Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1924-1994, May 18, 1939, Image 2
WHO’S f * * NEWS THIS |||| WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON TU EW YORK. Radio, automo biles, airplanes, moving pic tures virtually all the other technical ten-strikes of the modern . . _ world came in Dives in Cellar, between the Brings Up Our first and second Television Set Chicago world’s fairs. About all that is brand new at the New York World’s fair is television, which took its bow with ajelecast at the inaug ural ceremonies. Unlike Britain’s garret inven tor, John Logie Baird, Allen B. Du Mont, putting his by-line on the new television set, came along through the “channels” in which promising young techni cians are grooved these days. Out of Rensselaer Polytechnic institute in 1923, he was em ployed as a lube engineer with the Westinghouse company in Bloomfield, N. J., until 1937, when he became chief engineer of the I)e Forest Radio compa ny. But, when he caught the television germ, he did just what Baird did, the only difference be ing that he holed up in a cellar instead of an attic. It was in 1931 that he quit a good Job to play a hunch. The hunch was that the cathode ray was the joker in the flickering television deck. So hq dived into his base ment, built his laboratory and stayed underground until he was ready to come up with a cathode-ray tube which is pretty nearly the works in television. In 1937, Mr. Du Mont rounded tip some capital and built a siz able two-story laboratory at Montclair, N. J., employing 42 men. By 1938, Paramount pic tures had declared itself in in a big way, and, at last accounts, Mr. Du Mont’s enterprise was virtually a subsidiary of this cor poration. That is interesting in view of the fact that, in Eng land, they already are televising events for the moving picture screen. It is indicated that the Du Mont rig may be subject to the same development. pOL. EDWARD STARLING, who confers with Albert Canning, chief constable of Scotland Yard, about guarding the British king and . ... queen on their Chameleon-Like visit here> is an Sleuth to Guard American o f British Royalty tl\e“ Dead wood Dick tradition which the British like to think is typical of this country—a long, lean, reserved, tight-lipped Kentuckian, with a sombrero, the guardian of five Presidents, camera-eyed and a crack pistol shot. He will be there when their majesties go to the White House, but he will not be conspicu ous He merges with the scenery like a chameleon. lie saved Clcmcnceau's life during the Paris peace confer ence. Guarding Woodrow Wil son, he rode in an automobile immediately behind the “Ti ger's” car. He saw an assassin level a gun. Shooting from the hip in a lightning draw, he craeked the killer's wrist. He is the one man the President has to obey, an advance man who interviews police, maitres d'hotel, transportation officials and chefs, even editing menus, and, on occa sion, speeches, if they indicate too much of a tax on the President’s receptive energies. " At 17, he was a deputy sheriff of Hopkinsville, Ky. As a spe cial agent for the railroads, he touched off his first national headlines by trapping the "Cali fornia Kid,” a desperate ma rauder who had long eluded cap ture. President Theodore Roose velt gave him special assign ments which routed him into the White House secret service de tail in 1913. In 1935, he be came head of the detail, which congress had authorized after assassination of President Mc- Kinley. He is six feet tall, gaunt and se rious, graying now, the better to fade into the crowd. ♦ lOHN R. STEELMAN, the govem- ment’s special mediator in the Appalachian soft coal dispute, was once a “blanket stiff,” riding the it di i i ci'a rods .with the Ex-Blanket Stiff hoboes to get Boils Down Our from Arkansas Labor Disputes to , the western wheat fields. There, in the post-war boom days, he earned $9 a day and invested his savings in a Henderson college A. 8., a Vanderbilt M, A. and a University of North Carolina Ph. D. Heading the government conciliation service, he smoothed out 4,231 labor dis putes, involving 1,618,409 workers, in the 1938 fiscal year. He was an Arkansas farm boy, working the southern logging camps. He is tall and dark, and friendly and easy going in manner. Released by Consolidated News Ft iturcs. WNU Service. Artificial Flies for the Nation’s Critical Anglers With the old-fashioned worm fishing becoming a thing of the past, thousands of fishermen are using various kinds of flies to attract their prey. Here workers are busy in a Freeport, Maine, factory, one of the country’s largest, turning out flies made from the feathers of bright-colored birds imported from all parts of the world. The feathers must be correct as to color, size and weight for the fish they are meant to lure. Feathers shown include peacock, ostrich, kingfisher, African jungle cock, and Mexican macaw feathers. East Side Kids Model Latest in Informal Attire What the well-dressed East Side boys and girls will wear this summer, as modeled at the annual fashion show of the New York Children’s Aid society’s children’s center in New York. Left to right: Margaret Callahan in a blue play suit and cape; May Wagner in a beach play suit; Grace Callahan in a blue sun suit; Billy Collins in a blue sun suit, and Catherine De Lorenzo in white slacks and cape. Only bit of trouble— the children didn’t want to take off the new clothes. And It Really Isn't Done With Mirrors This is the kind of fishing the not-too-energetic angler dreams about. Ilomcr Harris and his son, Bill, of Atlanta, Ga., don’t bother with hooks. And it isn’t done with mirrors. Fishermen take their boats to the lair •f a school of trout in Jackson lake, and as the fish make their quick, arching leaps out of the water, the side of the boat is tilted and the fish falls to the bottom of the boat. In two hours these men caught 18 pounds of unhooked trout, French Babies Protected From Gas Attack In the event of war and threat of gas attacks, French babies under two years of age will be protected by means of a respiratory device which is connected with the gas mask of the mother. Not strong enough to open the air vents in a regulation gas mask, they are protected by this means. The baby’s covering is made of fireproof silk. Professor Le Mee, left, invented the device. I JUNGLE STYLIST Osa Johnson, famous African ex plorer and producer of wild animal films, is shown demonstrating a high-powered elephant gun which she will carry on her next safari. Mrs. Johnson’s clothes are especial ly designed for use in the jungle. IN THE BAG Sir John Simon, England’s chan cellor of the exchequer, seems to have Britain's budget in the bag. It was no laughing matter, however, to the house of commons when he set before that body a staggering budget swollen by the cost of war nreuarations. REMEMBER . . . "It’s All In The Examination” Dr. L. N Hull, 64 Broad Street Healey Bldg, Atlanta A Spe cialist in Eye Refractions for over 30 years, and a State Board Examiner for Optometrist since 1923, leads the South In eye ex aminations. Let Dr. Huff take care of the only pair of eyes you will ever have. |T -'1 DR. L N. HUFF Above Loch Lomond Scotland’s Ben Lomond, over 3,000 feet high and covered with grass to the top, can be ascended between steamer calls, a little more than two hours going up, less com ing down. Loch Lomond, at its foot, is the largest lake in Great Britain. Bathe Before Dinner Since it is a Japanese custom to 6athe before dinner, many Japanese hotels are equipped with elaborate common bathing rooms, profusely decorated, sometimes with varie gated tiles, fountains, or aquaria set in the walls and ceilings. Greatest Jumping Mammal The greatest jumping mammal is the Jumping Mouse, Zapus hudsoni us, of North America. This little rodent, having exceptionally power ful hind legs, is able to leap 40 times its own length. The Conservatory A conservatory is a small green house or glass house usually at tached to a house. The same term is applied to a greenhouse where there is a display of foliage and flowering plants. Sweet Limes The honey usually served with breakfast rolls and coffee in Czecho slovakia has a unique fragrance: thet of the lime trees from which Czech bees get the material for their product. Resembles Pig and Elephant A tapir is a large thick-skinned mammal with the nose prolonged Into a short trunk. In appearance the animal somewhat resembles the pig and the elephant. Formation of Mammoth Cave Mammoth Cave, Kentucky, was formed while the Green river was eroding its valley, which happened in the glacial epoch—or fairly re. cently in geologic time. ‘For All Who Wish to Learn’ “For All Who Wish to Learn” Is the motto inscribed on the building occupied by the Opportunity school in Denver, Colo. Universal Languages Some of the so-called universal languages are Esperanto, Volapuk, Universala, Kosmos, Idiom, Neu tral, Ro, Ido and Anglic. Many Refugees Left Russia About 1,500,000 refugees are esti mated to have left Russia during the war and turmoil of the years 1917- >920. Called Mustard ‘Nah-Poo* The great Greek physician Hip pocrates, the Father of Medicine, called mustard "Nah-poo,” mean, ing “that’s the end of that,” China Has Much Coal China is one of the foremost coal countries in the world with, reserves estimated at 243,669,000,000 tons. Mangosicen Delicious Fruit The mangosteen, a fruit of deli cious flavor, is a native of the Malay peninsula. I. First Y. W. C. A. in C. 8. 4 The first Young Women’s Chris- [ | tian association in the United States was organized in Boston in 1860. Bedouins Eat No Salt The Bedouins of southern Arable do not eat salt. Happy Thought On every height there lies repose —Goethe. Monetary Unit of Argentina The monetary unit of Argentina is the peso, worth about 33 cents; nickel and copper coins of 20, 10, 5, 2 and 1 centavo are in circulation. Size of One-Cent Piece* There never has been a time in the history of the United States coin age when one-cent pieces were struck the same size as a dime. Heat Given Off by Body Even in winter a human body gives off enough heat in an hour to raise two quarts of water to boiling point Mexicana Adds That Smartness to Linen Pattern 6317 Mexico, land of excitement and color, served as inspiration for these fascinating designs for lin ens, Bright prints from your scrap bag form the easy applique patches while simple embroidery adds the finishing touches. You can turn out a delightful tea cloth, towel or scarf quick as a wink! Pattern 6317 contains a transfer pattern of four motifs averaging 5% by 8% inches; patterns for ap plique patches; materials needed; color schemes; illustrations of stitches. To obtain this pattern, send 15 cents in coins to The Sewing Cir cle, Household Arts Dept., 259 W. 14th St., New York, N. Y. Please write your name, ad dress and pattern number plainly. burOFSORTS? Here is Amazing Relief for Conditions Due to Sluggish Bowels yt f . 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