Show TTTTtr PIRATES AHO¥! Jean-Bar- t By CHARLESvB DRISGOLL Performs Miracles of Daring By ISRAEL KLEIN Science Editor NEA Service Ther " is a mental hazard la driving an automobile that results in 'many cases from defects in- the car itself Chattering brakes slap ping piston! a noisy distributor rattling fenders' squeaking doort "are- only! a small number of the many inconveniences that can get on the nerves of a driver It isn' traffic alon& that causes the mental hazard It's the car and its parts — and the original cause if lye should trace it down to the beginning is the owner himself or an automooiie laei tne look after the little things as well as he does the more Important run ning parts and he will avoid that mental ha2ard in driving that might at ahy time unnerve! him when an emergency arises Bart by some Jean Bart by that he otters It aeems probableabout his wasn't Quite sure himself himself hecalled rafne Perhaps adjean Bart when he started his Jean is HEchroniclers and called ' -- carelessly venturous career and Jean-Ea- rt in signed his surname of the noted i his later years Some Z-JH4U !" hii-i-I'll ' i corsalr'a biographer's have fixed up don't I a fine lineage for himv has no think it's 'necessary! He his make to ancestors of need of the name shine in the companyFollowworld's noted adventurers hlm-eelf- rJ ing the custom of Jean Bart name sometimes write his with the hyphen and sometimes a Tlart as the surname He was a very dark-skinnugly man to look his He was upon disblack hair was straight butsmall-anordered and hii mouth was cruel Hel hid a peculiarly twisted nose which was unusually (Did you ever hear of a long Bhort-nose- d man of great courage and daring?) 1650 but He-- ' was- born about place of there is doubt about thewas his birth Possibly it kirk the French port with which much of his early life was associI 7 ated - AT SEA t EXPERIENCEHis first experience at sea was as cabin boy on a French vessel bound for Holland He strayed In Holland §3ong enough to get some experience in Dutch ships and soon was serving on Dutch privateers He grew us thus fighting and sailing now for this master and now for the other It was sa hard school and it produced a jhard man Eventually young Bart served The Magnificent Louis Placed a Chain of Gold Around Adunder the great Dutchman a repachieved and miral Buyter 'iirfnoi He sank one and from the pitcher waspoured and rV)vsir:i I tack in the night wine in which all the guests drank was counted upon He prowess m7 in her tha health o£ this intrepid yotjng hole bored that aa the best man to lead a boardtown-buildHe odds any ins party against si- and rapidjy nvwas wounded many times but lently floating on a partly sub- The very first day out of Dunr"vanauishei Vimii the Wch re- - merged raft that was buoyed by kirk Bart paid for his fleet of five made of cow-hid- e oats "It had two air-baHe captured a Dutch frigates public was feeling itsaid BROADSIDE a poRECEIVES to merchantman that was protected risen with English The other' frigate wok$ up when by eighteen guns Th© ship- - itself sition of some power in the world with it received a- broadside At dawn with armament was sold for fifty exuberance The nations of which the Dutch began to boast of the six merchantmen unarmed thousand crowns and there was a rich cargo aboard her Bart their power offended some of the- struck their flags for their The tectors were1 all at the 'bottom of aboard his flagship the Palm esof other countries Dutch had a series of coins struck the Baltic corted the prize backo Dunkirk and hastened out to join the fleet each iSln bearing a caricature of pro-soThe of Dunkirk company was so well plleased by on its way to further conquests European king or queen or prteora a desikn intended &s an insult to tWa expi0it tfeal it built and fitted HIS GREAT EXPLOIT Barfs next great exploit 'jvas the out a fleet of five corsair frigates somf nation: this way the cartoonists of the and mad( jean4Bart admiral of the capture of eight merchantment Netherlands of thoe days enjoyed £leet bound from London to Dutch ports themselves and thb Dutch people There was abig booster dinner The merchant fleet was convoyed at Dunkirk ati which the dashins by laughed heartily large warships on© of guns hero of the port was the guest of which mounted twenty-eigPREPARED FOR WAR The merchants rubbed The Palm ranafongside the small France and England prepared honor and Bart forVar Louis the! Fourteenth felt iheir hands Jean Bart was the est of the warships He killed the-- captain all cut up about one of the coins best thing that had ever happened boarded few that pictured him in an unflatter to the ancient town of Dunkirk with his own sword and in a veshad possession of th© ing manner and called upon his He was bringing In golden dis-la- minutes sel and fighters by sea and goes and the merchants from The other two warships bore to prepare to defend the hon- - tant places who came to buy goods at fire-sa- le or of their illustrious soverlgn prices were leaving away under full sail when Bart's Jean-Ba- rt at this time "Was vast stores of wealth with the local fleet mad© after them The merchant fleet was Bart's and one of iserviffg in the Dutch privateering merchants taverns and wine-shoHe The merchants presented Jean th© warships service and doing very well f This was one efcithe most "bril was offered a goo4 commission in I Bart with a great golden pitcher it£ 'um I i furrow i i ed mll f a ilffi??m d i : ml JiKiNMNM ! - ' mWMA the Corsair's Neck' liant strokes made ty tha French corsair The nind prizes mad© th© Duiikirk company of raercants rich and Jean Bart was given another pep dinner Th© young hero was becoming celebrated throughout the world as was evidenced by the Dutch men-of-wthat ran away when they saw his colors coming down upon them Th© taking of the nln vessels was followed ia May 1677 by th© capture of sixteen merchant ships and their convoying warship a guns after frigat© of twenty-fou- r a battle lasting three bloody hours In September of th© same year Bart and his fleet captured the mountNeptune a sevguns convoying ing thirty-si- x - - - pro-soverig- ns -- -- the i car-captai- ship-of-the-li- ns nd - ps Jeaci-Ba- rt was twenty-years old Beeattse he had eerved the Dutch well Bart was able to serve France brilliantly in fighting the Dutch He knew the Dutch ships and their masters He knew the Dutch harbors Every time the ship on it Drougnt t cruise kirk valuable to oacK r jjun- - prizes and a goodly etore of loot The intrepid young privateers-ma- n made quite a reputation as an officer on a French ship that al- ways brought home the loot But wasn't satisfied He was am-- t he bitious When he' had saved a comfortable fortunfe-ia few years out of his ehare of the prize money he bought a sloort fitted her out aswa privateer arjid sailed on his iCKwn account As there were many rich Dutch cargoes still afloat Bart didn't have to take the ships of other nations at this time In the Texel Bai-- t with his sloop of two guns and jtwenty-si- x men sighted a Dutch frigate of eighteen men guns and sixty-fiv- e Well" said Barit to his men "I inHiK we snan tae her iWhatl" cried the mate in con sternation ' "woutcStytiu have us all murdered ? Two gliir against elgh- teen?" NONE TOO 3IODEST "Two guns — and Jean-Bartexclaimed the nome too modest young rooster He made good his boasti Up went th Dutch flag over! ' the Captain Bart and when he camel again on deck he: was wearing the uniform of a Dutch naval officer He cleared the feck of most Of his Frenchmen tailed up alongside the Dutchman hailed in the iJutch language kind was' invited to come aboard Jean Bart went aboard the Dutch frigate taking ftur of his men along All carrietil as many arms as they could wdlf conceal The Frenchmen remaining behind had instructions to act when the signal a pistol-sh- quickly should sound r tapmin uart was met bv the Dylcit captain whom he shot dead by way of greeting The four 'who accompanied Eabt opened fire simultaneously and all of the offi cers of the Dutch ship were wiped out before the Dutchmen realized that something serious was about to nappen j ±ne rest or ±sart s crew was overj tne side and charging down the deck of theDutcti man-of-wbe fore the smoke of the first shots had cleared The battle was of telj minutes' duration and resembled a massacre Jean Bart sailed th Dutch back to PunkirkT' In triumph ins rame oegan o pead BOLD YOUNG CORSAm A group fnerchanta approached the bbld young corsair and asked him to tak© command' —r mil i a ! chine with which he hopes to beat Major H O D Segrave's world mark H- - Its tough A special nt In every tection of the country Oldsmobile gives the performance adcontinues to score tremendous vantages of a big because it in public acceptance gains engine It delivers briloffers a measure of value not to be liant speed—swift sure acceleration— duplicated at its price and above all a steady effortless flow Consider carefully all that Oldsmobile of power more than ample for any it for $S75 Then compare point gives need And the sturdy construction for point with other cars in its fielcL that is evident in every detail of both Oldsmobile is a stylish1 luxurious autobody and chassis assures exceptional mobile The spacious inte- durability and long lifej e roomy and com- ri0 JVO DOOR SEDAN Comedrivetto Oldsmobile fortable Seats are wide Examine it carefully Find out and form-- & CLD eat yourself what a filting Upholstery materials return in value it provides combine lone wear with fine t t i appearance spsrTirtBptZxtr forjevery doUar jou invest) -- Olds-mobi- le high-compressi- Louis should ask! The' proud officials of Dunkirk cooked up a very respectable lineage for the town hero and sent was init to the king Jean-Ba- rt vited to court and the Magnificent Louis placed a chain of gold around the Corsair's neck There was a gold medal attached Jean Bart red and almost black from the burning winds of many seas and the burning powder of many battles blushed yet redder with grateful embarrassment He went-awamuttering promlises to do greater things for thej glory of France (Copyright 1929 MeNaught Syndicate Inc) n© " Qj) £J 01dmobil delivered pric fi vtlve eompariai automobile tocludf PtJyrni n M fh-- t (IT) elud © on EJJ ed deep-cushion- 'Adh erihg strictly to the siDundest principles of design ftr Aglivery ni nmncinr in ©Ens o he CMer engineers have nevertheless developed and applied these principles in a manner just as revolutionary as t he We believe ships?application of steam to ocean-goin- g r n -- rt FARTHER AHEAD TODAY — J car piloted by the late Ray Keech held the world's speed record for a short while is planning the construction of a four wheel drive ma- ng For '875 in This Fine Oldsmobile ia1671 when AWAY AHEAD THEN TO BEAT SEGRAYEX t M White whose 3 5 -- cylinder WH AT YO U G ET ' went back to France He became an officer on a French privateer sailing out of Dunkirk This was one r --- session of Florida's legislature passed a six-cegaso line tax on motorists South' Caro A Qftiet car is a good car And lina is the only other state car it saVe the driver from lofinsr hi fryiner such a heavy tax this Jean-Baperson and sent to th© mayor of Dunkirk for a full statement of the young man's birth parentage and ancestry eral merchantmen IN DESPERATE ONE This engagement was a desperate one and Bart himself as usual headed th© boarding party that rushed the crew of the Neptune Wielding a iswprd until th© weapon was broken JeanBart finished the fight with no weapons Ijut his fists He strangled the captain of the warship with his iron hands and then the crew surrendered The fame of this battle reached Louis the Fourteenth and he was suffused with a warm glow of He made inquiries about pride ht BERLIN — (UP) — Twenty-nin- e of the 42 students enrolled in the newly opened German Music Institute for Foreigners are Americans according to a recent announcement The remaining students come From England Finland Holland Hunjrary Rumania Russia Sweden and Switzerland Classes are being held in the Charlottenburg castle in the western section of Berlin Special rooms in the castle have been set aside for this purpose by the Prussian minister of education one of these rooms being the famous Golden Gallery which was for the first time opened to the public during the recent Berlin festival Wilhelm Furtwaengler ia president of the institute from squeaking Piston slap on older cars should warn thd driver that his engine not only is being beaten to pieces by the constant hammering of the piston at) fault but that it fs also losing porwer and wasting fuel as a result A slapping pistoik is a sign of looseness in its cylinder and wearing of that cylinder Out of its trues shape The remedy ar gs - these sections - er - tick-ticki- NI MUSIC INSTITUTE of the wearing- parts and tightening of the body belts and screws The new car especially needs this at tention REPRESENTED- - US patience and' nerve It can asily be kept Quiet by regular inspection 1QOQ - -- jji naJ£5k d The of the distributor is another annoying hazard to the motorist and can easily be avoided It is usually due to lack Of lubrication A drop of oil every 500 miles or so is enough to prevent thi annoyance Similarly a turn of a screw or wrench will tighten up loose screws or bolts in the door hinges and fender supports enough to avoid squeaking and' rattling from Brakes wear down get out-o- f true and- begin to chatter and squeak and slip if th© driver! neg lects tnem ui course tne repmeay is to reline them and see that they grip evenly all around But! even better is the practice of avoiding such difficulty by having- the brakes checked up regularly to see) that they take evenly on all four Wheels Sometimes even the newest brakes squeak or in wet wekther fail to hold To avoid this a Buffalo N Y firm has been pjutting out a plastic material which when applied to the brakellningi will weatherproof it and enabli the brakes to hold evenly Thl$ substance fills the rivet holes where in rainy weather the water benight enter the depressions and cause It also works into the slipping lining itself to give it more grip ping abilityand to keep the brakes I a-n- accident - - - ' costly - for it means iaatalllnff cylinder j oversize pistons and rings piston slapping-coletting the tinue i for a time is wearing not ma : motor ox on me oniy on nerves The constant hamdriver's th© hood may beneath mering from eventually- - cause a serious traffic might b OO that the creation of -- It MOUNTAIN MOTOR COMPANY 7:' 2200 WASHINGTON AVE PHONE 592 i ERDMAN MOTOR CO OLSON MOTOR SERVICE Morgan Utah Brlgham City Utah accomplished an alUinportant evolution in motor cars no less valuable than the original invention of the automobile7 the-Chrysle- r —Advertisement Saturday Evening Pdst April 5 1924 ' t" -- WHY CHRYSLER CANT -- For five years the motof car industry has striven unceasingly to emulate and overtake Chrysler — —yet all its best efforts and ambitions to that end have fallen far short of their goal As time rolls on it becomes more and more manifest that Chrysler performance can't be copied: —that only Chrysler engineering and Chrysler! 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Q) -- I I '' Vessel on yvery lib- n eral terms Bart accepted and salted out to- greater glory5 v The first ship he met was the! Esperance a Dutch merchantman of twelve guns" manned The battle wasn't so short this time Bart took a heavy battering but af ter three hours he had the Dutch n colors down and flag ' flying over the Esperance lllis owners were gratified for this prize washighly a rich mor sel Bart went next to The Baltic Ho met a fleet of six Dutch chantmen convoyed by two' frig ates Each- of - the was better armed thaji wasfrigates the corsair But Bart launched a surprise at-- - BE Phone 830 1 1 |