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The Brussels Post, 1927-8-10, Page 6WEDN-ESDAY. AUGUST 10th, 1927 Insist U on THE BRUSSELS POST Wreele7, :reel „t1 T7ti Cti ii t 1 1ss St el./13:4114S Ca.Vateiteses `I, a eel' AI,,,,eny,.wr+ nam..1......nswuwN.fMM IW++1.1,.serwirinwrra,nwv,us,.ss.wn.+uVar: nmMK'•ri: x,Y Rob rt Barre i e 1 1 Suet of n.ot u,. cf , i T'r: n it .. to t lhcksnt t o tit only o f of the t meetie r '. Cm—bees wi t voted strongly agelen. tl, prop e:i'i'n ms outfa 1 at t? a Ire e in September of 18;14 and then :cant home to Nova Scotia and changed his m'n1 aril became a meet ardent support. r of the propose:. A study of th • life of this eemafl.alde man tends to la- dieate that Canada had statesmen 60 years ago who tild their own think- ing—men who arrived ni their owi1 conclusions and .tuck regardless of the consequences. When he arrived back in Halifax after the Quebae confereeee he was hailers as a hers ^�- because he had flatly refused to sub- H • p,,-, t1 al. .he re,luir -meats for scribe to the articles cf the prnl:oead legal prnet'ce in Nova Scotia and confederation. He was feted and then prepared himself to condaet cheered by the anti-confederationists legal affairs in Net- Brunswick also. but he dim not turn a near ear to '.air He entered poli;les in 1858. arguments that were being put !cleat after Confederation had become a by the •Confederationists, led by men realization. Mr. Dicket does not ap- like Archibald, Henry Tupper and pear to have taken a very prominent McCully, The arguments of the coa- part in the politics and policies of the federationists must have been pretty period. His Iegal practice required sound to win over a clever lawyer a gt).-,0)- Ictal of hie personal attent- like the subject of this sketch. In ion tin•1 .1„ was a man who deeply ap- 1866 he was an out and out chain- pr• ' . - '+ his home and family. Some pion for confederation and was it; - hi: t: - es have suggested that the pointed to the first Canadian senate. seat el the Senate was probably look - He was a native of Nova Scotia ed upon both by the holder and the and was born at Amhurst in 1511. Government as a reward for the Very early in life his parents decided noble stand he had taken in Nova that he should prepare himself for Scotia. He lived to a good old age, • the law. He was given a liberal edu- dying at the age of ninety-two years cation in the colleges of the east. tit 1903. R. B. DICKET NO L SVS LOST The Toronto Telegram is 'mad at the London Free Press for saying things about Tommy Church and the following is taken from the Tale - grams editorials of one day last week which included many features: A Coincidence, an Impudence. Perchance the London Free Press was not the Cause of Conservative i,: - feat wherever the Free Press circul- ated, except in London and one or two other constituencies where the Conservative candidate ju-t man- aged to scrape through. It is A COINCIDENCE that Con- servative ballots were scarce wher- ever copies of the London Frey i'r••-n wn1•e numerous. It is ?.N !We -- DENCE that a journalistic boot-he:rck to the wreckers of the Conservative party should throw blacking battl', brushes and other portions of its hit at the ever victorious Conservatives of Toronto. There was .not a Liberal M. P. elected within sixty miles of the constituency well represented and nobly served by T, L. Church, M. P. A short journey from the printing house of the London ree Press tvi11 bring the traveller to cnn- stituencies that elected sixteen Lib - bend members of Parliament and gave the King Government almost seventy-five per cent, of its following in the Province of Ontario. - L. F. P. Activities Failed to Avert Tory Disaster. The London Free Press is the best morning newspaper, except the Globe published in the Province of Ontario. The districts where the London -Free Press circulates were the sites of the polling booth, in which the Meighen Government utterly failed to elect its candidates, If T. L. Church, M. P., and the supporters and admirers of T. L. Church, M. P.,had made as poor a showing in the zone of their influ- ence as the London Free Press nmade in the zone of its own lack of in- fluence, the Meighen Government would not have carried forty scats in Ontario, The London Free Press had better look to its own editorlais and cease to worry about the speeches of T. L. Church, M. P. or the bogey of Too MUCH TORONTO, Results Indicate That "Too Much London Free Press" is Worse Than "Too Much Toronto. North Waterloo North Perth South Perth North Oxford South Oxford • West.Iigin East Elgin East Lambton West Lambton North Huron South Huron North Bruce South Bruce North Grey South Grey Kent Ontario constituencies named a- bove elected sixteen out of the twenty-six supporters of the M'te- kenzie King Government returned from this province. The King Government gets its 1I. P.'s elected in the constituencies where the London Free Press gets its readers. The list quoted ubove is not cam- plte. A full and authentic catalogue of election results would show that the Meighen Government lost ten or twelve seats in the constituencies served by the London Free Press at the ,general election of 1926. HURON CO. SCHOOL FAIRS 1927 Hensall .Sept. R Zurich Sept. 9 Fordwich Smut. 12 Wroxeter ...... ... Sept. 1S Ethel Sept. 14 Walton Sept. 15 Belgrave Sept. 16 Varna Sept. 19 Goderich Tp. Sept. 20 Colborne Tp. .. Sept 21. Ashfield Tp. ..... ...Sept. 22 St. Helens.........Sept. 23 Winchelsea ...... ...Sept. 26 Blyth Sept. 28 Crediton Sept. 29 Grand Bend , Sept. 30 • Dashwood ....... . , .. Oct. 3 Clinton Town ..... ... Oct. 4 Clinton, rural ...... .. Oct. 5 eLOOK AT YOUR LABEL cEAll,3 AGO people awed to make thomeeld$a heard by *hostile,/ from'the Loupe tope. f 9om'it• ed that to -day you weatd prob7 bii• have to appear before a cotnmtsllen in toenail,. NOW.AIDAYS' the boetaett mark aaopoar W'ti•nt.Ado, tm,mN rr r,.4 , 11 .000 Queer Customs of 1 Frozen North it eser epee 0 0-00 rn11 t' irnnir.,l. t. i11 ilia fur e,'cct1. t It rat 1'••1,11 nut- r. 1: . .. , ,I it: l'•.* „I; r 1, ., ,, 1,_ It 1111,e•i-.,1 1-1 r -i. in.. 11 1., It tial, r ete1 . -111• • ;11• Tit \. PRINCESS 0/A MON DS 0001 �,. �... o...., �.. �. �,............ a. �... �, e...,.,. a. glue White Sparkling Gyros wheal) hi.lr_in lustre proclaims their Quality, Canada'a Greatest line of Gttarantecd Diamonds our order, with ono of Ye• ol 1 Brea, of Diamond, 1m- •to1 •i,t r,. t c we are til • to of- ' t t y ,u. 1„„ te.: outhiy him) xhite i? „nurntl rat d,.i.:,, ,it:, re,lttevd prie,•s, l:Yery (111,11 liri!;sant, per- feetly out and of :t ) tet!''; that ern 'ver h.• t•rntiri..,01. Price according rn :ito ei t'. , from ,. 11!1 up. ' r ism e.'.. • II, - to N1:11*!, 1 t- 111,11 h.. W1ut• d,11•11 ih 111 ,1, •1 1.. o 111•1•i 11••1 :1.1,1 1 1•1'-, mol ill •.;e• Ittnu 11mn., 11' hal dt+appeared. 1Ir, 11a a ;, . !t whs to it, d 1-m It 100111.1. rat 'a l.f, r•;., i' ..It. 11„ „'dile. food, tsar ; •rt ed, fmly 11,v eller people used kith•, tttr ..1)1 'Aron terr- ine. the food with their 1i)we s, Ues- set•t duster„d ni th.r• larva,: of t110 ea :atom fly, cre•n: tat. trt..;.'., tr,ititic^. sorted up raw ,lust as t'1• : had leen plotted not from th • skin of taxa boasts nviien shot, Says till author, "'this wno 111••111 11Y more titan WS cat)ll. 'wallow.” The fond of the P t to ,s enn.•i••fs of ea iba't, walrus, seal, .inti variate kimis All are tat •n !TOY and a hot .S,•mp eco iris n; blond With itirnt . r' 1 i lttt'tl,b. r 11'.1 f,n• 12:1-•••,,,, and is th' Ir only metlu'd of hetotae. Their int at -• wade of strew, and as roan as neat•• WtS a `limiest' "1 blubber to fill six or eight Limns, the plane tett- so Warta that the OM. dr,•n went about nalced, 9'he1y can en -set 0 substantial hut in n quarter of an horn•. Daring the hong dnr)t evenings their only light is a ptimi- tive tallow dip node of mors and earribot fat. Wader Supply is en- sured by building the anew mutt close to the shoe.• of a lake, a hole belug kept open in time ice all ihretu_h wit, - ter. Their clothes, whim dump, are dried on the body. Their lives are full of terrible hardships. One day they are wallow- ing in luxury, having caught many caribou or seals. the noxi. the.t are starving. "Yet,” says Mr. Rasmus- sen, "they think theirs is the finest country in the world." They have all manner of invoca- tions to the spirits of the land and sea,: to which they pray Them food is scarce, and they never travel without wearing a large number of amulets. to guard them against all manner of misfortunes. Even children are forced to wear these protections, which consist of such things as a swan's beak, the head of a ptarmigan, a bear's tooth, the pelt of an ermine, a little dried flounder, and so on, One little fellow- of ellowof four or five had no fewer than eighty amulets about his person wher- ever he went. Girl childron aro killed at birth, unless already spoken Inc in mar- riage, the economical necessity being too great to allow girls to live, Otte woman. hard pressed to provide for her baby, exchanged it with another wnutau for a frying -pan and a c1!g. The Eskimo does not bury its dead. The body is lead out on the ground, and left to the mercy of prowling animals. F,sktmn woman are nlw ys cheer- ful, despite the terribly sorrel work they have to do. The housewife has to keep all clothes in eonslan1 re- pair; she fetrhr's snow for water, thaws meat at rho lamp, cuts up meat for the dogs, beats and presses blubber for oil, and keeps the lamp at a certain temperature. If it is allowed to get too hot, the roof be- gins to drip, and has to be plastered with fresh snow from within. She makes all the shoes by chewing pieces of hide as hard as wood until soft enough for boot soles. Divorce is common where there aro no children, and a woman may be married eight times before set- tling down fol' good. Polygamy exists but is not common• owing to the scarcity of wnmfin. Polyandry also occn•rs. Two men4inay go shares with one wife. Such arrangements usually end by the killing of one man, Changing wives for a time is a common thing, whether the wo- man wishes or not. The man has every freedom—the woman none. It is no uncommon thing for as Eskimo to be lost in a blizzard, Mr. Rasmussen's party came across the body of a woman who had set nut the previous winter to find her hus- band and had been overtaken by a storm. The inland Eskimos are very little concerned about death. They believe that,all men are born again, the soul passing on eontinoally,from one form of life to another. Good num ratite) to earth as mien, but evil -doers are re -born as beastct. Hunting is the chief interest in the life of the IEskimo. Caribou are killed by throwing spears. Fish are caught by speariatg or by hook and Iine; birds, bares, lemmings, and marmot taken in snares. The feath- erid game is mostly hunted in the autumn, when the birds are moult- ing and cannot rise easily, They are then pursued on the water in kayalts and killed with email harpoons. S&.1 and walrus are harpooned. - In Baffin Land winter begins in September and laths till the middle of July, Dining Ihte winter months the Eskimos, have to straggle for life against a temperature of between minus 30° and minus 50°C. In order to keep themseivre warm they play games meet of the day while not Minting, These two of a simple char- acter, such as hide -and -sank and "Dear," whore one person orawis about on ail -fours, While the rest dance round. ?fade,klgC Princess If.E AN.& An exquisite gem of rare fire and quality. $90.00 We guarantee to allow 100% of the purchase price of t his Princess Diamond Ring within one year of purchase in exchange, or towards the purchase of any other Princess Diamond Ring of equal or highea value, Diamond Rings Wedding Rings You can Buy lereNith Confidence J. Re WE DT JEWELER WROXETER Here and There Air mail service between Winnipeg and Fargo, North Dakota, has been inaugurated and the first mail for Winnipeg from the United States ar- rived recently. The Shorthorn bull, King of the Fairies, recently sold from the Can- adian ranch of H. R. i -I. the Prince of Wales to a United States breeder, again won the premier prize at the Calgary Exhibition, Evidences of the renewal of inter- est of Old Country investors in West. ern Canada are seen in a number of recent transactions recorded at 'Winnipeg, including the proposed erection of three motion picture houses by means of English capital. Mederic Beauperant, when clear- ing his farm south of Verner on the Canadian Pacific lines, found a 300 - lb: boulder which was half native silver and worth about $1,200. The discovery has aroused considerable interest among mining men in Cobalt end elsewhere who are arriving in numbers, London, Ontario, now has an air harbor. Through efforts on the part of the Chamber of Commerce an ideal air -field site has been taken over and, within a month's time, will be completely equipped and marked so as to provide an air depot avail- able to all planes that seek London an a stopping place. According to a financial statement issued from the headquarters of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company, the gross earnings of the Company for the first six months of the year ended showed an increase of $3,614,- 778.00. The net profits, however, decreased about $900,000 due to a four million dollar increase in the working expenses for that period. Quebec City lived up to its tradi- tions as the historic gateway and welcomed their Royal Highnesses the Prince of Wales, Prince George and Premier and Mrs. Baldwin with a tremendous burst of enthusiasm and a blaze of color. Vast crowds thronged the docks and waterfront as the Canadian Pacific S.S. Empress of Australia, bearing the distinguish- ed visitors to Canada, steamed into sight. Experiments in rust prevention by means of spraying chemical over wheat fields from airplanes is about to be tried out in Manitoba, under the direction of the Dominion Gov- ernment Department of Agriculture. The chemical used is merely sulphur in a collodial state, technically known as "Cola." It is said that one 'plane can treat 6,000 acres a day, flying at a height of 60 feet. The machine will carry 700 lbs. of chemical 10 the mechanical spraying apparatus. "Austrian bakers have discovered that with the use of Canadian flour they can make more and better bread. The prohibition of night baking also favors the employment of fast-baking"Ilour," says the Com- mercial Intelligence Journal; Ottawa. Frederick Franke, Austrian Consul, says his country le anticipating with gratification a trade treaty with Canada; for, while the war reduced Austria's' population from 64,000,000 to 6,000,000 the city et Vienna has ptil} 2,0001000 to feed,, _ . • -.__,, SALTS FROM DEAD SEA To Lxtrac(, lute uott 'Pons of t'ota'.h a t ... 4 ei t. esshlu i. io ho emoted by the (liteeremeni. , f P.,ieeIin,• 11.11' the eXplultnttott of the tint in the Deed sea; in other words, a colt Basi• itt tt In• given itt ni rht t ••treei. t ld:uti. 4111 the shore et th 1),110 0 1 fur the Purpose of •X!tt -•t r 1.',m t1 -o t`ttfel' mulct Illi int 1!,, pt. ,,nett, to 11111 ue rektl 1ncet, T , 4,.1 ...1, rt to the r ,,imp 1iu; i;� 1',:t•,•It .,,•.ti:,, years, en -1 :b), cot i —Con t tid by the company 1011 f,,1.1 rots, itu pei,lir 1• •Vt nit e! 1 1 lin,•. 1'11 1 h C•iii,fli it trill :•Iil•ltint- el ., ,, It .ii, t 11 ,t. 1,11„111 nn 111 1 1ti l 111.. 1Cia1 noi1. • anon of Dead d r + L., in,- i, r III,. a f:n•I. ro or I tt;,h •Cita, ceuel11-iu:'1s of Ih, r•1n'otiftr:, t"r" that from a t• hr: 11 t r;,'! :r i I t t- is no itt-uperaide difficulty 1n xarartt -: luuuuu t.ois l+trath c :u Irma the Salts or the leeni sea, A ptuduet containing 70 le 0 c rat. of potash eau Ize extracted by solar 1 io u. eci r rt n 1 .t Pruotirnli} unlimited quantities of eont'n salt and ureee •.stun can 1e uhtatim'd and emelt smaller ettteniltiee of cau ile tiotat•h and brow:nc, One Eioseih chemist who lets ana- lyzed the water of the Dead 11'a, esti- mates that there are two billion tons of pettish in that body of water. At present the so0rr•es or the world's supply aro 1hnitet1. Rum()' of the lam- nst, tt•itich are mines, are In A 1gtc,, which the Treaty of Versailh e rent. r- oti to Prance, A Francn-flra•man combine new exists for realt111ting world suneties; emelt cottony, after siteel ine its own needq divides the world---tu'o-thirdsof the export trtdr ruin.' to (leranY cn,l rine to Franco. Tile water :Ir ••1 of the Tread Sea in nitwit -111 snit' 1.0 1101, �. '•m1 its great- eet. width 10 r 11e,. 'fin depression of ille orthe eta. Its depth, and th nh•ecre of any outlet render it one of the r.:•,.t remarkable spore on he The depth is 1.308 feet, and the sit !Irv• is 1,116 feet halon' the 1et•e1 ei the Mediterranean, A anion of distilled warmer weichs 10 pounds, l,nt a gallon of Diad R':1 wet, r 0, hrhs 12?/ pounds and con- tains near see pounds of matter in or, w! -rettliy Wate, w:ehichtatiw, t -hs 10s?(nrt p00nnr11dssen- per nalr- tnn, centnies less than half a peend of mattla•. Of the 11,r, pounds of nuttier in eacli gallon of Dc ad Sea hater, one pound is common salt. A little to the northwest of the Tread Sen is n fiat area. It is heee that evaporating pans of clay (found on the spot), or cement, will be con- structed for the first prices of cry- stallization. In the next step of evaporation potash and the more vai- uable salts will he produced, 71 is considered that solar heat will be quite adequate. Power will be re- quired for pumping, and machinery for finishing some of the products The disposal of the Common salt. the chief residue, is, as the Govern- ment experts point out, a scrions problem, For every ton of en per cent. potash five tons of salt will be produced, so that the concessionaires may be left with half a million tons of salt a year. Transport is a provision else for the manufactured product. The rail- way from Joppa ends at Jerusalem. 18 miles away. A new rttilwal- will have to be bunt up a very steep In- cline, or a pipe line laid et road transport adopted, "Softwoods Storehntttte." In the fourth quarter of the last century people when they de"irod to bra unenmplimentary call,."1 Canada a "wooden country" referring of roars" to the widespread use of wood in the ronstruction of buildings, bridges, sidow1lks, pavements. etc. To -day statesmen and economists, with far different feelings, describe the Dominion as the "softwoods stnrehonse of rho Empire" and urge all Canadians from patriotic as well as from business motives to roottcr"A and utilize this creat' resource with which a beneficent Providence has en- dowed the land. Fire is the outstand- ing menace to this groat resource, and it is stated on official authority that the majority of forest first have been caused by carelessness. They should not have been, yet during the past six years they have burned an- nually an average of 010111 1,400,- 000 acres of young growth of var- ious ages, representing the annual increment nn twenty-five millions to thirty million acres of forested land. A Shop Gir'l's Romance. Miss Williams, a San Francisco shop assistant, picked up a $100 bill in a local bank a few weeks ago, and handed the money to the cashier, who told her that if it was not clafmcfl within three days it would be hers. Three days later she returned to the bank, and the cashier told her the money bad been claimed by a rich broker, who had boon given her ad- dress. Two days later Miss Wil- liams received from the broker ail invitation to dinner, and three weeks afterwards she accepted his proposal of marriage. 28,0000 -Year -Old Statue- Fhtcavations by Prof. Mayer in the Wachan defile at Wollennorf have brought to light an ivory at:atuo of a woman, said to date from the glacial period, and probably about 26,000 years old. The statue, which is ten inches in height, was carved from the lower -hew of %mammoth, whose re- mains were discovered close by, Enlarging Textile Plant. 'The Dominion Textile Company plant at Magog, Quebec, is about to be enlarged,,by an addition Vhich will involve an expenditure of from $1,000,000 to $1,6.00,000 in ccn- atruction and equipment. Among otter changes, the twelve printing machines will be increased to twenty. Londnn',a 'Women. London contains 241,265 more woman than mein. 1 The Car Owner's Scrap-Book1 (By the Left panel Monkey Wrench) WHEN CAUGHT IN THE RAIN. ~elect 1t location where the earl will trot be on the level when ctitieht1 In It heavy rain and forced to atop, In mitt, po:•Itioo 11:e wars r will run Olt' the top ilcitead of collecting is pude! (Iles 1111,1 .soaking into It. Stand the ear wit -ti ill. ;IAA t i_ tlitI t- t Blain tri roar ,so that the water will dram on to the, rctu' in,tesid of running doutt • ()mutt the heed and possibly into tate ell„tine. CLEAN INGCYI.INDFRS When scraping out carbon do n,d• sire it, ..'1 all •l: y, ee ut, is finished and the helm lyes beet() n on teedit. so water el - lowed. u . IL m t a. 1 .s . lowed to remain in the cylinder jack- ets it will citelt rosy particles of r at- bon that fall through the water t '-igt. These will (11 .11111 out, but if the jackets are dry, when the system is filled up again the particles of car- bon may he a;tshed around and cause trouble. GOOD CARE FOR BATTERY It saves the battery to switch off the lights when using the self-starter at nicht. Throw out the clutch to Bare the starter the trouble of crank ing over the transmission genre, and Mill the choker out before touching the starter button so as to melee every moment of the starter's work count. The juice :•aced in the ordin- ary start may be a thousand times more valuable should the engine stall when the carr is in a precarious posi- tion. LONGEVITY OF TIRES - - • ll,sirles proper inflation, the fol- lowing:' points should be kept in mind for the longevity of tires. Flats should he removed and repaired im- mediately; wheels should be kept in qu nncr alignment; bent or rusty rims should be corrected; use of tight metal chains should be avoided; tread cuts should be repaired prompt- ly by a reliable vucanizer; keep brakes properly adjusted;. be care- ful that tires are properly applied, and drive carefully. PROPER CARE OF CAR'S FINISH Bemuse the varnish requires con- siderable time to harden, extreme care should be taken in washing a new car during the first months of use. Even though the car has been out of the factory several months, the paint is soft, and until it hardens the varnish is cagily scratched. Only Castile soap or non -alkali soaps should be used for the removal of grease. The castile soap can be obtained in powdered form and is not of the finest and purest grade. -Gasoline is out of the question because it tends to cut and scar the varnish. Luke - Want water should be used. Hot water will dull the finish, and cold water will not serve well with the soap. Accumulation of mud and dust should be carred off by means of a six-inch stream of water from the hose instead of being washed with a sponge. This point should be watched carefully. It is very easy to scratch the varnish with a sponge, because of the grit collecting under- neath it, After a good rinsing, the varnish should be dried by means of a good chamois skin. Time chamois e: for this use can be obtained in large sizes. To keep the skin clean water. A long, straight, sweeping movement of the chamois produces better results than a rotary motion. HEATED TIRE WEARS OUT Tire Teel depends in part, upon Sneed, temperature and road surface. Road temperature at 100 degrees Fahrenheit wears tires 100 tines greater than at 10 11,1.:1', n. Tires wear 50 pe rcent ! ttarr at 10 mile.; nut belie Ulan al 20 toil. s, end as the :peed itxr r c;, the (111• weer locrea.e. ee la els titer proportion. 5 tilt lieranee to an inll.itinn stiptiole ti:11 eliminate much w. ay. 'Tire. Ilex loss at Toomey inflation and cnit.e,it itis' ()'tau;• ]e 1111 ii, 1 1'r1,1tnn, No tents' of extended i •teeth shnuld be undertake :t until the ear has been thoroughly h u�.lrly in•poettd. I'nrticuhar at- tentr un i • 111 cutlr should r• c l upon 'its ,.tfety features. Brakes adequate fop normal driving may prove enti;•e- ly incapable et' performing up to the standard demanded upon time tour. Travel will be faster than one's usual pace. There must be no weakness in the eitr's steering gear, The engine must he performing at its hest to deliver the extra hewer necessary for long trip: at high speed. Make cer- tain that carburetion and timing are right. The tires must be in good condition. It is unwise to expect old tires to stand up under the gruelling work to which they will be submitted out a touring trip. It is bettor to cut the clay'.: journey short than to risk the dangers encountered when .Inc drives in an exhausted condition. Making good time is a matter of driving consistently at a reasonable speed. This .rate should be neither so fast as to he dangerous, nor 10 slow as to kill the pleasure of the trip. Observe the rules of the road and show courtesy to other highway users. Be alert and keep a film grip on the - steering wheel at all times. ,flake careful note of danger and caution signs, Pay particular heed to the warning to descend steep grades in low or second gear. Never have the car on the highway while repairs, such as tire changes, are be- ing lmede. The generator and carburetor should be adjusted for the summer season. Wrap the terminal wires in Insu- lating tape when the battery is dis- connected. Always allow a distance of at least 30 feet from the car ahead when the streets are wet and slippery; When brakes are functioning pro- perly, it is possible to stop a car within 50 feet from a speed of 20 miles an hour. Drain the gasoline tank occasion- ally to rid of water accumulation and dirt that finds it; way into the chamber. Use low gear and proceed slowly when driving through water, This will prevent the ignition from be - coning Wet, Inner tubes will give better serv- ice and last longest if a new tire flap is installed when the old one shows wear or starts cracking. Keep the engine free from carbon and the valves properly adjusted, as carbon under the valves will prevent them from seating properly. i�iillli!Ilill!I There are a great many ways to do a job of printing; but quality printing is only done one way—TI-IE BEST. We do printing of all kinds, and no matter what your needs may be, from name card to booklet, we do it the quality way. P, S.—We also do It In a way to save you money. The Post Publishing House 11