T H E -MI-GlIGAN DAILY I New 'Fog Plow' Developed From CheapChemical M.I.T. Chemists Measure S iz e s Of Particles In Developing Process Is Movable Or Fixed Makes Channel in Cloud To Help Airplanes In Making SafeLandings By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE (Associated Press Science Editor) CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Aug. 8.--( P) -The new "fog plow" of the Mass- achusetts Institute of Technology, which does the same thing to fog that a snow plow does to snow, came from discovering what fog is made of. - It is another case of science taking something everyone thought -he knew all about, and putting its measuring rod to work to reveal tiny differences that can now be used for. practical re- lief The fog plow clears a path its own height and width - which is merely a tunnel in the mist. But it has a flex- ibility which .can put these bores to work in restricted areas. Unlike the snow plow, it can move in the air as well as on the ground. Or it can stand still and cut just as effectively while the rolling fog furnishes the motion. Like A Waterfall The fog plow is a spray tumbling in a sheet like a waterfall. The spray is a common, inexpensive chemical, the name of which is an official sec- ret. In falling, this sprayaturns the water particles, which are the fog, into rain, clearing them almost com- pletely out of the air. The effectiveness of the chemical spray grows out of years of study of fog by Henry G. Houghton, Jr., and his associates. He made the first meas- urements of the size of fog particles. The result was somewhat of a sur- prise. It had been believed that fog drops were rather uniform. Actually, they ranged from little things no longer than a wave-length of light, so small that 25,000 of them could be laid side by side in one inch, to droplets 20 times larger. It ap- peared also that these fog drops never formed except when the air was filled with material particles on which the moisture could gatfher For sea fogs the invisible salt tossed into the air from waves furnishes these nuclei. 'Reverses' Process With this picture of the mechanism of a fog, Houghton set out to find some sort of particle which would reverse the process -that is, knock the water' off its hard nucleus, or weight it enough to drop to the ground. It turned out that this could be done, if the attacking particles were small. They had to be very tiny, somewhere near the dimensions of the fog par- ticles. They were produced by nozzles set in pairs, shooting their sprays di- rectly at each other. On the first outdoor test in real1 fog a remarkable fact developed --1 the length of time that the tunnel in the mist remained clear before the fog began to boil in from its top and sides. This channel gave clear; vision easily for half a mile. Sees Many Possibilities The first fog plow was rigid, 30 feet high and 100 wide. Greater depth might come from sprays higher above the ground. Special planes could carry sprays to clear corridors leading into an airport. Radio beacons might guide] incoming planes to the corridor en- trances.1 For possible uses of the motionless fog plow, where the fog rolls past, it} is pointed out that along the sea' coasts fogs generally come from a fixed direction, so that tunnels in the mist would be likely to lie always in the same place. Chicago Teachers Will Get Back Pay CHICAGO, Aug. 8. -(/P) - With Chicago school teachers assured $22,- 500,000 in back salaries, Jesse H. Jones, chairman of the RFC, today selected as his next object the straightening of the affairs of the closed First National Bank of Detroit. Jones, who closed the loan for the school teachers, announced Tuesday night that he planned to set up an economical liquidating corporation for the bank along the lines of the model plan approved last Saturday for the Guardian National Bank of Com- merce at Detroit. Jonessaid an application for a $10,- 000,000 loan may be approved this week, although the amount may be pared down to $72,000,000, a figure tentatively approved by the RFC. He added, however, that appraisers may recommend the full amount. Attractive, All-White TAILORED GOWNS Many Massacred As Arabs Fight Jews In Algeria Johnson Seeks To Adjust NRA To Enforcement Code-Making Is Completed1 So Administrator Must' Make Industry Comply WASHINGTON, Aug. 8. - ( ) - Hugh S. Johnson returned to a clut- tered desk today to steer NRA into its second era. Now that code-making is virtually finished, the recovery unit enters the uncharted seas of compliance. New set-ups must be manned to see that industry lives up to its covenants. Problems galore faced Johnson, just back from a "vacation" mostly spent in seeking to get employers and strik- ers to agree. Topping all the problems was the question of just what NRA wvill be like ini the future, an issue that the President and Congress must decide. Johnson, who wants to step out when President Roosevelt feels he can be spared, has suggested a commis- sion to succeed him. Lifts Code in Small Towns The NRA formally lifted Tuesday night much of the control over trade in towns of 2,500 or less. It designated small-town employers in 15 retail trades and services as coming under President Roosevelt's order lifting code obligations from certain little businesses. Only child labor provisions and, in certain cases, fair trade provisions were retained. Price fixing was tossed out. The trades affected: barber shops, motor vehicle storage and parking, bowling and billiards, cleaning and dyeing, laundries, shoe rebuilding, hotels, baking industry (insofar as sale of bakers products at retail is covered thereby), retail food and gro- cery, retail trade (including retail drug and booksellers), real estate brokerage, restaurants and confec- tioners' stores. When Johnson returned, a new crea- tion of NRA began its functions. The industrial appeals board summoned complaintsaagainst NRA to a forum designed to protect the "little fellow." It was created by Johnson after sharp criticism of monopoly by Clarence Darrow's board. Four Problems Pressing Where Darrow's outfit was inde- pendent, the new appeals board re- ports to Johnson. The members, are Amos J. Peaslee, chairman: Monsig- nor John A. Ryan, and John S. Clem- ent. Pressing for decisions by Johnson were these problems: The Harriman hosiery mills case. NRA's policy toward L. Grief & Brother, Inc., Baltimore clothing Seeks Yacht Cup varP 4Prv;V0Q. -Associated Press Photo At least 100 persons were massacred in Constantine, Algeria, as savage fighting broke out between Arabs and Jews. Martial law was declared in the city and in the nearby port of Philippeville in an attempt to halt the religious war. A general view of Constantine is shown above, and at left is a street scene in a native quarter where the massacre took place. There were reports that fighting had spread to towns nearby. Long Is Premiere Danseuse In New Orleans' Musical Comedy NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 8. - (k) -I John Law put this city on the map. "Partial martial" law put it in the headlines two centuries later as the "armies" of Senator Huey P. Long and Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley scowled down gunbarrels at each other. New Orleans was a little known village of 500 inhabitants in 1722 when John Law, the Scottish econo- mist, made it the headquarters of his French colonial company. Now it is the scene of a political pageant in which these are the prin- cipal participants: Huey P. Long, The "Kingfish" From hoeing corn he went to peddling books, lard, starch and potatoes, and was admitted to the bar at the age of. 19. Five years later he was railroad commissioner, and in another 10 years he was governor. He was elected to the United States senate in 1930, but stayed in the governorship long enough to see O. K. Allen replace him. A rough and tumble politician, he worn green silk pajamas to greet a gold-braided German naval com- mander. T. Semmes Walmsley, the mayor: The son of a prominent New Orleans business and society leader, he heads the "old regulars" in New Orleans democracy; When Long went to the senate, Walmsley became his political friend after years of opposition. That alliance split when the mayor's own political strength was threatened by Long domination. Walmsley was re- elected over Long's opposition. The feud was on. A big, strapping man, Walmsley threatened to punch Long's 1 nose in Washington recently. 0. K. Allen, the governor: He is a protege of the "kingfish" and fre- quently has done his bidding. Born in the same parish, he and Long have been friends for years. Allen was a state senator and later, when Long was governor; chairman of -the state highway commission which put through the program which has been one of Long's chief vote-getters. He1 is a man of few words - and his op-J ponents say even those few are dic- tated by his political chief. Gentlemen of the ensemble: The national guardsmen, who took posses- sion of the office of the registrar of voters on Allen's "partial martial" law order issued from Long's hotel suite; the city police, who are sta- tioned in City hall across the street, on Walmsley's orders. Both sides have machine guns. While the basic issue is political supremacy in New Orleans, an act ( passed by the state legislature un- der Long's urging was responsible for the climax. It was designed to strip Walmsley of his power over the New Orleans police department by the es- tablishment of a police board. City officials obtained a temporary injunc- tion to prevent its functioning. Charge And Counter-Charge Then the troops seized registration1 books containing the names of voters! qualified to cast ballots in the con-1 gressional primary in September. Long charged Walmsley's faction with distorting the records, and the mayor said Long was trying "through his political machine and the governor,i to dominate and control and influence1 illegally the congressional primaries' That issue arises from thefact that Long and Walmsley are supporting rival candidates for congressional nominations. Another dispute centers around the city board of tax assessors, to which Allen recently appointed two mem- bers. Walmsley refused to recognize them. So the "kingfish" named his own board, and both boards are set- ting up their offices. Tomatoes And Potatoes Grown On Same Plant Betty Comptonm Fiishes First British Movie Mrs. Jimmy Walker Feels No Urge To Return To Hollywood LONDON, Aug. 8. - (1P) -Betty Compton, comely wife of Squire Jim- my Walker of Dorking, Surrey, has I completed her first starring role in a British movie and she "loves it." But she has no ambition to try her hand in Hollywood. i "It was grand fun and I enjoyed every minute I was at the Teddington Will Be Today In Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA Aug. 8.-(A)- Funeral services will be held Thursday for William Scott Vare, who trod the hardd load from truck farm obscurity A }'k y } ,to the door of the United States Sen- ate, and joined in death the two brothers he succeeded as chieftain of the family's powerful political dynasty :'.in Philadelphia. Interment will be in the family mausoleum at Laurel Hill cemetery. Although new leaders direct the or- ganization he built up, many of his followers are still in office. His death leaves Philadelphia without a mem- ber of the family at the helm of its political affairs for the first time in four decades. Republican leaders discussed the availability of United States Senator David A. Reed as Vare's successor on the Republican national committee. It was believed Reed would be -Asociated Pres Photo chosen if he would accept. United States Senator James J. Taking up the quest where Sir' Davis, who finally succeeded to the Thomas Lipton left off, T. 0. M. Sop- seat Vare sought so long, eulogized with (above), British manufacturer, the Philadelphian leader as "a chain- hopes to capture the America's cup pion of helpful social legislation." this year with his, yacht Endeavour. Sheriff Richard Weglein, Phila- delphia, the last person to confer with 'Leath r cs' ill Vare politically said Vare had planned a comeback. Vare's parting remarks caiafto him July 22, Weglein said, were: Leave Ha iii; First "The Republican organization is my life. It has been my life for 40 years. IMe In 19 Years I can't give it up now." WASHINGTON, Aug. 8.- ( Charge Murder In The marines are coming home from e Haiti next week, closing the book of akO a+ e ioi n American intervention in Latin Amer- ica. I NORMAN, Oka, Aug.8.-()- When the American flag is hauled Neal Myers, 21-year-old University of down at the barracks in Port Au Oklahoma student, must stand a dis- Prince Aug. 15 and the "Devil Dogs" trict court trial on a charge of mur- embark for home, it will signal the dering Marian Mills, former campus liquidation of another -of the war- beauty queen. time tasks that Uncle Sam shouldered At the request of defense attorneys, and it will underscore America's "good Myers was bound over at the close of neighbor" policy. a preliminary hearing Tuesday on the Haiti regains full sovereignty after specific charge of the use of an in- 19 years. The evacuation is being strument in an attempted abortion. completed two months ahead of The body of the 19-year-old girl schedule as the result of President was found July 10 in the home of Mrs. Roosevelt's visit to the island republic Hazel Brown, middle-aged, cook. My- in July. ers fled after calling a physician to The 1marine occupation which be- the house and for three weeks eluded gan July 28, 1915, grew out of whole- officers. He surrendered last week. sale disorder on the island, and the Chief witnesses at the hearing be- war-time fear that a European power sides Mrs. Brown were physicians who would secure a coaling base there testified the girl's death was the re- within striking distance of the United sut of shock following an attempted States. _ _abortion. Erlanson Will Discuss SO IT CAN'T BE SPOTTED Anthropology The spotted flounder, which lives Of Indians near the sandy bottom of haliow The botany and anthropology of seas, can change color to resemble southern India will be discussed in an this sand when danger threatens, illustrated lecture by Dr. Eileen W. Erlanson at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in room 2003, Natural Science building. Dr. Erlanson, a research fellow in THEY'RE PEAKED ON TOP- the Botanical Gardens, has just re- VERY SHALLOW-YET turned from a year of research and THEY FIT THE HEAD travel in Travancore and Malabar. LIKE A GLOVE I While in India she was honorary pro- fessor of Botany at the College of1_ Science of His Highness the Mahara- This NewFall Sty I ja of Travancore at Trivandum. TyP E W R I T I N G isa RevelationI MIMEOGRAPHING tsh. our om shop 'bYcfetent qera ttMRRa Lbo ALL MAKES { Fra {>F ,IN P111"EINS OFF - i Sheaf fers - Moores 4~ 'Y rmansy uip yourself with one is. A fountain pen is f n in your accessories i ~This IS. a r e a l 11 dent, teacher, COaC h"swnk tylan the larger cities that we feelcertain every smart girl in our $3,95town wili want one. So we have a large selection tomorrow in about a dozen differ- ST. PAUL, Aug. 8. -(P) - Just for diversion, Fred Rohner of the Uni- versity of Minnesota farm school did a little experimenting - and the re- sult is tomatoes and potatoes grow- ing on the same plant. In April he grafted a section of a tomato plant on a stalk - just above, the ground - of a potato plant which had been started in a greenhouse. When the growing parts of the tomato and the root of the potato hadf effected a union, Rohner removed the) plants and set them outdoors. When I he "harvested" the plant, it was well filled with tomatoes above the ground and had a fair-sized potato under- ground. TO SEE WHERE IT'S BEEN? The cornetfish, which has a mouth shaped like a trumpet, can swim backward as well as forward. studio," declared the wife of New manufacturers. York's former mayor. "But Jimmy Plans drafted in his absence for and I love our life in England too revamping NRA's structure for com- much to go to Hollywood or anywhere pliance work. else." Mopping up all code making by Miss Compton's first full-length Aug. 10, the "deadline." film originally was titled "The Rich- Labor's right to bargain collectively est Girl in the World," but the studio was the Harriman issue. In the Grief wise men have shortened it to "Too case, the men's clothing code accused Many Millions." the firm of failing to respect code No one around the studio seems wage requirements. Labor demands quite certain whether the film will be withdrawal of their Blue Eagles. exhibited in America. They will try FINANCIAL NOTE it out on the British public first, and PHILADELPHIA AuO8T( ) if it goes over big Miss Compton , g. - - - probably will be offered a contract. There's gold in them thar subways. She would like that. Samuel G. Gardon, associate curator of mineralogy at the Academy of Natural Sciences, found it in clay Federal Funds To being excavated in the"shadow of city Aid Iowa Students hall. But it isn't enough to get excited j about, he says - maybe three cents' worth to a cubic foot of soil. IOWA CITY, Ia., Aug. 8. -- (P) - Federal funds have come forward to permit some 500 students who could not otherwise continue their educa- tion to enroll at the University of ENT IRE STOCK Iowa here at the opening of the fall term. Eugene A. Gilmore, president, said the money is being provided by the federal emergency relief administra- tion and will be distributed on the FONA basis of employment - on an average of $15 monthly to each student en- " rolled. The jobs available will include4 0 everything from clerical, stenographic and laboratory and research tasks to odd jobs entailing manual labor on the campus._ _ Parkers - Wr - HY Wahs- the Summer Season s You Did at the Start Before you leave, eqi NS-SHOPPE is offering of these Real Bargain ER FROCKS a most valuable iterr ne Price whether you are a stu r95 or business man. (Values to $19.75) ( FOR 0 AN ALL-DAY OUTING... r. There's I1 w ---- - - ----- You Can't Finish Looking As Fresh A when THE COLLI All' SUMMI at O 7^ ...... .L. L --Il III