| Show A fashions for youth If Happened Around Here Dresses for your dales Off AH Over WERE visiting friends on a farm in a very rural area one day The family had just gotten a new radio complete with shortwave The mother coverage said to her son "Bob turn on the radio for some news" The son came back saying "The power is turned off” The mother replied “Well get Canada then” Bob returned again without results His mother replied "Ain’t that funny the power is off in Canada too” by Deborah Paige WE ' Crlc rrT OCIAL life is never dull for teens! Even though summer isn’t long for this part of the country we seem to be able to do the most with what is left If it isn’t a beach party or " show it will be records or canyon doings Name bands drop in now and again just to brighten the scene and call for dressier Clothes and a bit of sophistication for the occasion Finding the right frock may present Its problems with the change of weather Can’t depend on moonlight all the time Sudden storms can break too last The frothy full summeiy dress you’ve been wearing will soon give way to the "transitional” date costumes that can accommodate rain or shine Burnt? inter llUk one Sue Wilson for us rKE the grey in shade with a pert pique bib models Loving Core? MOTHER MY great pride takes In her rose garden Shrrwatches with loye each new bud that Bursls into" bloom She even empties her coffee grounds around in the garden supposedly because it’s good for her ' precious flowers One day she told our little daughter to put the grounds on the roses for her Later in the day some of her friends came to visit and mother took them out to see her roses There carefully placed in the center of each was ' a lovely bloom spoonful of coffee grounds Mn Norm A fclt Lake VHw tUk touching off the round neckline Crystaline gives a rich finish to the skirt full but not too full and an overskirt of crystaline gives it that delicate feminine touch Crystaline is only one of the many lighter fabrics being used this season Chiffon is a flowing number with bright shades and wide cummerbunds emphasizing tiny waists and petit figures Silk is also good? it always will be Cotton is still with us for the dating touch as well The nice thing about cottons Is that most of them can be washed at home Spots can be removed easily and quickly Dry cleaning Is eliminated Jewel tones will predominate color choices Reds golds whites greens blues and blacks get preference nods by fashion informed teens Bright shades and combinations will also be around Prints have not been foigotten ’ and teens should wear these pretty colors toften are coming out in EVENING accessories Ten Commandments” has now made its dent in the fashion woi Id with copper jewelry fill in necklaces and gold articles becoming the "it” for fall Your choices should be feminine more than frilly The new look is to bring out the natural lines of your figure The coming soft woolens especially in date frocks will give you a new appearance and a flatteiing one We’re not striving for the "fussy” touch We’re after a smart look leaning towaids simplicity in design r you and your car ' Checking the new models f by Don Morgan THE 1958 models are unveiled compare some of the engine specifications and keep abreast of the trend In American automobiles AS ' Electrocuting Kernels NEIGHBOR’S chickens were a constant OUR to us We couldn’t keep them off the kitchen porch until my young brother who was studying electrical engineering at the university cured them He attached thread like copper wires to kernels of corn which he scattered on the porch The wires were attached In turn to a battery in 'the house Through a window Joe watched his "experiment” When a chicken would begin to goble up a kernel of corn he would turn on the current There would be a surprised squawk as the chicken would topple over The current would be turned off After a few seconds the chicken would stand up shake its feathers look suspiciously at the innocent and tempting kernel and walk meditatively back to its own yard In our short time our neighbor’s chickens shunned our porch as if it were quarantined rul c Carroll CM f Jp-la- Soil Uk flak tt mrlrti Tko Salt 10 ko Trlbono will o S3 far ok Mi komorooo ar otraaco kooooalar aobllckcS If oooorotlaoo fro tiro araooat will ko aoaSe far Ik aar torlliolri cntrlaa la Caalrlbatlaao will aol ka return Strut Vhlac HOMS MoiaolaCtob Th Salt lak Trlbaoa PO Ml Salt Ukl City Itoi Bi lO pit-sen- t Items that are easily found include maximum torque compression ratio and the gross weight per horsepower Maximum torque represents the ability of the engine to accelerate quickly It is measured on a dynamometer and is In pounds of thrust on a lever one foot away from the center of the driving shaft Torque values have been steadily inci easing during the last few yeats Improved engine breathing with four barrel carburetors and dual exhausts have helped Increase’ torque Larger piston bores and smaller strokes have resulted in higher engine speeds with greater power Within the last 10 years one many factuier has into 5200 and creased engine rpm from more than doubled the torque Compression ratios have steadily climbed also With Improved fuel available to the motoring public compression ratios have moved from around 61 in 1547 to 101 in 1957 models Some 1957 models with fuel injection have boosted the cohnpression ratio to 105-- This facto? alone has probably been most responsible for increasing horsepower years ago Ihe average passenger f about engine produced horsepower per cubic’ Inch displacement some engines in 1957 just doubled that or 1 rREE one-hal- i produced one horsepower per cubic inch The ratio of the weight of the car to the horsepower of the engine is another index of Its performance Improved structural de- sign with compact engines has resulted in higher performance In 1951 the average sedan weighed over 30 lbs per horsepower today the average six passenger car weighs about 20 lbs pier horsepower Questions and answers: Q What is a "square” engine? MD A The term "square” designates an en- gine with the cylinder bore equal to the piston stroke Q My 1954 engine kills when I stop for Intersections Can I prevent this? RR A With the engine at normal operating temperature turn the idle speed screw clock-wisuntil engine rpm is about 500‘ This screw can be identified on your caiburetor as the one screw on the outside which holds the throttle slightly openr Then turn one idle mixture screw clockwise until the engine slows down now turn the screw coqn- terclockwise until the engine again slows down Halfway between these two points will be the qprrect mixture Repeat the same procedure with the otper mixture screw Readjust the Idle speed screw if engine Is turning too fast- If the adjustments on the idle mixture screws does not change the engine speed your carburetor is stopped up And will have to be removed disassembled and cleaned 4 ‘ five-passeng- I e - J ‘ The - Salt Lake Tribune ' HOME : Magazin I 1 |