THE' OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER ,10, 1916. 10 INVENTION .ROBS SINISTER SATURN FOG OF TERRORS St NAVIGATORS .before long may find tne fog robbed of Its terrors , through a device invented by Dr. A. G. Webster for showing the direc tion of signals, which he has demon strated in the National AcaJemy of -Sciences. The apparatus, which he calls a phonometer, translates the in tensity, of sound into terms of light, so that, as the Inventor expresses it. r the deaf may see what they cannot ,ur, .wsosier is connected witti ine Clark 'university at Worcester, Mass. 'Impressed with the loss of the steam ship 'Krapreas of Irelatu In 1914, he went to Father Point, on the St. Law rence, Where the boat sank, and there - made the experiments on which his invention is based. In a thick fog, when two vessels ar. approaching each other, he said, it in often impossible for the captains to "letl-the dlvt'on of, the Bound from horns.- -In the St. .awreni-c disaster i ' the ' masters of both vnsels should Jiava Stopped. In hi opinion, in view ' of the uncertainty of telling the exact direction. , ! " First. Dr. Webster showed a resona- tor or "phone" which took up the t bratlons of a tuilng fork ami emitted .a Sound of sUndan pitch. Th!: in- ' strument took the place of a regular ' fog Signal, The receiving Instrument or phonometer looked like a small , round box on a tripod, and fiom ei -h end nroiected a conical horn resem bling a megaphone. The small ends of the horn were turned toward each other. The device Is placed so that the hornn are at rlcht angles with the course of the vessel on which it Is installed. The vibration caused by the signal is concentrated by tho ; horns and communicated to a metal . diaphragm, which is held in place by j small steel wires. The pulsation goes; to a tiny electric light, and the effect I I upon it Is registered by the reflections j of a mirror on a scale which can he read through a glass, attached to the Instrument. The scale shows the in tensity of the found as the Image of light widens or contracts. The horns swing easily upon a pivot and when they have heen so adjusted by the operator that they show the greatest Intensity a tube of the Instrument is pointing in tho direction from which the signal Is being sounded. With the phonometer .-although it is not perfectly accurate in Its pres ent stage. Dr. Webster declares tint 4 th" direction can be determined within a very few d-'g-es. It will be neces sary to Imve all fog horns made of the same pltci. or. In other words, a standard fo-j horn a:nd siren. In connection with the wireless, it Is believed that the phonometer would be of value, for sihips approaching each other could communicate details at-out the fog horns employed s a further -rilidc. I About Your Siomacfoi w HY dOs not your stoma' h : geH Itself Have you ever tho -grit of that? .' Here you arc assaulting It, n'nd In . .suiting It with g .b of rindflol.-h and inheres of cobalt cabbage. Yci even permit strata of minerals, bone and ... '.tough Stea'-s of yesteryear, to crt.r it portals. -'.'.The atomacli of n goat and the pro- verbla bunch of stomachs w!' .ibe , envied oimd own. ar merel iarjrer or smaller editions cf the. hiinui:i -io n aeh, Yef these creatures eat tm cans " and boulder. Their stomachs .-.main just as vigorous and undigested as .they did before. . . Murlat Ic acid hydrochloric a.-id is powerfully destructive suhst n c. It ' Will eat lis way through the i-- of a battleship. It will bore into h,. rock of Gibraltar. Still It falls to make tho! Slightest "Impression open that tender, "'" soft textile tl e living stomacu' To he ''- sure. If you swallow add, it will kill , you by. burning it way through your ':Vltals. Despite this the stomach nen- etatcs Its own ar id and it Co i no .'harm. . -;. Even tha ft 1 1 too frequent in. i. ad v. , ; jbyperacldity commonly called, :.Ung with ether disorders. Indigestion -fails to be a source of hoi eft or ulcers in the stomach. ,1 leers in the' stomach are more often due to microbes than to any I other cause. They Iiave ne or been traced to 'self-digestion. A stomach may be non-act Iv '. that is lo say. lazv, flabby and not irritable enough In Us muscle. to nu.su Ibt un- digested victuals onward into tho next digestive compartment Some Mema I s arc spread ..igled. They are ballooned out and distended from drinking copious draugnts of, beer, broth soups or the likt . Moreover, such beer-buckled stom achy at tl.nes twist upon tlieiylves and form hourglass or pear-shaped folds. Then again overeating and ninc blbblng often (iraps i lie. tomach nrwii. It drops into the belly and induces all so'tu of unpleasant, nervous an' wor risome disturbances. Simple meals whb-h contain bread, crackers, ta and ho on. arc given as "test mea 5." to determine the facility nf your digestive tlssiifs to use c.p food. Those whoso various cares In one great point combine the busim-hs of their lives to s'ip and dine,a ? often boastful of "never having had a day of indigestion." Finger TaSK in Grain Pit ven cent lit Quotation J cent SMT a-) i coht !?, cent r I ce n-r J cen - i mmmEimmMmmm mm ': Biff fftrill I i tfeil li rr- g MmM: SSx 1 Above, left to right Looking from the Portland end of the bridge toward Vancouver, showing the piers ready for the last four span to be placed, and in the distance showing the towers for the bridge lift; the last four spans all complete, ready to be towed to position in the bridge. Center Broken pter and shattered cement slabs, caused by movement of subsoil; another illustration of wobbly character of soil over which embankment is built, this view being at' the intersection of the old Vancouver road with the new embankment. Below Looking into the bridge from the Oregon end; looking from the middle of the bridge toward the Vancouver ap proach, where large crews of men are at work. ONTRACTS for the Columbia River nterstate bridge call for comple- I nun ..uvciiiuci X Jl is tuuaiu- rren nigniy proDaDle oy Kurus Hoimn, chairman of the interstate bridge com mission, that the bridge will be com pleted and ready for traffic a short time before that date. Work is now under way on the sec- ond tower for the bridge lift, which i will be similar to that In the llaw , thorne bridge in Portland. A' crew of men Is at work laying the concrete foundation for the paving on the Van couver end of the bridge, while the I'ortland end Is complete and ready for j the paving surface. . Another group of men Is at work on j the Vancouver approach, where a big rill is Delng made, while on tne Ore gon side the pier in the Columbia nloucb which war riamnfirpd hv a ttiova- i ment of the subsoil, is yet to be re placed and the bridge span set up. Work is oeing rushed by the city of Portland at the end of I'nion avenue, where a fill must be made and paving laid to connect the city street with the bridge approach. E. E. Howard of the firm of con sulting engineers having supervision of the construction work said that the work was being so planned that all the tag ends will be completed at the same tune. He and the members of the bridge commission say they do not want to permit any travel over the bridge until everything is complete. In cluding the last foot of paving, and for that reason the last bridge span probably will not be swung Into place until Just before all the rest of the work Is completed. In the construction of the bridge, which, with the approaches, will cost $1,750,000, many difficult engineering problems had to be solved. The bridge and embankments are three and one fourth miles long. There are 5000 feet of steel bridge structure and 12,000 feet of embankment. The bridge road way is 38 feet wide between curbs, while on the right side going toward Vancouver there is a five-foot walk. The main bridge has 13 spans, three spans being each 275 feet long and 10 spans each 265 feet long. The concrete piers are resting on piles sunk by means of water jets to 105 feet below water. The piles are 120 feet long in single, straight poles, rxdng probably the longest piles ever used In bridge construction. Ninety piles were driven beneath each pier for the 263 foot span. The piles were sunk in sand. Great holes were washed In the river bed by means of powerful streams of water the water jets and the pile, were diopped In. For the last 15 or 20 feet of the desired depth the piles were driven by a pile driver, which was spe cially built for this particular Job. The driving equipment was mounted on a wooden scow, 32x100 feet. Tho leads of the driver, designed to handle 138 foot piles, extended 122 feet above the water. The piles were all completed by May 1, which was 30 days before the contract date. In fact, all along the work has been ahead of schedule time, according to the engineers. The contract for the bridge was let in February, 1015, and construction work " began the next month. Because of the fact that the long ap proach to the main bridge on tho Ore .gon side must be over swamp land and silt fills, a difficult engineering prob lem was presented there. In the main Oregon approach 1,000, 000 cubic yards of embankment have been built, while the secondary ap proach has 500,000 cubic yards. These embankments are made principally of sand pumped from the Oregon slough. The sand was lifted from the slough by suction dredges, with electrically oper ated pumps. The sand was delivered through Iron pipes all the way from 5000 to 10,000 feet, or nearly (wo miles. The embankments are . 42 feet across the top and an average of 20 to 25 feet high. The main embankment Is built across silt land. Commissioner lloluian de scribed it by saying It was built across the top of a custard pie. In one place tho custard foundation wobbled and slid, with the result that a long de pression was made In the embankment. This characteristic of the soil Is also responsible for the earth movement which practically upset one of the piers in the Columbia slough. As a means of holding the sand In the embankment, cement slabs four Inches thick have been laid where the embankment ends at the slough, while wljlow trees and blackberry bushes have been planted all along the base of the embankment. J 4 The Board of Trade Sign Language. THE Chicago Board of Trade Is by .far the most Important grain ex change not only of this country but 4t the world, and few people are familiar with its method of operation, .ays Popular Science Monthly. ' v People who visit the board of trade . ar perhaps most Impressed by the sign language used In buying and selling raln for future delivery. Un- . lik Anything else seen in any other ltn of business this wonderful sys tem. while simple in its execution, - nevertheless puzzles the uninitiated. It Is a system that has grown up with the board, and traders' would be help less without it. In that awful din. where 'hundreds of men and boys are rushing about and shouting and count ies telegraph instruments are click ing. . Individual voices ane smothered and the trader must talk with his hands. Jle has no time to waste a lost ' second 'may mean hundreds of dollars to him. By a simple movement of his finger the trader makes it known -whether he" would buy or sell, which price he la willing to pay or take and what 'Quantity he wishes to trade in. All the Information necessary to con aummate a deal, involving perhaps thousands of dollars. Is conveyed by a few movements of the hand. Each ' finger extended represents one-eighth of accent. Thus-when all ' four fingers and the thumb are ex- f tended, all being spread out from one another, it means nve-eignins. wnen the four fingers and thumb are ex tended, .'but ara. pressed close to gether, f' H' represents three-quarters. t is so shaped as to fit closely to thel head and deliver its contents in a nar row stream. An English scientist who has raised wlieat In record breaking time ex plains that he so treats the seed with electricity that he trebles the life force within it. The largest hen's eggs are prc duced in Manchuria, those weighing i one-sixth of a pound being common. I A new bathtub seat can be hung in side a tub to assist a person bathing or outside for use in dressing. To enable his aeroplane to alight by clutching a cable a Frenchman has Would Feature Crater Lake oil Screen o1 the top of the machine. The clenched hand, with the thumb extended, Is sevon-elghths, while for an event cent the closed fist is used. The thumb protruding between the index and the big finiger is the signal for a split quotation, These charac ters refer to the price, and the hands and fingers are held in a horizontal j a new trap to be attached to a re" position. When displayed vertically frlgerator drain pipe permits waste the quantity is indicated each ex- water to f ,ow out but prevents the T n , .u r. e . ' ouuu ousn entrance of warm air or vermin, els. When the desire Is to sell the. . . palm of the haad is hield outward, and An American has obtained a Cuban when the trader wishes to buy he patent for a machine that cultivates NE of the biggest feature film pro- i ductlons to be put over within the iical iew monins i vo cenier around Crater.., lake, Oregon's unique and romantlc national park. It is to rival Cabiria,'the story of the fall of Pompeii under the eruption of Vesu vius. One of the world's biggest mov ing picture companies has been inter ested in Crater lake and has promised tc build up the picture exclusively for its dramatic value. As a matter of fact, however, the built a spring fork that projects from!comPany was lon& besieged bv Robert signals with the palm facing htm. ODD FACTS BRICKS made of peat are being sue- cessf ully used In Sweden for small I buildings. Using benzine for fuel, a new ciga rette lighter is a close facsimile of a cigarette. Waterproof knapsacks made of horaa hair have been invented by a Japanese army officer. Names have been given to 737 minor planets and new ones are being discov ered all the time. There are spiders in Java which make webs so strong that it requires a knife to sever them. A recently patented porch or lawn seat can be converted Into a swing or crib for a small child. A Detroit woman has Invented a syringe for applying acalp lotions that growing sugar cane, work that hereto fore has had to be done by hand. For administering medicine to a horse an Inventor has patented a hol low, perforated bit with a funnel at one end. Warm in Bed. ! Many people have to sleep In coid rooms in winter, and some, not being able to warm up readily after enter ing the bed. lie awake a long time. To warm up quickly in a cold bed lie upon the back, with the bedclothes well tucked in about the neck and shoulders, draw up and extend one foot, then the other, alternately, draw ing the foot up as near the -trunk as possible. Keep this up for a few mo menta; and If done with vigor, by the time one has drawn up each leg and straightened it out, say, 100 times, one will be In a glow, and will us ually feel sleepy, the blood having been drawn away from the brain to the muscles and skin. Feeble patients can do a few strokes, and rest a moment or so, and then begin again. S. Yard, publicity expert in the depart ment of the Interior, to make a picture play about the lake. Until he told the company some of the history of i Mount Mazama, however, he could rouse little Interest. Mr. Yard, who is assisting Stephen T. Mather in exploiting the national parks told of the efforts he made to get Crater lake upon the screen of every moving picture house In the country. m After; he had shown the picture peo ple what a mighty feature the his tory of the lake would be, Mr. Yard went through the archives of the geo logical survey and dug out the story of Mount Mazama and Crater lake to gether with pen and ink drawings by some Imaginative geologist showing what' the original mountain must have looked like before it was blown to bits by a gigantic eruption "long be-M fore history began. ' He forwarded tfrese facta to, the film people and a reconstructed Mount Ma zama done In miniature but for photo graphing according to the mysterious cunning of the camera man as if It were full size, is to be built. Some scenario person is writing a romance around Mazama' s "Great Adventure" and the final scenes will show Craterv) lake as It Is today. Mr. Yard had never actually seen Crater lake until he visited It recently I with Stephen T. Mather, assistant sec- 1 ipM - 1 i tv; i . .rr ! j WW ill I n 13 1 II! Robert? H. Yard, publicity expert who ' aroused Interest In Crater Lake film scheme. retary of the interior. He described his sensation as "distressing" when he had ascended the rim and looked out over' the' lake. v m "Distressing" it was in the sense of such an appreciation of grandeur that no expression could be found for It. "I'm afraid the people of Oregon do not appreciate the big scenic asset that Crater lake is," said Mr. Yard. "A much traveled New York man who has seen the world's best Bcenlc offerings, spent three days at Crater lake. When he left,, he said he felt three towering impressions: The Grand Canyon of the Colorado. Crater lake and the Matter horn, The other impressions were di minishing gradations from those. "With such a testimonial, it would appear that Oregonlans ought to know their lake better and go to see it them selves. That Is the first way to pop ularize and capitalize such a great thing. The concessions should be en larged and developed and every fa cility be given to lure people from arar. This development is bound to come, but it can be hastened only by the efforts of the people near home," he said. Mr. Yard lately complied a series of articles on the national parks of the United States which were Issued in portfolio form. He has attempted lit tle newspaper publicity so far. believ ing, that this will take care of Itself, once the policy of park development Is known. He related an incident at a promi cumulating such stores of preserved meat as possible, for that article of food is so scarce. A new household device has been invented, however, which serves admirably to this end. The apparatus consists of a lac quered cylinder, which is provided with an Interior dividing wall separat ing both halves of the cylinder. One portion is designed to hold the meat to be smoked, while the other is for the passage of smoke. Underneath la a small cylinder which 'serves to admit the smoke. This is so constructed that the smoke must first pass through the transmission com partment and enter the smoking com partment from above, in order to re turn finally to the fireplace. That an even distribution of the smoke may be achieved there is a perforated plate above the smoking compartment In the large cylinder. This also serves to prevent the entrance of particles of soot and dirt. Two rings are provid ed on whch to support the meat. Eat and Grow Thin. The craze to reduce which has been so rampant among obese male and f e- By Frank Theodore Allen (Dlrectur Adrototlcat lieiearch Society, At- bar Park. N.J.) t CHRONUS, r Kronos. is one of the name by which the planet Saturn was known to the ancients. From - I this w.t ... II a H.rl , m i . 'KpAnll ' because all the afflictions resulting j from the aspects of Saturn have a ten dency to assume a enronte rnaracier, Saturn is the source of those etherlo vibrations that are cold, contracting, depressing, melancholic and serious, and when acting on man lead to dis content, suspicion. envy. Jealousy. I selfishness, treachery and other' man ifestations of coldness and Isolation. For a year Saturn has been trannlt- j ing through the sign of Cancer. Kor centuries past, or long before tb American colonies declared their Inde pendence and separated from Great Britain, astrologers have recognized Cancer as the sign having chief do minion over New York snd its Imme- diate vicinity. During this period New York has . certainly experienced a mosf"uiiuual j array of dramatic, startling and traglo occurrences, besides a regular epidemic 1 of discontent manifested by Us work-: i Ing masses. Prominent among the In cidents of magnitude that have brought New York Into the limelight since the pressure of Saturn's vibrations began to exert themselves through' the med ium of Its . ruling sign may be men tioned such as the subway explosions, the dynamiters' attempt upon St. Vat rick's cathedral, numerous strikes of large proportions, the great prepared ness parade, etc. The two most recent occurrences that give New York temporary distinc tion are the terrific explosion of mu nitions early on Sunday morning, July 30, and the most sensational suicide in tho city's history, which occurred Just as the sun passed the meridian at noon on August 10. when a man flung him self from the observation platform of the hlr.ger building. Shortly before midnight on July 1 this year an eclipse of the moon oc curred with that luminary Hearing the meridian at New York snd in direct opposition to the sun at the Nadir,- who was going to the conjunction of Ssturn In the sign' ruling New Yoik city. '? This was but one of a series of ce lestial phenomena of it'nt occur rence, all of which agree in snowing New York to be the scene of troublous vibrations that must of necessity find or force expression through such ma terial and pn.VHlcHi tne.iium as iimv happen to be keyed to a utale of re ceptivity, and hence ready to respond to and suffer the force of the blow re sulting from the liberation of these terrific concentrations of the cosmio forcec. While the vlbfratory Influences gen erated by this lunar eclipse were, of course, world-wide in effect, yet in ac cordance with certain fixed rules they were , specially concentrated. thoiiKh at different angles, at many places. nence cenain regions as well ns par ticular persons and centers In hiu h regions were destined to come espec ially under the sway of their power. It happens that New York Is one of the regions In and about which there have recently centered a succession of the germanutive stimulations of acute planetary phenomena, hence It ha been the scene of far more than the average number of events of stupend ous Import or startling nature. The great explosion on July 3d oc curred exactly as Saturn reached and was passing over the place or the sun end opposition of the moon's place at tha eclipse of the fourteenth. Rut that was not the only significant feature of the planrdary phenomena that was startllngly acute at the in stant of that stupendous event. And this Is why astrologers so fre quently hit wide of the mark In mak ing forecasts. They place too great emphasis upon single and Isolated phe nomena and fall to note those Instance In which a succession of strong as pects will occur In connection with tin slgnlf icators of certain localities of Individuals. Just five hours hefori the great explosion there was niw moon, which happened to b a solaf eclipse, though not visible near New York. At the Instant of that lunation th fiery end explosive Mars was Just set ting at New Y'ork and in exact evil as pect to Venus in New York's rullne sign and Hearing the fateful Nadir. And at the exact moment when the ex plosion occurred Venus hsd just reached the horizon at New York sml Mars was right at the same relation to the Ndlr that Venus had been at the time of the lunation. The planetary configurations at th time of the sensational suicide on Au gust 10 were even more acute and startling In their concurrence with the event. If we may Judge theni by th long established rules of astrology, i ne sun was just at tne meridian ana in exact opposition to the erratic ni spasmodic Uranus, who was exactly at the Nadir. Mars was ruler of the ascendant and Just past the evil square of Venus while the moon was passing from most evil aspect of Venus and going te an even more malignant aspect of Mars, this forming a fatal cross. Jup iter was setting and in evil square it the chaotic and sensational Neptune, who was Just past the meridian. Bui while there were more acute aspect at the time of this occurrence ihan at the greet explosion they were of a more temporary or ephemeral character. male New Yorkers today Inspired New nent Washington city hotel when he! York hotels to cater to the seekers after slenderness with especial menus. ' One big hotel has employed an ex pert In dietetics to prepare food that can be eaten with all the recklessness of a stevedore and at the same time not endanger the embonpoint. The new daily menus are called "Madah Menus," and across the top In quotations is the line, "Eat and Grow Thin Suggestions." Here Is the lunch eon menu: Cold fish in vinegar; radishes, puree of spinach, broiled veal cutlet, boiled onions, beets, compote of stewed fruit and assorted fresh fruit. Dinner dishes include broiled chick en giblets with mushrooms, roast spring lamb, chicory, tomato or cucum ber salad and fresh fruit compote. told an eminent Jurist friend the nature of his new efforts. "Oh, yes, the national park. That's Yellowstone, isn't it?" When he was asked to name the other national parka, he was stumped after the second. Then Yard 'and Mather laid a little wager. They were to ask 20? men of the greatest Influ ence and wisdom they happened to meet, to list the national parks. Only three could name three national parks. All the others mentioned Yellowstone only. For Curing Meat. In the present time of economic dif ficulty in Germany many housewives are confronted with the problem of ac- Paper Clothing. Both Japanese and Russian soMlen are wearing paper clothes. "Kamlkn." as paper clothing Is called In Japan, Is made of the real Japanese papei manufactured from mulberry bark. The paper has little "size" in It, anj though soft and warm a thin layer ol silk wadding Is placed between two sheets of paper and the whole Is quilt, ed. Its only drawback Is that it i not washable. Rheumatism AUomt CtreCttDbjOoeWlo Had It lo tb prlns of 1S93 1 attacked by Moaculur ui Inflammatory tttieauiatUm. I differed uolr tbo wbo bar It know, for over tbree Jtara. I tried rcaMdr after remrdy, and doctor after doctor, but anea relief aa I rcelTd waa only temporary. KlniUy, I found a remedy tbat rurad ma euuiplelely, and It baa Barer returned. I bare gives it to a lumber wbo ware tarrt. My afflicted and aven bediitldeu wlts KbeumatUm. and It effected a cor la every eaae, I wast every auffarar from aoy form of rheumatic trouble to try tbla mar valoaa baallng power. lxn't aesd a (Ml: imply mall yonr same and addreaa sod I will aeod It free to try. After yon ba uaed It and It baa proven Ibtelf to be tbat long-tooksd for meant of eortng yoar Rfaeo matlam, you mir arad tba price of It, one dollar, bat. Hodcrtand, I do not west yoar money unleas you ar perfectly latiafled to send K. Isn't tbat fair I Why antler aay longer waan poaltlv relief la tbua of farad, yao treat Don't delay. Write today. Mark K. Jaokaoa, He. 1ISC Gsrsty BUg., irrseuaa, ,.. .