January 3, 2009

Party Fun With This FREAK Camera (May, 1932)

Party Fun With This FREAK Camera

IF YOU are looking for something different in party entertainment, perhaps a freak camera similar to that shown here will help.

This camera started life as a store box. A little paint and a trimming of lantern-slide tape transformed it into something resembling a camera. From that point the construction consisted of attaching accessories that have no connection with photography.
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Simple Electromagnet Does Mystifying Stunt (May, 1932)

Simple Electromagnet Does Mystifying Stunt

THE well-known barrel of monkeys could produce no more entertainment than an electromagnetic “circus,” consisting of a powerful solenoid magnet and a number of accessories, that you can construct in an evening.

And besides being a source of fun. such a device is highly instructive, and will serve to clear up many of the mysteries of everyday electricity for you.

The electromagnet or solenoid consists of nothing more than a quantity of insulated wire wound on a spool, and provided with a suitable base, connecting wire and plug. Read the rest of this entry »

NEWEST GAME-”SMASH” (Mar, 1957)

NEWEST GAME-”SMASH”
SMASH! Into the sturdy, collapsible plywood backstop goes the tough little polyethylene ball. How it returns is anybody’s guess until you’ve learned how to play the angles against an opponent’s weaknesses. Big thing about this new paddle game is that it’s fun from the beginning, can develop great skill and condition in the player and uses a space only 9 by 12 feet in your garage, cellar, porch or driveway. Schools, Y’s and youth clubs are using it and Aussie tennis stars showed it off at Olympic Village, Melbourne.

January 2, 2009

Keaton’s Kontraptions (Jul, 1947)

Keaton’s Kontraptions

BUSTER KEATON claims he’s an inventor. Yes, and the former dead-pan comedian, now gag man, insists his devices are a boon to mankind. Hm!

Enter the Keaton M-G-M office and the first thing you see is an elaborate contraption completely covering a four by six table. “That,” says Buster proudly, “is my walnut cracker!” He pushes a button. Read the rest of this entry »

NEW in SCIENCE (Oct, 1951)

NEW in SCIENCE

Real One-Armed Bandit was hand carved by Sundance Cravat of Reno to raise money for a Shrine fund. Like its less worthy brethren, this slot machine took in much more than it paid out.

Pedestrian Glasses are equipped with a rear-view mirror for spotting lady and Sunday drivers. Inventor Emil Meyer showed them at Munich’s Inventor Fair, insists they are no gag.
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105 M.P.H. Streamlined Auto Built in Home Workshop, Uses Ford Parts (May, 1932)

105 M.P.H. Streamlined Auto Built in Home Workshop, Uses Ford Parts

EXTREMELY unique in design, but highly serviceable withal, is a new home-built auto which an English mechanic recently completed after five years of labor in his workshop.

Power is obtained from two Austin 7 h.p. engines placed transversely in the frame behind the back rest. These engines were tuned up till they could do 5,000 r.p.m., permitting a speed of 100 to 105 m.p.h., thanks to the efficient streamlining.
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Rubber from the SUN – and Power Too! (May, 1932)

Rubber from the SUN – and Power Too!

Amazing experiments conducted on the American desert point the way toward the day when the sun will be the universal source of power for industry—and also the manufacturing source of rubber, nitrates, and other organic compounds. This authentic article explains how such results were achieved, and describes probable future developments.
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January 1, 2009

Personology—Science of Success (Apr, 1953)

Personology—Science of Success

Bob Whiteside, Personologisf, is startling the scientific world with an amazing new system for determining a person’s aptitudes by his physical appearance.

By Lee Edson

THE man and woman standing in front of the studio audience at a recent San Francisco radio show were plainly skeptical. And so was the audience itself.

They stared at ex-newspaperman Bob Whiteside with a show-me attitude that for a lesser person might have been disconcerting. But Whiteside, who was on the program to demonstrate what he could reveal about a person merely by looking at him, was used to skepticism. He looked his subjects over carefully. He had never seen them before and there was little about them that could distinguish them from thousands of others. Read the rest of this entry »

PERIOD DELAYED? .. Don’t Worry! (Jan, 1960)

PERIOD DELAYED? .. Don’t Worry!

*USE “SOLFERA TABLETS”: BE RELIEVED of this worry! Your period delay may be functionally delayed menstruation as a result of secondary anemia due to iron deficiency, and “SOLFERA TABLETS” MAY BRING relief! If Is a QUALITY preparation of OFFICIAL MEDICAL DRUGS! NOT REPRESENTED AS A MEANS TO INTERFERE WITH PREGNANCY. EASY TO TAKE and NO harmful EFFECTS I PAY POSTMAN ON DELIVERY OF PACKAGE TO YOU OR SEND MONEY AND SAVE POSTAGE AND C.O.D. FEES. PACKED IN A CONFIDENTIAL BOX! ONLY $10.00. RUSH YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS . . . TO HEALTH-AIDS CO..

Dept. HIS-1 RUGBY STA. P.O.

BROOKLYN 3. N. Y.

William Gray’s Pay Telephone (Apr, 1953)

William Gray’s Pay Telephone

By Alfred Lief

THE young wife of a machinist in Hartford, Conn., fell critically ill. The year was 1888. There were few telephones in town and William Gray had to call a doctor. He ran to a nearby factory and asked permission to use their phone. The manager said no; it was not for public use. But his pleading won consent, the doctor arrived in time and Mrs. Gray survived.
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Let’s Use Helicopter Cavalry (Apr, 1956)

Let’s Use Helicopter Cavalry

Swooping in suddenly, helitroopers on powerful “sky horses” could wreak havoc with enemy troops.

By Frank Tinsley

SCATTERED along the western slope of the Asiatic coastal range, the copter troopers and their mounts cluster in little groups as the rising sun climbs behind them. The jump-off moment is fast approaching. Within minutes, the sun will burst blindingly above them to cover their westward assault.

The first elements of the blitz landing—submarine-borne marines —had hit the enemy coast only three days ago, seized the controlling crests and passes of the coastal hills in bloody fighting, well covered by massive flights of water-borne jet fighters. Read the rest of this entry »

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