Show THE OGDEN ST A ND SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 25 1928 Tales of RealDogs-- - ' ' " - - ' ") was a tattered and looking little old husky Belle by name For years across the snows she had done her grue-Ingrsled-pullin- - WASHINGTON— (AP) - r "' 11 rA " er boys e'ther It was the old dog's farewell BACKFIRE HAZARD IS— ENDED — -- - — New Air Cleaner Serves Dual Purpose long-draw- NEW FCEIi BEATS GAS A new automobile fuel said to be a combination oi alcohol and water is claimed to have 30 per cent greater efficiency than gasoline and can be produced at d the cost lit has been invented by Engineer Steiger of the Martini ' automobile factory in Switzerland : j-- GLASGOW!— (AP)— The motor trade has developed a new Indus — the rtiotor-ca- r demolisher tr'i The business which Is spreading over the country comDrises th© soiling of vital parts of old car which tmve been dismantled Many isinaljl firms are doing a this department of goddibusinessjin thes rjibtoa- - trajde and they make-mucmore money on the vital parts than tbey give for the old cars For many years this business was the jmonopoly of the professional car thief but the vigil ance of the pAlice has given it overf J 10 jine- - legitimate aemonsher l s jl yHLJj y'- I ®kt&L - 1 Lf H!£Lj! — ' j i - I "v xpzQ IlZlr wBtl W -- fr ?4jm? — — I ik Kviys I !i 'fWrifel — f i —t——I i "Vrt " 1 &MLJLihz -- y iZSy v ' -- J so have the Walt er four-passeng- models One! eight the Hillmah "20" has everi ventured to with the imported Americanjompeto cars of the same clqS9 which heretofore have had the price market almost to themselvesl This iS the first British or continental eight that hasi sold below $2500 Finaliy" the international jhar-actjof the joiympia show here promises to be adopted at the next' Ne York autjjo show At the Lon-do- rt show there were 3 9 British exhfibitom 26 American 22 French sevt-ItalianJ four Belgian two Austrian twi German and ono Sp4nish ?r i According recopnizprl tliat boys upon dailv to select food t home in the school or in the Sto - Automobile Club of Southern California thera are! 207231 liinprotected crossings in the United States the bureau! states "They (often are required tto buy clothingi and later in their livffi 1o huild fpurchase or rent ft home in the rearand to be ing of a family "The greater part of the monov that boys will earn through all their lijves after they become men w ill bfj spent in their homes A proper understanding of the problems ojf those homes promie to be of pimstant" practical value to them after they become men and accnlre families "It i!f ialso recosrnled that some nhases of home economics education are needed for boys to become intelligent consumers of pconrtmk croods rnd pymnithptic participators in home and family life" By SEA Senicp LONDON — When American au- tomobile manufacturers ijind engineers came here to insiett the novelties of the British and French auto shows they aerain 'took back with them ideas that mafr material-iz- ? in the United States! ana Canada a year latej This peems to be nathing new PREDICTS USE OF hi international practice7 and the itisli and tontinontall manufac-u- i ALUMINUM GARB IJi era are used to it They nave brake system thq four-wheBERLIN— The day is not far d in reen for from theii instance imported tan when people-wilwear' cloth" own oountres to AmcHca And skvsof Dr aluminum ing made in ways )ther they pioneered haye rt James - iJiubinfeld metallurgist that eventually found their popuI He r©ints out that thin alumi- larity ir America even jimore thun the land of their birth num already Is used successfully in So again this year the Olympia for the! jinterior deroration of airauto in London and at the shpw plane jfor the outside covering of Grand 1'alais in Paris reveal inshoes tend on fancy pocletbooks novations that rnay eventually find ladles and vanity bass way to America One of these Froniithis Dr Ilubinfeld argues their gearbox This it is btt a step toward the use f is the is even new £o here that it 2f aluminjjm as a substitute for cloth still offered as extra at equipment exhe says "Germany — a cost of $175 to $250 eijktra "Already" ports tcilltaly aluminum brocades This j mechanism enables the brocades for ladies' garthat to ments i((woven of fine aluminum driver U shift his control lever oar a even the gear highejr whjle "There is little danger threadaj runnfngr in low'1 At Ihe proper that these materials will hear or is moment the shift is 'automatic crumple" he says "because the and smooth The apparSensitive metal has been Neutral- noiseles-placed on ifhe market ized aid been made capable cf atus has been two after years of experiment only stretchjng through layers of cellu- ation lose su)erimpressed upon It" "FRAME LESS" AUTO HAS SHOW FIRST U!l Another innovation ROE At the request of the Italiani in the novelty class is pfrhaps an automoItalian automobile bile without a frame j Although government manufacturers will hold their first the ideh has been shown before automrityile show in Rome in Jan- it is still a novelty in e°mparison uary lis? 2 9 They have previously with other ideas that have been been hld in Milam j more wSdely adopted Instead of the frame there is a JOYS OF MOTOIilXG single tubular backbone kvhich conThe British motorist is apt to tains the drlveshaft and supports offend jthe automobile laws in 200 the entire body The Atistro-Daim-ldifferent way1? and- the Tatra are two models However traffic officersj of England know onlv showingI this type of chassis in about half of the laws as some of Parist them qite back to 1835 Although it may takejsome tine Ti f— before 'anything like this will be seen in America visiting American ODDITIES AT SHOW There will be at least one manufacturers looked favorably on two oddities at the New what is 'called the valancjeless body York automobile show next Jan- The valance is that prt of the uary Among the new cars will be frame between the running boart's one or two makes of front wheel and botitom of the doorsi drive automobiles In tie valanceless 1ody the el ft" w v i i ' I ' - ex-ps- J self-changi- team of his own dogs Old Belle had never left her master's side from' the tmoment when Gall was brought home Sit lent drooping the little old dog - parts: for profit t® 1 m 1 g - es - — 'i jiii- "It is! now nre'caled - G J - ( had crouched beside his body lna voiceless agony of grief DOG SOBS TIKE CRITD Newspaper accounts of the tim say the funeral procession of Gall was one of the most grimly ImpresThe sive spectacles of the North sled set forth for the graveyard jmoving with sedate slowness the sled-dog- s pacing along with none of their wonted eagerness Close beside the sled walked poor ©Id Belle Every time the sled was stopped for any reason she would lay her head on her dead master's body and would sob like a human chljd She chose for herself the roje of chief mourner nor would she yield her place beside the sled to anyone or anything When a dog-sle- d passes through a: village every village dog always dashes out at it barking and snarling and trying to pick a fight with the sled dogs or to tease or bully them Often it Is a task to keep a general fight from Injuring the sled animals But as Gall's body was drawn through the' several villages on the way from his home to the there was no such rowdy graveyard scene - At each village the' dogs would Come slowly forth from their owners houses or from the corrals without a sound and with no sign of attacking the sled's team HEADS ARE DOWN They would fall into line behind the sled moving slowly and with heads down as a part of the At the next strantre procession be another would there village crowd of does that moved noise lessly up to the sled and dropped quietly in behind it And so on at every vjllage or settlement they passed tnrougn At last so the accounts said there were more than a hundred Ravage sled dogs all marching in deathly silence behind the bier giv Ing no heed to one another nor to anything that went on around them but seeming to pay mute and sor rowing tribute to the dead map who had been a master of doj?s ' And ever at each stop old Belle would lay her head moaningly on her master's breast standing statuelike there until the procession started on again and then solemnly taking up her march as chief mourner ROWIi When at last the graveyard was reached the throng of dogs grouped themselves near the church and stood there as If carven of stone — these brutes of huskies and male-mutwhich ordinarily would have roarinff and rending at one ben another's throats had circumstances brought so "many of them together with no one to separate them Belle stayed close belde the dead man until Gall's body was laid in the grave and earth flung on it Then she lifted her nose to the sky and waked the echoes with an n death and howl It was the wornout old dog's last farewell to the brave man who had been her god (Coryrlght 1928 McNaught Syndicate Inc) ' no- f 1 CAR WRECKER SELLS h The tion that hoine economics instruction for' boys "will develop them Into cobka and seamstresss" has been ' exploded and today 7000 young men in 42 states are being taught the fundamental principles underlying 'American home 1H says the bureau of education-othe departroent'of the interior In Tulsa Okla a year of home economlca instruction la required of boys before they may be graduated !i In Dietiver the home economics aj conrso department has outlined entitled "Applied - Economics" which jls elective by boys In tho So effective senior jhigh school has the! course proved that the bov3 In the jjunior high school are urging a similar course for themselves tho bureau says The Manual Arts Iliih school of Los AnJ5:oles for a number of years has offered a uccpssful coXir?" in home Economics to high school " - one-thir- -- - l bowed and her chest abnormally broad 'and her once dainty feet were splayed to double their original size: And now her working days were No longer had she the tirepastless strength and endurance to tug at the traces of a heavy sled at top speed for hours at a time and then-tdig down in the snow for' warmth at night after munching" a' handful of dried fish RETIRED FROM SLEDS So she was retired from sled work and ' was kept around the homestead as a pet pensioned for what might remain of life There in the North where sled dogs are kept for utility alone" the broken-dow- n or aged dog seldom receives such treatment as was accorded to Most owners have not Belle enough gratitude for their outworn workers'" But old Belle ' was fortunate In having for a master the great mail-carriGall a hero of that region and one of the fastest and most expert dog drivers the North has known He was a renowned racer of dog teams too and he was fearless almost to foolhardi- u neat There was a hurry call for ti dogsled to travel a route which was notoriously unsafe over frozen waters and at a time of year when alternate freeze and thaw made such a course treacherous in the extreme Unafraid Gall volunteered1 for the task It called for speed and for pluck and for science' Gall had all three qualities and he be lieved he could make his dogteam cover the distance In the required But to go over the brief time treacherous Ice in safety luck was also called for And Gall's luck V had departed DROWNED AT ONCE? ' As his team was galloping at top speed it struck a stretch of water where the ice was a mere surface fchell Over the spot swept Gall and his dogs The thin ice was rent asunder letting driver and watdojs and sled down in to the deep ers below They were drowned at once or else killed by the shock of immert sionFor later a party of search ers could look Sown through the glass-clenew ice which had formed above the rift and could eee Gall whip 'in hand alongside his sled his dogs still straining at the traces where death had overtaken them all The luckless man's body was recovered and taken to his home There because he was a local hero elaborate arrangements were made The graveyard for the funeral It was was many miles away a bed on to Gall's body lay agreed of furs on a sled arid to have him drawn thus to his burial by another ng - - i i I g hard share of until her strong forelegs were ©ar-spHttl- uto Matures A merican Manufacturers May Adopt Design Petticoat Theory Killed When 7000 Youths Register" ly EAR-SPLITTIN- 3— B Shows New Europe HO WAKING SHE ar !R N BOYS TAUGHT jvAr-- Belle the Sled Dbg of Gall ' ' ARD-EXAMI- ng ):: flow tiame is stopped aavice connected with a new type Isj shown here by' H' G Kamrath one of the engineers who perfected it Instead of going straight through the fire is si absorbed by meshed copper ribbons! " ' By ?EA Service knitted and arranged in a container FLINT Mici:— A dual air clean so that any flame emerging from inlet must pass er flame arrestor has been devel the carburetor t it through oped that removes all hazards due COPPER IS USED to carburetor backfires from auis used because of fits Copper tomobile motprboat and airplane superiority over steel or other maengines Engineers say the device terial it has a heat conductivftv should ultimately result in reduc- nearly nine times that of steel The wires which are artion of fire insurance rates on au- flajt knitted at all angles and inclinaranged! tomobiles motorboats and air- tions serve to diffusa the flame the masa jof uniformly throughout planes ' t material RESULT OF RESEARCH l tHe alfco device say Engineers The device s the result of long acts as an efficient muffler for research: work! by engineers of the carburetor noises AC Spark Plufj company here and has been tested and approved by the National jioard of Underwriters According! to the underwriters' report no flame can be made to pass through Jfhe air cleaner flame arrestor even under the most severe conditions The device attached to 'the in take of the scarburetor prevents L dust particlesi from reaching the idust in as comes The it engine contact with copper ribbons in the apparatus adheres'to the oiled surfaces and is retained there The principle of ' the flame arresting feature is the quenching of the flame by material which will absorb it at such a rate that the gas is "cooled below the point of Ig nition This icombustion- material 5 consists of flat copper' ribbons by a air cleaner 5 ©f r- i - i v t I er - f : one-ma- n 1 — I er v e JUL ajFsvxm-CBai- M KJ f yotir epark plots look like this it jrneans hard etarting slow pick up poor idling losi of power wfiste of fueL M After a season's dxiying or 10000 miles put in ja new set of AC's That will insufe easy starting fast ' ' pick-u- ' smooth running increased p power more miles per gallon Insist upon AC Spark Plugs sold by best dealers everywhere ot or ' i AC ? Spark Plug Compantc Flint Michigan O 1929 AC and-probabl- I: "c h r y s lesI"-- P n""! fAassVBOjBSjsaBSMBSBBBM lAT U 5prk flag CompftttW f 1 - " - (( j i to tr i 4 ! CTTl "' - New features at the Olympia auto show !n London Upper photo shows the folding top whiie center picture shows how this is worked from ths driver's sat Sketches show (1J chassis-les- s auto (2) vanity compartment and mirror in back corner of sedan (3) wider body reaching over rear wheels and (4) door reaching aown to running board eliminating the valance ft HM a i doors come all the way down to of the the running boards This type of coupe construction is especially suited to 'In many cases at least the extile real low cars bein built hers tra lugrKae box is designed to conform with the contour of the sedan Tfiey offset the appearance of dl- - in back and so form a pleasing mlnutlveness that might seem ob unit MANY STILL OX TRIAL jectionable JiVAX 1DKAS IX DOORS Both the Olympia and the Paris j!la connection with this type of shows have presented a profusion b$dy there is the wider door in of new Ideas in automobile design fact a door that bj wide enougrhto and engineering many oi' which jikik luuin xor entrance m iron are still more or lessi experimental Extend To enumerate some of these there a$d rear of a four-seating down to the ' runnlji board such are the "sunshine" tep which rolls anvide dOor obliterates the thought back at the twist of a lever beside ot too squatty an appearance al- the driver side valves overhead though it stiil conveys a speedy camshafts front drive construe stream-lin- e tton with supercharger separate effect American motorists may expect wheel suspension orie-shchassis sQmethlnff new also hi the- - form of lubrication: double spring suspena! four-dobodv without tenter sion' narrow frame and wide body pillars In this case the front door sloping windshield and lower j closes over the rear door and holds frames both rhut This affords a wider Despite the popularity of the entrance a longer appearance and steel body in America the fabric a f neater job debody seems to have (With this reform in" body design mand in England and the contincdmes another much needed inno- ent However as a sop to the steel one manufacturer vation at least from the esthetic body maker point of view That is the elimin here has developed 'a "fabric that ation of the luggage carrier in is hard to detect from steel when back Instead bodies have been finished on a body A large number of new sixes and signed to flow backward even be hind the sedan and make room for eights have come In this year and n ti© 7s alCSE!: - f - - i BRING VISITORS — r - Plymouth i ESKIMOS COLDS ST LOUIS — (AP) —Although the Eskimos pt Baffin island and Greenland are very susceptible to the common cold and other infec tions of the upper respiratory traot and live in a plirrtate which might be expected to foster suelr condi tions they apparently neyer jtre at tacked by these diseases except when they come in contact with the less frigid outside world This point is emphasized in a pa per by Dr Peter Helnbecker fel low of the National Research coun cil in medicine at Washington uni versity who was a member of tho Greenland expedition of the Amer lean Museum! of Natural History in 1926 "and of the Putman Baffin island expedition last year in collaboration with Dr Edith I M Irvine-Jone- s Theron Catlin fellow of the St Louis Children's hospital Despite the poor hygienic conditions which exist among the Eskimos and 'their' unusual exposure to occupational Injuries- the paper published by the American Association of Immunologists- also records the observation 'tha- their wounds heal rapidly and without "the attendant infections frequently encountered elsewhere This is believed to? be the result either of a bacteria scarcity of in tKose regions or to exceptional qualities of resistance in the skin K ft aoooa tained" the paper says "and it seems 'quite unlikely that these illnesses ever hjive occurred in this region during the lifetime of the present 'generation" Their immunity to these diseases which f other peoples are thought to develop only through exposure to the germs is attributed to heredity! SEDAN coupe ca ROASSTZX field Don't Miss this Opportunity to Gave! OLD PRICE H'i ' I 2Dooc Sedan Conpe y- fSport Roadster Phaeton Cabriolet Sedan Sport' Landau Sedan -- 4-Oo- - -- to - f595 ' SS95 AND UPWARDS A: "1 LAUDIE MOTOR CO 2568 WasWngtoni Ave : ! ' ' - ' I ' Roadster £675 (with rumble seal S64S s675 I 685 695 700 735 Coupe Touring 2Door Sedan 5 i I i Phone $30 GEO full-siz- e com-par- e with the few other cars in the lowest-price- d group to realize quickly why Plymouth is everywhere acclaimed the greatest value in this field dollar-for-doll- ar With tbeir prists reduced $150 these Pontlac Sizes sr moTlng fast Act now if y on want to enfoy one of the most spectacular motor car bargains ever offered here Small down pay men t— easy monthly terms— your old car tiken In trade ! F S PECK Garland! Plymouth's HEW PRICE ' Pratlac ptas delivery c target Now tot the rirst tira la felatory wenderlnl PoatUe Six with bodies by Flhr la allabt t tb price I m lanrl W arc moTlng car entire stock f bread new' current model Poatiae Sixes at prices re daced to as low as $5951 0 $745 $745 $745 $775 $795 $825 $875 All you have to do i$ to i I ' i or All prices f pus-produci- ng " 77 '' FULL SIZE r - """-Njy- t -- ' of the Eskimos"No history pf scarlet fever diphtheria or measles could be ob- Door Uiam $735 Lavtoii I De Luxe Coupe (with rumble seat) Sedan '735 4-D- f All prices o b Detroit Plymouth dealers are in a position to extend the con- renience of time payments RH You find here a new measure of roominess and comfort for all adult passengers—long low richly-upholster- ed wide deep seats AVE " But Plymouth value extends much further than rnere size It strikes an entirely original PECK-:AUTO'iCOMFAiN- 2SGS --WASHINGTON bodies with "'-- - note of style and smartness In performance it gives the power speed and smoothness that only the new Chrysler high compression can engine givej And the safety assured by internal-expandin- g brakes — the hydraulic only car at its price with this j fine equipment c Keeping these facts in mind it is easy to prove to yourself by inspection and actual trial that Plymouth gives' you more for "Sil-ver-po- me -- 4-wh- eel your dollar than any other car ui the lowest priced field -- l rHONB 110 |