KOSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1927. THREE VEFJTIUT10N OF 9 . to drive the easiest riding cars you ever traveled in The Three New Series of Nksh motor cars, introduced thirty days ago, have won America. . , It is their beauty, speed, lowered lines, attractive colors and, above all, their phenomenal, new performance, which have given so much added -impetus to Nash sales. Quly 58 greater than any July in Nash history; and production now reaching the unprecedented total of 700 to -800 cars daily.) 1 Praise for these finer, faster models of Nash is heard everywhere. Those who have driven them will tell you that supreme riding luxury is accomplished by the new Nash super-springs of secret-process alloy steel. . , . . ;-. i '.- They will tell you the engines in these new cars are smoother and quieter : than, ever.' . ' - . And they will also tell you that these are the easiest steering cars on eartbl It is the:greatest motor car-contrast in the world today to step out of your car, . and then- drive one of these great new models of Nash. , We want you to know that contrast. "This is Nash "ComeiDrive" Week. 'Courtesy cars are waiting at our showroom ! for you to try. All you. need to do is step-into the car, sit down behind its wheel, and drive it. No sales, pressure. No obli- gation. . Don't buy any car today, until you have driven a Nash! 1 3 N E W S E R I E S - AT N EW 10 W E R P R I CES US i L. R. CHAMBERS MOTOR COMPANY ( 444 N. Jackson St. NASH GARAGE 1 Phone 649 (6195) IS The need for using improved methods in producing the public milk supply becomes more and more pronounced ffs the time goes on, Lsays R. J. Possbn, associate market milk specialist , of the United StateB Department of Agri culture. As cities grow larger or become more numerous - the milk supply must necessarily be trans ported from greater distances and handled in hirger quantities. To withstand such treatment it must be produced under the most sani tary conditions. Furthermore, says Mr. Pnsson, tliere is an increasing demand for clean imilk on the part of the con sumer, and health officials are: re quiring that improved sanitary methods be used' in its production:. Unless care is . taken -in. producing it, therefore, great losses may ; re-sultMromUho- rejection of milk by dealers or healthdepartments and1 from the lessened demand fop. low grade milk. The responsibility for clean milk at the source is placed squarely on the shoulders of the milk producer. By observing certain precautions clean milk can' be -produce:! with very little more effort than, milk which i& not clean. These pre cautions, are discussed by Mr. Pos son in leaflet No. 3, Improved Sani tation in Milk Production, vjust is sued by the department ' The' first requirement for clean milk is a herd of healthy cows. Once it is determined by test that the cows are- free from tuberculosis and 'are otherewiBe healthy, pains should be taken to "clean them thoroughly be fore they are milked. Wiping the udders with a damp rlrtlh removes eWorld has never Known sue 1 1 T 1 hVal ue AH former standards of motor car value fell when Buick for 1928 swept into.view. Here are listed all 16 Buick models for 1928, with their prices, so that you may see for yourself how .little Buick costs, when you;consider how much Buick gives. - Five-passenger -2-door Sedan, Series 113... "95 ': , Four-passenger Sport Roadster. Series 01X95 Two-passenger Coupe, . Series 115... 8119 ' Five-passenger Sport Touring, . .SerioslI5...8aM Four-rxusenger Cou Wry Club Coupe, , . Series 115... tl1S V Five-passenger 4-door Sedan, Series 115... WS Five-passenger Town Brougham, ; Series 115... I7 "Five-passenger 4-door Sedan, i. Series 120... I49S . . Five-passenger Town Brougham,., - Series 120 .-. .S17S Four-passenger Sport Roadster, ". Series 128 , . . I49 Five-passenger Sport Touring, Series' 128 .. . - ' Four-passenger Country Club Coup, Scries 128... I7M Five-passenger Coupe, '. , Series 128... SlSS Five-passenger Brougham, Series 128 .. . IS Seven-passenger Sedan, Series 128... 199 the danger, of contaminating the milk by tailing hair and dust par- tides. Since' bacteria cause milk to, sour they should ' be 1 kept out of itby every possible means.'' Farther precautions in the pro duqtion or cleau. milk require that only healthy people be' employed ill' a dairy, " that : they wear clean clothing, and that milking be per formed with clean, "dry hands.; The use of small-top -pailB Is recom mended as a means of reducing the amount of impurities that fall into the mdk. , Every dairyman should be cer tain, that he has a pure, safe wnter .supply. WellB should be located on the 'highest available ground. A' separate dairy house . or milk room should be 'provided. Milk to bo sold should never be handled in d dwelling as there is too much chance of dangerous contamination in case sickness occurs in the fam ily. - V Milk utensils which are net pro perly washed or-sterilized may be the greatest, sourse of.- contamina tion. . They should be -rinsed in side and outside with lukewarm or cold water as soon as possible after use, then placed In a wash vat,. Boruhbed with a brush in wnrm 'wntnr rnnlninlnir a soda or alkaline washing -powder (ndt soap), rinsed, placed in a otcrillz- Ing cabinet, and thoroughly steam ed. The best way to prevent multipli cation of bacteria which unavoiu- ahlv net into the milk, Is to cool the milk as soon as possible after It Is produced and keep it cold. Hacteria are tiny aingle-celleu nlants. which, like most other n antft. . renuire warnun to grow If milk is cooled to 60 degrees P. or below and held at that tempera turo. bacteria development Is very much retarded. Milk should not only bo kept cold until it loaves m! farm but should also be pro tected from the sun and 'warm nlr while being transported fronflarm to city. . , ft MP n FOR SIX YEARS FOR 33 CENTS TAX . Four-passenger Coupe, -Series 120... 4M Alt prices . o. FK. Mich., Garmmatt Tax to bt added. " BUiCK 1928 MOTOR SHOP GARAGE PHONE 208 moTomliTORS FOR DOUGLAS COUNTY OAK ANU nuac oio WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM A number oi. automobiles which htwo apiieared within the last year have announced the feature of vac uum ventilation tor the crajtkeaso. This is uol generally uuderstoou by the motoring piiollc aud has been interpreted in many ways. The engineers of the Tide - Water Oil Company, .refluent of Veedol Motor Oils and Ureases have maue exhaustive tests to determino how this feature' aflects lubrication. They report that vacuum ventila tion is a step in the right atrectiou that has been advocated by tunny of . the oil refiners and marketer,! toriears. It will tend, they say, to overcome a condition which in the past has been understood by manu facturer aud service organizations but which has been very Uilflcult to explain to the Individual motor ist. A condition more usual lh. win ter, but common to all seasons of the year, exists in the cranKcHses of many cars. it. is known by many headings, such us condensa tion, water accumulation, smug iug, etc. The process which takes place la as follows: In the combus tion of the gasoline und air mix ture, water vapor is formed, and It this vapor wfere to be condensed, it would be found that great . Quan tities of water would result. What Happens to tho Gases. If. thetcrauaoaso is not properly vented, these water-laden gases stay in the engine. If proper vents are supplied, the gases pass Off. To facilitate this, the cruuKcaso breather is standard on every au tomobile-engine, its location on the engine, however, is of vital im portance. Obviously, If this breath er is placed at a very low level it cannot vent - the gases which are trapped in the engine at a higher level. A .number of manufacturers have placed these vents at the top most part., Two examples of this ure the Nash and Marmou. The front end of the englno housing, the camshaft and acces sory shaft drive uro usually built as a separate chamber. Oases are frequently trapped in' this, section aud a number of manufactures have provided a vent at .this point. Sometimes, the usual' -erankcase vent and at other times un addi tional opening... . t ' ' The Hudson engine uses a small piece of 18 in. tubing which is suf ficient for this purpose, and Cadil lac, Wlllys-70 and Peerless w have provided v main breather at this point. The 'Buick engine '. now-' has facilities for venting these gases by a series of louvres Wnlcli- are cut in the cover to the "valve ime cnanism on the top of the engine. The vacuum ventilators '-idvoriisea by a number of manufacturers help tnis condition .considerably. ;. - . The ventilation system; provided by this book-up ceases to; iimctloji, however, -"when the englnp Is sto.v ped,; and.'.lt'.iS'jafjter the engine is ;'stoi)ped .-"that : ctius xonUenstuion takes place. Therefore, oare should be taken to Inspect the condition ol the lubricating oil, particularly in the winter time, -whether, your en gine is provided - with a - vacuum crankcase ventilator system or not. Oil should be changed oftener in cars not provided with these new engine features; . Parabase1 Motor-Oil 100 per cent pure parafflne base, J At General Independent Dealers.1. SIZEOF NEW YORK ONCE FRIGHTENED YOUNG INVENTOR PATHS, July 26. An 83-centlme hiwaiili -has been tolng on nearly six .years In France and the end is not vnt in a cht. THIS Sum is about 3? cents. Millions of francs nave oeeu spent, courts have been occutiteu for weeks at a time and the best lawyers have argued on both sides. Marcel Doyer, a well-known "cbansonnler," conducting a sort of literary cabaret in the Latin (juartcr, started the judicial row by refusing to pay a disputed cx- j tin tax on two tickets he gave to ah old war comrade.' Buyer, soe-1 ing the soldier at his box office, promptly passed Mm in, haniling1 four francs to the cashter as the government tax on reduced-price i tickets. The government inspector demanded S3 centimes more be cause, he said, Uoyer did not go through tho formality of buying tho low-priced tickets from the box office. Ilorllnna nf nil ani-fn hnVn hppn ! handed donn, seine courts holding one way and some another but al ways leaving unsettled some tech nicality that caused -new trials. These rebearlngs then went to other jurisdiction. Tho case has travelled pretty well over central France since it started, November 2', 1921. . ' NEW VOKK,. July 26. Analol Josepbo, 33-year-old Russian Immi grant, 'who receritly realized : tho golden dream of all immigrants when the Henry Morgentlmu syn dicate paid him. $1,000,000 for his Invention, an automatic camcru, once before essayed to become an American, as a youth of 18 in iai2, but was frightened back to Europe for eight years by the sheei immensity and strangeness, of New York. -.. This Is tho" revelation made by Edward J. Uoherty who, in ll.e August issue, of McClure's. maga zine, tells of the romantic struggle for recognition which carried the young Russian around the . world for .17 years before success came to him -with dazzling suddenness. Joscpho, son of a prosperous Jeweler of Tomsk, Siberia, first left home at IB, provided with funds by his futhcr. Malting nls way to Berlin, he found a job in a photographer's studio where he learned the fundamentals of the business before setting out- for America, where, ho believed, for tune awaited as ono landed from the boat. Escaped Death at Soviet Hands ' His few months in New York The Big Drive Still Going The High Standard of Quality is ' Always Maintained in Kelly Springfield TIRES We Swap New Tires for Your Old Ones. Greasing, Oiling, Vulcanizing Fully Equipped Power Car Washing Machine. : AUTOMATIC AIR MACHINE ELECTRIC SERVICE ' BATTERY, GENERATOR AND IGNITION NIGHT AND DAY SERVICE Rose Garage 4 mm, VI TT. V . ail MA 1L-, , ' s.c A 1 A l I F.O.B. Detroit - Fu Equipped 4 Door Sudan (not a Caek) The lowest priced Dodge Sedan eves; sold --iand the Best IlieSmoothcstS tSturdiest Longest springbase of any cmt tuider 11000 thfomeaiis Comfort Sarprbmg:cte pcrgallca iit w;imlea .perihottr . llccuurlmbtei tOi2$ miles psr houritiiroush gears in less monicsvcnceconac 1Vya!milesat the wheel and ex periencsia'new sensation I 0. NEWLAND & SON Phone 458-Rosebutg, Oregon ' woro disillusioning. Thrown Into n panic by the siso of tho new world metropolis, baffled by a slrungo language' and strungo customs, ho fled back to Berlin, thence to lludu pest. . In the latter city ho, opened it studio and conceived the idea of an automatic, camera which, when a coin was dropped in its slut, would take anil develop several photographs of the subject In rap id succession. i This ho was working on when ! the war came, catching hltn, a Itussian, in enemy territory. And j at tho war's end, when ho deter mined to visit his home ho had n i narrow escape from death at Ihe hands of the Holshevikl, twice . escaping aftr capturo and once traveling afoot for IS nights until I he reached his home. Threo months later he set out I again, tho McClure's article rc lntes, lamling after several ail i ventures In Shanghai In 1920. Ho 'perfected his camera and made ienouth money to bilng him again i to America by the eastern route, 'landing In New York with $30 and ! struggling for six more years where his machine, finally installed lira I Krondway studio, caught the -eye of the capllaliHlK'Bnd brought him i fortune overnight. MILLIONS ARE SPENT U. 8. FOR GREETING CARDS PATRONIZE NEWS-REVIEW ADVERTISERS Few persons realize tile magni tude nf the industry that supplies the American people with Its greet ing cards, .points nut J. P. MeHvo) In an Article In this week's Liberty. "Tho greeting-card Industry," ho explains, "in Bplto of its 'phenom enal growth and undeniable import ance, still exists In the iioiiular mind as 'something to do with post cares.' - - - "Hut In one year," he continues, "tnorti than . J(i0,non,00f) was spent for greeting cards In tills country. One coinpnny alone lislH,more than 2ro varieties of cards. And lor Ihe cards Issued Inst yonr 27,812 verses wern -written, . i "The greeting . ca rd 'Industry sklniB tho cream of tho best pnper mills In UiIb country, and is Ihe lai.'cst Importer of the finest hand made patters from all over the world. It Is the greeting-card in dustry that has raised the standard of American printing and plKto tnaking until they no longer need how even to Lelpslc'nnd Munich traditions, . l'TT.X.W.Tr.I SAVE MONEY IN CULTIVATION 1 , with the new improved FLEX-TRED Garden Tractor WEATHER HOLDS COURTNEY SOUTHAMPTON, Knglnnd, July 2 Weiithcr conditions woro again tiuvorable todny and thero was no immediate prospect of Captain Frank T. Courtney taking off on his trans-Atlantic night which will bo mado from Valentin, Ireland. , A depression was reported over western Ireland, with a southwest wind blowing from 30 to 35 miles an hour. .: WILL PLOW, DISC, CULTIVATE, HARROW 1 Do away with slow, tfresomo wheel and hand hoesand expen sive horses. Put a FLEX-TRED on tho Job now, and begin saving hours, dollars and hard work at cultivating. Easily handles 9 or 10 Inch plow, according to size of tractor, In year oid sod. Adapted to any and alt ordinary walking cultivator tools and attachments. Noted for sturdy construction, power, 4 fuel-economy and sure traction in all soils and under most dif jj ficu, conditions- one man does the work of four. 5 Writs today for free illustrated folder. - VAUGHN MOTOR WORKS i 480 E. Main St. Portland, Oregon