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PAGE TWELVE
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THE CUTLASS IN FLIGHT: The * STI g —
LIGHT: The “feel of flying” is built i ]
ying” is built in. |
First Cneratonal Supersonic
Plane Mass-Produced By Navy
By DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
DALLAS, Tex.—(NEA)— Mass
production is now under way on
America's first operational, super
soniec airplane, the Navy's F7U-3
* Cutlass. =
The first of a secret but “sub
stantial” number of these strange~
looking twin-jet fighter planes
have begun coming off the line of
the huge Chance Vought factory.
Reliable reports reveal that test
models of the Cutlass have
achieved sonic cruising speeds.
This means that in normal flight
they travel about 760 miles per
hour. The same reports say that
the Cutlass has flown at speeds
from 900 to 1200 miles per hour
in level flight under test condi
tions.
Officially, however, all that Na
vy and plant officials will say is
that the plane is in the “more than
600 miles an hour” class.
The-only official announcement
of any military plane flving faster
than sound was on the Air Force's
experimental XS-1. The Pentagon
revealed that this tinv, experimen~
tal test plane broke the sonic bar
rier on Oct. 14, 1947. and after that
made numerous flights “several
hundred miles faster than the
speed of sound.”
* i *
Since then, although it is well
known that intensive research and
development has been carried on
with many types of supersonic air
planes, the services -have not ad
mitted that anvy ‘other plane has
crossed the sonic barrier.
The big significance of the Na
vy’'s decision to buy a large quan
tity of Cutlasses is that apparently
they’ve licked enough of the com
plicated problems of supersonic
flight to attempt routine opera
tions at that speed. That means the
day of commercial supersonic
flicht is not far distant.
Despite the plane’s amazing
speed, it will operate off the deck
of carriers. Secret devices slow it
down to a little more than 100
miles per hour for landing. It is
39 feet across, 40 feet long and has
a gross weight of 20,000 pounds.
This great weight will require the
beefing-up of launching devices
now used for jets on carriers.
. Details
Details of the plane’s armament
are secret, but it bristles with
many heavy caliber guns, The
newer models of the plane will be
powered with two Westinghouse
J-36 turbojet engines, each with
more than 6000 pounds of thrust.
After-burners for getting addition
al power from the exhaust gasses
of the engine give it a large part
of its exceptional speed. -
To enable the pilot to maneuver
the plane at its supersonic speeds,
its controls have hydraulic boosts.
This requires that an artificial
“feel” of flying, which simulates
the control forces of conventional
planes, be built back into the con
trol system. i
To stand the shock of super
sonic flight, there is more mag
nesium in the frame of the Cut
lass than has ever been used on
any previous aircraft. It has no
conventional tail surface. Two rud
ders on the trailing edge of the
swept-back wing control horizon
tal direction. “Ailavators,” which
are combined ailerons and eleva
tors, give it lateral control. The
wings fold up for more efficient
storing aboard the carrier.
Pilot’s position
The pilot sits far up on:the nose
of the plané in a pressurized cock
pit to protect him at high altitudes.
The position gives him far more
visibility than a pilot gets in most
fighter planes.
More than 6000 persons are now
employed at the Chance Vought
E i B i A “:
l y g. S &x.
Woman Again ~ &
e g E 0
“Cardui Insurance” . B
Melps Thousands ‘_ b
Through i
Monthly Misery SR
Why let monthly eramps and pain spoil your fun?
Just u little Cardui dally wmay bulld resistance so
that you sulfer less and less each month. Many
women use ‘Cardul insurance” and go through
their bad days without feeling any cramps at sil,
Take out scientific “Cardul insurance” today
Say Cardui (“card-you-eye’’) 10 your dealer
MONTHLY CRAMPS
CHANGE OF LIFE
Ie”
p ' 7 THE
B e
st
AETER BUICK’S
SPRING TUNE-UP
Ask for details. Complete
g
spring and summer driving.
CEQRCIA MOTORS, Inc.
’ Cor. Brol:t;::'.Llél:l.lvkln Sis.
plant here. This plant, plus the
Consolidated Aircraft Co. plant in
nearby Ft. Worth which is turning
out B-365, makes this area one of
the busiest aireraft production
centers in the U, S.
In addition to Cutlasses, Chance
Vought’s Dallas plant is turning
out a few of the famous Corsair
fighters which are being used for
close support of ground troops in
Korea.
ON THE
HOUSE
By DAVID G. BAREUTHER
AP Real Estate Editor
So many new houses were built
last year, giving so many families
their first acquaintance with the
behavior of a house, that the vil
lain of condensation succeeded in
stealing the show during the win- |
ter from that veteran trouper, de- |
hidration. I
While a million or so new homes
have been sweating out their first
winter with steamy windows and
damp walls, several million older
dwellings fairly sing “How Div I
Am,” with everv piece of. furniture
joining in the chorus. 1
Many home owners annoyed b}»';
puddles under windows a vear ago |
are mystified to find their homes
so dry this season they are wor
ried that chairs may fall apart.
Mrs. W. P. H. of Glen Allen, Va.,
sums up this experience.
“Our house is 14 months old,”
she savs “Last winter we had con
densation probl!ems, but this year
it's the reverse.” She says the.lack
of moisture in the air is “interfer
ing with breathing at night and is
causing dry skin and dry hair.”
* % % |
For comfort you have to strike a
happv medium between dry and
humid air, Both can raise hob with
your housce, your disposition and
your health.
Air that is too dry can hasten
a piano’s loss of pitch, loosen joints
of furniture, shrink lumber until
crocks open in woodwork and ‘even
parch membranes to the point of
causing what the doctors call epis
taxis—plain, ordinary nosebleed, '
The only way to combat all of
this is to evaporate enough water
to maintain the proner amount of
relative humidity indoors. This can
be tricky business.
Winter air holds so much less
moisture than summer air that
when you let it into the house and
heat it, it develops a ravenous
thirst. Heating engineers say that
when ‘the temperature is 32 de
grees outdoors you may have to
evaporate as much as a gallon of
water per day for each room to
maintain comfort. This would be
six gallons a day for an average
house,
Whether you need that much
moisture depends on how you live.
Identical houses with identical
heating plants can show a varia
tion from excessive moisure to ex
treme dryness because of the dif
ference in family habits.
& * W
Usually normal cooking, bath
ing, laundry, potted plants and
other customary containers of wa
ter provide enough moisture—and
sometimes too much. On the other
hand, a neighbor who has become
condensation conscious, opens the
windws and closes the bathroom
door after every shower, uses a
hooded ventilating fan over the
kitchen range every time the tea
kettle is on, has no growing plants
and sends out the laundry and
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GAL IN A HURRY — Barbara |
Rush is the girl Hollywood pro
ducers call on for last minute
castings after other actresses |
have been considered. As a re- |
sult, Barbara has played nothing {
but leading roles in her four
picture movie career. She’s seen f
on location for “Fort Savage,”
where co-workers labeled a spe
cial chair in her honor.
diapers—this person may have to
keep water pans on the back of
every radiator and buy electric
steam makers at the hardware
store.
You can measure the humidity
in your house with a psychrometer
or hygrometer in the same way
you measure the temperature with
a thermometer.
® % ¥
The psychrometer comprises two
thermometers, one with a wet bulb
and the other with a dry bulb. An
accompanying table lists the dry
thermometer reading up one side
and the difference in readings be-
L P s o S R
Iv's Wonderfully simple to Gef Good Valves Wi
3 /" @
! ol %
| low-Profit VollC
4 &
I's simple 28 AB.C. to get good buys at AaP, where the net profit on
2 _ur dollar is only a pennys and hundreds of items aré priced low. Easy
" 1o do it in any department, aoy day, too, because AsP offers storewide
low prices every day, instead of just 8 few “week-end specials,” and
L/ guarantees all advertised prices for & full week, even though market
L prices go Up- Want to see what this “Low-Price, Low-Profit” Policy car
i do for your pudget? Shop at AP, noting the prices that are marked on
¢ all items, a 8 well as on the shelves. Then check your purchases with your
itemized cash register ship. You'll be delighted t 0 Jiscover what & lat
you got for your money!
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AAN - -
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» - FRFESH FIRM RIDE
9
w(]ustomers
Corner
Do you find that A&P advertise
ments help you plan your week’s
shopping?
Do you find them accurate and in
formative, as they should be?
Do you find them easy to read, as
they should be?
If you have any suggestions as to
how we can make these ads more in
teresting and more helpful to you,
please let us know. Please write:
CUSTOMER RELATIONS DEPT.
A&P Food Stores
420 Lexington Ave,,New York 17, N. Y.
4 ’
W, ASP's Pantry
el
o Favorites
R =y " s You'll find these old favorites
O grand to have on hsnd ;’»ck
plenty for your pantry! '
YELLOW
Nutley Margarine . ....11. cta. 29
HERSHEY'S
Chocolate 5yrup......160.c0n 18e
Tuna Fish osgermesa o 454
Fruit Cocktail s -2 38¢
Field Peas "xurer 2427/
Marshmallows s o 19/
Cracker Jack &5 2> 9y
FOR A BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION
Ivory Soap reomcn Gy
Y
IT'S PURE-IT'S MILD
lvory soap Med. Cake 9;’
—“_.____.v-._—___—._
SAFE FOR BABY'S SKIN
Ivory Scap 1« e 14¢
FOR CLEANSING THE HANDS
Lava Soap v« cu. 10¢
Large Cake 1 3%e
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATNENS, GEORGIA
tween the dry snd wet thermome
ters across the top. The intersec
tion of the two lines gives the
moisture content of the air in rel
ative humidity.
For example, if the dry reading
shows the temperature of the
house to be 75 and the wet reading
is 55, the humidity is, only 24 per
cent, which is too low when it is
zero to 10 above outdoors.
The hygrometer registers humi
dity through the expansion and
contraction of a filament of human
hair. These instruments can acti
vate furnace humidifiers similiar
to the way thermostats operate.
The type of fuel you use has
virtually nothing to do with de
hydration, Unvented natural gas
may be an exception, creating
moisture in the air. The type of
heating plant has more bearing on
it. Warm air is usually easier to
humidify, but one large manufac
turers of warm air plants has dis
continued humidifiers because
they were so commonly over-used.
Radiators, steam or hot water,
and radiant heat usually call for
auxiliary evaporation if normal
household moisture is inadequate.
It all boils down pretty much to
an individual problem.
Dubrovnik, Yugoslavian seaport,
is a town of 18,000.
BRIGHT SAIL
Bleach Water....... .....:Guon 24¢
Green Lima Beans swkeys 0. can 170
White Corn vLibby's Cream style 303 Can 18.
Peaches 1ou: siced—veliow Cling No. 24 can 31 @
Kadota Figs rickers Label ~ . . No. 24 Can 43¢
Dry Skim Milk oo Lakes, 105, Can 39e
Pancaka MiX Aunt Jemima v +2O-oz. Pkg. 180
DOG YUMMIES - 10/
A-PENN
Notor Oil o 24¢
A-PENN
Wick Deodorizer. ... R co. suc. BBe
A-PENN
Lighter Fluid. .. . ... .coc con IQe
A-PENN
Dry C1eaner.......... .16 con 98e
Canada Revamping Forces In U. S.
Style For Unified Defense Plan
BY JAMES MONTAGNES
NEA Special Correspondent
TORONTO. —(NEA)—Canada's
armed forces are being restyled in
the U, S. pattern for joint defense
of the northern reaches of the
North American continent,
In the new $5 billion defense
program, the major share will go
for expansion of the Royal Cana=-
dian Air Force. But the budget
will boost the army and navy, too,
build a radar warning network,
create airborne units and help
supply forces for Western Eu
rope. ’
Last year, Canada’s 14,000,000
people spent about a billion dol
lars on defense preparations, in
cluding S3OO million in equipment
for Atlantic Treaty nations, The
new $5 billion program will be
spread out over three years and
amounts to 10 percent of national
income (the U. S. defense program
is 14 percent of income).
No provision has been made for
drafting men to meet the planned
increase in the armed forces. The
Tory opposition complained, be-
FRESH FIRM RIPE :
Tomatoes ..... p; py i 19¢
SELECTED NEW
Redbliss Potatoes..... 6¢
TENDER
Yellow Corn. .3 iegerars 25¢
FANCY GREEN
Lima 8ean5..........0. 17¢
FLORIDA GREEN
Bell Pepper..........n. 17¢
CALIFORNIA
Fresh Carrots .. 2 Behs, .. 19¢
NEW GREEN HARD HEAD
Cabbage............n. . 5,
FLORIDA LARGE SIZE VALENCIA
0range5............v0z. 39¢
FRESH TENDER
2 * 29¢
fore the new program was an=
nounced, that the government was
moving too slow in the face of an
emergency. But both sides skip
ped any form of conseription.
There is some feeling that Can
ada can do more by being an ar
'senal than by supplying manpow=-
‘er, Although the first Canadian
troops—a 5,000-man brigade group
—will go te Germany this spring
to become part of Eisenhower’s
Atlantic Treaty forces, a bigger
contribution will be made in
training and equipment,
Already airmen of six Western
European nations are being train
ed at Canadian airfields. Canada
has equipped one Netherlands div
ision for NATO duty, and will
equip three other European divis
ions.
As the home army is swelled
from its present 65,000 men to
115,000, all equipment will be
standardized to match that used
by the U, 8. either bought in
America or made in Canada. This
will simplify supply details in a
y 7 s
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g er ; r’ 17
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g Drawy, | #
i B PRI N ; b 74
bAkB ST * Dressed &
i :1.:,,\"',’{._}1.-,',,‘!3( _\,,- 'A 4 ‘\fi\a § & /_;
AR 37 Fadl SFI 8/ 27
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” g“' efs g {‘,“-‘l"\fih'" CadhA S ‘:fia, G
el
Aflm:bmbra(hdldl’u‘lhouolumm
subjoct to cellings ) are guaranteed—Thureday, April
Sth through Wednesday, April 11th,
Slab Bacon swokci—by the Piece, .Lb. 53e
Smoked Hams sut or shank Portion Lb. 55 e
Chuck Roast suerright peer . .Ib. 73e
Picnics toslb. Avg short Shank Smoked Lb. 4 7 e
Fresh Porgies ....... Lb. 18¢
Whiting B AN, . ot enie.. b, 25¢
Dressed 8a55..............5. 35¢
Wilson's Corn King *
Slicedßacon:49¢
el
Cornedßeef Hash srosdcast 16.02. Can 39¢
Armour’s Beef Stew..:6oos con 45¢
Swift's Corned 8eef..:20. con 43¢
Armour's Chili v Beans 16-oz. Can 3Ge
Feather-Light Jane Parker
Angel Food Ring
PR
8-Oz s&”’ b
‘.‘ - .. b \'Q*')
T
This heavenly ring is »‘( g“‘,""‘
just the thing to serve . 7
with Sparkle Gelatin,
fruit or ice cream.
JANE PARKER—EXTRA RICH
White Bread 16.02.1.01 t 15e¢ 24-oz. Lost 20e
JANE PARKER
Brown'n Serve Rolls. .1 ris 18e
JANE PARKER
Pineapple Topped Buns s in ris. 32¢
JANE PARKER
Sugared Donuts. . ... .00 i co 23¢
JANE PARKER
Dessert Shells .........curie 20e
JANE PARKER
Spanish 8ar.............150. 38e
Jane Parker—Strawberry Coconut
Layer Cake o 46¢
CORFEE—MILD AND MELLOW
EightO’Chckl-Lb.Bsu77¢3-Lb.Bu"’-“
COFFEE—RICH AND FULL-BODIED
Red Circle 11b. 50 79e 3-Ih. Bug $2.31
COFFEE—VIGOROUS AND WINEY
80kar.... 1150 81e 310 B 0 $2.37
126 Oconee
Street
unified North American defense,
Although details of military es
tablishments in the northland are
secret, a radar network is being
put in operation as fast as pos
sible, using both ground and air
support.
One phase of northland defense
is a special airborne brigade,
trained in Canada, which operates
| in conjunction with the U. S. 82nd
Airborne Division, .
The RCAF’s progranr calls for
35,000 men and 40 squadrons of 25
jet aircraft each, Of these, 11
fighter squadrons and 6,000 men
will be stationed in Europe.
Equipment will be F-86 Sabres,
U. S.-designed and built in Can
‘ada, and CF-100 Canuck twin
'engine jets, designed and built in
Canada, Both planes are now com=
ing off assembly lines near Mon
treal and Toronto.
The budget includes S%O million
for new airfields and $64.5 mil
lion to train 3,060 aircrewmen of
various western nations.
Canada’s navy, which now has
40 ships (some of them.in Korea)
and 10,000 men, will get 100 new
or rebuilt ships, and new harbor
defenses.
The streets of Hanoi, Indochina,
are said by the National Geo
graphic Society to be virtually de
serted during the noon-p. m. sies
ta period.
For thrifty ireats, get the Sparkle sexteite:
Strawberry, Raspberry, Cfierr). Orenge,
Lemon and Lime!
Spllhettl Ann Page Prepared 15}5-Ox. Can 13@
Peanut Butter 1o Page, ,12-Ox. Jar 314
s‘l‘d Mu‘tal’d Ann Page, ~ 6.0 z Jar 8o
"oney IR Page. oo o uii i s I 3 20
Grape 'Selly Ann Page, , . ,12.0 x. Glasi 22e
Ann Page-Crabapple
jel I y 12-oz. Glass 20;[
Nectar Tea........... % e 510
Nectar Tea 8ag5......16.C0unt 15¢
Our Own Tea........ .10 rie 870
Our Own Tea Bags. .. iscomt 37¢
Vanilla Wafers nubisco. 1202 Pka. 33¢
creme Patt'es Nabisco—Peanut 6%-07. 26e¢
Siepace
SECY N=
®
Dairy Delights
If you're fussy about freshness and fond of
fine values, you'll like AaP's Dairy Center
A&P-Domestic Swiss
Cheese - 55/
Limburger Cheese puin viia 1. 60¢
Mild Cheese wiw0n5in.......15. 53¢
Bleu Cheese ki caino. . . .6.0. 33¢
Parmesan Cheese xricrateason 33¢
Cream Cheese tienrna, . 300 18¢
American Cheese sordenisicearsir 837 ¢
Butter .81
AT
THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1851,
LONDON ABATES SMOKE
LONDON —(AP)— Festival of
Britain visitors in grimy Londo),
will be safe from smoke and s
from Thames tugs and steamer:
The Ministry of Fuel has arrange
to allocate 8,000 tons of Welsh an.
thracite, which is almost ‘smoke
less, for use by river tubs during
the festival period.
It has also asked factories on the
riverside or in districts cloge 1,
the South Bank of the Thames,
where the festival site is, to keep
the air clean, g
To Women With
- k :
Nagging Backache
‘When kidney function slows down, many
folks complain of nagging backache, loss o f
pep and energy, headaches and dizzinese,
Don’t suffer longer with these discom{orts
if reduced kldn:iv‘ function is getting yo,
down~—due to such common causes as stress
and strain, over-exertion or exposure t,
cold, Minor bladder irritations due to cold
or wrong diet may cause getting up nighig
or frequent passages,
Don’t neglect your kidneys if these condi.
tions bother you. Try Doan’s Pills~a mild
diuretic, Used successfully by millions for
over 50 years. Whije often otherwise caused,
it's amuinf how many times Doan’s give
happy relief from these di_ueomforu—gelp
the 15 miles of kidney tubes and filters
flush out waste. Get Doan’s Pills today !
Ann Page Sparkle Gelatin
“l € Leiveadey \
A g , Flavors /~\
\}J 3 e 190 l