Illinois News Index

Sheridan Road News-Letter (1889), 21 May 1904, p. 5

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W. A. Averill of ti ӣ0300 doputnent stick! a “mint )3: is pronounced ‘ IDITED BY STUDENTS OF ' THE HIGH SCHOOL. THE X-RAV 1 Lent Pride, night a lecture ‘ “given i'n Assembly Hall by filt Avetlll of the High School " t Wt “do“! Pfen- ._ thenchool It ‘ by my the moat may of them The lecture was brilliant with elec trioal experiments tau .wonxnn, and with, ntereopticon slides of more than ordinary interest. The lecturer'n poise and mnnner were excellent, his voiee carried well, and he never lacked ior words that conveyed in” e‘iinpleet terms; jnst what was meant. The lecture was clear and simple throughout. Even the children, of whom many Were present, silent with openâ€" eyed wonder, seemed to drink it all in, and went home to explain the x-ray and. wireless telegraphy to parents and friends; Iditor-lmChief. Ann Emu“, ’04. A-oointo Editor. A powerful induction coil, the child of annstiehl a patient genius was used. It was a marvel. In the darkened room we saw EIGHT HUHDRED THOUSAND vows of eiec~ tricity play minigttdre chain liuht- niug, shoot holes through cards and burn wood into the carbons of are lights that glowed. across a .wet path on a board. 1 Emu Bnim. '04. All-unto. Joan E. Commas, ‘04. 11“qu Busy, ’05 BO)!“ LU". '05' 1°! Hm 05' Em Conn, 05. “fire-fleas telégmpl'zy was illus- trated. Messages 'syere bent. and raibell was 'mysterio'asly, rung by the .elegtriq fluid, with no qther medium than air through Which to pass. But the x~ray pictures taken by means of the. coil were perhaps the most'i'nter'esting of all; Among: other things we saw on the Screen, a confederate bullet in the side of one of our townsmen, showing big as a coconut in a; forest of ribs . ‘ VOL. 1; - vvv v- -_..~. After the lecture many people HIGH SCHOOL NEWS. flayed to m the bone. of had: Ind um .througb the flora-cop. nod to examine their on interior anatomy. It was a great In'ooeu. 0n Fridsy night, Ms, 13, there' vss given s scientific lecture which was s new venture in the; field of our lectures. Heretofore they were distinctly geographical and historial. This one consisted oi the tents, circumstsnces snd ex lplsnstion of the guys. incidently bringing in the wireless telegraph end induction coil. Mr. Averill did the talking and Carl Pfanatiehl demonstrated his points. The pictures of the selen- tilts, who we responsible for va delil _’ ’1 i t inventions in thi .scientifieworld,‘ were loudly Q’- plauded, which dieplayed the em lthnslaem of the audience. A wireless telegraph of Pfanstiehl's own manufacture, was very inter- esting, undone could easily im-1 agine its‘ I great usefulness, for without any connecting wires the bell of one telephone when touched called fyrth a responsive, ring upon the other. V To persons acquainted with electrical lore, Carl’s indugtion coil is exceedingly interesting be 1 cause its spark is so much more: t powerful. than the ordinary one: 1 This seine coil ia‘a monument, to I Eto speak, of Carl’s patience and i perseverence. Its construction 0c- 1 cupied three months and consists ' of ii hollow’ iron pipe filled with wire, around which is wrapped fifty-three miles of very fine wire. The spark‘from the coil was made to perform some very spectuoulm‘ experiments, among which were the worm and the electric fence. One beautiful electrical effect was made by a disc across the middle of which was fastened a row of Ealteruato blue and green bulbs. When these were lighted and the disc set in motion the result was Eu myriad of beautiful illuminated 3. g‘desigus almost like a fourth of ‘ 5 July pin wheel. But the x-ray itself, was after all, the most wonderful; the most interesting and the most mystifiâ€" ing, .and especiquy' u the machine was mufe throughout by HIGHLAND PARK. ILL, MAY 21, 1904. 0qu! Mill. Rdiocnplu mm: by menu of the manure Olson. Thou veto vet, inbred. tag, on. picture showing a build“ lodged in the shoulder of a nun who had no idea tint it wu them. . “0530! In. 0. H. Warren and mother hive given to the noun: bottles of and um! chy taken from the notation: of the Highland Put mean well in front of the city building. The well we: dug in 1885-’87 to a depth of 2100 feet. Mr. Kirk has presented I wild- ont’s skin, and Mr. Stoker and ‘Mr. Bell have contributed speci- lmeni ot ore. Boon our c To go bi Some may Some to aetve our country's canoe,- Some in the erdinary walks of life, :Bome to.aerve for breaking 13's,. - And some to serve a wife. . 10 Tue semen: ‘1 Soon carols“ shall scattered be ‘ Togo bur different ways; Some in) travel o’er the sear, Some will wish for betteg day's. NOTES The graduation essays have at last beén completed and now it is definitely known who will take part in the ‘_program commences ment night. The choice, wag “made largely becguse of class tetanding and also because of merit in the oompositi‘ons submittéd. _Iow on m up. Vary cum-db The. first thing 'on the program w”"“ wm'*°mm" ‘ . (Jo-hogan! vault-on. mll be, of course, the aalutatory, m th 01 ’ . . . - The M“ t 0 ”13“ W‘ dehvered m latm by Elena Brand. raphy‘aonld do levers Mar! to tho ‘The valedictory will be given by l’trzdomcommercmltertflm,mdapo-, l Estelle Clark.~ Essays will bei daily to the convorgion at row phon- -’ in plant food, a m read by Elizabeth Kemp and,‘ photo to mm: 1 5 sight absurd. Eleanor Smoot. Henyy Bell, l Y“ 30 it 1!. and in this Wu. ms Stray (n;-_l-- DLAAVJI‘AOA- and hang- l'n M Herbert Moore and Williavaioe will deliver orations fund Annie Enmark «class poem. Wednesday morning the Phys. ica plans enjoyed‘a’n‘ unuzunl treat. Heretofore they «bawve pined away in the labratory while the bioiogy class trumped thmugh Bug [and1 at their own BWeet will. An event- in! day came, however, and the delighted class found themselves in the heart of the Skokie Valley, performing experimentaflter- mine the velocity of sound, the abject now under disouuiontr'l‘ho trip In both instructive and on- joynble, and the oh:- 00 living!» Lfond hopes of I repetition of thtt 1d”? plum. Monday morning Mr. Sandwich gave n talk. on how people with little wedth hnvo hooolno grant. He told about some young men Lwho worked their my through lBtnnford University nnd now ore Kl ALL DUE TO pno'roemnr. t There was a dandy 101mg Greek, 5 Who continually beauty did 366k, 3 He fed on tin cans To whiten his hands, 9Then went to bed for a week. very prominent, pronperooo bui- neu men. He aid that Auction 080:. no many opportunitieu that every youth here can get a college education it he desires it.~ ' We are planned to see the good sense and «game. lor knowledgo displayed by our felfow high ichool of Hinadule, Illinois. _Thio school evidently knows a good thing when it see: it. and in this can, clamored Io loudly h! it 09., of! to Hinsdale lut night I! the cfiizena of that town enjoyed the Ware one- half as 'mncli u we did, we feel sure they win on- tertain the right opinlon of the people of 'Deerfield. Stories. Phosphates and bones. to b. made tunable in ID“ mun-oven. malt. ho tented with culphurlc acid. Now. sulphuric geld will dissolvo’mm metal. as sully a water «ice: mm. mum. 13 almost the only metal upon yuan has no exact. So. in spite a: “(nation m: alumna are generally unplpyod no- tom 5228013 platinum may to: tho concen non of sulphuric acid. The“ retort: and to be made in Pals and coat $8,500 to 813.000 apiece. Toâ€"day su'ch a thing as I mama. to- um would cost literdly 3 fort“... to: phtinun. owing to the tntroduuon u the platinotype proceu in film». has gone up tram thou: In donut“ cum to. tho pro-on; mo. of.” It ounco. It It Ind.“ and, a 00m. 110. 81

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