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Physiologists and physicians made no mockery of a new announcement last week by one Joe H. Pos, civil engineer of Portland, Ore., graduate of the University of Zurich. He said he had constructed an "electric-radio" machine, that regulated blood pressure, whether high or low and he exhibited a box, like a radio receiving-set, of bulbs, coils, condensers, arms, doohickies, thingumbobs, gadgets, gimcracks. On top of the case are two brass arms, one of which constructor Pos points at the back of the patient's head, the other at his stomach-that is, at the medulla...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Machine | 1/18/1926 | See Source »

Acting* Foreign Minister Stresetnann: "My wife and my two sons rejoiced with me in true German felicity. "I expressed satisfaction that a Christmas address to the American people, which I had spoken into a new recording device, the Panatrope, was being re-created and broadcast over the radio at Manhattan, while I remained at Berlin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GERMANY: Weihnachtsfest | 1/4/1926 | See Source »

Thousands of U. S. apartment houses are afflicted with noises like these. Can anything be done to keep you from hearing simultaneously the matrimonial differences of the slovenly young couple upstairs, the radio in 4-A, the quacking of the saxophone across the hall and the telephonic improprieties of the bachelor below? Steel girders, plaster and cement can muffle but never quite extinguish sound; but last week a scientist came forward with the statement that noise can be kept out of a room just as well as a snowstorm can; that a scream can be locked up. He, Dr. Paul...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Soundless | 12/28/1925 | See Source »

...used to do all the cooking and clean the house and help me with the washing. He scrubbed and wrung the clothes. Then we used to sit in front of the radio when there was a fight broadcast and hug each other when his man was winning. . +. Oh, he was a fine boy. He wouldn't hurt anyone. . . . Just mischievous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Louis Phal | 12/28/1925 | See Source »

...farm income for 1924-1925 was $12,400,000,000 greater (7% greater) than last year; that the farm population has decreased 182,000 (.6%), to 31,134,000; that only 29 out of 1,000 farmers are rich enough to pay income taxes; that 553,000 farmers own radio sets; that the average family income on the farm is $1,504, of which $634 is furnished in food, fuel and housing by the farm; that an odor of the cotton plant has been isolated and plans are being laid to manufacture it synthetically as a bait to lure boll...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Annual Reports | 12/21/1925 | See Source »

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