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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1921)
Lights Change Stage Scenes Turn of Switch Transforms the flimsy and covered with embroidery. How about th at?” Scenery, Costumes and Fig “That's quite simple,” replied M. Samoiloff. “To the colors I use In ures in London Theater. terial ; they will seein to match ex actly, but chemical analysis will show that one contains radium bromide, another phospherine or zinc, and a third no special chemical at all. In ordinary daylight they look exactly alike, but when I begin to throw my specially prepared lights upon them they change In different ways accord ing to the chemicals they contain. When you have worked this out very carefully, as I did, it will be quite simple for you to make a plain blouse look like a mass of embroidery. “Perhaps you noticed In the Oriental scene three of the dancers who seemed to be clothed In quite different ways; one looked as If she were wearing merely a skirt, another was draped to her shoulders, and so on. Yet when the light was changed all three were found to be clad in modern gowns, the only difference between them being the colors of their costumes. It’s merely an application of the knowl edge of how light affects color.” the mountuln scene I applied two meth ods of analysis. First, I took their spectra; then I analyzed the paints used chemically. From the spectra I found into what colors the first would split up by the application of the M. Samoiloff Assert* He Is Merely proper kind of strong light, and by chemical analysis 1 discovered that a Utilizing Harmony Between Light, great variety of substances had been Line and Color— Principles used In the original paints and colors Are Not New. to produce the original hues. Take, London.—The wonders accotniJlshed for example, several pieces of red ma In transforming scenes, costumes and actual figures from one period of his tory to another by a mere change of light on the stage of the Hippodrome has set all London talking. In a revue now playing there Is a scene repre senting a very modern damsel sighing for her lover In a frowning mountain pass. She sings, the echo answers and the audience is beguiled by the sweet sentimentality of the situation. Then behind the scenes somebody does something and everything Is ultered In a flash. The grim moun tains become a Hindu temple, the frowning rocks melt Into sands and palms and the tall, slender young woman turns Into a stout Indlun maiden. It has all been brought about by a change In light, by the manipu lation of wore tliun 100 different switches at the same moment, and the audience Is carried back 3,000 years and from one continent to another. Every detail Is transmogrified, nnd the Gun pit of the JL-2, armored dreadnaught of the air, showing two of thirty girl, who was clad conventionally In machine guns from which 3,000 shots can be fire l In four seconds while the a yellow artificial silk blouse with blue plane is speeding at 140 miles an hour. The Initial flight was mude from New fuclngs uud a rust-red golf skirt, ap York to Washington In two hours with no stops. pears now with her bust draped In white, embroidered In black and brown, with her waist unclothed and her trousers-sklrt pule cream with a graceful figured pattern. WORKED OUT BY A RUSSIAN Horse Racing and Starvation in Soviet Russia I New Dreadnaught of the Air * Back Goes Everything. Alien Property to Be Returned Here is an example of the sharp contrasts in soviet Russia. One photograph shows a trotting race on the track at Moscow reopened by the Bolshevik government The other shows a starving family In the Samara dis trict waiting for food or death. Lessons of War in N ew Defense Plan Provides for an Efficient S taff Trained in Peace Time. Guard and the organized reserves Into the army of the United States In peace times is defined by Colonel Pal mer as follows: “It ls primarily the object of our new law to perpetuate the framework of the organization developed In the World war, so that Its tremendous cost can be funded as a permanent Invest ment for nil time,” Had such a system as Is now well advanced toward establishment been erected after the Civil war, the offi cer adds, “In 1898 more divisions than were needed for the war with Spain could have begun their expansion within 24 hours after the declaration of hostilities." Supposed Suicide Gets Up and Runs g :$ ij Baltimore.—Several hundred persons gathered on President street to await the arrival of the police to move the body of a re- ported suicide lying under a rail- road car. They were startled when the man got up and ran. William N. Houck, conductor of a Baltimore & Ohio railroad train, grabbed the man and held him for the police. The “suicide” gave his name as Angelo Scapano, thirty-two, and an address on President street. He was found lying be- tween two freight cars, with his head across one of the rails. A pistol with two discharged chambers was nearby. A watchman at a nearby plant fired several shots to attract the police. Scapano told Lieutenant Mooney he had crawled under the car to sleep and knew noth- Ing of the pistol or pistol shots, £: -j: S An Oriental scene follows, with the customary dances. Men and women In all the finery of the East enter and £: weave In and out In the mazes of the •j: £: Foundation W ork on Great National ballet. The lover comes on, to all ap Government Officials Are Try tro-Hungarlan empire broke up after Scheme of Mobilization Already pearances robed In the loose white gar the war has made possible a return £• §: Done— Regular Army to Train ing to Map Out Plan for Un ments nnd the trousers of certain of a large portion of the property castes of Hindus. The action grows Men for W ar. seized from Austrian and Hungarian raveling Tangle. fast and furious; the heroine is threat nationals who after the peace treaty ened by u rival; she runs to the hero became citizens of the new repub Washington.—Two lessons of the £: K- for protection, und as he clnsps her to lics that assumed friendly diplo World war, learned at heavy cost, are Ids arms some one throws those matic relationship with the United sharply emphasized In a War de switches again. States. Mr. Miller has been proceed partment bulletin, giving the first of Centralized Process Demoralizing. Hack goes everything to the moun ing quietly with the unraveling of ficial picture of the new national de •:i tain gorge, and a very modern young Most of the Seized Holdings W ill numerous claims until the old Aus fense structure projected In the re “Mobilization In 1917,” Colonel Pal man In a brown lounge suit of unex trian property Is In such shape that organized army of the United States. mer continues, “would have proceed Eventually Go Back to the Orig ceptionable cut Is seen embracing the he can see daylight, and he antici inal Owners— Claims of Our One lesson comes direct from the ed as a decentralization process and young woman In the crowd of equully pates little trouble from that source battlefields of France. It Is that effi not ns a great centralized process, Citizens Must Be Satisfied. modernly dressed people. between now and the time congress cient staff work Is vital to modern mil upsetting the economic life of the na In peace times, but through practice In handling a divisional unit of 20,000 or How Is it done? Only Adrian V. acts. itary operations, and with It goes the tion. It would not have been necessary so men, training can be imparted, It Washington.—Administration leaders Rainolloff, the Russian artist who has Congress will hove to pass on the corollary that staff functions cannot to spend millions for great concen worked the thing out, and the Moss are trying to map out a policy disposition of less than half the be trated training camps or to overbur is felt, to fit future leaders to handle learned over night for disposing of the alien properly Empires, who hold the patent, can tell den the railroads with unclassified corps of armies in battle. Austro-Hungarian holdings, or prop The other comes from the wartime From Its role as staff college, also, In detail, but It Is possible to give a trusts. Most of the seized hold erty valued nt $18,000,000 out of a din and confusion of the centralized personell nnd material In order to comes the demand of the army for a general Idea of this startling new ings will eventually go back to the total of $40,000,000 seized when war organize and train and equip and pro training camps at home. It Is that effi larger proportion of officers thnn the stage effect. When JI. Samoiloff was original owners, but Allen Property wns declared. When congress amend cient mobilization of the nation's fight vide officers all at the same time. actual enlisted strength of any prob Custodian Miller Insists that the usked about It, he said: Such a national organization must ed the trading with the enemy act ing strength can be carried out only "It’s merely a matter of establish claims of American citizens ngalnst It provided that the possessions of as a decentralized process through have saved months In time and mil able regular force would require. These extra officers would play little ing and utilizing a harmony between Germany nnd Austria must be citizens of Czechoslovakia and Po agencies set up In times of peace. lions In money.” light, line and color. Is It new? Well, satisfied first. The ultimate disposi land and subjects of the new Jugo Colonel Palmer points out that part In the actual peace time em Realization that these lessons must all the elements of It have been been tion of the property rests with con slav nation and the section of old be worked Into the new mllltnry pol Stonewall Jackson alone of leaders ployment of the army as such or known for years; I have merely gress, except In cases where It has ex- Hungary added to Rumania might icy If perilous delay and costly con on either side of the Civil war en even in small emergency that required brought them together and worked pressly authorized settlements. Wind be returned, and settlement of the fusion which preceded past mobiliza tered the contest with knowledge of only the regulars to meet the nation's them out scientifically nnd systemati ing up the alien property affairs Is claims of these people Is proceeding what staff work meant. He had stud needs. They would be under training cally. Ho you remember, for Instance, now the big lask before the adminis rapidly. Mr. Miller announced that tions were to be avoided lias marked ied Napoleon’s troop orders, and In In staff functions, and In turn be the postcards we hud as children, tration In getting back to an actual possessions valued at more than the effort of the War department the first battle of the war, Colonel passing on their knowledge to the Na The bulletin shows that It has attempt which showed one Inscription in one peace status. $9,000,000 already had been handed ed to write regulations under the re Palmer says, “showed that even raw tional Guardsmen nnd reserve officers and the whole scheme of keeping the No Austria-Hungary Now. light and another la another? Well, back to the owners. vised national defense act that would troops can stand like a stone wall if that’s part of It. Then during the Of the remaining approximately furnish a clean-cut scheme for war the prevalent rawness does not extend country up to date In a mllltnry sense Virtually all the attention, both war he heard a lot about ‘dazzle’ nnd public nnd in congress, has been $30,000,000 Mr. Miller estimated that to the craftsmanship of the com without keeping any substantial force under arms at any time rests on this camouflage, nnd how a few apparently focused on the seized German hold about $12,000,000 subsequently will go mobilization without violating nation mander.” random lines of paint would alter to ings In this country. The chief claims to nationals of the three new Euro- al traditions against militarism or cre To meet such a situation, the new provision, It ls asserted. I ating ; iu u c llilic i J m u t W L714IL 1 I Impose machinery that would the distant observer tlio shape of the of American citizens growing out of pean states or nationals of the new heavy burdens In peace times upon military policy Imposes on the regular outline of n vessel. That's part of It, the war are against the German gov section of Rumania. This will leave army the duty of training In peace Com for Fuel. too. I have merely worked along these ernment, which will probably be approximately $18,000,000 tied up in the taxpayers. times the men on whom must of ne Le Suer, Minn.—Declaring that corn To Profit by Experience. and similar lines until I got the re charged up with the financial loss to trust until congress authorizes the cessity fall tho burden of command at 21 cents a bushel Is cheaper fuel sults I wanted." The project undertaken probably Is and direction of great forces in war. than coal. Dr. F. A. Dodge, a resident Americans through the Lusitania President, through the alien property Light Change* Costume. sinking, on which many of the claims custodian and the Department of Jus the most far-reaching military effort From this arises the present distribu of Le Suer nnd a farm owner, has "Hut the girl’s skirt nnd blouse In rest. For this reason It Is expected tice, to return It or dispose of it other the nation has ever attempted in peace tion of the regulars into divisional commenced burning corn as a fuel to times. areas which underlay the corps and heat his residence. A1 Schlegel, a the mountain scene seemed to be of that settlement of the German prop wise. In discussing the Austrian nnd Hun The foundation work has been done. army area structure. It is not ex farmer living near here also says he solid color and heavy material, while erty will be longer delayed. In the Hindu scene they were quite In addition, the fact that the Aus- garian property seized in this country. All over the country decentralized ms- pected, officers say, that more than a Intends to use com ns a fuel, because very few pointed out that it Included chlnery is being set up cnpable, Its division ever will be brought together of the low price and labor at $3 a day. very few estates of any size—In fact, designers believe, of getting the na- only one, the Gladys Vanderbilt estate, tlon on a war footing with little de valued at $4,008,000, which was re- lay and confusion. Yet It Is felt that turned after congress provided that the nation at large and even the most the property of American women mar- Important links In the new defense rled to alien enemies prior to April 8, chain, the regular army, the National 1917, wiych was taken over during the Guard and the Officers' Reserve corps war, might he handed back. Count do not appreciate fully what Is being Szechenyl, who married Gladys Van- ! done. derbllt, ls now mentioned ns the Hun- Col. John McA. Palmer, the officer garlan ambassador to the United assigned to aid congress In framing States when the treaty ratification» the legislation making It all possible, are exchanged. and who has devoted himself to a One Item of $400.000. study of the subject, was called upon Of the remaining Austro-Hungarian to furnish the document, and his work property In the hands of the gov is to go to all parts of the new army ernment the largest lump sum Is as a means of preventing misunder that of >800.000 taken over with the standing. Austro-Hungarian bank of New York. Colonel Palmer points out that at I*art of this trust fund will prob the conclusion of previous wars, the ably be handed back before congress United States scrapped all it had l asses on the Austrian property. Mr. learned In battle and demobilized with- i Miller said that citizens of Poland, out any attempt to carry those costly Caecboslovnkla. Jugoslavia and Ru lessons on to youtiger generations for mania hold an Interest, the extent of their protection and aid In time of which ls still umleternilm d. In the war. Veterans of the Civil war, j bank. It is expected to materially schooled In soldier c ra ft skilled In reduce the total when claims are al staff work and the handling of mighty lowed. • forces with minimum contagion in Virtually all the rest of the Aus movement and minimum loasfes In trian property consists of small es- battle, went back to civil life, be says, tates, some of which amount to only and lost all touch with military mat $40 or similar sums awarded work ter*. When the war with Spain came The Island of Ceylon produces most of the graphite used by the world In men under state compensation acta. their knowledge was lost to the men i the manufacture of lead pencils, paint, stove hlucklng, lubricants, crucibles and The $18.0t*»,dtm of Austrian and Hun of 1888. It was necessary to bulhl foundry facings. The methods used In the mining of the mineral In Ceylon are garian property Is In the same boat again from the ground up. and 1817 primitive, natives only being employed In the work. The Ceylon graphite Ls •a the balk of the German trust funds, saw this waste repeated, the bulletin h~ ,.In»KT,CT keep,a rec,’r<1 of their best chicks, progeny of their best laying ih?v are h 7 tc£ d " a X L S ’i T “* “*Eg,n* the tlny blrd* , s ’oo° “ over 08 |>er cent pure carbon. It Is also commonly known as “black lead." The over which the Prwldcnt has no ■rts. th ey an hahhed. A numbered bit of metal ls affixed to a win? Mi«« Rdirh above photograph shows native women working over a barrel of graphite at power of disposition nntil be obtains The purpose of the new scheme of Struddera, who claims to have some of the finest of Petaluma’s Twelve Colombo, Ceylon. welding the regulars, the National j fine hens. Is shown tagging a few of her day-old chicks. » twelve million further authority. BARS CENTRALIZED CAMPS NECESSARY TO PEACE STATUS iik iij Where Your Pencil Lead Comes From Tagging Chicks as They Are Hatched r