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Show N MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH m YEARS OF ELECTRICITY V ; fW a v - y?""f s .It f"y i rn ,- "T 1 ! rj 1 2 , . - . - ; X J - i 3 ' ' J I O Reaching into all phases of human life, the accomplish-ments- of scientists and engi-neers in the past half-centu-add up to some of the most amazing stories of all time. From many laboratories, from countless men have come a steady flow of ideas which have brought new products, new processes. Combined, they have given America an unpar-alleled standard of living. Photo at left shows nation's first "big" turbine 5,000 kilowatts for generation of electric power. It was installed in 1903 in the Fiske Street station of the Com-monwealth Edison company in t Chicago. v V hy rn 11 1 1 ifs t it! A i ' ' , ? f . I J,7. il ... . hiii t b thee itwl ie Ripping through the air like u!! spear of fire (above), a bolt of lightning, Most powerful produced by leaps between two im-- st Ise generators in the General it, sctric company's Pittsfield, !li:ss., high voltage laboratory, i.ch man-mad- e lightning aids nesiiin in his never-endin- g battle Jt"ainst the destructive forces natural lightning. At right is ilia- - D- - Coolidge, inventor of fci the y tube ich made an exact science of ''3 hitherto X-r-on fcictice. rata; . , 'I (' it k ' 1 r ' . . t ;Kf . Vy v ' ' i j I i A ! V - . i - 4 j ; - ! - - :. O Experimentation with o i I films on water, conducted by Dr. Irving Langmuir (above), un-covered a new branch of chem-istry known as two- - dimensional or surface chemistry and won for him the Nobel prize. It pro-vided a means for optically de-tecting viruses, toxins, poisons and other tiny, invisible sub-stances. Photo at left shows a modern General Electric tur-bine, 12 times more powerful, than the first of the "big" tur-- j bines, under construction in Schenectady. A turbine like this may provide enough electricity to supply the normal require-ments of a city of 300,000 peo-ple. That Settled It Sim (startled) "Hello, Jim, I heard you were dead!" Jim "They did say I was dead, but it was another man. I knew it wasn't me as soon as I heard of it." Pop Corn (torn your gw MW'lsZ m 1c il tender nd hullcM he B Y mow delicious pop corn ever I Jg I I gron. See back of cut loi 1JBL J recipe for ben pop corn WtU7jJ1tfjr3 balls ind carmcl corn jott M w V I M ev usccd. JJW mil,'--' KVH(T OR YUIOW Happy Combination (Politer TWrATCH your pansy scarfs and towels with this bed set. Edging and medallions are cro-cheted separately, embroidery lends color. Pillowcase-Shee- t Pattern 7124: three transfer motifs 5x11 to 5x18 Inches; crochet directions. Sewing: Circle Keedleerafk Dept. P. O. Box S740, Chicago 80, III. or P. O. Box 162, Old Chelsea Station,' New York 11, N. Y. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No Name Address i OVERJOYED! YEARS OF LAXATIVE DOSING ENDED! "I had to write ! After 25 years of dos-ing; for constipation, I started to eat ALL-BRA- N for breakfast. The are wonderful!" I , Andrew H. Truby, Box 42, Woodland, W - 111. Just one of hun-- dreda of unsolicited letters from ALL- - i , J BRAN users. Marvel- - ; :SJT1' ous results can be yours, too, if you suf-- " 'v fer from constipation Li - due to lack of dietary bulk. Eat an ounce of tasty Kellogg's ALL-BRA- N daily, drink plenty of water! If not completely satisfied after 10 days, return empty carton to Kellogg's, Battle Creek, Mich. GET DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK. Are you going througn the functional "middle-age- " period peculiar to women (38-5- 2 years) ? Does this make you suffer from hot flashes, feel so nervous, tired? Then do ' try Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms I Regular use of Plnkham's Compound, helps build up resistance against this annoying middle-ag- e distress V LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S SCS One application MAKES FALSE TEETH FIT for the life of your plates ; If your pittes are loose and slip or hurt, refit them for instant, permanent comfort with soft Brimms P las strips. Lay strip on upper or lower plate . . . bite c:id it molds perfectly. Hardens for lasting fit and comfort. Even on old rubber plates. Brimms PI gives good results from six months to a year or longer. Ends forever mess and bother of temporary applications that last a few hours or days. Stops slipping, rocking plates and sore gums. Eat anything. Talk freely. Enjoy the comfort thou-sands of people all over the country oow get with Brimms Piasti-Line- Easy to Rt-f-lt or Tighttn false Teeth Permanently Tasteless, odorless, harmless to you and your plates. Can be removed as per directions. Users say: "Now I tan eat anything." Money back guarantee. $1.25 for liner for one plate; $2.2) for both plates. At your drug store. Planning for the Future? Buy U.S. Sayings Bonds! JeASY! No skill rcquirci resetXXHi"LpZ LOOSE Xs. mtowooi HANDLES wk : .p"! A CIUUIOM HIM !:U K CAMS y'lO?; u1j.M&&r .LDMtAES TO MITAL 01 WOOD On electric fans, lawn mowers CCO. roller skates 3 -- IN -- ONE Oil ( If Peter Pain knots you up with V tTdely offered 1 QUICK! ISc.fSifl rub in iy)Mijay THE ORI&INAL BAOME ANAL&e'sIQUE fcy FAMEDBASKETBALL COACH OF y CCNY.,WAS A STAC ON THE ORIGINAL i CELTICS AND IS RATED ONE OF THE tyf I J BST SHOTS Of ALL 4 HAS BEEN NATIONALLY ""Tf IT ' rankex) N rHE TOp 1 L-- TEN TENNS RATINGS A ffl frii - I FOR 17 CONSE- C- n 042,LEN MERULLO, CHICAGO I UTIVE YEARS - cue SHORTSTOP, MADE A ERRORS I IN ONE INNINGJ -- """ r SPORT LIGHT . Greb Was One of Boxing's Gamest By GRANTLAND RICE- - ' MICKEY WALKER, the toy buU other years, had just laid aside his brush, canvas, easel and whatever else goes with paint-ing a picture. For Mickey, the embattled welter-weight who fought such heavy- - weights as Jack Sharkey and Max Schmellng, has been an artist for some time. Mickey even paints "moods" and "illu-sions" as well as landscapes and sea-scapes. But a big I heard someone call my name. It was Greb. So I went over and sat With his gang. Later on they all left us, leaving only Harry and myself. By that time my right- - eye was closed tight and badly swollen. We became great friends and the ale we drank didn't hurt us any. "Finally about 3 a. m. we de-cided to look up another tavern. As we got to the door I said to Greb 'Say, if you hadn't closed my right eye I could have licked you.' "Greb turned on me with a snarl. I thought he was going to bite me. 'Say,' he said, 'you couldn't lick me if I cut off both arms.' "Now," Mickey said, "we had just fought before a packed house at Madison Square Garden at plenty dollars a seat. We had just been paid very big money. And here we were heading for another fight with just three spectators who were pay-ing nothing. " 'Come on,' Greb said, 'let's fight it out here.' He started taking off his coat. As he got the coat about halfway off, which locked up or tied up both arms, I nailed him on the chin with everything I had. It was a nectarine, full of juice. Greb spun and crashed into the side of a car so hard he dented the running board. I never threw a harder punch and he was wide open. "I guess I was lucky. Ton couldn't kill Greb with an axe. He bounded back from the car and started for me, when a pair of cops arrived. Our three y spectators were still there. They shoved me in one cab and Harry in another. "Greb was a great fellow. I never liked anyone better. The next day Tex Rickard sent for us. He offered us $100,000 each for a return match. Now $100,000 isn't goulash. But Greb turned to me and said 'Mick-ey, there are too many guys around I can beat easier than I can beat you. I like the easy dough. I can make just as much fighting them.' "I'll tell you about Greb. He was a great guy. He was a great fighter and one of the gamest men I ever met. And don't believe all those stories about his being out of con-dition. He fought himself into shape. No man could travel 15 rounds at top speed and be out of shape. "He had superb skill and the heart of two lions. I've seen Greb go faster and harder in the 15th round than he did in the first. He liked to upset Broadway gamblers by fak-ing a drunk now and then. But when you met him, look out!" part ui necm, Grantland Rice sm belongs tQ the rosin. It has been just 11 years since Mickey absorbed anything resemb-ling alcohol, which is a good, solid ieat on the good old cart. "My biggest thrill," he said, "well, I guess it was an evening I spent with a fellow by the name of Harry Greb. It was a long evening, starting in the ring around 10 o'clock and winding up around daybreak. "I'd heard Greb hadn't been training right. In fact he staged a visit to a restaurant I was in, stag-gering a little. It was an act. I was dead sure I could beat him. He was just as sure he could beat me. I knew after the first minute of the first round that I was in for a stormy night. Greb was in perfect condition. His act had been phony. I was never in better shape. "He almost knocked me out In the second round. I almost stopped him in the third. But he was a dead game guy and he could take it. Ask Gene Tunney. Neither one of us wasted two seconds. We threw all the punches we carried and I know Greb carried a lot. He was fast and strong and rough. He was only a dangerous puncher when he got tired and quit moving around. Then he could hnrt you. I was in at 148 and Greb was around 160. He had too much for me. I knew by the 12th round that I had little chance to win. But we kept on punching to the final bell. "It was a great fight," Mickey said. "But I liked our next fight better, that same night. I lost the first one and I think I won the sec-ond. I'll tell you about that one." The Second Fight "After the fight Doc Kearns and I dropped into Duffey's Old Tavern. FIRST AID to the grpb AILING HOUSE IPlCj BY ROGER C. WHITMAN Leaky Porch Floor QUESTION: My cellar goes un-der the front porch and the porch floor leaks. The cellar also is cold at that spot. What would be the best way to seal the wood porch floor and to insulate under the floor? I was thinking about using a gypsum board as insulation. Would that insulate against cold? ANSWER: To make the wood porch floor leakproof, cover it with a roofing canvas, then paint it with a good-qualit- y floor paint. If insulation is desired, place a blanket or batt type of insulation between the floor joists on the underside of the porch floor. fllOVmtX;ilT1 8 Haro!(l raett , PAINT MM'Kmm MATCHING TO MIX PAINT TO MATCH V irilsW WORK ALREADY DONE, Oy-- O 'iyiA SMEAR SOME OF MIXTURE f JtiV' ON PIECE OF GLASS AND f1J ZJ HOLD GLASS AGAINST 1 JT SURFACE FOR COMPARJSOH LI, IF SWATCH DOESNT MATCH J'll WIPE IT FROM GLASS ftfLU. SSSIwr BEFORE APPLYING h&M wmRsample- - HOT PLATE ' MAKE HOT PLATE FROM TIN CAN f Cut AND HEAT-LA- ELEMENT, SCREW UtoW HEATING ELEMENT INTO SIGN RECEPTACLE UfHF.T.N(. TO WHICH A PLUG AND CORD ARE ATTACHED tp? iwm AND FIT RECEPTACLE OVER HOLE IN BOTTOM ' OF TIN CAN. LET EDGE OF CAN mm st&ti tTXTEND SLIGHTLY ABOVE TOP OF Py5"1' ELEMENT AND PUNCH HOLES IN EDGE OF jf,Sim C CAN FOR WIRES TO SUPPORT A GRATE, ggTa |