Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 August 1952 — Page 3
ily ins Blast NSN
1, Aug. 18 | E. Stevenson rear pew when nister charged M. Dirksen (R. ant lie” about
» presidential out from week erences to ate ervices yester- » Rev. Richard
t Mr. Dirksen, ¢ized Gov. Ste-
1 his congregais Senator told en he made a aying Mr. Steworst Illinois turn of the cen-
There
gs a Unitarian hurch of that d. o said later he Mr. Stevenson gation, did not but later cong that it was talking about, d out to be one onsible men in his own party,”
1 a blatant lie r of this state, ing is that he ” the minister
cottons we rate eyelash. They're sh 'n' iren like a ghtful details to y, the price is a family budgets, Sizes 3 to bx,
Idren’s Shep, Fourth Floor
———
MONDAY, AUG. 18, 1952
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Typhoon
Army Planes fire Grounded: Navy Slowed
By United Press SEOUL, Korea, Aug. 18— Typhoon “Karen” slashed into the Korean battle zone today,
grounding Allied warplanes, sending Navy vessels off the west coast to cover and bringing the war to a temporary halt. The storm hit the southwest Korean coast 100 miles south of Seoul and ripped inland at 15 miles an hour to batter Seoul and the western battlefront. The winds were expected to build up to 80 or 90 miles-per-hour, There was no immediate report of casualties among Allied fighting men nor damage to United Nations installations.
Allies Expect Reds To Ask for More Aid
MUNSAN, Korea, Aug. 18 (UP) ~-Allied observers said today the Chinese Communist mission to Moscow may ask greater Soviet support in Korea and the unleashing of the Red Chinese air force in Manchuria against the United Nations forces. The U. 8. has estimated the Communists have 1800 planes in their Manchurian ‘‘sanctuary.” 1300 of which are Russian-built MIG-15 jets. The jets. have appeared over North Korea recently in small numbers despite the attempts of U. 8S. F-88 Sabhrejét pilots to lure them into battle. Peiping radio reported the arrival of the Red Chinese delega-! tion to Moscow on the eve of resumption of truce talks at Pan-
Police added up a long list of] ‘charges against 30-year-old RichI ONiomernow snarled over the ard E. Rouse today and concluded exchange of prisoners of war. he should have stayed in his own The negotiations resume tamor- Vehicle and kept out of trouble. row after a recess called by the! Rouse was arrested on a bus United Nations, the third in as last night by an off-duty policemany weeks. {man who said the foundry workler took his gun away and fought One or Another hi.
FLOYDS KNOBS, Aug. 18 Patrolman Norman G. Scott (UP)—State police reported to- was on -his way to police headday three troopers failed to find quarters when the bus he was a hit-run driver they sought in!riding was forced to the curb at the Banet Cafe, but did arrest Pleasant Run Parkway, South cafe owner Herman Banet, 41, Drive, and Churchman Ave, by a and 10 customers on charges of car driven by Rouse, the officer
gampidgit.
for today’s PREST
sadd. : 2
It took vears of methodical and painstaking work by trained research engineers to produce the highly efficient design used -O-LITE acetylene cylinders. Roger Clemons, one of the engineers at the Speedway laboratory, is in charge of a research project for improving the rate at which the acetylene can be withdrawn from a cylinder in service. In this work, he uses a new performance test that allows him to determine what is happening inside the cylinder while the acetylene is being discharged. The instrument used indicates the effects of seasonal temperatures and cylinder pressures on the rate of acetylene
HARD EARNED REST—A greup of battle-weary Marines sleep on the ground shortly after being relieved from front-line duty in Korea. Exhausted from recent savage fighting on the west. ol Bo the Leathernecks just flopped down and dozed off.
Motorist Grabs Gun Of Officer Aboard Bus
Rouse jumped on the bus and threatened one of two women passengers at which Officer Scott, in plain clothes, tried to calm him, he said. : "Rouse grabbed the policeman’s pistol. He was subdued only after a 5-minute battle up and down the bus, scaring the. women and two male passengers. . Rouse was charged as drunk, disorderly person, resisting an officer, reckless driving and operating a motor vehicle under the influence of liquor. Police said a 10-inch butader knife .and four unpaid. parking stickers were found ‘in his car.
a
There's more here ~ than meets the eye!
ment.
wT ae eh el
n Temporarily
Low-Cost A
CHICAGO, Aug. 18 (CDN)--How far are we {rom the day when the flick of a switch will flood a room with light generated by an atomic power plant? Popular articles of recent months have hinted at discoveries which at long last will make lowcost power available overnight. But scientists at Argonne National Laboratory near Lemont, Ill, assure you that is not the case. Argonne is the center of the nation's research on nuclear reactors, the ‘furnaces’ of the power system.
Accomplished at Arco
In an experiment last December at Argonne's testing station at Arco, Idaho, enough electricity was produced to operate pumps
print with declarations that the peacetime era of atomic power (is around the corner. They overlooked of costs, Prof. George G. Brown, Uni-
the problem
= * Xe FRG TS
Capehart ‘Improves,’ Says Army Hospital
HEIDELBERG, Germany, Aug. (UP)—U., 8. Army doctors announced ‘some improvement” to“day in the condition of Sen. Hom-
United Pre<s Telephoto
Say Leaning Tower
er E. Capehart (R. Ind.), who entered the hospital here last To Fall—In 400 Years Thursday. Mr. Capehart's illness was PISA, Italy, Aug. 18 (UP)— diagnosed as a severe upper
Art critics complained today the respiratory virus infection. y f Pie 411 He was to have been released Leaning Tower. © ax from the U, S. Army 130th Stacollapse in another four cen-
tion Hospital by next Wednesday. turies because a snooping archi- put medical authorities said this tect wouldn't mind his own was now doubtful although the business about 100 years ago. Senator spent a comfortable The critics contended the tower Week end. was built in 1174 to lean all the, Mrs. Capehart, who is accomtime. However, in 1836, Ales- panying him on a tour of U. 8. gsandro Gherardesca, an Italian! military installations in Europe, architect, cleared away the earth has visited him frequently at the inte which the base had sunk. { hospital.
To keep ‘his excavation dry,| . . Gherardesca pumped out a stream Believes in Trees of water that had seeped in from NEBRASKA CITY, Neb. (UP) the Arno River. In doing so, he —Frank Fields believes in Arbor weakened the tower, causing ‘it, Day. Fields planted his first to lean at a greater angle. The!Arbor Day tree in 1902. Last year experts now fear the famous he planted one on the holiday, tower will collapse in another 400 making the 50th consecutive year
and light the building housing the reactor. The event sent some leaping enthusiastically into
years,
R R
release. It is a method that quickly evaluates the results of months of research. This test is typical of those being made at the lahoratory on the performance of products in various stages of develop-
Testing is part and parcel of the overall research program at the Speedway laboratory where so much progress has been made over:the years in the production, distribution, and use
of acetylene gas.
Roger Clemons and others at the laboratory can take great pride in their participation in this program.
Brest Olive
LINDE AIR PRODUCTS COMPANY
|
TH
Speedway, Indiana
A Division of Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation
The term “Prest.0-Lite” is a registered trademark of Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation
engineer, makes the discharge performance test.
development at the Speed-
tained his degree in me-
he has ohservead YBa holiday.
>
oger Clemons, research
oger is in charge of filler ay laboratory. He obchanical engineer-
ing at Iowa State College.
—
vear-old Jacob Union 8t,,
reported
today.
tom Power nis pants hanging on a hall tree entry to the house,
Still Long Way Off
versity of Michigan engineer, has estimated power from a nuclear pile would be 10 times that of coal, gas or other presentday sources,
Cost Is Terrific A cube of wuranfum small enough to fit into a corner of]
Costs
| your living room has the poten-!
tial to heat the homes and run the machinery of the nation for| a year, | But the expense of processing uranium fs so great, only a gov-| ernment under pressure of de-| |fense needs could afford it. Some analysts believe the only! answer is to bring private enter-| prise Into the picture where profit | {motives and competitive tech-| niques ‘would bring costs down The AEC has recognized merit | in the proposal and invited several
Writers yp, qustrial and utility firms to con- |
sider the matter. One suggestion emerging from! these studies is to permit utilities] {to build reactors that would pro-| duce both power for home use| and plutonium for atomic bombs. | | The plutonium would then be {sold to the government. | Under a setup like that, many| {believe it would be economically {feasible in about five years to] (develop atomic production ip] particular sections of the country | where conventional power is ex-| | pensive. |
Atom Survival Test Planned
By Scripps-Howard Newspapers | WASHINGTON, Aug. 18— ‘The government is going to ‘try to find out what can be
done to get an atom-bombed city back on its feet in a hurry. | The San Francisco bay area has {been selected for the project, | which will include intensive study {of practically everything the city does.
This was revealed by Jack Gor‘rie, chairman of the Natural Resources Board. The work at San Francisco will he an important] {paft of the board's post attack! | rehanittatjon studies. “The things we learn in San: |Francisco—the mistakes we make | and the policies we validate— | {will eventually be applied to every imajor Industrial city in the United States,” Mr. Gorrie said,
‘Operation Bootstrap’
Operation bootstrap — as it] {might appropriately Le called |will get under way Sept. 8, Mr.| {Gorrie said. It will be directed by [the Stanford Researchers Insti-| tute, Palo Alto, under Dr. Weldon | {B. Gibson. Stanford Researchers] {will work closely with a 86-| member bay area industrial com-| {mittee. A final report is to be] made to NSRB by Dec. 31. |
“Post-attack rehabilitation is] much more complicated than industrial dispersion,” Mr. Gorrie sald. “Civil Defense pals with pre-attack preparations for pre-| tecting our cities and people— lifting them out of the rubble, dusting them off and binding] their wounds. Post-attack re-| {habilitation is the next step. That means getting going again. If we have the capability of recuperating rapidly, that will weigh {heavily In any enemy decision to |proveke a general war.
{ | | |
ty | No
quid
A
.D.A
h HG
Ac little $ S03 ac
GIVES YOU THIS GUARANTEED* FORD DEALER SERVICE
* Al parts used in ‘our service are Genuine Ford Parts guaranteed for 90 days or 4,000 miles, whichever occurs first,
And here's what you get at NO COST or obligation to you! An honest estimate based on modern equipment tests. A complete - analysis of your car's symptoms, , Estimates cheerfully given, absolutely no obligation to you.
Downtown Ford Sales Co., Inc. 720 N. Meridian Street
C. T. Foxworthy, Inc. 810 Eost Washington Street
STRAUSS SAYS:
Alinakoff,
to
ORLON SOCKS:
are something for a
man fo put his money on-
and his feet info!
1.90
ORLON is a marvelous test tube fiber
that fits the bill for a swell sock!
- PAGE 3 ' Says Crooks Stole Pants, $1200
Burglars stole his pants con- Saturday night. In the pockets taining $1200 while he slept, 78- were a bilifold containing $600 in 1226 cash and. another $600 in checks police/and a wristwatch, he sald. The burglars cut a screen in Mr. Alinakoff said he had left the dining room window to gain
Your FORD Dealer offers you
= Week
~It washes wonderfully
—It will not
LA ib dries res)- quick a -
shrink
—It does not stretch out of shape —Resists mildew —Moths won't touch it —It is luxuriously soft —It w-e-a-r-s!
Vou see it pictured here in a good-looking cable-stitch knif— pull-up length—fine light-ish
colors—
Give your feet a treat—ORLON is the name to remember!
(First Floor)
COLORS: Gray Camel Shade Green Blue Yellow
Slizs 1072-13 MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS (LI. 1561) FILLED
L. STRAUSS & CO.
\
ENJOY NEW-CAR APPEARANCE! Body and Fender Repairs « Complete Paint Job « New Seat Covers
Ac ile $950 a
THE MAN'S STORE
ENJOY NEW-CAR PERFORMANCE! « Engine Tune-up » Complete Lubrication s Shock Absorber Adjustment
As te 9 03
ENJOY NEW-CAR SAFETY! « Brake Relining eo Steering and Wheel Alignment » Lights— Inspection and Adjustment
Ac tke $950 a
4
ENJOY NEW-CAR DEPENDABILITY! » Authorized Reconditioned Engine = Transmission Service » Clutch Adjustment
Ac ike $950 hk
~ Hatfield Motors, Inc, 623 North Capitol Avenue
Walter Hiser, Inc. 3902 North Illinois Street
> =
Dan Rohyans Motors 829 Broad Ripple Avenue
Harry A. Sharp Company 443 Virginia Avenue - EAST SIDE BRANCH
5704 Eoit Washington Street
-
-
