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Show Kp K? rp r) rp Co Cy READY TO PLOVJ OOEArrS FLOOR Sliip Sets Out, with World's Largest Chain Aboard, to Cut Furrows In Sea Botton for Cables That Now Are Damaged By Fishermen i L - 1 1 ' .. - ! ,' ; . . fc; gts ('; A.'.:- v ( ' r - -1 1 l ' - f ? - ' " ' ) v r " J h- ; i X As" A A v r r j , j i . : -. : -: - '-. :1 , J K I ... v . Vi. .-. .... 1 ' '"-' j i Ai , f j ; ' ' j - - A s I Aa: ; 3 : zi : il A A A AA IRS i; i 1 ' -5' ' i r 1 ha - 4 v" ; , U ' ' ' A V ' h ... " j I . ' - . - , is A i I Finds Lead to Kidnap Solution 1 i . Because heavy drags attached to fishing nets of steam trawlers off the Irish coast cause $500,000 annual damage to the combined cable systems of the world, the Western Union Telegraph Co. decided de-cided to "plow under" their transatlantic lines to protect them. Engineers developed a device that tut a furrow in the ocean bottom, feeds the cable into it and closes the furrow, all m one opera-lion opera-lion Unique feature of the sea-going plow is the worlds largest chain, shown at left. It is a 4200 foot line of 12.500 nickel steel links, each weighing 3"2 pounds. The chain weighs 42,000 pounds and will withstand a stress of 65.000 pounds. It wi II be laid out over gigantic spools or "sheaves," teen at top right, from the cable snip Lord Kelvin, shown right, Bottom. I A 'Vi J j $A?A " v A - ... .tM,.x. ..K X W Jpper, a G-man points to a spot In the woods where the body of litt.e rimmy Cash, 5, was found dead r.ear his rrinceton. Fla , home, neary :wo weeks after he was brutally "snatched" from the crib where H vas sleeping, rushed to liie woods where he strangled to deatli fir-:he fir-:he effects of a cloth tied around his mouth. Lower, where G-" "mind the $10,000 ransom paid by the father in a fruitless attend o save his son from death. A 21-year-old truck driver, Fran'Kit ' 'ierce McCall, confessed the brutal crime. |