Ecorse Courier Lincoln Park Edition River Rouge Journal
PAGE TWO
THE WYANDOTTE NEWS-HERALD
PAGE TWO
WYANDOTTE MEN AT
45TH INTERNATIONAL
YBCA CONVENTION
A trio of Wyandotte Y.M.CA.
officials are attending the 45th In
ternational Convention of the
Young Men’s Christian Associations
of the United States and Canada
at Atlantic City, N. J. The three
are Wilfred P. Newell, executive
secretary of the Wyandotte ‘Y’;
L4ny Egland, president of the
Phalanx club and Ray Hunter, Jr.,
treasurer.
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Shoppe
Fhon« 0024 J 1 95 Oak Street
ARMSTRONG’S WYANDOTTE'S finest store for men
BIDDLE.AT OAK
A statement on the shortages
When merchandise is short, tempers are likely to be short too. But
not one is going to huff and growl at you when you shop for nationally
known brands of men’s wear here.
W T hether or not they have your needs in stock . . . whether or not
you buy . . . you*ll receive an unhurried, friendly reception.
While the supply of several items still isn’t back to normal, we are
trying in every way we know to get the goods you want ... so, if it’s not
on the racks when you come in, be patient and try again later.
Another thing you can count on at Armstrong’s is dependable qual
ity ... for it is the home of such nationally famous brands as:
oil *foir" Varsity-Town Suits
JAYS ° N SHIRTS
SUPERBA TIES
Excello Shirts
S e
ARROW SHIRTS
K uppe „. . o^e**'*
Sl ">* ond Coots Revere Sweater*
"EXCLUSIVE BUT NOT EXPENSIVE"
F. ARMSTRONG & CO.
BIDDLE at OAK
Wyandotte
THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1946
Trenton Sets
Poppy Sale Date
May 23, 24 and 25 have been set
as the dates for Trenton’s annual
Buddy Poppy sales, according to
Henry Vickery, commander Tren
ton Post 1888. VFW.
Richard Oibbs, recently returned
Army captain, and his father,
Charles N. Gibbs, assistant Tren
ton postmaster and World War I
veteran, will be co-chairmen of the
drive.
diamond tiny of
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• WYANDOTTE •
Electron Tube Nothing More Than Glass Bottle, Tin Can
And Piece Os Window Screen Engineer Tells Rotary
A glass bottle, a tin can, a bent
hairpin, and a piece of window
screen are about all there Is to
electrons, members of the Wyan
dotte Rotary Club were told at
luncheon Tuesday.
Translating the much publicised
science into terms easily under
standable to the layman, Gordon
Volkenant, Coordinator of New
Products Research for the Minne
apolis-Honeywell Regulator Com
pany, explained and demonstrated
"that electronics offers a method
of doing in a simple manner —a
very simple manner things that
otherwise would be difficult, or
often impossible.**
Speaking from a table crowded
with small and large tubes, sirens
that blew when anybody approach
ed them, whirling gyroscopes, a
bombsight and a model airplane,
Volkenant told club members how
electronics played a hitherto un
publicized, although important part
in the United Nation’s bombing
program.
AUTOPILOT BEGAN
WITH THERMOSTAT
The electronic Autopilot, which
his company developed for all pre
cision bombing aircraft, had its be
ginnings In a thermostat, he ex
plained, while "through the over
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•Recently discharged from the
U S. Navy, Dr. J. P. Schultz hag
resumed his dental practice at 105 it
West Jefferson, River Rouge.
An alumnus of Roosevelt high
school, Dr. Schultz was graduated
from the University of Detroit,
Back to Dentistry
Dr. J. F. Scholia
cast bombing,’* radar, automatic
engine control and many of the
other “amazing” w-eapons of vic
tory were nothing more than spe
cialized variations of oontrol devices
developed by industry long before
Pearl Harbor.
Between Pearl Harbor and V-J
Day, Minneapolis-Honeywell com
pleted 441 separate development
piojects for the Air Poroes, he
said; most of these were electronic.
FROM FLY POWER TO
ELEPHANT POWER
Speaking well over his allotted
time at the insistence of his audi
ence, the young engineer contin
ually stressed the simplicity of the
new science and criticized those
who attempt to surround the elec
tron with an aurora of mystery.
"The science of electronics began
about 30 years ago,” he continued,
"when someone became curious to
know Just what happens to elec
tric light bulbs as they age and
burn out. Why does the ins 1 ’e '
the bulb blacken with age?” he
asked, and then explainer that as
the little tungsten filament wiihW
the bulb disintegrates it throws off
tiny particles that form the black
ening. "Each particle is potent with
a millionth of a fly power of ener
Dental school In 1935 and practiced
in the Reno building, River Rouge,
until he was commissioned as a
dental officer in the Navy Dental
Corps in 1943.
A Lieutenant (senior grade) Dr.
Schultz served at Great Lakes as
an oral surgeon and dental photog
rapher until December 1944. He re
ceived orders at the end of that
year to the attack transport, U.S.S.
Thomas Jefferson, as senior dental
officer and combat photographer.
The Wyandotte dentist served at
Pearl Harbor, Guadalcanal, Tulagl,
Bonika, Manus, Ulithi, Eniwetok,
Guam, Saipan. The Jefferson was
one of the first ships to land Ma
rine troops on Okinawa on L Day,
April 1, 1945.
He wears the American theatre
and Asiatic Pacific theatre ribbon
with one battle star and expert
rifle and pistol awards.
Married to the former Virginia
Borthwick of Redford, he lives with
his wife and two-year-old son,
Richard, at 112 Emmons boulevard,
Wyandotte.
Penn Salt Head
Commends Fire
Department Work
Commending the Wyandotte Pire
Department for their work during
the recent Werner G. Smith ex
plosion, W. F. Mitchell, superin
tendent, Pennsylvania Salt Manu
facturing Company, wrote to Fire
Chief Gustav Anselm:
“We wish to express our most
sincere appreciation for the prompt
response to the fire alarm as a
result of the fire in the buildings
occupied by the Werner G. Smith
company on the evening of Febru
ary 28, 1946.
“We are confident that the dam
age, which was serious, would have
been much greater if your depart
ment had not given us such excel
lent and prompt cooperation."
-And Thai's a Lot of Coffee
It would take you 275 years, at
the rate of three cups a day, to
drink all th coffee that was served
last year at the Michigan Central
USO Travelers Aid Lounge. Annual
statistics of this Community Fund
supported agency also reveal that
volunteers at the Michigan Central
Lounge gave a total of 18 years of
service during the past year.
gy capable of developing into one
elephant power,” Volkenant con
tinued, and, “each tiny particle or
ion carries with it a charge of elec
tricity—hence the term electron—
which means simply a charged ion
0! metal ”
AUTOPILOT DEVELOPED
IN THREE DAYS
The Autopilot, he said, was de
veloped to transform a bomber into
a "steady platform.” Through its
myriads of electronic circuits it is
capable of making more than 300
flight corrections a minute, or more
than five a second. It was respon
sible for the saving of more than
10,000 lives and 1,000 airplanes In
the Eighth Air Force alone. These
planes were safely returned to their
bases after manual controls had
been damaged or completely shot
away. The first model of the Auto
pilot, he continued, was developed
in three days and delivered to the
Army in a shoebox. He was quick
to point out, however, that the pro
duction model Autopilot was a pre
cision instrument far different
from the original version which
wvas installed on a Flying Fortress
about six motnhs before Pearl Har
bor.
JUST ANOTHER WORD
FOR CONTROL
Electronics is just another word
for control, the scientist who has
studied in 13 countries in Europe
as well as at American universities,
stated. "Automatic controls are
where my company lives—we make
more than 3,000 of them. And to
day the circuits of the Autopilot,
the blind bombing devices and some
of the other weapons we made for
the armed services are being modi
fied for peacetime living.
"You never know where you’re
going to end up in our business,’’
he concluded. “We were asked by
the Army to develop a gasoline
gauge for the B-29 program. It
was quite a problem, but we solved
it with electrons and came out with
a gauge that reads within two per
cent accuracy as compared with a
15 per cent error in the best of all
previous gauges. The funny thing
about that gauge, however, is that
We have already found about ten
different industrial uses for it. Just
for example, people in the grain
industry have told us they would
like one version of the gauge to
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measure the moisture content of
wheat.”
“A-AH- YES... I SEE YOU ARE PLANNING
TO INSTALL GAS HEAT IN YOUR HOME”
W».T
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NOW IS THE TIME TO INSTALL A GAS BURNER
IN YOUR PRESENT COAL FURNACE
ONE DAY
INSTALLATION
Trained specialists can in
stall a Gas Conversion Unit
in your present coal furnace
in ONE DAY. The Hayes
Company fully guarantees
installation and operation of
its products.
Hayes Furnace Cos.
“THE SAFEST NAME IN GAS HEAT”
1728 EUREKA WYANDOTTE 1540
The Trenton Junior Chamber of
Commerce will hold its first In a
series of lectures April 25, Don Ro
per, progTam chairman, announced.
The lectures, which will con
tinue throughout the year, will be
held in the Slocum Truax high
school.
Completely
Automatic
Term a At Low
At $7.33 Per Mo.
No Down
Payment
Dr. Charles L. Smerling, River
side drive, Trenton, with offices in
Wyandotte, returned from Cleve
land where he attended a post
graduate course In advanced chir
opody, sponsored by the Ohio Chir
opodist association.
And if Madam's prediction is cor
rect, this young housewife will en
joy all the comforts of modern gas
heating.
But don't consult a fortune teller
if you're planning to have a gas
heating unit installed in your fur
nace ... Os course, you’ll want to
make sure you're getting reliable
and efficient installation, but it
doesn't take a seer to tell you the
safest and surest way of converting
your furnace is to call 1540.
The Hayes Furnace Company is
at your service, ready to put an end
to your home-heating worries w r ith
the latest laboratory-tested gas
heating developments available.
ONE YEAR
FREE
SERVICE
by our trained servicemen.
The Hayes Company, oldest
all-type heating concern in
Wyandotte, invites your in
spection of its services.
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