Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE JUNIOR SUNDAY MORNING Page Eight JUNE 7 1939 Study These Replies for Genuine Help Youth Wins Praise For Experiments Don Rosenblatt student Margaret Golden of Neph) writes that she enjoyed seeing the picture of the Mona contributors in our alumni issue She also asks about her score saying that she had 20 one week and 80 the next and asking whether her total is 80 or 100 Your total would be 100 We publish each week only the score for that week These are added together to get your real score at Bryant high school is winning a good deal of recognition for the various intricate electrical experiments he has been working out Recently he gave a lecture and demonstration before his classmates showing an understanding of the workings of electricity unusual in a high school boy Among the interesting experiments performed were the increasing of short wave currents so that an observer could light an ordinary light bulb by merely touching it the demonstration of a photoelectric eye and similar attractions Don who Is the son of Mr and Mrs Morris Rosenblatt 1355 Butler avenue has his own workshop in the basement of his home Here he spends many hours each week developing his hobby Donald and Elaine Petersen of Riverton ask how to tell how many points to put on their charts You do not need to put any points on your charts The column for “totals" mean the total number of X’s or O’s you have earned You see you mark your chart for 16 weeks or 112 days You put an X when you do right and an O when you fail Then at the end of the 16 weeks you total these You might have 80 32 O’s for one question or 112 marks in all X’s and Irene Carlson American Fork asks whether she can send in drawings that are not on Bristol board in India ink She also asks whether drawings must be original No to the first question and yes to the second Irene All drawings must be in India ink on Bristol board All drawings must be Occasionally we do original publish a copied picture not knowing that is is copied but as soon as we learn that the drawings are copied (and that doesn’t always mean traced) we eliminate them Magpie Proves Interesting Bird The magpies belong to the crow family They are characterized by glossy black and snow-whi- te plumage They are from 16 to 20 inches long They are found in the old world and in western North America If encouraged they make friends and are easily tamed Because their song is only a “cack cack cack“ they are called “chattering magpies" Their food consists of grubs snails and grasshoppers The silhouette which one of the earliest methods of portraiture consisting of a profile drawing filled in with a solid color usually black has been added to the art of photography Rayola Parker Bennion asks is BARBARA GOUVALAS Salt Lake City Be cheerful Keep the corners of your mouth turned up Hide your pains worries and disappointments under a pleasant imile Laugh at good stories and learn to tell them contributing to The Tribune Junior The only rules are: The work must be you rown not copied from any source at all Drawings must be in India ink on Bristol board Contributors over 10 years of age are expected to use ink With the camera tak- ing the place of the sitter’s shadow cast on a blank sheet of paper Balloon Kite us to send her all the rules for Milbert Remy Salt Lake City writes that he is getting along fine with his chart but it isn’t asks finished yet and he whether he can submit material to The Tribune Junior Milbert The Yes indeed sooner you begin the better we shall like it silhou- ettes are now easily made indoors by hav- ing the light behind the person or object and the shadow projected on a white sheet may be du p 11 c a t -- e d with outdoor lighting and without the the of use sheet The A most effective kite can be lade with the help of an ordi-ia“slimjim” balloon Cut your :ite in the shape of an airplane ittach the blown up balloon to he lower side as shown in the Iecompanying sketch ry other enclosure the subject Is silhouetted sharply against the outside brightness A profile expo- eing relatively dark even w1 normal lig h 1 1 n g in the room or ti of course is essen- tial and the “true” silhouette is the one in which no detail sure of course is based on the outside light The interior in which the subject is placed Whatever appears A photographic silhouette of the familiar nursery rhyme “Ding Dong Bell Pussy’s la the Wen” The subject must be placed a bit away from the window or other aperture so that the daylight does not directly strike the face of the subject while being silhouetted Mary Barraclough writes that and reshe asked for Pen-Pa- ls ceived a letter from a Japanese girl Unfortunately the letter was mislaid and Mary is unable to recall either the name or the address of her new friend She asks fpr this little girl to write her again please and she will answer immediately ( Ruby Tashima of Layton asks When material is to be in yie office Material on the subject announced on Sunday morning must be in the office by midnight of the- following Sunday It is published four weeks after it is - announced |