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DON'T BELIEVE IT!-
A Radio Sound Men Fool Public
With Strange Noise Gadgets
JD A DIOS demand for sound effects that make a storm or police raid
S j U g rea l to millions of listeners has created a new profession of
sound effects men who, on a moment’s notice, can fill any request —no
matter how :razy—from a producer. Harry Saz, with the National Broad
casting company at Hollywood, illustrates in these pictures how the
• great deception is accomplished:
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Below: Here comes the show
boat! Saz blows a riverboat I® IS:
horn and churns a box of water
with a crank that turns small Ws
wooden paddles.
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Christmas chimes didn’t sound like the real thing over the radio, so Saz
tried hitting c discarded brake drum with a small hammer. It worked,
and that’s what you hear over the radio each Yuletide.
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Fifteen thousand records of different sounds in this library!
When asked to reproduce the sound of a
beating heart, Saz spent hours experiment
ing, then decided to try the real thing.
Above: He strips to the waist and applies
the microphone to his own heart, getting
the desired result. Left: A conquering army
invades a city and the marching feet of the
military is reproduced with this gadget.
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I Rain pattering on a tin roof
I for the radio audience. Harry
■ Saz is shown creating this es-
I feet by dropping grape seeds
O from a sprinkling can onto a
H piece of paper.
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Above: A thunderstorm over
the prairies. Saz uses a huge
drum made of a single piece of
steer hide.
OUR COMIC SECTION
MAN OF THE HOUR
“Since he became so popular he
says he has to live by the clock.”
“Naturally—he’s the man of the
hour.”
BAKER COUNTY NEWS
Events in the Lives of Little Men
Foor Judge
A farmer, who bragged that he
had the fightin’est dog in three coun
ties, was in conversation with a
prospective buyer for the dog, when
along came a little dog about half
the size of the farmer’s dog. They
fought, and the little dog gave him
a terrible beating.
“Say, I thought you told me he
was the fightin’est dog in three coun
ties,” said the prospect.
“He is,” the farmer said, “but he
is a dam poor judge of dogs!”
HER STEPFATHER
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He—My, how primly you were
walking with that man today.
She—l have to mind my step when
I’m with him.
He—But why?
She—He’s my stepfather.
Youthful Tailored
Two-Piece Frock
CEASON in and season out, the
whole year round, you need a
two-piece tailored suit-frock like
1875-B. It’s ideal for business,
classroom wear and general spec
tator sports. The collarless neck
line, besides being very smart,
gives you a chance to indulge your
fancy for sports jewelry and
scarfs.
The skirt is full and circular,
and of course you can wear it
with your lingerie blouses, too.
The jacket-blouse has unusually
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attractive bodice detailing, with
Jticched seams emphasized by two
little flat pockets, placed just
where slim figures need them! It
is fitted m to hug the waistline,
and th«s shoulders are gallantly
squared, to make it look even
more slender. Tweed, velveteen,
flannel and wool crepe are ex
cellent materials for right now; by
all means repeat this later in faille
or flat crepe.
Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1875-B
is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18
and 20. Corresponding bust meas
urements 30, 32, 34, 36 and 38.
tSize 14 (32) requires 4% yards
of 39-inch material. With long
sleeves, size 14 requires 4% yards
of 39-inch fabric.
For a pattern of this attractive
model send 15 cents in coins, your
name, address, style, number and
size to The Sewing Circle Pattern
Dept., Room 1324, 211 W. Wacker
Dr., Chicago, 111.
WEARY DESPONDENT
M|>| Q* Crying spells. Irritable
IIKIq nerves due to functional
“monthly” pain should find
•real "woman’sfriend” in Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound. Try ii!
LydiaLPinHiam’sSS
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A Good Mind
He that procures his child a
good mind makes a better pur
chase for him than if he laid out
the money for an addition to his
former acres.—Locke.
A J MINOR SKIN IRRITATIONS JOS
MorolineO
SNOW-WHITE PETROLEUM JELLY VUMI
To Be Pitied
If our inward griefs were seen
on our brows, how many would
be pitied who are now envied!—
Metastasio.
I MeiCtkola'ltd — CA-ioAo-lsd
Give a Thought to
MAIN STREET
• For,in our town... and towns
like ours clear across the country
... there’s a steady revolution
going on. Changes in dress styles
and food prices ... the rise of a
hat crown ... the fall of furni
ture prices—these matters vitally
affect our living... And the news
is ably covered in advertisements.
• Smart people who like to be
up-to-the-minute in living and
current events, follow advertise
ments as closely as headlines,
v They know what’s doing in
America . .. and they also know
where money buys most!