OCR Text |
Show THE FEATHERHEADS ..!l Keeping Up cienee Beam Will Probe Mysteries on High New Scientific Marvel to Transcend Strato w u.Ui,, i. CALn ifflw.,WNU 0 A new of method discovering what exists id the unexplored upper air Rubber Barrels, Herei a Tense Moment, Ye Indeed! SMATTER POP By C. M. PAYNE New dechemical velopments of the from rubber acid-r- e sistant - barrels to mattresses made of glass were exhibited at Grand Central Palace here in the Exposition of Chemical Industrie. U NUNTUT . With Her Best Regards The rubber birrel are the latest handlisafety devlcs for shipping and as chemicals ng-such dangerous will Quick which hydrofluoric acid ly eat Its way through ordinary glaas containers. The barrels, half as big as beer kegs, will stand 40 Interpounds to the square Inch forces exterior and nal pressure of from 1,000 to 2,000 pounds without Injury. Mattresses of Glass "Wool." The glass mattresses consist of glass wool," the finely spun fibers of glass which are packed Into a mattresa In place of hair or cotton Shown by the commonly used. were exhibitor tarns glass ropes tnd twine for use where the material will come In contact with chemicals or heat which would destroy ordinary twins. ; Liquid heat, a special high melting point chemical, was also shown. The material la used In heat treating steel by dipping It into a bath of the liquid. Gold, Silver, Find Us. Gold and allrer coated tubing or sheet metal, for use In chemical Industries where stainless steel and alother ordinarily attenloys ars worthless, attracted . FINNEY OF THE FORCE TiWfc Cagey Decision e tion. tubing can be manufactured for from 1A00 to 110 the cost of a solid gold pipe. In fabrication a layer of the pipe metal of a thickness of one half Inch is soldered to a 'layer of gold In whatever proportion the final thickness of the coating la desired. This heavy thick twin metallic "sandwich" la then into a thin sheet and the two materials costly and inexpensive retain their original proportions. Gold-coate- d REGLAR FELLERS Want To Be Tidy v nearly emMc.o MAKING YtXA HC.W PANT totmcoo ! tILASC.,MOM, WILL YOU MAM.I OKU. OF TMC POCKET A THREE CORNERED ONE ? JUS A A' FAVOR WILL TWQM ? AU. I HAVE Pvrr in pockets t NOW WHO hcaro op CORNERED WHAT with rr AWFUL HARO A Piece op to PICpit INNA EVER three ' relar POCKET? WRON4 fMLGLAft 2k KIKDA POCKET, MOM. ncJhest Shaped pockets? ! cold-rolle- d w Yk ADAMSONS ADVENTURES One, Two, ThreP 4mrtn Out! By Urges Planting of Weeds to Cover Dust Storm Area of West y 0. JACOBSSON the A Scion of Richard the Lion-Hearte- By d A NT KVnAOkh 10 Now I FRED HARMAN A Not fb A IMUL PlOtM WILL ' KttP -- TV A IN VICW 1VAT OAV UAO TW WAT. XLeaf "CSSff - V FORGOT HIS TOOLS NT F0R W,SH BETTER (YOU COULD Pv&'j.WRIGLEY'S FLAVOR THAN wind-drifte- d in the West. Plant weeds," says Professor iSears, and he points out why; "It la vital that toms cover, no matter what, be developed here without delay. Nature has furnished a hint Throughout this region after the drouth was well begun the despised Russian thistle did so well that It was often the only plant available for stock feed. "Instead of seeding the area with costly grfiss seed, whose success Is a gamble. It might be sensible to mix In a good proportion of weed seeds. If the land la abandoned, weeds will be the first cover any-oand as we have seen, they are transient affair at best, preparing the way for the better kinds of plants." Lest we fhould Jhlnk JProfessor SeartHproposaFtoo' daring, he hastens to offer a precedent always a consoling thought to the conservatism ingrained even In pioneers and experimenters: Actually the method Is not new. There Is a brilliant example of Its ase on the bare clay slopes of the huge Ohio conservancy dams north of Dayton, which today are held in perfect condition by a dense, well The success of this plant cover was Insured from the start by the deliberate use of the cheapest, weediest mixtures of grass and IHt. could, be. obtained Hattie-Scarre- d !llurrj,..Mr.-number,-an- d broken pipe" Ar-ths- tmfHMILWNimM Ethiopia AWWIXMWiPwa LONDON. Vultures and jackals, at their grim repulsive feasts after battle among the Ethiopian hills, may be joined lh,r1 roup of uest I butterflies PERFECT GUMk dainty-lookin- kRIHvi FftAiVQUiCf MMlMV4Ur UNAi. T0 fcy tOPTUk (VYWYiMiNt Cia- - wr FWISHttJON.WNOUAvW tetPWWHWccMii,. Wirp BOUND FOOT. g t One species among Ethiopian by being but-terflle- t, known to scientists as Lharaxese lactetlnctus, Is stated to prefer feeding on gnb- thes butterflies fosUbly are the creatures to which the present war Is an unmlxed booh. JU ' 5. feebl der?f Inter- wary tT0: r" offspring I(t Sector, none it in he itn sorVy less. Often, latter destroyed one mother. JJI) the cruel tally moont?) thousands dead, 80 of thousands crippled tod kr,J These curious peopie place called America, and th J they worshiped wM called Speti1 maS I The M what ousht wh0 kDoirT) with the wX? to be done 1 but cant make er to have ills up hlg t'J mind ejg$ fried ca side or turned over. At lunch oday, I encountered, gentleman who could diaew our political and economic like that and name the too. In fact he did name few while I was looking after check. And yet I know for i rive fact that his wife wont him pick out his own necktie t! he cant be trusted to eroa UlK-- jjj ! i street by himself, owlnf to iota Ing able to decide automobile he prefen tii; to be kit v Tlio Patting Twenty-thre- f KipRg. yean w, e Rudyard Kipling A for seclusion, . which, following of his only son In the Vr made, of him an entnsd death war, recluse. He shunned people; be Am the pigtutqi life. He developed an ncttol like for Americana the jk; whom he once loved tnd vht s stltuted perhaps his most loyal h lowing. He became tbit so k mentable of figures among Kff folk the spot marked D," bring where a quenched gealu ft last seen. Most of us who write an bat slmllators and assembler! Er was s real creator, and ml et tors dont happen ofteiRll books and his bamckrooa k Mulvaney and bUE lads; his . U fixing to be u band whos also of fe A billion fern leep (bite, t Thoi 1 A so lu n ntt i The Umli; bis n )Mhe bitted tf fol t att Jtlre Ufte Suxbi ks. ha hi is J m Inder ne si Hu Wp i Iffhic k d hd b 'pita; to ti Poan I TrS ' ' h; Bet JDilCd bi . ,, nun-- - d: bilst la ca M KWd Dent i Wh let yonlook 'Tcrt sp getUng so yoa twenty - one oin "F sine r A . president, w t hero-- wts Urlty. R liters ; In 1935 the produc- lion had risen to muixj.uuu liters, j (A liter Is a little over a quart) In sshes nine years the German use of un- Kho.1 fermented fruit beverages has mul- for the i r br lick Well, every Pve always vitK":; :uAd. , lady for a hclpmitk ng lad c had see what she other side. 00f i bees r reqiticsta. wP,rouJ . k,Gs y profession. well, sitting on Rhine And the Moselle, is producing and using at w tiplied over SO times. E'ghty per cent of the total production Is sweet cider, 12 per cent grapejulce, and the remaining 8 per cent Is made up of miscellaneous berry and other fruit juices. be qu )our It MU, I , i Gart Jid sh Whi Tattoo theatrical TNA 1 one of the most P trated tattooed lAdWjSIb: Germans Drinking More 8.000.000 latter jd not t Ef klled . turkey." The method, says the author of the report, results In a minimum saving of a penny a day per person in his family. ever-increasi- all e tolled Mow Acting for tbo lot, on tbli OUT hereup the first mlax ture in which Te Scribe bis hil real chance to give bis ill "Ererjwf pictures to be calledWins the F Old Man" that Is, it ducers change their minds custotsiff. Is as last minute, e it "The Bollo Bojt . . fall-flavore- d amounts of unfermented fruit beverages. ToUl production of these products In 1929 ws only seen da In cu Whe ns I real Igloo or something. None of us seemed to we were .shooting scene! M fl erybody Is as tired rock , , to have Is, they wont to sleep. The head eami on a rest cure 8000s 0 . ,.- -4 tors wife Just telephoned worried- . A little bit bio keeps hearing brass white nd tried to stop rnniwy wasnt there. , a llg gmp. bom re-tltl- Using-mutton Toast" as A start--' er over the protestations of his wife, Mr. Dufton obtained a roast 'delicious beyond all expectation." A cheap boiling fowl, he reports, after 15 hoars of the same treatment "was found to be as tender as chicken and as as ucksk these will live while men md fe llsh and speak It May that I balm to his passing soull f The discovery, according to A. F. Dufton, U the use of low temperatures over long periods of time for the cooking of large cheap cuts of meats such as beef or mutton. Whereas the recommended temperature for roasting meat Is from 800 to 600 degrees Fahrenheit, says Hr. Dufton, the discovery Is to cook the meat for some 15 hoars t a temperature of but 212 degrees. Miss lancet A things; shunned described UnermentedBeverage3 ( home In Sussex. Gracious h i hospitality, he nevertheless nii ready showing signs of the su' LONDON. What the author calls a new technique in cookery with .a potential saving of $350,000,000 a year to hers constantly whats vmdi Temperature, Long Time Boasting Urged in British Cooking Tests U I World-ProbleB-Sol- somebody lf housewives J ft les. Man-carry-I- British ntfefei 4JR the given frequency using so that when it la scattered by the upper air and picked up by large mirrors it can be recognized by tuning the observing Instruments. From what happens to the light In the upper airs greatest unknown region will come the answer to some questions that science is eagerly taking. Will Probe .Unfamiliar Strata. How the thinning airs density varies with height some SO miles above the stratosphere, In the regions known as the "ozonosphere" and the "altotroposphere," will become known. This is Important basic information now lacking. The research team that has taken the first steps toward conquest of the region between where the stratosphere leaves off and the aorora begins to be born, consists of Dr. M. A. Tuve and Dr. E. A. Johnson of the Carnegie Institution of Washington and Dr. Oliver R. Wnlf of the United States Department of Agriculture. So far tests have been confined to an artificial light In the laboratory bnt field tests are being organized. probably with the aid of Urge army - type searchlights of Just one large great brilliance. searchlight Is expected to furnish enough light for the experiment Expect Other Solutions. Once the delicate Instruments are put Into use analyzing the scattered "fingerprinted" light gathered by the mirror, the scientists expect to solve other numerous problems, connected With water vapor, turbulence, winds and dust, as well as the chemical state of the rarefied atmosphers that allows U to shine with fluorescent light at times. In no other way can science adequately probe the region 20 to 50 miles above the earth, balloons "highest up U the 14 miles of the recent stratosphere flight. At about 60 miles above the earth there U fonnd the base of the auroral displays and the first of the Ionized or electrified Uyers that reflect radio waves The region between stratosphere and the altostratosphere,' which begins at about 60 miles can be probed with no means so far suggested except the modulated light. "light-choppe- et h bont BERLIN. Germany, home her to fan?Quswmea ..oL.Uie naV ultureThmerliies" " u.lVRIGLEYS i. ripped, lands developed sod. I WIPK 1 Tx I possible challenge of plow drouth-scourge- BRONC PEELER st a rupted a This PLANT suggestion is offered by Prof. Paul B. Sears, )Otanist of the University of Low Oklahoma, as answer to weeds had te tutions department of terrestrial magnetism and the United States Department of Agriculture' bureau of chemistry and soils. Searchlights will be used to shoot light Into the night sky, light that Is "fingerprinted" !'-y- ' -- h. connected with the Carnegie Insti- NEW YORK. r m some .ways n,,; worshiped and a monsfrou's beyond the reach of balloons, some 20 to 50 miles above the earth, has been developed by three Washington physicists Glass Mattresses Will Soon Appear Novelties Are Shown at Chemical Exposition MESCAL IKE was a st7an7erace WASHINGTON. NnfW while one of ministry, but of them to f( c miyb . if gj ? ; Wsf P' ft for 1 th w- - - hge Vea i. g, Jf th pl kiad, tally ? hi Vrt, 11, - liow ,PAk IRV1" As |