The Turner tribune. (Turner, Or.) 19??-19??, January 26, 1928, Image 3

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    TUR
T R IB U N E , T U R N R R ,
ORECON
No Expulsion»
Making Genuine Diamonds
Oldest Clock
In the school of experience, If you
flunk the flret year, you are not dis­
qualified from making a new matricu­
lation, hut the tuition fee !» some­
times a little high.—Fort Wayne
New»-Sentinel.
The mystery o f the formation of
diamonds has led sdeutUts to experi­
ment In making them. Lamp black
waa mixed ln*o molten Iron, which
was dissolved In arid when cooled.
Tiny diamonds thus were made.
The oldest clock In the world,
wrought In 1430 A. D. by an unkm wn
artisan at th* court of Philip the Good
of Burgundy, and valued at I'J.txio.otlO,
has been brought to the United States
for • museum exhibition.
Remove A ll of Them
The B A B Y I
King’s
Mate
By Rosita Forbes
Cuy? rig ht hr Itoalta Furba«
WNU torvi« •
mC
Why <lo so many, mnny battles of to­
day r*tB|ip nil th« little fretful »pells
uod Infuntlle alluirtita that Hard to
worry mother* through II h * day, and
keep them up half llw night?
I f you don't know the an*wer, you
haven't dUeovered pure, hariuleaa tea
torla. It la sweet to the taste, and
aweet In the little slomurli. And Its
gentle Inlltieiiee seems felt all through
the tiny system. Not even a distaste­
ful doaa o f raster oil does so much
good.
Fletcher's Castorlu la purely vege­
table so you may give It freely, at
Itret sign o f rollc; or coast I pat Ion; nr
diarrhea. Or those many limes when
you Just don't know what Is the mat­
ter, F<>r real slrknesa, rail the doc­
tor, always. At olhrr times, a few
drops of Fletcher's t'aslorla.
The doctor often tells you to do just
that; and always aays Fletcher's.
Other preparations may he J tat a*
purr, Ju*t us free from dangerous
drugs, hut why ex;>erliiiriit? Itealdes,
the leeik on care and feeding « f Imldea
that comes with Fletcher's t’aatorla Is
worth Its weight In gold!
Children Cry for
Stop Coughing
T h « n m r « y o u r o u i fh l h « w«»r«© you
a n d (hd m n r i In fla m ed y o u r t h r o a t a n d
lu n g s brcoifia. U l v a th em a t h a n e * t j
h » at.
Boschee’s Syrup
haa b # m ff lv t n ff r a l l a f f o r a l i t y -nn*
ya a r a T r y It lo<- m><l »Or bottlaa. Il uy
It at y o u r d r u g » t o r « . U. Cl. U r « a n , Inc.,
W o o d b u r y , N J.
CONSTIPATION
RELIEVED
. . . QUICKLY
Carlar t llftft* Ihm N h
F«r«ty VagaiaMa Laaatgaa
m o w « tha b o w « U I r w fr *m
p « m a n d M nptaaaani a lia#
T W f rallaw-a th e aw>M«m o i t.n e <
im i wiki* h tsu se that d u ll a n d a *h in g
_
R i n u m h w «h e r a/a a d o d o r 'i r » a -
a> lu -n o n a n d » an b a ta k a n h v the « n it r e l u m . i ,
A l l I > ru ««is l* 2
m J 1 %< Hast I'o s k a g r*. «
CARTER'S LSI PILLS
CORNS
Ends p a in a t o n ce
/
In one minute pain from corn* Is m ls L
Dr. Scholl's 2 1 no-pads do this *o fuljr
hy rsmoving the cause —pressing end
rubbing of shoes. They ere thin, m*dt-
cstsd, antiseptic, healing. At all drug
and shoe sturea. Cost but a trifle.
D lS ch oll's
Zino-pads
Put one on — the
pain <* gon e!
Thu way to wlckedneae Is always
through wickedness.—Seneca.
Headache» from Slight Cold»
E a i a t l v * B R O M O Q U I N I N E T a b l e t s r s-
1 Is ve t h e H e a d a c h e hy r u r l n a th e Cold.
L o o h f o r s l a n a t u r e o f E. W . G r o v e on
th# bo*.
10c — A dv .
No oculist can remedy the short­
sightedness o f n selfish person
Tired and Achy
Mornings?
T o o Often This Warns o f
S lu ffis h Kidneys.
T N O F .S morning find you st iff. achy—
L f "a ll worn o u t?" D o you feel tired
and drowsy— sufler nagging backache,
headache and d izzy spells? A re the
kidney secretions scanty and burning
in passage? T o o often this indicates
sluggish kidney* and shouldn't be
neater ted.
Doan's r i l l s , a stimulant diuratic,
increase the ear report o f tha kidneys
end thus aid in the elim ination o l
waste impurities, lite r * everyw here
endorse D o a n 'i. AsJ( y-tur iw«fM or/
DOANS
A STIMULANT DIURETIC
KIDNEYS
fo s t e r M ilburn Co. M fg C hcvi B u ffa lo N Y
-J P I S O
.V
F
O m lrk R e lie f !
s
COUQhS;
A r im a n t , .«fe ttle s
i m p - IV « and h V U t...
A n d #*-
m e n a it ,. it.« P1SOS Throat sad
t t i. S Sale., Ite .
STORY FROM THE START
l t o « « m a r y C r o f t on la v l a l t l n g
t h « g o v s r n o r ' a p a l a r « In K * « ,
M o ro cc o « w i t h h « r aun t, l-nd y
T ragarían.
A
Franchman.
!>•
Vrlaa. ttiakaa lo v a to har I I « t « l l a
h « r o f t h « K a l d . a m y a t « i ’loua
p a r l ó n In t h « a « r v l c « o f t h «
aultan.
Ito a a m a r y rvpulaaa !>•
Vrlaa* l o v a N a s t m o r n i n g , w h l l «
r i d i n g , a h « I« t h r o w n f r o m h « r
h o r a « a nd r « n d « r « d u nr on a rl o ua
Hh« la r «a c u a d by I tl f f trlb«a>
man a nd m a « ta t h « K a l d , w h o
t u r n « out to b « an E n g l l a h m a n
T h « K a l d aaya It w o u l d Jaopar*
«Ha« h l « r a u » * t o r « t u r n h « r to
K«a.
I ' a t «, an A u a t r a l l a n . and
K a r l fa . a a ar va nt , a r « a « a l g n « d to
t a r a f o r har
Hha laar na tha
K a l d ' a n a tu « la W o a t w y n
Mar*
t o n g o , a Hpa nla rd. la a t t r a c t e d
hy h « r b r u u l v
I I « « u b t l y a «ta
a bo u t g a i n i n g h « r f a v o r by p r « *
l a n d i n g to h « l p har to i i r g p * .
VV aatwyn o ffmtn t o do a n y t h i n g
h « r a n f o r har * ! « r t « n g o In du ca «
I t o a a m a r y t o g o to hla h ou a « at
n ig ht . I l i a a c t i o n s a r o u a « har
su spicion s.
CHAPTER IV— Continued
" l l was not drugged," raid the Kpan-
Isrd.
"Y o u
m -e d
not have b e e n
afraid." He stood In the doorway
Imiklng at her and the girl knew at
once that the maak was gone. In
fare o f a concrete danger her pulaew
quieted.
"It Is very late, we must start."
ahe aald. and waa pleased at the un­
compromising evenness of her t»ne.
“ Vat )•'<-" said Js s a "1 want to
talk to you." lie closed the door,
looked nt I* a* If he would like to
lock It, but there was no keyhole.
"W e can talk on the way."
"It la too late to go tonight. The
dawn would calch ua before we were
out o f eight. You muat wait here
till tomorrow, and we will atart aa
soon aa It la dnrk." He kept hla
handa In hla pockets, but hla eyes
were hot. They poaaesaed her. atrlp-
plng her o f her hatee wound harrncan.
Rosemary understood and nnger
blazed In her. "Old you ever mean
to help me?" she flung at hltn.
A etnlle crept Into every deep
grooved line In the face before her.
"1 did. I do. Rut nt a price."
For a moment the girl wna de­
ceived. “ Why talk alaxit thnt now?
You know I have nothing with me."
With a flood o f Impatience she
clenched her handa. " I f It'a money
you want, you can hare ns much nn
you like when I get to Fes. Surely
you're not going to waste time bar­
gaining."
"Ihma mla, I would have left thnt
kind of reward to your generosity—
It'* another sort Tin after.”
Rosemary was silent. A little sick­
ness crept up her. She wna a hit
uncertain o f her knees, but she told
herself that she wna not In the least
afraid.
"Sit down for a minute." Martengo
pointed to the couch, and without
conscious volition the girl found her.
self In a corner, huddled Into the
etmillest possible compass. The man
did not move or change hie attitude.
“ Freedom Is worth n good deal to you.
Isn't It?" he asked. "I'll give you my
word you ahnll go .down to Fez.”
"Your word,” re|»ented Rosemary.
Junn Ignored her scorn. "You can't
afford to take It like that," he said.
“ Nobody knows where you are. I can
do whnt I like with you."
Meclinnleally the girl tucked a fold
of her barracan over her fe e t She
felt ahe must cover every Inch o f
herself, shield heraelf with every ves­
tige o f wrapping from those eyes.
“ It’s a question of what will you
give me to take you out of TelehdIT"
"Nothing,” said Rosemary, and all
her flesh wns damp.
For a moment the Spaniard looked
■t her. “ Then I must take It,“ he
said. With a single movement, lithe
as an animal's, he wna beside her.
She flung herself off the couch, hut
her sandal caught In her native dra­
pery and before she could recover she
wna In hla arma.
"Dloe, how I’ve wanted you!" file
lips were on her throat an she strained
away.
‘T-et me g o !"
•^fot yet I" laughed the Spaniard,
tightening hla hold. Something clicked
In the girl's brain. The ahuffllng of
their feet, Martengo's breathing, the
sudden rip of her hairncan were con­
fused with another round, the rush of
footsteps, voices, hut she didn't know
If they were outside or In her own
head.
A scream tore through her
throat
Why, It wna easy I
She
wasn't so dumb—somebody wns out­
side. She screamed agntn and again.
A door burst open nnd there was a
medley of voices In the outer room.
Martengo loosed his hold as men cata­
pulted In uimn them.
Rosemary,
frozen Into immobility, her mouth
hanging open, saw Westwyn hurl him­
self nt the Spnnlnrd. She wns Jerked
o(T the couch by the Impact of their
bodies.
Huddled on the floor, ahe
shut her eyes, while the room became
a whirlwind of struggling figures. A
horrible, guttural .miind broke Into
her consciousness. "You're strangling
him," said n voice. "It's murder, man.
Drop It I" The girl's lids were forced
up. Curiosity and panic held her gnr.e
on the tight
Heinz and I’ete were
trying to pull Westwyn off something
-rumpled nnd gulping among the bol­
sters.
With s terrific heave they
dragged off the aggressor, shaking him
is they might have done a terrier.
Home Riffs were looking through the
doorway
Rosemary recognized the
young Mcnctihh*. Then unwilling, ahe
" I f every person devoted half an
looked si th* figure on the couch
hour a day to study, half our lawyers
Slowly Martengo pulled himself to Ida would be unnrrersary," declares a con­
feet. "You'll pay for this,” he said temporary. Then I f * up to all o f ua
thief!/.
Westwyn nodded toward to devote one hour a day.—1'usslug
ii o s e n i n -y, still on the floor.
"Take ■bow.
her hack to the guest house. Heinz,"
he ordered, "Are you all right. Mis*
Apparently a Soch Sale
Orofton. not hnrtT" Martengo lurched
against ll.- laid«. A riding whip lay
That woman who got a black eye
on It, and In a second the Spaniard while trying to get dose to the coun­
had seised It and struck Westwyn ter In a Milwaukee bargain sale obvi­
serosa the face.
II not light you ously got more than she bargained
her«. Hire« to one, you pensunt, hut for.— Farm and Fireside.
111 shoot you any tint« you Ilk« to
name I"
Where Swatter» Are Taboo
I There was an Instant of stillness In
in Ukranla, the southern Russia
tho room. Then half a dozen voices province, superstitious native* hob)
broke out. T li« Itlffs seized Martengo. the common house fly In reverence
Heinz huztled Rosemary out of th« end make no effort to kill the peat
'door. “ You've got to ebust come with Man; persons regard the fly a* a sa­
me,“ he said, and did not relax hi*
cred animal.
hold even when they were on th*
path. The girl drugged back. "W hat
Jaywalk Into Car»
will hapiietiT Whet will they do?" ahe
repeated. "There will !>• a duel,“ re­
Five per cent o f the automobile ac­
torted the Herman. "One o f thou« cident* of the country are caused by
fool blind duels that Ilia Itlffs arc persona who walk Into the aides of
so fond of."
moving machines. Like automobiles
Refusing to answer any more ques­ running Into the side* o f train*.
tions, lie hurried her down the steep
track “ I f you want to help us," lie NEW WHIPPET CAR
told ber as they reached the guest
A MOTOR MARVEL
house, "don't move outside thl* place."
One of the aenaatlon* In the automo­
He lied started up the hillside before
alia had time t* protest. "What Is bile world la the [ierfected “ Whippet"
It?" whimpered Znrlfa at her elbow. produced hy the Wlllye-Overlund, Inc.,
" I saw the Kald running with men and ll I* direct evidence that John N.
behind him.
What has happened? W illy», president of the corporation,
“There Is going to be a du«'l,” aald proposes to make good on hla decla­
Rosemary, dully. "Zarlfa, what la a ration thnt “ there can be no monopoly
blind duel?" Ilut the III III woman was In the light car field." The perfected
clinging to her arm. "What do yon cur. and the price at which It Is
uicun? Who Is going to fight? Not offered, placing It directly In compe­
the Kald?" "Yes, I'm afraid so. Mur- tition with the lowest priced core, hn*
tengo struck him."
centered the eyes o f the automobile
| "A le e !" walled Ziirlf*. "It will be Industry and the motor car world In
murder. The Spnniu-d I* ns crooked general on the enterprising Toledo
as a witch's stick I" Kb« disappeared manufacturer. It make» him the flrat
Into the darkness, barefooted, her bar­ manufacturer o f automobllea to enter
racan drugging behind her.
the price field heretofore exclusive to
H alf an hour Inter a group ot men but one light car manufacturer.
were gathered In Mencbbhe's house.
The “ Whippet,” which has lieen In
The young headman, hla dignity Ilk« production for more than 18 months,
holds the national fuel economy rec­
ord of 43.28 miles to the gallon la a
test b«-lween Loe Angeles and New
York City, covering a distance of 3.5.7.«
miles, under official observation of the
A. A. A. In a speed test on Rocklng-
hnm Speedway. Salem, N. H., a
"W hippet" recently attalnel a speed
o f 71.0 miles an hour over a 50-mile
route. This was officially timed
The same engltie that has accom­
plished these record» Is the power
plant employed In the perfected
"Whippet," now offered at the lowest
price In the history of Wlllye-Overland.
The “ Whippet" was the first light
car to be equipped with four wheel
brakes, setting a new trend In the
light car field. The braking area of
the “ Whippet'»" brakes Is greater
than any other light car.
r>etolls o f the perfected "Whippet"
disclose a wider range of colors, em­
ployment o f full crown fenders, a
new cadet sun visor that Imparts a
smart military effect, and the addition
o f automatic windshield cleaner, rear
view mirror, and a combination rear
driving light and stop ligh t These
additions make the "Whippet" the
most fully equlpp«*d light car built In
the four cylinder field.
A Scream Tor* Through Her Throat.
Why It Was Easy! Somebody Wat
Outside. She Screamed Again and
Again,
a mantle on Ills shoulders, was seated
on a carpet. On either side of him
stood Westwyn nnd Martengo. The
German nnd half a dozen Itlffs were
clustered opposite.
«T O I1B C O N TI N U E D .)
Egyptian Leaders in
Manufacture of Linen
That the manufacture of linen was
knowh thousands o f years ago to the
Kgypllans Is proved by the cerecloths
or wax-covered winding sheets of the
most undent mummies that have Imen
found, since these were made of linen.
I’haruoh arrayed Joseph In vestures
of fine linen In 1770 It. CX, nnd that
wns nearly 4,000 years ago. The gar­
ments o f the priests o f the Egyptians,
us well ns those o f ancient Hebrews,
were o f the same fabric. Many varie­
ties o f fiax are known and more than
25 have been cultivated, but the plrnit
la said to rapidly exhaust the soil,
and ao Its cultivation suffered severe­
ly except In Egypt. There the fibers
of this product were manufactured In
very early times and the secret was
carried to Tyre tn 588 R. O. From
Tyre the Phenlclane carried the se­
cret of working flux to Europe and
traditlim Is that the Irish were among
the first to get It. As one of the
products of Egypt flax la referred to
In the Rook o f Exodus. To this dny
Egypt cultivates Inrge quantities of
this product—Detroit News.
W orld’s Most Tragic Man
Chance plays a smaller part In life
than some people think. The least
beginning may lead to the greatest
end.
Every dny, hour and minute
men are building or neglecting to
build. Events thnt they attribute to
luck are nearly always due to some
act, thought or purpose long since for­
gotten. Frequently worthy beginnings
of the least promising kind have led
to consequences beyond the wildest
hopes or dreams. There Is only one
really tragic figure In life, and that
la the man who never makes a start
— American Magazine.
Ape With Curiosity
Australia’s Busy Station
A chimpanzee, ■ pet of i Berlin
post mini, amuses Itself by turning tn
tire alarms and sitting by and watch­
ing the fire engine come.—Philadel­
phia Inquirer.
At Central railway station, Syd­
ney, Australia, more than 1 .«GO train*
arrive and depart every 23 hours; ap­
proximately
250.000
people
paM
through U every day.
Life’s Added Problem»
Grandfather» on Vacation
Hen Lays Twin Eggs
f.lfe Is boom ing more mathematical
every dzy. We are now urged to cotint
our blessings before eating, our cal­
ories while eating, our change after
eating and our sheep while going to
sleep.—Kansas City Star.
Opportunity
Fifteen grandfathers, whose ages
totaled 1,200 years, recently enjoyed
their annual two week»' vacation to­
gether at Llttlehampton, England.
They are member» of the Browning
Hall Grandfathers' dua of London.
The oldest In the party was eighty-
four and the youngest seventy.
A hen In Ulster lays two eggs at ■
times,sometimes three. The owner ex­
plains this by saying that the hen, •
last year's pullet, had ennstroke when
a month old Since It haa grown op
the hen hns on fonr days a week laid
two eggs at a time, and has twice laid
three.
Next thing for scientific breeders to
do Is to cross the carrier-pigeon with
the parrot so that rrwssages can be
delivered verbally.— Wall Street Jour­
nal.
Correct the Fault
Apotheosis of the Pancake
Whatever yov. dislike In another
person take care to correct In your­
self.
Sign In restaurant window—“ W af­
fles o f Class and Distinction.” —Bon
ton Transcript
Various Trades Offer
Occupation to Blind
Blind men are employed In many
engineering factories. In one German
electrical concern, says the anrual
report of the National Institute for
the Blind, more than r>ne hundred
sightless people are employed, while
double that number are being trained.
Blindness, It Is said. Is no hindrance
to a man looking after two or even
three automatic machines. The aver­
age earning rapacity of a blind oper­
ative In these works Is considered to
be about 80 per cent of that of a
normal-sighted man.
Ninety blind persons employed In
French engineering trades earn about
85 per cent o f full wages. A motor
factory In America employs 44 blind
men. who are given the work for
which they seem most competent.
Nature’s Economy
Migratory Bird Treaty
Canadian Lake» Beautiful
A resident of Ohio, who had previous­
ly raised wild fowl under a federal
permit, but failed to submit the re­
quired report of operations and con­
tinued to make sales and shipments
without renewal of the permit, was
arraigned In Federal court at Toledo,
Ohio, found guilty, and fined $300 and
costs.
To engage In the business of rearing
and selling migratory waterfowl, says
the bureau of biological survey. Unit­
ed States Department of Agriculture,
It Ls first necessary to obtain a per­
mit from the secretary of agriculture
and then to comply with all require­
ments of state law.
These requirements are made under
the migratory bird treaty act regula­
tions to protect and perpetm. , migra­
tory »pedes o f birds passing each
year between the Unl«ed States and
Canada.
Among the seven reservations set
aside by the government of Canada In
the Rocky mountains there Is none
more beautiful than Waterton Lakes
National park, which lies on the east­
ern slope of the Rockies where these
mountains approach the Internation­
al boundary. The park forms a rough
square with a long L-shaped section
added to the east, the whole having
an area o f about 220 square miles.
Newest American Sport
Critic-baiting has become an even
•r« ater and more typical American
spo-» than framing prize fights or fix­
ing horse races and championship
i use.,all games. Tue man *~bo prac­
tices professional criticism in this
year jt our Lord lives constantly In
a metaphorical gashouse district, hls
head and seat In Imminent prospect
of bash and boot.—George Jean Na­
than in Vanity Fair.
Inventions daring the next two or
Let» the World Go By
three centuries will. In the opinion of
For the seventy-fourth consecutive
Profit by Past Error»
many experts, probably be In the di­
season, Mrs. Rlchaid T. Auchmuty of
The past Is gone, and gone forever.
rection of Imitations of the wonderful
New York has arrived at her summer Ton may learn by your mistakes, but
e<?onomy and the simple, dlrert meth­
home, the Dormers, on the Lenox- do uot be guilty of the sin of constant­
ods o f nature. Take the electric eel
Pittsfleld road. She has never owned ly worrying over them. Turn your
as an example. Its electric organ 1» an automobile, has no listed tele­
face toward the future. Give your
In no sense a storage battery, but a
phone, no electric lights, no steam mistakes and blunders a decent burial
contrivance by which electric energy
heat In her villa, nor a radio. She in the part, and let the memory of
Is liberated at the momeht when It Is
prefers to drive over the wooded them furnish you with Implements of
required. At rest, the organ shows go
roads In an open victoria. Glowing Industry by which you may operate
small an electromotive force that a fagots In her fireplaces and kerosene
the gold mine of future possibilities.—
good galvanometer Is required to de­ lamps furnish heat and light. She Is
Exchange.
tect It, but a sudden nervous Impulse In her ninetieth year.—Boston Globe
from the eel's spinal cord raises a
Fow l» in Biblical Time»
potential of many volts, with very lit­
Not That Sick
tle heat, and so small an expenditure
Partridges are noted In the Old
Girl—I want a nice book for an In­ Testament The fatted fowl (I Kings,
o f matter as to defy the most expert
chemist to weigh IL Fireflies, glow­ valid.
4:23) Is Interpreted as either goose
Librarian—Something religions?
worms and many deep sea fishes pro­
or duck. Cocks and hens were brought
Girl—N j , not now. He’s convales­ from Persia two or three centuries be­
duce light without heat, at a cost ,
which would make the price of a wax cent.
fore Christ A tomb at Marissa of
candle an extravagant outlay.
abont 200 B. C. has a good representa­
tion of a crowing cock. Sparrows and
C u r e for Optimism
other “ twittering birds” were also
The neurologist says optimists live
Feet and Talking
used for food.
longer than pessimists. They might
It's the fellow who can't talk on hls
feet who puts bis foot tn hls mouth If !h*v didn't have such sublime faith
It doesn’t pay to advertise unless
In loose b.rkes.— San Francisco Chron­
when he tries.— San Francisco Chi- -
I you are awe to deliver me gooas.
icle
icle.
Beauty’ and Quality
in the Perfected l^ h tp p e t
MA Q U A LIT Y CA R A T THE L O W E S T PRICE IN OUR HISTORY’*
4-D O O R SE D A N
*585
FORM ER
P R IC E
*725
R E D U C T IO N
*140
THE MOST V A L U A B L E C A R EVER OFFERED FOR SO LITTLE MONET
New Low Prices
Reductions
Touring - *455 ’ 170
Coach - - 535 90
Roadster»““’ 485
Roadster with rumble seat
525
Coupe - - 535
545
Cabriolet
Chassis - 355
Punishment by Ostracism
Ostrnclsm wns a method employed
hy the student Athenians of banishing
citizens wli >se Influence wns consider­
ing prejudicial to the state. A day
for votlnr. wns fixed, when the people
wrote on sninll earthen tablets or
shells the nnnies o f those whom they
wished banished. Six thousand votes
were necessary to drive a man tnth
exile. To ostracize today means to
Ignore, to exclude from a certain so­
cial circle.
C ou p e
AU prices f. o.
b.
170
90
200
90
factory
Quality Shown in Outward Beauty—
W hippet introduced the vogue tn light car design for smart,
compact bodies with low, fleet lines.
Only True Happinete
Conscious virtue Is the only solid
foundut^pn of all happiness; for
riches, power, rank or whatever. In
the common acceptance of the word.
Is supposed to constitute happiness,
will never quiet, much less cure, the
Inward pangs o f guilt.—Lord Chester
field.
Tomorrow Alway» Come»
It Is frequently said that tomorrow
never come«. Rut the man wi>o has
u note falling due tomorrow knows
that
tomorrow
cornea. — Atchison
Globe.
THE
WHIPPET
NOW
READY
Big 4-wheel Brakes — more braking surface per
pound of car weight than any other light car. Y ou can
stop from 40 miles an hour within $1 feet.
Rear Gasoline Tank— for utmost safety— with
vacuum fuel feed. Th is costs more to build, but is much
safer.
Increased Speed — W hippet superiority is also ex­
pressed in greater— and safer— speed; 55 to 60 miles per
hour, and many owners say 65.
Greater Gasoline Economy— W hippet
holds
the A. A. A. Coast-to-Coast economy record o f 43.28
miles per gallon.
Other Important Features —
164 inches o f
springs, full force feed lubrication, faster acceleration, silent
timing chain, longer leg room, adjustable steering wheel,
lower center of gravity, single plate clutch, longer connect­
ing rods, banjo-type rear axle housing with removable shaft,
are among the many quality car features of the Whippet.
FOR
IMMEDIATE
W IL L Y S-OVERLAND, INC.
T O L E D O , O H IO
DELIVERY