The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 17, 1922, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

the wall? on fim the kitchen. ‘This copying telegra Carbonnelll, the Belgian, who Great success at telegraph pictures by @ system of re dots of biack, sane as tiny dots you sce all over | in newspapers. Gelephotography is extremely But what its stu- have in mind has spread mong the people as a vague ef an attachment by which would look into o gins and ee what the party was doing af | the ether end of the telephone | Ap far back se 1914, Professor A Korn was lecturing in Vienna the possibility of sending movies by wireless. eee ~.DM you ever see a mirage? ‘If mot, you know about them— the appearance in the sky of 8 perfect picture of some distant or mountain. one nature's ways of picturea, tech the move or objects, you iture’s original wire jem—and it’s all as as operating a camera, of radio movies That tnventors to copy nature by wireless, re stretch of the may net come But & wil come ry theater, Rght waves ® moving picture from fhe projecting machine to the sil- ‘Ver ecreen, usually about 75 fect. ‘The powerful Hertzian waves _ may extend that 75 feet to thou- a miles. A country doy was doing some th hens eggs one night. white dalle frequently. _ keep seven of them going in the air at once.” He performed that re- “Markable stant. Then he sald: “Now I am going to pitch one of 4 them into my mouth at arm's |) length, never striking my tecth Or breaking the ego.” Just as he | tohirled the ego cid Uncle Johnny, | Witting there holding hia whiskers | Out in front of him and chewing his | @ud, turned his chair over and fell. & Dey slipped a cog, hia mind 4 distracted from dust oO. A rushed to him and eatd, Ww. shall I send for the doo- Jimmy sala, “Don't touch don’t know what to do. If it will break, and tf I stand Mt will hatch."—Sen. Heflin (D) Cheaper Travel A Leoning monoplane alr yacht 1,210 miles, from Palm Beach 5 te New York, carrying pilot, me and 1,600 pounds of cargo. trip cost less than $75, in fuel and depreciation on plane. For similar accommo- the trtp by railroad would cost at least twice as much. Flying will be the cheapest form transportation within our life | times, +e i r 3 § i i ” ~ ~ BE a3! ; The Leré God ts a mun and a H i the Lord will giwe grace E | @nd glory; no good thing will He } wlthhold from them that walk up- | vightly—Mark: 12:23, Hi ee | Whe hath not owned, with rap- ture-smitten frame, i The power of grace, the magto of @ name? —Thomas Campden, Our government says it ts sav- | §ng $250,000,000 a year; meaning this amount is spent for something | Besides what it was once apent for One skin we would love to touch fe that of the man who walks across our newly planted lain. Best way to tmprove the postal service ts to stop mailing Dilla, The Seattle Sta By mall, ont of ety, Hee per month; & mentha, 11.50; # montha #178) yean 48.06, In the wiate of Washington. Outside ef the state, He per month, 14.40 for # montha, or $9.00 per year My carrier, city, Is the day close at hand when moving picture films will be broadcasted by wireless, enabling families to have the best movies right in their homes, on a sheet pinned to | Impossible, you say? ‘Your ancestors said the same thing about the steam raflroad, telephone, phonograph, movies, wireless and autos when these inventions were first 7) predicted by clairvoyant visionaries, ’ © Francis Jenkins has successfully made the first step toward radio movies. He thibits photographs of images, which he transmitted by wireless during his expert- ‘ments. This happened in the laboratory of the General Electric company, at Lynn, during the annual convention of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers, ‘Thirty-two years ago, Elisha Gray invented the telautograph. This instrument re- produces handwriting and drawings at a distance, electricity doing the transmitting. Maybe you have seen telephone girls in big hotels use such a device, writing an a pad before them, while the writing is simultaneously duplicated by a ma- ph apparatus was expanded into a photograph-sender tn 1906 No prediction that the dogs has ever come true. It is easy to make a monkey out of a man when you get him up a tree. Our idea of a bad insurance risk is an innocent bystander. No woman ts an old maid until she admits it. “Poker Faces’ We have ® way of saying the Japanese bi “poker faces.” Pure fiction. The French, the Germana, the Ruassians, the Ital fans, even the Americans, and, above all, the British, may have “poker faces,” but the Japaneses, never, it fe « royal straight of jus « plain bobtall flush. Word comes from Tokyo that Well, {t's more Iikely te prove a pale of pale pink deucea, It so happens that the militar fst party of Japan ts slipping. Japanese Mberals are struggling harder than ever against the me diaeval system of samural sword play, mystery and the mikado dl vinity flubdubbery, while the world at large hae definitely turned against absolutism and mil itarism, the other names for war to withdraw thelr troops from Siheria. They also desire to calm the opposition at home. Trouble tn Asia will serve the double purpose of quicting the home folks and disarming critics abroad. If necessary Japan ts prepared to stir up sufficient trouble tn Siberia to accomplish her object; but nobody able to read need be fooled. There is always danger, of course, im every international poker game. Some stranger is likely to call, Siberia may call Japan, but don’t let's be too quick to say which one started the row. And, now, having made these few remarks, let's «it back and watch the game, The transactions of stock ex- changes of cttles with a population of more than 500,000 are not to be subject to thie blue sky law, The fact that they are powerful, does not change their character, They are essentially inatitutions to en- courage gambling on a large scale, and they have been responsible for mora wrecked homes, more sut- oldes, more crimes, more dank- ruptotes, than all the petty gamd- ling houses combined.—Kep, Lon- don (8) q Bome days our rotten dall team loses and some days owr fine ball team wina, Trouble with second-hand tnfor- mation ts tt has uaually been mis- used, When they ston a treaty in Tre- land everybody ducks, Many a gorden will soon be all weeds and a yard wide, The faster a man ta, the eamer a woman catches him, and vice versa. t } GEOGRAPHIC PUZZLES { YESTERDAYS wee 1 LOLORS ~ +14 + BOY_L-%. ® COLOMBO THE SEATTLE STAR be & month. ture of U.S. revenue cutter Hydah, taken Alaskan patrol duty. “~ U. S. was going to the Thinking in Terms of a Finer City The announcement of plane to build on Fifth avenue » Fine Arts building which would Insure Beattle’s future leadership ae the fino arts headquarters of the en- tire West, calle attention to the thoughtful community planning Controlling, as it docs, o 10-ecre aren in the business heart of the city, the corporation has every incentive for constructive effort. Thie incentive leads it to study —to look ahead, to anticipate, to seek to understand the needs and aspirations ef all elements ef the city’s life Such a policy on ite part ts enlightened selfishness, of course, but of no less value to Seattle for that reason, If some broader organtzafion, tmcluding owners of all or a ma jority of Seattle property, could | enly be formed and kept stead fastly busy formulating and m= terializing ambitions, forward looking plans of similar nature for the improvement of the whole city, what an impetus our town would receivel | ‘All the turmoil of their noisy pier, | Like antelopes, before the wind, and Charm Hunting in Seattle No. 9.—Photograph by Henry Clay; Poem by Leo H. Lassen. Pic- evening before the smart craft steamed out of harbor for at Bell street dock the HO knows what lovely web of dreams is spun By ships in harbor? Perhaps they never hear Dreaming of tomorrows when they will run With tides across an open stretch of sea free! EVERY DAY wore ts PSYCHOLOGL LEARN A WORD} : LETTERS EDITOR It’s pronounced—et-teo-loj--kal, with |accent on third syllable. j | ,1t means—reiating to peychology, | jthe science of the mind, being per [haps most frequently seen as part . Blames His Trouble on Jewelers of the combination “paycholorioal | Batter The Stan jing off his starboard side, leaving moment,” that ts, the occasion when| The Nut Bros. got off a good one: the bones intact instead of in my any action or event ts most certain | “It is bad manners to dip your bread | face. to have full effect on men's minds, |! the gravy,” says Ches, | Tt comes from—Greek “psyche,”| “Yea, but It's good taste,” says soul, mind, together with the suffix | Wal | “logy,” also from the Greek, mean-| I'm going to frame that and hang jing a word, discourse, Goctrine,|{t over our family eating trough. theory or science, | About the only time I get a chance It's used like this—Dr, Bun Yat|to really enjoy my food ts when I Sen, thern Chinese lender, ex-|go fishing and lap my coffee from |pects to enter the struggle between a gaucer, annoint my b @ 1 in the Generals Chang Tso-lin and Wu Pel-| skillet and dissect my frieu trout by Fu at the psychological moment.” | taking firm hold of his tail and pull sters to rear eo they can appear in public, I have to watch my step, tho they caught me too inte to give me more than two forks at @ time and expect me to juggle them with ex pert ease. Once tn a while the wife ties « sack over my head and leads me out to @ social function, where «: Imatter of form rather than o SIX-INCH SQUARE FILE WE ate~still looking for the perfect man, but the perfect file is made in huge quantities by the_Nich- olson File Company to meet“a~ world-wide - demand. Keen cutting and precise, ‘Be sure the Name "NICHOLSO de_stamped_on the file you buy) A_FILE FOR EVERY PURPOSE NICHOLSON FILE G PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND ANAM YZNINGIESI NTIS INELYAEN Od. NY Ar w I watch her perform the mystic gyrations of polite society with secret | awe and envy, and I always fintsh/ | last on each round of the menu. | There it, all amiles, and clean |ahirt, and hot feet, and asininity, | with six forks and seven spoons and la pair of tongs and three knives and/ | four or five do-dads of unknown nig: | | nificance, and, also, a modicum of} food. I chatter gnyty, but keep a weather | leye on the wife; when she picks out | At home, with two aspiring young |the salad fork and braves the mys-(‘t 's to stand up to allow others to mound of greenery, I follow eutt; | n she setzes firmly on the proper | ade to shovel an ollve seed Into its roper tomb I tag along; when she, jtic at the first glanes, picks the right} spoon for the soup, and the next minute expertly chooses an entirely | But you can set it down as true we all should do the same as | our way; for half the joy of life depends on everybody being Two Recipes for the Most Appetizing Desserts You Ever Tasted FREE: Ask your ford Corn Starch recipes WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1922, AL etter From AIVRIDGE MANN. Mr, Marry Prices, Beattie, Washington Dear Marry: I have heard them aay you journeyed up Vencow ver way; and, having entree to « club, you went to get a bite of grub; you thought, “Altho a stranger here, I'll find a clubby etmom phere.” And after you were shown a neat, and ordered what you wished to ent, a chap with quite an English air set down tn an « chair; so, with our customs in your head, “My name ts Br amiled and sald He put his monocle in place, then calmly scrutinized your faeg your fingertips, your collerband, your shoes and your extended hand; and then, with measured voice and slow, he answered you, “Oh, ts that sor” But don't you worry; he, perhaps, was Ifke « lot of Inglivh chaps and after he has thought tt out he'll lkely pass the word abou, “I met a pleasant chap today—a clover talker, by the way.” you, and have «@ friendly word to say to strangera who may come friends. Gifferent spoon for the peas, I em 5 wardaee sautnent Storeomea i right at her heels, and finally the | have watched eminent statesmen 2 dessert comes along and ends my|fudges and clergymen making » lennon. massed attack on the beacon ang I have always contended that «| ges in camp, and J notice that 7 knife, © fork an4 @ spoon should! refrain from aticking the little fingey | natinfy any reasonable diner-out, but at right angles to the fist, that they even at home I find them slipping find @ knife and spoon handy oq extra implemenw into the game cherry ple, and that they know the whenever we have a guest, and half | proper une of @ saucer for hot coffey the time Iam caught using a brassie| Most of our fine table manneriame when I should have picked a niblick, |are invented by jewelers who contine and often I foozle entirely; never Go| ually invent new eating tmp! I make it In par to boost trade ogo ge oss Initiative Petitions Available Biitor The Star fraternal, religious ow other ergaaiy | I wish to call to the attention of | “tion. “ your readers the following initiative| Two of these sets of petitions werg petitions: filled with signatures at the port of Me. 40: Repeating the pott Sake, Resiens th, Conte ee a, I have some blank petitions at my No. 4%: Amending the injunction | home, No. 123 Weet Bertone st, one law; providing for permanent injunc | door east of the Ross Marcha It te on by jury instead of by @ Judge. | centrally located for precincts §8 ang | No. 47: Amending our present! 89. We would be pleased to have im compensation law by Increasing the | terested voters call after 6 p. m, compensation of employes injured in| leave thetr signatures, hazardous employment Hoping that some of your These changes in our state laws) will get the ures, then obtain « are Intended to be beneficial to the| tion and hustle for signatures, Wage earner, regardiess of affiliation Yours respectfully, or nonaffiliation with any labor, J. PORTERFELD, Marketing and Japs Editor The Star: the lay @4 not buy from him, tm 1 visitor, oth , tn | Stead of the Jap, especially when the bye oe ree ‘Price and article were the same. He your city, and I visited your public market, I saw beautiful displays of | no that wengen'Duy-wtthous | Veretables on Jap stands, and also on | white men's stands, I was Just look-| to any that the Indies in this section ing on, admiring the display, when| think before they buy from Japa @ white Indy made a purchase from) That's why there are eo few Jane ithe Jap stand. I also noticed that|/ here These white ladies may be the white man next to him sold the sorry some day that they ever patrond same vegetables at the same price as | ized Japa, AB, the Jap, I asked the white man why! Ignden, Waa, —_— s New Theater-Seating Plan Eiitor The Stan a asinaiates Why ¢o we have motion picture =o shows where you get up and sit down | about as continously ag the picture! iteelf, I have a remedy—or what) seems to be remedy. Mf It ts atmply this—having exft aisies and entrance aisles Say we areata. show. When we enter the foyer in : if it ts a large theater, each be marked entrance or exit, | as the case may be. We will take one! marked entrance, and the usher wil! |g show us to @ seat, as usual, except) that we will not pass in front of any- one, but will take seats that are va-| jm cant from the alstem. And they will be vacant from the aisle in for this reason—the exit aisies wil] be alter. m native with the entrance aisles, That fe to aay, when you enter an en- trance aisle you may «it to either side & of it where seats are vacant from the aisle in. The whole cycle revolves jm on this point. It is just as easy to rise and move over a seat or two as pass in front of you. I would sug: gest that there be not too many seats in a row between exit and entrance aisles, ‘This would eliminate the changing of seats too often. ORSON M. POPE, 1907 E. Madison st. and to make your I've got modern ory equipment. Ill do the fob right. Federal Shoe |= Repairing Co. | 1407 Third Are. it SUReeeEee —and see how easy these are to prepare PINEAPPLE FRITTERS VE ap MIT 2 tablespoons Kare 1 tablespoon Marcle S slices of Pineapple Leup Flour 2 tablespoons Kt; at Baki “Powser NW teaspoon Sak Sift the dry ingredients. Beat the eggs thoroughly, add the milk, Karo and Mazola, Stir the liquids into the dry ingredients. If fresh pineapple is used, ‘wash, pare, and slice thin and with apple corer , remove the centre. Dip in batter, remove with fork and fry in deep, hot Mazola. Drain on paper and dust with sugar. If canned pineapple is used it is well to cut the large slices in all and then split with sharp knife, making four fritters from one slice of pineapple, The syrup or fruit juice ia i heated and thickened with a little Kingsford's $ Corn Starch and served around the fritter. Or put Ps @ spoonful of Karo (Crystal White) over the frite, ter and sprinkle with shredded cocoanut, KINGSFORD’S CORN STARCH PUDDING scalded Milk = cup poon Salt % ugar 2 teaspoon Vanilla jespoons Kingsford's Corn Starch Chocolate melted (optional) Mix the corn starch with a little cold milk, Stir thet hot milk slowly onto the corn starch and stir over? vi peal Con Brattle water until it thickens. Cook fifteen minutes. fortolder of the new Beat the eggs slightly, add the sugar and salt. Add the corn starch mixture to the eggs, and cook, atirring constantly, one minute longer. Remove from fire, add the vanilla or melted chocolate a desired. Serve cold with cream and sugar, (Serves six persons.) negate

Other pages from this issue: