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FRIDAY, L.._..iBER 28, 1949,
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£ and the New Year be
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{il Best wishes for a very merry {)
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" SN happy and. prosperovs New Year,
FIELDS MANUFACTURING (0.
AND EMPLOYEES
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AND EMPLOTYEES.
‘Suap” Planned For Washing Machines
WASHINGTON— (NEA) — A
noise you can't hear may soon be
doing the family wash without
soap or detergents.
The same “soundless sound”
also will be homogenizing milk
(the kind you drink) and blend
ing cold cream (the kind women
put on their faces). :
That is the prediction, in audi
ble tones, of Stanley F. Reed, di
rector of the Reed Research lab
oratories in Washington, who says
that “practical, every-day use of
‘soundless sound’ is now simply a
matter of adapting to commercial
mass productior the results we
are getting in the laboratory.”
By “soundless sound,” he means
the sound frequencies too high
for the human ear to hear. Sound
can readily be turned into power,
and in the ultrasonic or soundiess
range it’'s equal to several thou
sand times th.e force of gravity.
*
Up to now, the high cost of the
electric power it takes to make
“soundless sound” has Kkept its
possibilities in the dream stage,
but Reed researches claim
they’'ve found a method that's
seven and a half times cheaper
than any other.
The trick, Reed believes, is to
make the fluid used in a specific
operation (such as the water in
the wasing machine) take the
place of most of the electric pow
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CRANE’S |
Restaurant |
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Employees
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
er ordinarily wvsed.
This is accomplished by what
he calls a “vortex system.” It
shoots the fluid, jet fashion,
against a reed or dianhragm and
generates enormous amounts of
sound energy. The energy of this
noiseless noise does the work.
In the Reed laboratories right
now, they’re doing laundry with
a washing machine that operates
with ordinary cold tap water and
nothing else. No soap, no wringer,
no drier, and no heater.
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In industry, Reed expects to
produce solutions of oil and water
that won’t separate, blend beauty
preparations, cut the cost of ho
mogenizing milk by 75 per cent,
lower the cost of making paper,
apd do all kinds of industrial
cieaning jobs.
Reed’s interest in wultra high
things also has prompted him to
invent a cafeteria tray that will
keep the sizzle in steaks and the
steam in coffee for at least 20
minutes after you finish arguing
with the cashier and start hunting
for a table.
It works with ultra high fre
quencies just below those used in
radar. When the compartmented
tray is slid down the counter to
the cashier’s desk, it contacts an
electronic heater which fires up
the hot food sections of the tray.
Like the noise-you-can’t-hear
that washes clothes, this is heat
you-can’t-feel unless you stick
your thumb in the soup. The bot
tom and sides of the tray remain
at room temperature, and your
ice cream won’t melt unless you
get it in the wrong compartment.
1
Sam Needs
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A New Home |
For Museum |
CHICAGO — (NEA) -— Samuel |
Bornstein’s museum—so,ooo itemsl
ranging from a dozen shrunken
human heads to the tusk of a long= |
dead . mastodon—is looking for a
home.
The 57-year-old tailor has been
collecting odds and ends like that
for years. Whenever he gets to-|
gether a big enough kitty, he takes
off for some place like Egypt orl
the South Seas, picking up what
ever strikes his fancy as he goes.
But now the collection has no
place to live. From 1933 to 1944
it was housed in Chicago’s Jewish |
People’s Institute, but, during the
war, he had to remove his treas- |
ures because the Institute needed
the space. |
Most of Bornstein’s prizes are
now gathering dust in a storage
| warehouse, although he keeps
lsome of his best-loved items in
his apartment. |
3** # :
What he would like most would
be a small museum in his neigh
borhood, available to the neighbor
hood youngsters.
“Many children don’t visit mu
seums often enough,” he says.
“Branch libraries are an example
of the need of an outlying museum.
If children had to go downtown to
the library many of them would
never read a book.”
Bornstein’s collection includes
such varied items as birds and
eggs, nests, plant fossils, insects,
fish, coral, petrified wood, meteor
ites sea horses octopi, scarabs,
beads, lamps, pottery dating from
3500 B.- C., butterflies, Indian
walking sticks, giant snails, 2500-
year-old coins, and a calabash bot
tle decorated with ten human jaw
bones. |
Bornstein has traveled to every
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continent and throngh the South!
Sea Islands to assemble his vast!
array of global oddities, and he
hopes to accumulate more before
long. But first he wants to take
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Lt R WL n for your
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o'; s valued friendship we wish to -
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. B 4 for A Merry Christmas
,;2;3 Tgl and A Happy New Year.' “
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# CHRISTMAS (UISHESS
Wi w, There's no time like Christmas : \ ,-_1;;;
‘ ‘, time to wish all of our friends— {' 0
' Good Cheer, Good Health and F
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ATHENS OFFICE ‘ A
EQUIPMENT CO.
o AND STAFF |
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Merry Christmas!
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>§/%AK’ of love and of giving en~ s k\\ :
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f £ \w’: T Bii \§ whose friendship we cherish
’ E&( S %« i \;\ so much, May your every wish
811i@ .| (B befulfilled this Christmas, |
&‘% i, ‘ é‘;" f ! \&; healthful and happy:
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GUEST PHOTOGRAPHERS
And . Employees Ty
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