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Show J Vimiiiiiiimmm 1 The - CANYON CLUB f a J SOFT DRINKS and SMOKERS' SUPPLIES 1 5 16 Main Street f COMPLETE 3: Spring is here, and so is the best merchandise in town for Men i: and Young Men i at the CLOTHING STORE 1 AT YOUR SERVICE j Mr. Jack Thebert j. X OUR BINGHAM REPRESENTATIVE for Dodge X I Brothers Cars, is now located at the Modern Hotel, and will i f be pleased to explain the many new improvements in these t cars, which owners proclaim "The finest Dodge ever built." j R. J. FRY, Inc. j Salt Lake City t X Motor Avenue MURRAY X t at Second East 4810 South State St. I X We also sell Dependable Used n--y j X 175 East Second South YOU NEVER j CHANCE WHEN YC CAL-L- . p I ED JOHNSON'S j MARKET Government Inspected Meats Only I Phone 93 I Free Delivery j . USED CAMS I The lowest cost transportation you can buy, is given by a good used car. Begin now to enjoy the pleasures and conveniences of a car of your own. " ... .Any one of our used cars will serve you for years to come, because every one we sell is in first-clas- s condition throughout. Greatest Bargains Many of them are nearly new late models recently turned in on new Olds-mobire- s. They have the best part of their lives before them thousands of miles of economical transportation. Reconditioned and repainted wherever necessary. Good looking, full of pep and power and priced extremely low. Terms to responsible people. SEE THEM TODAY at our UJED3) (SiIE LOT Next Door to Bingham Garage A representative is always at the lot, and will be glad to demonstrate any car. Come today! Remember, each one is Backed by Dependable A TOURSS.EN GRILL CAFE I CARR 8 LONG 1 Bingham's Finest Cafe Tables for Ladies I i S I 1 Phone 3 7 ' C7 V frLie of the Ills that motors ere heir to can escape thl new $12,000 auto-""Woi-trouble shooter, established In Chicago for the benefit of the motor-I- n public. The testing laboratory la equipped with every modern device to diagnose motor troubles and Is employed exclusively for that purpose An hour's test under the delicate Instruments suffices In sounding out every part on the modern car and discovering whether or not It Is functioning at Its proper standard of efficiency. 1jTuubition investigators, - at $J,800 a year. 109 Prohibition investigators, at $3,- - 000 a year. 53 Junior prohibition investigators, at $2,400 a year. 228 Prohibition agents, at $2,400 a year. 1260 Junior prohibition agents, at $1,- - 860 a year. .102 Warehouse watchmen, at $1,140 to $1,800 a year. 74 Attorneys, at $1,860 to $5,200 a year. All of the examinations will include ratings on training and experience, a searching oral test, and a rigid charac-ter investigation made by the Civil Service Commission with the assis-tance of other Government agencies. H 1 I l M .' I 1 I ! IM M I I I I I t Pedestrians Quite Safe in Afghanistan ; ; Not only has the United States the greatest number of motor vehicles, but it hus higher .ratio " of automobiles to population than any other country-o-ne car to every six persons. ' ' '. '. China, with a population of '. ; ; '430,000,000, has only one automo- - ; . . bile for every 31,871 people, and ; j India has only one car for every j . . 3,573 of Its population of more ; ; than 247,000,000. Hawaii has the second highest ratio, with one car for every I eleven persons, and Canada T ., " ranks third with thirteen .v-""- ! sons for every automobneT The ' .! ratio of automobiles to popula- - '.. ; tlon in New Zealand, which . . stands next In the order, Is one ' ; car to fourteen persons, that of ' .. Australia, one to twenty; that j of Denmark, which stands sixth, ) - is one to fifty-on- ' " Ratios for other countries vary " i from one to fifty-thre- e for ' France, to one to one million one I hundred thousand in the case of " ' . . Afghanistan, the lowest in rank. !! I I 1 i I I I I Mountain Really Overlooked It depends on where a thing Is whether It is Important. Between San Francisco and Honolulu Uiere is a mountain 8,000 feet high, but it does not attract any attention, because there are 2,000 feet of water covering Its peak. It has been discovered In charting the bed of the Pacific ocean. DEVELOPMENT OF SPORTJS AIDED Particularly Beneficial to Golfer in Affording Fast Transportation. It would be interesting to delve Into statistics and determine to Just what extent the automobile has aided the development of any line of sport, or all lines. It is certainly true' that sport flourished, but not In all Its glory, before the advent of the horse-Les- s carriage. At any rate, It has cer-tainly increased its scope since It was possible for Mr. Common People to own an automobile. Big Aid to Golf. "The motor car has greatly aided one of the oldest games known," says Robert S. Breyer of California, "and that Is the royal and ancient pastime 'of - golf. Greats numbers of people throughout Europe, and especially in Eugluud and Scotland, swarmed the links playing golf, but the automobile has made It possible for thousands of persons In this country to Indulge in tlie sport. An Increase Is also no-ticeable In the old country, "The minutes of today's everyday 'luslness man are worth real money to aim. And he Is one of the greatest devotees of the sport in the country.. The only reason for that is the auto-mobile, qulek efficient transportation between his home, the links and his office. There are very few courses In tlie entire country that are not acces-sible to the automobile, and courses to which there Is no other transportation save walking. Other Sports Benefited. "Golf, however, Is not the only sport that has been benefited by the motor car. Name any sport, and It wlU owe much of Its recent develop-ment to the automobile. It is Just a matter of a few moments to convince yourself of this. Pass the baseball parks in the morning; visit tie beaches, the tennis courts, in fact any place where sport Is Indulged in, and note the automobiles there. "The automobile Itself, the great-est aid developed in modern business, offers a variety of sport that no one other thing could. Nothing is more beneficial than a spin Into the fresh, invigorating air, and physicians every-where recommend motoring as a great aid to a healthy physical and mental condition. Thousands annually Join the ranks of those who are enjoying the benefits of the motor car In all walks of life." i ; Fastening Arrangements J on Hood Will Get Loose ! The fastening arrangements on the hood of the modern automobile usual- - ly hold It tight enough to prevent rattles, but when the fastenings wear, annoying rattles sometimes develop. H05E (5PLIT) ; Simple r for Hood. A way to eliminate them is shown in the Illustration. Take a piece of small- - ' size garden hose the length of the , hood, split it with a' knife and slip ' it over the lower edge of the hood. Popular Science Monthly. ' i 1 in 1 1 1 1 ! AUTOMOBILE NOTES J H I i I 1 I 1 I 11 I I 1 I I i H ! Speedometers may lie, but you can't convince the Judge that the one on , the cop's motorcycle does. No medium priced cars are shown ' at the Paris auto show, because in France there are only rich drivers and poor drivers. A new British automobilt- travels 170.45 miles an hour. It Is hard to hplleve that nnyhrdy In Grest Britain is In that much of a hurry. I The majority of automobile accl- - dents occur at Intersections. Motor- - lsts should always assume that another driver Is Just coming around the corner. i It isn't strictly the railroad cross-- lug's fault that It is more deadly than it used to be. Man got along fairly well when he had the horse to do his thinking for him. I A bill to compel motorists to stop at railroads is being opposed by mo- - 1 torlsts, and there Is some force to the argument that it Is about time for trains to stop as a matter of habit ill! Took for the oarU. V Scheme Devised to End Peril of Motor Fumes A recent experiment in the city laboratories of Paris Is said to have demonstrated the practicability of a catalyzer designed to consume the gas produced by motor cars which Prof. Yandell Henderson of Tale and others have asserted was a serious menace to public health In crowded cities. The device consists of an exhaust pipe containing certain chemicals pos-sessing catalyzing properties which reduce the combustion temperature of the noxious gas. By the passage of a current of air through the tubes the fumes are consumed before they enn pass out Into the street. M. Kohn Abrest, director of the laboratories, says that the average motor ear in Paris gives off one-ha- lf cubic meter of carbon-monoxid- e for each half gallon of gasoline burned and that a cubic meter of such gas renders six cubic meters of air unfit to breathe. Ic the country the half cubic meter of gas Is scattered along half a dozen miles and consequently Is harmless, he says, while In Paris the automobiles move more slowly and often fill the air of narrow streets with Inhirloui, auantilles of fnmoa ( |