Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1950 — Page 11
that chillove too! ; 7 to 12
tar” woven winner.
ique collar
fs. Brown, Red and edominate. 3.98
| wgnortly I'll have a
ave a student here.” Feels Like Father of Tri
| ANOTHER SURPRISE. My impression had
always been that a pilot completing his 10,000th
men who have that many hours in the air. °* “You are going to use your 10,000th hour haul{ng a student around in an airplane?” - “The student is going to haul me around” answered the soft-spoken pilot. . “Why don’t we get a bottle of champagne and take it up, do a few loop-the-loops, figure 8s, fly on our backs at 30,000 feet?” I must say that 1 wag sort of joking. “A celebration doesn’t have to be noisy. I'll celebrate by doing my job.” _ Shortly, Norman Harritt, agsistant to the vice resident of the Polar Ice & Fuel Co. walked in. He was the student. The flying “iceman” was close to getting his commercial pilot's license, > When informed of his instructor's coming event, Mr. Harritt reacted like an ice cube in a few ounces of ginger ale and jolt-juice ... he effervesced. Wonderful. “How does it feel to have 9999 hours in the air behind you?" Paul smiled wide again and said it felt fine. We got Mr. Harritt a Coke and the “party” was underway. What were some of the highlights of your flying life, Paul? ’ Paul certainly is an easy-going individual. He dragged out seven small log books and one thicker than our phone book. Paul said he was tired of filling up the thin books. The fat one ought to hold him for awhile. Paul soloed the 6th of June, 1929. It happened in Evansville and he was up 10 minutes. Great event, “I felt as happy about soloing as I do right now,” laughed Paul. He has flown 63 different types of airplanes. For 3% years he was a civilian instructor for the Army. Flying has been his life and he's never had an accident: “My wife says she doesn’t worry when I'm flying. She starts to worry when I'm through workIng and head for home down West Washin Street,” said Paul. His one anxious moment in the air happened in Evansville. He says it was the only one worth mentioning. Paul took up two young fellows for a ride in a four-place monoplane. The ship was the
New Cremonas
9 ~Paul Schlundt, who rode
e Indianapolis Tim
TUESDAY, JULY 25, 1950
In Ordnance Company Races Soaring Last Reported in Japan p
Served War With Rainbow Division,’
Re-enlisted; Wed Cicero Girl on Furlough
. By MARION CRANEY _ Among our Hoosier Heroes are a destroyer tender scheduled to isome “raw recruits” who have return to the United States with|yet to receive the taste of battle. in two weeks, |
Million air miles . . . Norman Harritt (left) * But within
ets instruction before flying with his instructor, the ranks are is 10,000th hour in the otliers,” who are battle - hardened veterans of
air.
top-wing variety, like Lindy’s “Spirit of St. Louis.” world War IL
At takeoff something happened to one of the|
ship became airborne.
Wings were intact. The motor was firing all right. tion.
The tail was in place. He still had two passengers. The left wheel was in place and the right . , .|
to three feet lower than the left.
on the wheel. Two hours and 10 minutes later, the
the left wheel.
No Fanfare at Air Milestone MR. HARRITT and Paul went up in a Beech-| craft Bonanza. Without fanfare, I think Mr. Har-| ritt showed more excitement than Paul did. An hotr later they landed. I waited for them.| Paul was all smiles, Mr. Harritt did well. Paul had a thought while up in the air. 1 “Ever notice how peaceful and orderly the earth is when you're up in the air? Maybe that's all the Lord sees and thinks we're getting along beautifully down here.” I wonder. Quite g guy, Paul. Here's hoping for the 20,000th hour. al 3
WASHINGTON, July 25—Inventors sometimes lead an uncertain existence. : The man who thought up. the eraser on the end of a pencil never got a patent or a cent out of his invention. He went broke fighting his case up to the Supreme Court. The inventor of the safety pin was a little more fortunate; he made a few hundred dollars. But the record shows that Henry L. Ellsworth, who . resigned as head of the Patent Office in 1845, said in a message to Congress that he was d because:
use: _ “Advances in art and human improvement must end.”
Only 4000 Patents
MR. ELLSWORTH thought there was nothing left to invent—even though such things as the electric light, the automobile, the airplane, radio and television were yet to come. In 1845 the Patent Office listed some 4000 registered patents. The number today totals more than 2,500,000. Some fnventors have banked millions. That brings us up to date—and a story about my friend in Chicago named Edward Roeder. For many years, Mr. Roeder has been having a fuss with the patent people over the recreation of the famous Cremona violin tone. Apparently Ed has arrived, for now he has some fiddles on the market, although he isn’t rich yet. They are dandies. I used to play a saw-box myself, and I can testify that the tone is very fine. It’s all in the varnish, which is a duplicate of the
tween him and Patent Office. Mr. Roeder worked more than 30 years to dis-
cover what went into the varnish that made a'/and Mrs, Orville Brinson,
high-priced fiddle what it ought to be. ! Me, I'm just a hack Turkey-in-the-Straw fellow. |
But others with considerably more talent have Wabash St., reports nothing but praise for Mr, Roeder’s violins, com-|/fit has been | alerted. He recently } several members of the Chicago Symphony and| returned to Ft. Henry Weber's symphony at radio station WGN Lewis, Wash, in Chicago. Also at the opera and for recordings| after a furlough { home. {Army for two |years, the 21MODEST ED says the verdict is that his vio-| year-old corpo- | ral is in an antiNot long ago, an artist played one of the new| aircraft outfit, violins and then in turn played a genuine Strad, Battery A, 15th
plete with his own special varnish. His Instruments have been tried and played by|
and television.
Sound Like Real Thing
lins sound like the old Cremona product,
and one of the real great G
dagninis. -] “The new Cremona type |
jolin,” he said after|
He
of : {Esther Williams, On a pass over the field he noticed men around R, R. 1, Cicero, the hangar were waving their arms like crazy. has that distinec- |
In
Mrs.
Division.
. Pfe. Brinson 3 ard, By Harmon Ww. Nichols, duty in the last war. Clar lence was with the Army five
Cremonese process. How Ed did it is a secret be- years and Richard served four| : {years in the Navy.
the
Sgt. Jos h@ wheels. Paul didn’t know anything was Wrong wilams. lp because the strut must have cracked just as the yond :
Sgt. Williams -(served in World f1eave hold the phone, the right wheel was hanging two war II with the 42d Infantry, 1. the Marine ' “Rainbow” The quickest flight instruction in history fol- listed Mar. 4, 1947 and spent three gq 1949 Pfc. ! lowed. Paul showed one of the men how to keep years with the 725th Ordnance Docktor enjoyed the plane on an even keel while he went to work Co, Osaka, Japan. : returned wheel strapped up, Paul's ship touched lightly on Apr. 25 and married Mrs. Wil- ja508 started ¥ His gas was about gone. The|liams May 4. On June 6 he sailed july 1. He is in right wheel held. The two men jumped out of the from California to Osaka, where the 2d Truck plane and Paul has never heard from them since. he rejoined his outfit.
= # » | On Okinawa is Pfc, Robert | Brinson, 829% Birch Ave.
Cpl. Carl E. Chevalier, 632 E.|
AA. His mother,
It did not have the new sound —or the tone of an! m wabash St.
unused fiddle. That is the real test.
2 »¥ nn =» onan Ga tn Sons (0 soring win So mmr tn No 3 gs 1 fiddles, as oid as a Strad. b pe 5, Yi combat outfits is Pfc. Melvin R. with the Head- : rad, have a poor tonaliy.,in who is with the 31st In-|quarters Co., 2d |fantry Division in the Pacific. to his
quality. “A violin has to be worked on--played,” says)
do to making a better tone, although a lot of vio-|tryman. was stationed in Sappora,
His m r, Mrs. Helen Ed speaks as an expert. He not only makes a| Grubbs, or rm Ave., re-
lin makers will deny this.”
fine fiddle, he plays one, too.
Milk Lore
By Frederick C. Othman _
WASHINGTON, July 25 — Milk is not my favorite beverage, as it is Sen. Guy M. Gillette's. The gentleman from Iowa thinks this pale stuff is priced much too high, and that more people would drink it if they could afford it. So he’s been holding investigations these many months about milk, the weird regulations which govern its distribution, and the way the profits are divided. The proceedings were nearing their end when he called in O. V. Wells, chief of the Bureau of Agriculture Economics for some expert testimony. The chief brought with him a 144-page book about milk, especially written by Agriculture Department experts for the occasion. He said he did not intend to read it aloud.
Interesting Lore THIS, 1 think, was a shame. I read-it and I learned some lore about milk that ought “to interest anybody, Senators included. So:
The average cow in America today produces
5234 pounds of milk per year, but a really first class cow who is anxious to please gives 8000 pounds in 365 days. It is fortunate that the experts have developed a new fast milking method that cuts in half the usual time it takes to drain a cow. The only trouble is that some cows are temperamental and insist on the old-fashioned, easygoing method. Try to high pressure them and they kick over the bucket. The average American drinks 270 quarts of milk per year, or three glasses a day. This strikes me as incredible, but that’s what the book says. Good milk, too. The average cow, producing all this milk, gets all the vitamins she needs from the improved grasses and clovérs now being planted in pastures, but somehow she does not pass them along to the
customers, Or, at least, most dairies add vitamins to their milk. | i They used to do this by shining mercury vapor rays on the liquid as it flowed past. These mercury lights are the same widgets that are used in| sunlamps. It is my theory, therefore, that a fellow| ; can get the benefits of drinking milk merely by| crawling under a sun lamp and taking a brief nap.
These lamps proved too slow, however, for thel |
dairymen. Today they usually stir vitamin powder] directly into the milk. Then they homogenize it.|: This means that they break up the fat into such small globules they never rise to the top to mak cream. This is why I have to take condensed milk! (much: improved lately) in my coffee. { Farmers have quit using copper milk cans. So
it costs so much to ship; water is heavy.
why. IN
Tons in Storage
all this to keep as per law pass
e price of milk at present levels, p y Congress.
Ed. “The resin off the bow has something also Ly the 19-year-old infan-|Corps
1Japan.
~ » » Marvin Jay Goddard is a memr of the crew of the destroyer ~— |John W. Thomason which is|
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. milk seldom has the flavor of an old penny. Whole Melvin Goddard, 35 N. Colorado milk is 68 per cent water and that’s one reason Ave, He is a graduate of Short|ridge High School and a member Poor people drink more buttermilk than thei Ee I a Methodist idle rich. Sotitherners, rich and poor, imbibe more Church where he was active in buttermilk than northerners. The book did not say! scouting before he enlisted in the
avy.
Cpl. James E. Gough, son of Mr. THE FEDERAL government now owns 176 and Mrs. Harold Gough, 536 Dormillion pounds’ of butter, 69 million pounds of man St. is drivcheese, and 342 million pounds of milk powder, ing an ammuniwhich it dried first and shipped later. It bought tion truck in Jaaccording ito latest letters.
an,
So it would seem that if the price of milk is in May.
to drop, Congress has got to pass another. law.
day or so; the book, unfortunately, has nary
suggestion, but I may have to start drinking milk duty
as a patriotic gesture,
The Quiz Master
22? Test Your Skill 29?
s there an estimate of the number of people undér Russian control? : _ /Russia has brought 830,000,000 people or about 40 per cent of the earth's 2,000,000,000 people under her control In the last 10 years.
Why did the Egyptians use beetles as settings for aware? i rab, a beetle, was regarded in Egypt as a symbol of immortality and was placed on mummies as a sign of the resurrection. It was also a
Have any facsimiles been made of the Declaration of Independence? . wa In the 1820s the only actual facsimile of the Declaration was made. It was taken by a coppereS 9 How many railroad funnels are there in the United States? : :
Later
b
Mr. Goddard
| petved word from him five weeks | lago at that station. |
word That isn’t all. The secretary of the Department of jwas received Agriculture wants to know what he’s supposed to'earTier this do with all these millions of pounds of food Con- month by a boy gress told him to buy. We'll go into that in another friend, indicating a he still was on in Japan. {He worked in a laundry before !entering service, o =
Paul is aboard the USS Hamul,
{| Pvt. James Smith, a former em{ployee of Fairmount Glass Co. {is in the 30th Infantry Regiment lat Ft. Benning, Ga. He enlisted {in August, 1949, when he was 19. * {He was well known at Riverside | Skating Rink.
| » » ” { Marine Pfc. Paul Ray Docktor, ison of Mr, and Mrs. Harry Dock-| tor, 2601 Epler | Ave., returned to : {Camp Lejeune, , iN. C., today, aftSgt. Williams ler a 25-day
: | i { | i
He re-en- rng since Sept.
three weeks at to Indianapolis nome here. The
Pfc. Docktor
. | Platoon, 2d Motor Transport Bat- | E {talion, of the 2d Marine Division. | Th ol He is 18,
|
Power Needs
|
Expansible Generating Plant Being Built Near Noblesville
There's a push on for power in Indiana. So much that the Public Service Co. of Indiana, Inc. is thinking about expanding its biggest expansion. “That's the $14 million 80,000 kilowatt Riverwood station four) miles north of Noblesville. Already six months ahead of construction deadlines, PSCI has the steam-turbo, generating sta-| tion geared to future demands. Instead of blocking off the fourth side of the powerhouse with brick, PSCI has ordered! fluted aluminum end-wall, This end-wall, sturdy enough for permanent construction, wil make a temporary barrier until final expansion plans are readied. It can be ripped off easier and less expensively than a brick wall.
Current Demand Climbs
The need for power is almost more than company planners;
Battle-Wise Hoosier Gl In O
Photos of Russ Chiefs
Wall; Commisar ‘Interprets’ Daily News
{Stalin has formed a new German Wehrmacht—the Bereit-
"PAGE 11
rient
| vr Il: DOPI Prowth [inside Red Germany... No.6— Sgt. Joseph Williams PSCI Growth Hote of U.S.
At Red German Army On Round-Clock Basis
Hammere
Peer From Every
schaften—another important link in his chain of stooge armies. To get the inside, human story of this Communist Prussian force Fred Sparks spoke to ordinary soldiers and officers, de-
serters and high Allied officials. articles,
This is the sixth of a group of
By FRED SPARKS, Times Foreign Correspondent
BERLIN, July 25.—Shortly after the average Fritz is posted to the Bereitschaften—the German Coimunist army--he learns that although his uniform and weapons once belong to the old
{ Wehrmacht, now his heart must belong to Daddy Stalin.
The favored marching song, symbolically enough, is one yodeled by Russia’s airmen, It is a mad double-twist of current history to
hear the children Adolf taughtto —
despise Bolshevism sing as they the “Amis.” (Deutsch slang for
march: (Sorry, translated it does
1 not jive.)
“We guard the Soviet Union, yah!
Yanks.) Trying to juggle my own public opinion poll on the basis of what
“We were born to make big facts many Bereitschafteners (and Al“To overcome the wordly space lied obseryers) told me I cons
“To fly on eagles’ wings.
“Bach propeller singing Red front
“We guard the Soviet Union, yah!” Stalin Pinups Besides the constant, hovering
» » » i 21-year-old serv-| Cpl. Carl F. Tate, son of Mrs, anticipated. The company supplies presence of two Russian officers jceman enlisted| Catherine Tate, 2715 Ethel Ave. current for 72 of 92 Hoosier coun-| gttached to each 1000 men (plus
Negro 24th In-| fantry Regiment, | 25th Infantry]
in the Air Corps|is in June 17, 1948. He was sent’ to Okinawa; 22, 1949.
the crack
* Division,
Pfc, Brinson, of the Korean) who is 21, is sta-| War, | tioned at Naha Air Base. regiment aided] His two older brothers, Clar-
Taejon. seized the highway and rail hub after the
Cpl. Tate {1st Calvary and 25th Infantry Pfc. Brinson is the son of Mr. Divisions landed last Wednesday! nanny management representative,
{to support the battle-thinned 24th : Division. A 1948 graduate of Crispus that his out-| Attucks High School, the 22- | year-old doughboy took his basic | training at Ft. Dix, N. J, after entering service in September, 1948. Miss Evelyn L. Sumner, 2428 Highland Place, who subimitted the article, reported his last letter came from Gifu, Japan.
” ” » Pfc. James M. Shaver, son of
{707 Virginla {Ave,, Is serving iwith the U.S. Army in Ger-
many.
Cpl. Chevalier the test, “stacked up favorably with the others. Mrs, Lois Chevalier, lives at 632514 private first
The 20-year-
{class, who en-
{tered service
| Battalion of the
buddies a8 2d Armored pg. Shaver
American- sector of Germany.
” » » 8 2/¢ Walter Jack Troutman
at
operating out of| San Francisco. The 20 - year - old sailor took his boot training and went to Fire Control School
tion,
the air base.
at Great Lakes or — » year -| Naval Training old sallor was a e student at Beech|
Center. On Apr. 25, he was assigned to the Thomason at/S 2/¢ Troutma the San Francisco Navy Yard.
Grove Hig
penlisted in Navy
Training Center, San Diego, Cal
Seaman Second Class. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Troutman, Hobart St.
w
Mr, and Mrs. David M. Shaver,| . unit, new power will come from
In his last letter to his parents here, he was patrolling in the
Naval Air Sta-
nh nec School before he| the | He took] his boot training at the Naval
where he received the rating of ing report. power company upped operating]
live at 2103
ties and in 45 are sole power-
a scoop of spies) the eyes of big
masters. And considering upward p. ther Stalin peer from eve production quotas, spurred by the op pe Y
which| Korean situation and business in| is in the thick general, those counties take a 10t| joc are verboten, each sleeping
of current. And this has pushed the River-
Cpl. Tate’ s/wood construction pace, too.
Consumers along interlinking
in the capture of transmission lines morth of InYechon, 60 miles dianapolis will receive the first/things American goes on around northeast of electric boost from the new staThe yl!tion by the end of July.
Originally, the first of two 40,{000 kilomatt units at the station was to churn out the juice early {next year, John L. Mellett, com-
{said. Two weeks ago, the first {carload of coal was dumped in {plant yards.
| And the second unit, originally
|expected to be in use by 1952, will |be operating before 1951, he said.
$55 Million Program
Expansion of the Noblesville {plant rakes off the cream of $22}
{
While pinups of Prussian pret-
room is decorated with Stalin, Lenin, Marx, Engels and last (and least) lackey Wilhelm Pieck, East German president. The mental rubber-hosing of all
the clock. Two hours after he rolls out of bed at six (“feet must be on the floor before the whistle stops”) Pvt. Fritz attends “newspaper review.” at There the Polit Kulture officer (commissar to you) “interprets” the daily tidings. Told 8. Koreans Bad
These last few weeks he's been telling all about the despicable South Koreans and how, with that old debbil MacArthur, they attacked the peace-loving, flowersprinkling, dog-petting North Koreans. For shame! | (So all inclusive is the officiall
i clude: Fifty per cent of them, glad of {a new “political religion,” blindly accept Soviet mastery ... with the warlike efficiency and diabolic deadliness the Germans are no slouch at. Twenty-five per cent are quite definitely allergic to fighting for {the Kremlin. But they would like [to strike a blow for a United Germany . . ., even. under commu. nism, 25 Pet. Disloyal And 25 per cent are rather dis. loyal. They are going AWOL in batches, “might” be troublesome if the bullets whiz. {| I above have carefully put | quote marks around “might.” Because so ramrod is the discipline, and so deeply instinctive the German soldier's acceptance of orders, that we dare not expect widespread sabotage within the new Wehrmacht, if and when the
blitz breaks.
Certainly, there were those
wishful thinkers who doubted the loyalty of the North Koreans to the Kremlin's cause. How they did push! And these are Germans —+they’ll push that much the
harder. : However, deep down in every Teutonic stomach filled with
\million worth of generators going anti-Americanism that our tobac-| gareitschaften chow, I think
|into PSCI properties.
the
tion near Bicknell.
|growing plans.
west of here.
Dresser Station at Terre Haute and the Edwardsport sta-
Major transmission improvements will take another $16 mil-| 3 11.00 Coca-Col s a and jazz mulion and other new construction, | gj, The later, incidentally, must $17.5 million. It's all part of | never, never be played in the dz PSCI's $55 million, three-year. .. Damn decadent, comrade.
I,
jeo—favored by most—must be|
Besides the Hamilton County | Purchased on the black market)
and concealed inside empty Rus{sian or East German cigaret packets.) 3 Later in the day there are two hours of chatter about our side's plan to enslave Germany with
| Always the political blah points]
| Part of the new construction is} this way: There will be an Ameri|going into $3 million worth of can-led invasion. The Bereitschaf-|
new offices and new central con-| ten is expected to stand with the| trol center at Plainfield, 14 miles Red Army to guard Europe.
| (Even if that means advancing
The offices and buildings hous- defensively to Cincinnati.) ling machine, transformer, stores,
Poised For March
land garage shops will be com-| Certainly, these boys don’t have {pleted before the end of this year, , yo convinced a A war is|
joined the Navy in February of Mr. Mellett said. - this ‘year and is now stationed!
Kokomo - Lafayette and Castle-Connersville runs.
Through May, income $214,096 to $3,638,512.
{more homes, factories and farms
Of Men in
Do you have a son, hus military service?
where they are stationed. The Times will keep a fi
| Cpl. Gough He is 19. i
W. Maryland St., Indianapolis
from The Times a clipping o Hoosier Hero as it appeared i
Serviceman (or Servicewoman’
Name
CesT enssasrRabena En
Branch of
Your Name RE i hal
Your Relationship chin
Join The Times List
The Times wants to publish their pictures and information | | about their current military service. The Times particularly wants photos of Hoosier service people in Korea . . | | also want photos of ALL Hoosiers in military service, no matter
report the news of Hoosiers in uniform more thoroughly. It also will enable us to let you know when the United Press cables bring us word about them. Usually news of troop movements and news of battles come first to The Times office. Please fill out the coupon—write any additional information on a separate sheet of paper—and mail it with a picture | | of any size to HOOSIER HEROES, Indianapolis Times, 214
All pictures will be returned . .
3 He was last heard Of from. cesses snvesssvssssssannassrasannss
Service
band, brother, sister, friend in
. but we
le on all these men. so we can
9. , and you also will receive f the item and picture of your n The Times.
5)
APRS ARARERI RTs rar as sera
Unit or
AAs east ENA E REE I RNIN A asa Ran
BAAS IAIN AEE AAA SARA R IRR RRE
The Nobleville expansion willl replace the 500 kilowatt hydro|electric plant and will service con-/ ting transmission lines on the New
Another indication of the PSCI| growth spurred by demand is re- business houses in conjunction with the showing of Walt Disney's ‘flected in the five month operat-| new technicolor movie, “Treasure Island.” The movie opens at the the Indiana Theater Aug. 2. ADRS ee
{ programed by fate. Those I have|
there is indestructable Prussian
nationalism — t h ¢ “Deutschland, Deutschland uber alles” spirit, Belief in Army Many of those who serve de spite their crashing hate of Leninism do so in the belief that a
{German army-—any kind of Gers
man army-—is best for the Reich.
Somehow, they figure, in good -
time, it might again become a German army with no string at. tached to Moscow, JA Bereitschaften = lieutenant told me: “A war can do no harm to our country ... What have we got left to harm? At the end we'll have a huge force—no matter which side wins. They'll both arm us. Then what? We'll be Germans again.” :
TOMORROW: What Rookie.
{ The power substation will be spoken to calmly await the orders! Fritz eats, wears, loves and the U. S-loperating before 1952. Cost Torito march—first against West| how he’s being. trained. Ithis expansion has not been de-| Germany, then, in time, against Copyright 1950. by The Indianapolis Times Hol, Cc 2p S!termined yet, Mr. Mellett sald. | ————— against 70 the Cictuo Dally News toe. ristl, Tex. He] mne Edwardsport station, Tq T 4 $ Off is con nected... expanded to 150,000 horse-| imes reasure un ers
with a Special, wo output, is being face-lifted
Devices group atii i .rease capacity to 240,000 HP. Prizes for Whole Family Numbered Keys to Be Distributed Sunday And Monday With Copies of Newspaper
The list of prizes for The Times Treasure Hunt next week
|provides a “jackpot” of gifts for persons of all ages.
The Treasure Hunt is being s
It's a treasure hunt in which everyone may participate with-
And that's powerful power for out any cost—and get their share
.lof ‘some $3500 in prizes. The| {Times will distribute numbered) {keys next Sunday and Monday | with The Times newspaper, | ! “Then on Aug. 1, 2 and 3 the] ‘holders .of the keys. will begin| {their hunt among the 10 business: {houses to see if their numbered {key “fits” the treasure chests at| {those stores. The keys that “rue” will allow the holder to open the
chest and obtain one of the 189] | prizes. . List of Awards
! | The awards include: Philco {electric refrigerator, Admiral j television set, Benrus watches for {men and women, Eversharp pen! and pencil sets, Ronson cigaret| { lighters, Universal coffee makers, | ‘waffle irons, food mixers and |ether of the firm's electric kitchen tequipment, nylon hose, sports equipment, portable typewriters {and other valuable items.
{added to the list of places where {The Times Treasure Chests for | prizes will be located. The latest | me is Lord Jewelers, 47 Monument Circle. } The others are: Dee Jewelry Co., 18 N. Illinois 8t.; Kay | Jewelry, 137 W. Washington St.; iMiller Jewelry Co., 29 Monument Circle; National Furniture Co. 335-343 W, Washington St.; Pearson’s, 130 N. Pennsylvania St.; Rogers Jewelers, 5 N. Illinois St.; Rose Tire Co., 930 N. Meridian St.; Rost's, and silver. smiths, 25 N. Illinois St, and
Your AGAPeSE. .ovivscisniisn vases vassvesssoPhone NOcesswsionr, AE g i & RATELY li 4 nA * kA a
TaVel's, jewelers and optom|etrists, 119 N. Illinots St. |
taged by The Times and 10 local
A-Blast Cloud Rise Is Traced
By Science Service t WASHINGTON, July 25-—How high an atomic cloud will rise can be figured ‘rom data applicable to any ordinary, much less dangerous cumulus cloud. By doing this, Dr. Lester Machta, of the U. 8. Weather Bureau, has figured, that the original Los Alamos atomic cloud rose to 39,800 feet,
A cloud rises because it fs warmer than the surrounding air and it stops rising because it cools, both by expansion and by the entrance of outside air into the cloud. An atomic cloud does a super cooling job. It starts out at least one million degrees Centigrade hot and almost instantly cools
A 10th business firm today was down to about 3000 degrees Centi-
grade, by radiation. Then the usual meteorological effects take over, ; i
Air Brought In The heat of the cloud
