One By ELMO SCOTT WATEON Ss Are thrown i" pour the wn a broa ue of Flage™ They are le world the space f Which foreign and Mrs, American a it be Argentina or Algeria, Guatemals i salemr Ede Chine perors worshiped centuries ago, it walk cafe In Would you prefer wrestlers, juzelers i I Oiriont fingers of village made Pp of transplanted Ghent, Brug I Malines? I we “your oyster,” Mr. and Mrs. American and America. All you have to do is open it! No thrill In visiting foreign lands you gay? And you never geography in school, any- way? Then a trip “Farthest South” by stepping down into the hold of the ship which Admiral Byrd sailed into the Antarctic may not thrill you. But stepping into the bathy- gphere in which Dr. Willlam Beebe descended 2,200 feet beneath the waters of the sea, or into this featherweight aluminum globe in which Dr. August Plecard ascended 54,000 feet into the stratosphere? Certainly you cant say “Oh, everybody goes THERE!" fie & how about If A Century of Progress were “Just another world’s fair,” the foregoing might be representa. tive of “the whole world” which it offers fut there Is another “world” which the visitor dis. covers here—the world of science and inven- tion, the new world that has been created by the ingenuity of mankind during his progress of the past century. And this is the world which offers the thrills, for unlike expositions of the past with the customary static rows of still “exhibits,” A Century of Progress 18 a show in motion, Movement . . . action , . , things in the process of making or being . . . Life! That is the world that is unfolded before your eyes. One of the most Important things in making this possible is the diorama, a small stage with a realistical ly painted background and three-dimensional sictors built In perspective In the foreground. Dioramas have been used for years In museums, but here machines and chemical reagents take the place of stuffed animals. Molecules and fons perform for you, You “see” a radio wave bringing you your favorite music or the volee of your favorite comedian. You stand in front of one case and push a lever or two and under your hand an earthquake is produced, geysers spout boiling water and volcanoes belch forth lava and gas, For a moment you are a god on Mount Olympus! You stand before “The Transparent Man” a model of the human body heroic In size, Your eye possesses the penetrating power of X-rays and you see the nervous, respiratory, elrcula- tory, digestive and muscular systems in action, You gaze upon a cross-section of a twig (en- lnrged many times) and you see the cells in it growing. You are looking at Life! The history of the human race might be writ. ten In terms of its means of transportation, So come down to this Greek theater on the shore of the lake with its triple stage, including river, — and deep-sea narbor front, as well as land, - J ! h y p- LR RS Lh 1. A part of the crowd of children who throng that five.acre wonderland, the Enchanted Is. land, every day. 2. Replica of the Golden Temple of Jehol, seat of worship of the Manchu emperors and the finest existing example of Chinese Lama archi. tecture. 3. “Bozo"-—He lives! He breathes! Me rolls! And he is one of the many devices on The Mid- way, “the City of a Million Lights,” which pro- vide the thrills, dizzy turns, flops and spins for amusement.seekers. 4. Robot, the Mechanical Man, who can do al. most anything a real man can—after you press a button to start him! 5. Inside the log walls of Fort Dearborn. From this little palisaded fortification of a century and a quarter ago grew a modern city of more than three million people. : 6. Young America’s dream realized! What boy hasn't visualized himself actually “running a real train”? Here it is—something of a minia- ture, it is true, but “real,” nevertheless. “w ®» Before you pass the pageant of travel—rum- bling ox-cart, Conestoga wagons, stage-coach, post-chaise, locomotives and railway cars of every description, a Yankee clipper ship, Robert Fulton's steamboat, the first automobiles, the Wright's first airplane and the giant vehicles of land and sea and air of today. You see a whole century of history passing in review be. fore you. (Did you, by chance, drive your own car here? Do you know how many parts make up a modern automobile and what takes place under the hood to “make it £0"? In one place you see the whole process of making an auto- mobile from the time the raw ore is converted into steel until the shiny new car comes off the assembly line. Movement , , . action . . + things In the process of making or being , , , Life!) The whole world In 424 acres and _ . a hun dred years In one day! Yes, even more than a hundred years. Over here is a building from which “the centuries look down upon youn.” It Is the Maya Temple, the famed Nunnery at Ux. mal, Yueatan, relic of a elvilization that was old, old, old, when Columbus touched the shores of North America, And two minutes walk from this building with its fantastically carved walls and its brilliant colors are the houses in which we may find ourselves living during the next few years—steel houses, glass houses, houses of building material undreamed of during an era of bricky wood and stone construction, houses which ah unlike any houses ever before con i 2 ANY : | mm ceived by man. (Some day will & future American be bora in one of those houses, as a Brent American was born in that log hut which stands over or os 4 areal there—the replica of ville, K5.7) bistory of an American family. It is a revolving stage. First the Colonial family appears, their elders, A screen descends and the family appears In a house which Is part of a village. a self- sustaining community, with church. school und a courthouse. Out of the village leads a boggy road over which a horseman struggles with a stagecoach, The stage revolves to show the family of 1033—city dwellers in an apartment house, with telephone and radio. Cans on the shelf show the nature of the food supply. Outside one glimpses amusement houses, parks, schools and factories, The boggy road has been replaced by the mo- tor highway and railroad, while an airplane soars above, Just a bit dizzy, Mr. and Mrs. American, from looking at the whole world compressed inte this small space and watching the centuries roll past your eyes? Better give heed then to Young America’s plea “I want to go over to the Enchanted Island"—he knows he will find there the stuff of which childhood's dreams are made: a magic mountain down which to slide, a sure-enough falry castle, a miniature railroad and heroic figures of toys and story book char acters, How to get there? Why, take the Sky Ride, of course. What the Eiffel Tower was to the Paris exposition and the Ferris Wheel was to the World's Fair of "G3, the Sky Ride is to A Century of Progress, They call It “the supreme thrill of A Century of Progress.” But it is more than just the out- standing amusement thrill of the big show” of 33. It points the way to a vehicle of transpor. cars, symbolize not only the progress of the tury to come as well, (© by Western Newspaper Usnilen.) TB SALT’S HIGH PLACE IN WORLD TRADE Medium of Exchange Long Before Gold. buxom wife In the East Indies could be purchased for a handful of salt ; many slaves which were brought to the United States from Afries were bought and paid for, not with gold, but salt, reports the Wercoster Salt Institute In outlining the many inter esting activities carried on by man in seeking to satisfy his need for salt, remarking that the sult stand ard In the history of commerce an tedated the gold standard As a medium of exch =n e salt was widely used in many ancient eoun tries. The Mogul conquerors of In ago regulating the standard of salt that was used for money. In Asia and Africa cnkes of salt were fre quently money. Up until comparatively recent times salt was used as a medium of exchange in the Shan markets in Indo-China Besides being used as money, salt employed as in days gone by was a powerful de veloper of ecommerce %s Being essen tial to life, and unavailable to tribes substance was obtained by evapora tion, trade routes were early devel route wa ntained Sprinkle Ant Food along win. dow sills, doors and z=penings through which ants come and go. Guaranteed to rid quickly. Used in a million homes. Inex. pensive. Af your druggist’ PETERMAN'S Lum l J A vagile dose of I» hot™ expels wore, Tones up t) bowels. No after © Decessary, All Dragpists, Sbe. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM i i — 5 SHAMPOO = 14 connection with Marker’s Hair Balanss, Makes the hair soft and fully. 50 cents by maii or at drag. iste. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N.Y. bullt to accommodate salt haulers when the river was toe swollen to ford. From thig humble beginning ns a resting place for salt traders the great city of London resulied, Coo Your Shin of Pimples Anoint the affected parts with Cuticura Olntment. Wash off in a few minvtes with Catlenra Soap and hot water and continue bathing for several minutes. Nothing purer or better for skin troubles, Write for special folder on the care of the skin Address: “Cuticura,” Dept. 9 8, WiTe J Ml meals omy 4 WEEKLY ACT 12% weexLy U7 ure weeny CWE RERIP ARAL IENY For (Booklets and baltisnoves FOREMOST RR {oi Po “4 EVERY ROOM WITH BATH. a lL) HOTEL » JUST WEST of Bway NEW YORK 1000 ROOMS EACH WITH BATH AND SHOWLR «Radio... Cirewiet ng lose Water , large Closets... Full Length Mirrors OTHER UNUSUAL FEATURES SUN-RAY HEALTH LAMPS Roof Soleriem . . . Air-Cooled Restourcn: ROOMS $950 SUITES $6°° IN THE HEART OF TIMES SQUARE WANU-—4 I A Anywhere? Me for therel Ble Carman —— By Conrteny of “Life™ BEACH HOUS pere No hay {Drvesing pe 1933 Rates