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Show BEAVER PRESS Sally Sez 'By AH J em en i h Y Si t. -- oi . Wl v "X ' , 1. At.' x ,x xx'xsj-- ' , x s xtx Xsvx x x i , X X XXX S T . - t4B. tOX w.V) J3r - " www. fegsrzri: xx - X4 ' x ? Xj - -- 1 Whether in golf or in business one has to be a good driver to play the game lightly. Do a bit of driving for home industry by becoming a patron and a booster. These Brands Are Intermountain. Made And Deserve Your Support mm lift fciiifc (Pad mi UTAH HIGH BEAUTY-CULTUR- THIS WEEK'S PRIZE SCHOOL OF STORY E The insignia of quality to people who know The password to economy and higher saving The product of the mountains, of mountain people. If needless noises are detri- Are you a user of the products' of mental to the health, the Ameriyour community, your state? can race must be rugged, for it Can you honestly say, "I am helpstands a lot of punishment. Deing to boost this section; I am troit Free Press. really one of the Intermountain people"? Ak Vonr t APEX OLIVE OIL MRS. NANCY M. LILJENQUIST, For McCammon, Idaho. Ird Floor. Clitt Bide. Salt Lake Citr. Vt. It jon r Planning a Payinir Buiineas Future, Inveetlgate Our Plan Writ For Catalogue Drug-gii- AS INTKRMOUNTAIN 4 By ELMO SCOTT WATSON Cjp N MAY of last year the announce- rT jT" merit was nmde that the United ,'cKJ Vl States army had added another bril?V: liant .5S achievement to the record which makes valid the boast Hint J',eS otl"r tni"Ss besides U$l "lhe nr"'5 k.i ngm. ' a new record in long distance aerial photography had been 5et by the air corps of the army when Capt. A. V. Slovens, photographic expert, succeeded in taking a picture covering a distance of 270 miles in a single exposure. In Captain Stevens had set a Ion;; distance photographic record when his camera registered objects 227 miles away from the camera eye but his 19.".0 flight in a plane piloted by Lieut. John Corkille over Outer lake in Oregon added more than 50 nrles to that record. Upon his return from this flight, Captain Stevens declared '"While I am very well satis-tie- d with the results obtained on this particular mission, I nm inclined to believe that It will p only be a matter of time before we will s camera that will record even greater distances, r.ofore we can use it, however, we must have n photographic plane that will take us considerably higher than 20,000 feet because from that altitude even an object as tall as Mount liainler will sink below the horizon at - C- ' j""'" I - i .n- , r.'-- " ' ' jSx 'S.V "',VVlv f S :i miles. "Shooting at Mount Rainier from a distance greater than that between New York city and Washington Is much like shooting at the moon, with the difference that you can see the moon. The principal task Is to aim the camera In the general direction you believe your objective to be, snap the trigger and hope for luck." What "luck" the army captain had on this expedition was revealed by the remarkable photograph which Is shown above. Another achievement In this new scientific marvel of aerial photography, which was not fo much a matter of luck, was demonstrated during the army air maneuvers over New York city during May of this year, the results of which are shown In the photographs numbered three and four above. As explained in the captions, these pictures were taken by exploding a bomb containing enough magnesium powder to make a 3,0O0,fXM).0O0 camllepower flash and snapping the shutter at the height of Illumination. It would worn to he an ensy matter to drop a flashlight bomb and at the moment of the explosion to take the photograph. Since, however, there Is a definite relationship between the altitude of the airplane and the height at which the bomb explodes, It Is not so simple. Night photographs can he taken only at comparatively l"w altitudes. Measurements of the photographs taken over New York showed the airplane to Imve been flying at only 1.500 feet, although light photographs could be taken effectively up to around 3,000 feet. The lens cannot be left "Pen until the bomb explodes because lights from the ground would blur the plates or film. The only thing the air camera man has to do at night Is to refc'nse the bond); the rest of the details are taken rare of automatically. The bomb, containing twenty-fivpounds of magnesium powder, is checked in Its fall by small parachute and a time fuse sets the Interval from the release to the explosion. As the bomb "irsts the camera's shutter Is automatically tripped by nn Ingenious mechanical device. I'.efore the World war the science of aerlnl a few cases, most of photography, except which were unsuccessful, was virtually unknown. It took on added importance early in tli" war and developed rapidly as the airplane '".Mine such nn Important factor In waging i essfui battles. Hut it has been since the v 'T that its most rapid development has laken I'iace i,nd that development In this country has fr Free From Carbon No Equal For Crtapness and Quality Factory 47 Kensington Are. Salt Lake C'ilr Tel. 11 T 1741 "I've never seen a millionaire who didn't dress conservatively," says a Fifth avenue tailor. Thun A scientist states that the Berwe've been staring at vaudeville muda islands, which now have a actors. Kansas City Star. land area of about 20 square miles, once covered about 300 square CLAUDE NEON LIGHTS miles. Electrical Products Corporation . HELP UTAH HELP Intermountain Made Brooms Black Beauty Gold JL 9?'TWt .illOiTifliliillfr.iTllit t1'if'-"M- - Two hundred and seventy miles of wide A photograph of Mount Rainier taken from over Crater lake, a distance of 270 miles, by Capt. Albert W. Stevens from an army air corps plane piloted by Lieut. John D. Corkille. To get the "shot,'' the two army airmen flew at 20,000 feet for nearly five hours in a temperature of 20 degrees below zero and came down only when their supply of liquid oxygen was exhausted. Some of the mountains shown in the picture are: 1. Mount Rainier, 270 miles; 2. Mount Hood, 200 miles; 3. Mount Jefferson, 175 miles; 4. Three Sisters, 125 miles; 5. Diamond Peak, 50 miles; Crescent Lake, 45 miles. 2. Captain Stevens and Lieutenant Corkille of the United States army air corps with the large aerial camera used in taking high altitude focal photographs. This camera uses a length lens of special construction. 3. This night photograph of lower Manhattan, New York city, was taken by Captain Stevens from an airplane piloted by Lieutenant Corkille at an altitude of about 1,500 feet.. A sufficient flashlight powder bomb containing for a three billion candlepower flash was dropped from the plane and the picture taken with a specially constructed camera equipped with an automatic device for exposing the film at the height of Illumination. 4. A night photograph of the Statue of Liberty and Fort Wood on Eedloe's island in New York harbor taken In the same manner as described in No. 4. All photographs, courtesy United States Army Air corps. 1. open spaces! 1 $ been carried forward mainly by the United Slates nrmy. Although the army is chiefly Interested In and Intelligence photography, each of which requires a different technique, It has many times sent Its camera men and planes lo with other government agencies. The army has Indirectly aided commercial aerial photography by developing the best In technique and In precision of the Instruments. In addition to military work, aerial surveys are Few used for a large variety of nitrations. public utility companies would consider putting down a new power line without first hnving an l aerl.il survey made. photography Is also In demand for forestry services, geological surveys, harbor developments, highway and tralllc surveys, and all manner of city uses, from planning and ssonlng to tnx equalization. The cameras and equipment used for civil aerial Hurveying and for the production of aerial photographs os Illustrations have been improved but little during the last ten years, because the ordinary nlr camera, operated at relatively low altitudes, meets all usual requirements at a small cost. This Is not the case with military photography, and so It Is In this branch that the latest developments are found. map-mnkin- g Ar-ria- u,'u il rerhaps the most Interesting development He camin the use of or eras, the same technique being used also for lower altitude work through fog. In high altitude work the camera must have a long focal length (the distance from the nodal point where the light rays cross, between the two lenses to the surface of the plate or film). With a short focal length It would be possible long-rang- e Chronicle. Crcwn Fish cannot see details clearly, hence their sudden darts into rocky recesses or grasses when any mov-tii- g form appears. L ARTIFICIAL LIMB CO. Braces Artificial Limba Truuet Crutchea Arch Support Extenaiun Shoe Elastic Houtery Established in Salt Lake) In 1908 Ph. Waa. 6264 Satisfaction Guaranteed US W. Third So. I Salt Lake City, UU high-altitud- e for the camera to ''take the whole world," but the detail would be too small. A camera with a long focal length, on the other hand, while it will not take more than about thirty-thresquare miles from an altitude of approximately IW.OtX) feet, gives such clearness of detail that the negatives may be readily enlarged to ten diameters. If the camera Is tilted an oblique photograph is taken that is, a photograph which is progressively distorted as the objects taken are distant from the lens. Tremendous distances have been covered In this way and objects have been taken which were not visible to the naked eye, because aloft there Is almost always, even on a clear day, a certain amount of ground haze. Several refinements are necessary, however, before those photographs may be taken. The camera must be fitted with a special film sensitive only to Infra-rerays below the visible spectrum that Is, the long wave lengths which go through foz easily. This condition Is met by taking ordinary gelatine film and immersing it in a solution of kryptocyanine. The next requisite is a special type of filter, so dense as to have the opaqueness of rubber. All lenses Lave to a greater or less extent the property of a prlsrn ; thnt Is, they break up the white light Into spectra. It is necessary under given conditions to use a filter to eliminate the active colors( such as violets, blues and greens) and restore the light to white. I!y increasing the opaqueness of the filter more of the visible spectrum is eliminated, and It is possible to eliminate It altogether. This Is what has been camera. done in the cast of the rays are Through Its filter only the infra-readmitted, and as ground haze or smoke Is no obstacle to them, objects are recorded on the film which are Invisible to the naked eye. In this way Captain Stevens was able to photograph Mount Rainier from the record distance of 270 miles, the peak Jutting up above the horizon, though It was miles beyond it In the taking of photographs for a special technique has had to be developed, equally applicable to m'litary nnd commercial purposes. It Is not enough to sight the camera and trip It; all sorts of things have to be determined before the photograph can be taken. Because only the center of each photograph can be considered anything like optically perfect, a large number of overlapping exposures have to be made. (S by Waotern Newl.pjr t'nloa e ASK ' jft.p Vj FOB w BLUE SEAL CLEANSER lV5Sg Wonderful Sanitary Household Cleanser and Water Softener The avaricious man is kind to no SOLE DISTRIBUTORS person, but he is most unkind to himself. John Kyrle. THOMAS ELECTRIC M CO. PUMPS MOTORS WATER WHEELS BOUGHT SOLD REPAIRED S43-- S WEST 2nd SOUTH 8 ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH hone grieve so ostentatiously those who rejoice most in heart. Tacitus. HAY DERRICK? We can tare) you money Writ u for Circular Salt LaW City. Ut BEACHBEAR IDEAL "GRAINS OF GCLD" THE WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL "Makes Cream Taste Better" Western Made For Western Trade Auk BuildeA Steel & Iron Co. Spend Your Vacation at e d map-makin- g Tear Grocar WANTED IZ1 b,c-- :'r Writ O. WILHELM8EN Eaal 5th Ho. Salt Lake City. Ut. LAKE 5.00 d long-rang- Hardware Co. t ASK YOUR DEALER Oldest Printed Journal A Dutch newspaper, first published in 1G56, is the world's oldest as in existence. Are yon going to liutld a 475 West 6th Bo. T.ake City parents are those who fear the worst when daughter fall in love with a worthless kid as San Francisco her mother did. Typical By Name Blue Ribbon Salt 1016 Rn. Main YOU I!j nlwayi asking your dealer for I. de-elo- VICO MOTOR OIL FOREST DALE POTATO CHIPS S - J, i V x NEW It is said that during life an. cient Greeks arranged for their tombs and sat for a sculptor that marble might faithfully reproduce them after death. Sjt Stf"" yyts y PRODUCT Boating- - Bathing- - Dancing-Tenni- s Good Cabins and Meals 50-wo- per week will bs paid for the best article on "Why you should use Intermountain made Goods" Similar to above. Send your story In prose or verse to Intermountain Products Column .P. O. Box 1545, Salt Lake City. If your story appears in this column yoo will Qff UV receive check for Reasonable Trices J. W. Niel, Garden City, Utah WANTED: Name of Agrnta la aell Clrtet- Carda tn Mil through year teal printer. Plana lor 1 931 being made aew. Sand la roar naaia for detaile whlrk will aaake your aellinf eatier trlthaat the tronblea. nlatakra and delaya yo had In eaatera factorlet. representing Write W. N. V. P. O. Bos Ilia. Salt Lake City Ve ff ENROLL NOW BEFORE THE FALL TERM We have places for students to earn board and room. 45 .1 Fleet street, famed London thoroughfare runs from Lulf?ate hill to the east end of the Strand. It is named from the Fleet river. In the early chronicles of London many allusions are made to the deeds of violence done in this street. By the time of Elizabeth it had become a favorite spot for shows and processions. It was noterl formerly for its travens and coffoe houses, frequented by many persons of literary fame. It is now the chief center of British 3 1 1 "Racket's" Origin Tlie word "racket" with the meaning' of confused, clattering noise, has an imitative origin By extension this came to mean a social bustle of some kind, with a meaning similar to the word "spree." Finally by the uncertain processes which such words often take, it came to have a slang manim? of a schems, dodge or trick. This meaning developed into the Idea of a gigsntla illegal enterprise. |