Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 10, 1930, Page 10, Image 10

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    proE FOUR
Nnvn , (iFFfR !i : iv..;i or i wr-r, 1 HOW VARIED FOLKS
iiuiju.;. v.i;ii,u... . 1.1 ---I i
MADE BUYER
WEEK AUG. 8-16
"Western ' Auto Huiiily 'eom
pany'H fourrh nnnunt 'buy one and
gel one free' offer will lie In ef
fect at fill Western Auto stores
' during the week of August H to
. 1 It;." announce Mr. tjahnm, lo
cal ncceswory ntore manager.
"TIiIk wile Ihih been ho well re
ceived In the past that w have
ilerlde'l to make It nn annunl
event. The real purnoo of tin
pale la to acquaint new qitIvuIh
lu this community with the many
ndvnntaKes of huyhiK at WeHtein
Auto. We want every car owner
to know the va!u-H that brought
niotoi-istH f luck inn to our ntnrH
laHt year for more than li, 000,000
Individual iiurolmtu'H.
"With each purehane of one of
the sale Memx, the huyer will be
Kiven an extra one without com.
This Jh not a Hale of a special It
of booiIh hut Ih our Ktundard qual
ity taken from our regular moekH.
"We feel that It in worth more
than the Iuhh we are taking in
thiH offer to acquaint cur ownei'H
with the everyday vatueH to he
. found ifc WeHlern Auto and to In
, troiluce to newcomera the many
products Hold hy our company.
Future Hales will more than ro
"jiay uh.
"Many nrticlcH mirh as step
platGH, HpongeH, polish and eleun
(.erH, wind wing mlrrorH unci cuh
. Ions, are usually purchased In
pairs, and we know from lam
" year's experience during this sale
that it makes a decided hit with
the auto owner when he findH that
Jy purchasing one of these articles,
we mako him a present of another
.without cost. Other items such as
SlUHt cloths, In nko lining, gloves,
'"Spring Me.," and radio tubes, are
hJn regular demand and an addi
tional supply without cost Is wel
comed. "t.'igar lighter, tire covers, tube
repair outfits and camp stools are
listed' among the offerings."
MOT ZEPPELIN HAS
NexviYorlt Cily Iiub her. Htatue
"of Liberty, I'ittsburKb ber
Amokestacks, and Uvh AukcIi's lias
,. ner airship! The "Volunteer,"
" 'baby steppelln of tho (loodyear
Tiro & Itubber Company, which
has been in operation In Califor
nia, and particularly In Lou An
gles, Hfnco June, 111 lift, has be
come such a familiar luhl to our
citizens that It Is poiisidcred a
fixture and an institution. j
Hinee beliiK assembled at the!
Arcadia balloon haimar and be-j
' mir launched, the "Volunteer" lias
.Veen In the uir L-IH lumrs, IS ,
' minutes. This time repreiits
l.Tr.O separate fllKlHR.
" I'asHonnerH who have flown In
' the Bh!;i, from both Arcadia where
' the idilp was based for approxl
. niately 30 days, mid from the
nirshlp-dork nt the (loodyear fac
tory In Southwest Los Anweles,
T.umbcr 3.Q02.
In all this notlvity, comprlnlnn,
, It docH, approximately one
V year und a half In time and
, Many, many flylitK hours, not
one paswiiKor or one bit of prop
nty has been dumuKcd or scratch
ed by fllichltt.
, The "Volunteer" undo r tho
command of . P. (ltud) Tanip
' l.ell. recehtly demonstrated the
fcnslhilltv of lout: and extendc
fitfchtH with an nlrHhtp' of thls
tvpe up tho Ban Joaquin valley j
nnd out over the bay to San Kran-i
cIsco nnd Oakland. i
Ueenuse of the Buccesn of the
,B:n Francisco operation, nnd the
enthusiaHm for llKhter-than-alr
built up by tho "Volunteer" hero,
it has been decided by Ooodyeur
officials that tho ship Rhould be
. equipped with a Kas 1uk f ln
- creased capacity. The "Volun-
teer" is now secured at the (lond
ear airship dock where she will
undergo a complete overhaul and
reconditlonliiR and tho InHtallatlon
of h now and lui'Kor bug.
WUImv Wins Suit Ami Inst Son.
M rs. 1 1 oso Pea rce of Ulrmlnix-
ham, England, recently won Iter
. ult for $2,ri)0 damages, ngnlnst
; her gon, Thotnua, whom churn
ed with holnir responsible for the
d"t;th of her husband nnd his
father, II. T. Peareo. Thomas
Penrco wan driving nn autoniotuie
his father being among tho pas-
pengera, when It crashed Into nn
jnther car, causing the iienlor
. J'enrce's dentin
I -Ml .
pAnrs. Aug. it. uP Tho
, Prenchman'i reputation for pre
ferring his own country has been
enhanced by failure of n (lerinan
. government bureau here to per-
suade French youths to ntudy
a cross the Itblne. Only i"i have
gone, whereas 1.000 Germans are
studying In Paris.
IIONOKONO. Aug. 9 (Pi
"Flower street," one of iho land-
marks of Hongkong. Is being de
molished tu. make way for a mod
ern thoroughfare. Tho flower
peddlers moved to another street,
, ncurhy.
KARAJKVU, Jugoslnvln, Aug. 9.
The minaret of one of the
oldest mosques In nil Itosnla, built
In 1476, was blown down Into a
street hero, smashing Into frag
ment but Injuring nobody.
BtTOHAKKHT. Aug. (fl1
General Clhoskl, war minister, has
ordered a census of all tho con
crete cellars In riumanln. It Is
supposed that ho wishes to list
refuges for cltlssens In case of aer
ial bombardments In future wars.
Eiehty-three years ago the parents o Mrs. V. A. Williams took six months to reach the
Pacific Coast in a covered wagon from the middle west. Recently Mrs. Williams and her
dauehter Mrs. Henry G. Pratt, arrived in the west in a Pontiac coupe from Washington,
D C after a drive of only eight days from the Atlantic coast. The two women easily
traveled 500 miles a day over the Oregon trail by automobile, whereas the pioneer families
were making good progress i they drove 18 miles in a 12-hour period. .
1930 Marks Record Travel to Crater
Lake, But Other Tourist Travel
In Southern Oregon Shows Decline
Most minor tourists travel Just . She sends unite a number to tho
f..r a net-on but some almost ! ' I'll-, but the fact remains
seem to travel forever, tin, comln I ' "'"' .. rv fln.1 their way
and ''lntr of winter anil summer th-e 1,1 "olk-
menninK but lit. I.- to nomadic in- However, a brighter side of bo
stincts tbat leail tt) all corners -of tourist travel Ik shown In the
Iho land, patient ol.Hervanee of amount of money spent In south
tourists passim; through Me.lforu -'rn Orcitun by those who come
has revealed. I n .May their strea u, l'''l"' t ''"Joy a recreational
travel hcKins to Kt'ow,
Ini reaslm; !
steadily until Ihe peak Is reaeheit. (
.......... I....... lii Aim. nut l.nl ..flnn In
July. This year
This year another week is I
expected to hco the peak
the peak for I
southern Oregon passed.
.,f
itnirinniML' w r iiui milium iil i
July, tourist travel is heavy and ;
. I ,,, f(1,. I.ll,ll,..vi. !
mutely omo month, fluctuating oem-i ..mi ius L -uim -.......
considerably during Unit time. ! wod by restaurants and other es
Last week the number of 'out of j tabllsbmenls. The avenge tourist
state auto resist rat Ions was on Iho hpmmIh approximately per cent
decline at the local resist ration ' v..ry dollar tor merLHu.udiHe
station, but this week the number "rants "re credited with 20
lu (in t ho liii'i-i'iism 11 nil next week
Is expected to bo as Kood 1C not
better.
The travel is under' last J'ouKs
averafro ami the condition Is par
tially uttrlbuti'd to the general
business depression experienced
throughout the nation. JUcdl'ord
auto camps aVe doing averago
business, but lioLels are said to
be doltiK less than during prev
ious tourist scasoiiK. Tho explan
ation 'has been offered that tour
ists are Unwilling to spend as
much money as they formerly did,
patronize auto camps more
tllld
alsu are Inclined to camp moro
iilonp; tbe rondslde.
('niter luikivmivcl HmikH Itecnnl
While the tourists may not be
spending as much, they find their
way to southern Oreuon resorts
and . Keenli!. attractions. Crater
Lake travel Is heavier than last
yuar by far and other lake at-
lf.illiiim urn iL.ltwr fl troiwl Inwl.
ness. . A heavy percentago of. tho
visitors coming to Med ford, es
pecially those from California, are !
In search of employment. Koports
of fruit picking hus-vlufed Imn-1
dreds of tourists, In this case
transients, to Medford. This travel
means but little to the business
of the community and Is moro uf
a detriment.
Aulo Tramps
One family, including three
young men, had been traveling for
t he past five yea rs, a I wa y s f o I -lowing
reports Indicating employ
ment. For, five years they had
not been in one place for a suf
ficient length of time to call It
home, and- they planned to keep
traveling, for tho next five years
or even longer. They were not
unlike, a group of gypsies and
were akin to the nomads of the
desert, folding up tents and dis
appearing like shadows hcToro the
dawn. They enjoyed this mode of
life, but the youngsters of the
family suffered through inability
to gain oven a common school
ed ucatlon.
0,uttu a number of such families
pass through Medford during the
season and occasionally they nr
rlvo in winter. When they arrive
during cold weather, Miss Lillian
Huberts, county Hod Cross Execu
tive, is more familiar with their
visits. A child becomes sick or
the father cannot find work. They
appeal, to rhaiity and charity re
sponds with a basket of groceries
or with euro for tho sick at the
hospital.
Occasionally lu summertime,
this year moro than usual, charily
comes In for Its share to provide
for penniless travelers. ,Iast week
In an auto camp at Ash land, a
young coupte, already blessed with
two children, arrived In the eve
ning ami late the same nifcht. the
wife u us about to give birth to
a third child. Without funds,
charity again had to come to tho
rescue. The child was born In n
hospital and everything was sat
isfactory. WihhI Pile Starls Marly
To bear out tho contention that
this year's crop of transient mot
orists through noutheigM Oregon
do not huVo as much money as
usual, Miss ltnhcrts reported yes
terday that the wood-pile, us n
rule, only conducted during tho
winter to y von men an oppor
tunity to earn n few cents to buy
a meal by chopping big chunks
Into smull pieces, U now la use.
MEDFORD M20L
'"'
state auto registration bureau re
ports tbut the annual euravan of
,ll'"llH y" "
,UU1 ninions cu unnm-H in iv
naiion. minorecis 01 nunis:iniis m
ibilhii-H
of this is spent in southern
"M , , ,
The merchants head th
list of
I" 1 ""n-i i .o i"- 11 111
auto accessories, paw una oil, ii.u
per cent; theati'i's and amusement,
8;5 per cent; transiiortation, 7 er
cent; coiiCectinnerJes, fl.M jier cent,
and taxis ami Ihimscs, ;i.;i per cent.
I ted wood II In 1 1 v ay All racts
The decrease of tourist travel
In this section is attributed to the
use of new routes, the Jtedwood
add (he PnlleH-Vnliiornia high
ways. Tbe fact remains, however,
that the Pacific highway continues
to be the main artery of traffic.
While incoinlmr tourists on the
1 ,llllM numi limy in; nil mu uu-
ciinc, the ouiKoiim motorists imo
t'nllfornla has shown a decided
i'i ase this summer
I1 1,0 vui fl-kinK st
over last.
station near
llorubrook reports that over lr.oo
more cars were counted last July
than in July of l!)it. Over lti.
IMMI ears passed by 'the station,
where all motorists must stop for
examination lu connection with
lhp transportation of citrus fruits,
none
of which are allowed to
cut
the state In keeping with
i..' "Good Will" bars have-always been value-leaders . .
in the used car field for "Good Will" recondition- ..
' Ing and our Written Guaranty insure owner satis
faction seldom found in ordinary used cars. Now
you are assured of still greater value, for we ore
offering our entiro stock of high grade, late model
cars at mid-summer clearance prices. Our stock
Includes nearly every make and model. Come and
select the car you desire at a price that means a
substantial saving.
buy now at mid'summer
clearance prices
1127 Utllek Sethi ti Its depend- ( .
able motor ready to give thous
ands of mlleii of satisfaction.
I tody offers heAMtyf ttyk, and
comfort of new 'cars of today.
Kt this real
Value
$550
l Price
liter; motor
thousands
Oakland Condi nt n Price
New paint; Rood rubber; motor
runs fine; will ive thousands
of miles of service.
Kasy terms ..
$265
I'ortl Coium that Is in nice
shape; has bad splendid care.
This, car Is a real
value at
$125
1127 1 -se SiiHr Sl Sethi it
Looks nice, nnd runs fine. You
will net real pleasure
$350
In this rar
Essy 0. M. C. Terms Small
Down Payments Balance a
Few Dollars Per Month
Se4ftoot ftlofcr Company
Y0U9 09KLAPCJVI3 DOXLER
6outh $ir$ett
TRIBUTE. MEDFORD,
efforts to keep the Mediterranean
fruit fly scouiko out of the state.
"1'ishiiiK in the Kokuo river, trib
utary streams and lakes attract
hundreds to this section, in addi
tion to the ninny that visit Crater
Lake, attracting more than 125,
000 visitors last year. These tour
ists are much In excess over the
travelers who pro from place to
place In search for work, at times
forced to sell their watches find
other persnnal properly to buy
KaHollne. When they exhaust their
supply of saleable Koods, they ap
peal to charity ami charity cannot
let llu'm starve.
Trlsom!1' Will Not Iamivo.
Lewlshnm, KnKlaitd, iiollco have
a prisoner in a cell of their sta
tion which they are anxious to pet
rid of, but has no desire to go. lie
Ih a lai'Kc sft-an which alighted in a
biiMy street and lied up traffic. Two
even larger policemen finally cap
tured It. Police reports ahow that
It has a la rye appetltlo nnd no
friends.
Subdivisions for Scotland.
Old residents of Scotland are
aroused over the Invasion of mod
ern real estate methods. A land
speculator is touring tho country
to secure opt i cms on large tracts
which lie plans to sudlvlde. and sell
to specula t Ive builders. ' The old
timers fear flint his operations will
split up "ii bit of honnie Scotland"
in a vay that will disfigure the
landscape.
Woman Taxis Across Agrica.
To prove that Africa Is as civ
ilized as any great city, M rs. M,
Doulhlrt, aed HI, Is taking n tnxl
ride across that country. A few
weeks ago she stepped out of a
hotel at Wind lock. In Sou I Invest
Africa, hailed a taxi nnd drove to
the borders of Am;oln. Here she
hired a Portuguese car, and hopes
eventually to teach Morocco.
Itabbll Outsmarts Cubs
liOSTON A ltnhhit Maran
ville. Knives field captain beat
Chicago this season by knocking
fouls down the first base line. He
stalled until a Massachusetts hlue
law ended the game and wiped
out n Cub rally.
I 1127 Ponilac le.
m l.nxe ljutdaii Sedan
I New paint; motor I
I In nice shape. A I
ar that Is m
always O C m
l popular . $4mD M
PhortB) 1$Q
OREGOy, SUNDAY, -AUQFST 10, 1930.
OF EARTH DEPICT
PATRON ZEPHYRS
WASHINGTON. Aug.. .lan
soons, tdroccos and southern burst
ers, harmattans and. ha boobs, cht-
nooks and willy willies, mistrals i
and "the doctor ; each country
has its favorite name for .its dis
tinctive winds. (
Algeria dreads Its chllilUs, . ,
Guatemala and Nicaragua, expect
daily chubascos In summertime.
Flume shivers at the approach
of a bora.
Spain scorches under the whip
of the leveche out of Africa.
erslu has learned to live with
her shamal.
'Yet fewer than a dozen differ
ent kindM of winds are recognized
by meteorologists," ..says a bulletin
of the National Geographic-society
from .its, headquarters In. Washing
ton, D. C. "A blizzard by any other
name, Buran, poorgu, or pampero,
is still a blizzard.
Central America's '"Monsopji '
"Central America's chubuBCO
season Is a small scale copy of
India s monsoon. An Australian
set down in Texas would soon .rec
ognize that a Texus 'norther' was a
near relative to his own 'southern
burster.'
"A Swiss, traveling through the
Rockies in early spring, sniffing a
soft, dry, warm breeze would ex
claim, Ah, foehn wind.' 'Chinook,'
a native might correct him. But
a South African would call it a
berg. wind, a Hum at ran a bohorok,
and a Faroe Inlander a glove wind.
"The typhoon that hit Korea
and Japan recently is nnother var
iety of the wind species, hurricane,
that occasionally sweeps the West
Indies und southern United States, spouts, thunderstorms, tornadoes,
Hurricanes, or typhoons, also zoom j blizzurds frdm northwest Canada,
around in the South Hcub, curvet i are all swirls of winds ot greater
off the northeast und northwest j, or lesser diameter.. But u sep
coast of Australia and charge the I urate cubby hole has tq be re
east coast of Africa. The tornado, j served 'for the monsoon. The
a concentrated whirling wind and .
most destructive of the storms of
small extent, which appears in the
American middle west, Js nlso
known to northern Africa and to
Australia. Tornadoes attain the
greatest speed of any winds, esti
mates of their velocities running
as high as 000 miles per hour.
1. S. l-cH-Ls u 'Slrorco"
The United States has been
experiencing the sirocco, If you put
tho Italian label on hot waves from
the south. When a low, which Is
the weather man's name for a
largo storm area, moves across a
continent, it often pulls In hot air
from, the direction of the Equator.
Italy's sirocco, like American south
winds, has passed over wuter so It
brings a moist, heavy, lazy atmo
sphere. But the same w i n d.
reaching Spain as the solano, after
having passed over land, is hot,
dry and dusty. So Is the leveche
of eastern Spain, and the leste of
Madeira .and northern . Africa.
Argentina's hot zondas uro South
A iiiei'lcaii nlroccos. To tho same
family belongs Australia's brlok
flelder, although It blows from the
Get the Gar 8j t.
Lot 'us show you liow youVowu a -fine j
l)i,!- Essex for loss cost than a ear" of afipar--oiitly
lower price. In the .column to the
right are' -the figures of a deal winch illus
trates the point and proves it in dollars and
cents. ' '
One car APPATJENyLY.was $240.00 lower
in price than Essex. But look into the
whole deal, and you find Essex actually
LOWER in price, besides being by far the
larger, roomier, finer automobile in every
way.
Examine the trade-in we can allow you.
Remember, our business is not so laid out
that we must take your used car from you
at less than it is worth. We can give you
its full value.- Do not give up your used
car at a loss because you are attracted by
a list price of another car that SEEMS low..
Let us show you a REAL price comparison
an automobile-buying proposition that
will appeal to your business and thrift
sense, (let our linancc terms
tails.
Have a car you are
money, too.
0
ESSEX
Armafrong
north instead of the south, since
Australia lieu below .the Equator.
"Australia's brickfielder used to
be a south wind; now It is a north
wind. It happened this way.
Sydney was one of the communi
ties firm settled on the continent
and It had a brickfield on the
southern liniiu of the city. A
storm from the south would hurl
clouds of dmt on the grumbling
inhabitants. Many duaty Hydney
Jtes rushed to Victoria when gold
was discovered and soon thereafter
the hot, north sirocco winds rush
ed on them. Kxperiencing much
the same discomfort they suffered
in Sydney frjjm brickyard dust, the
miners promptly named the hot
winds hrickfielders.
Thunderstorms Almost Universal
"Australia supplies curious nick
names to ajl its breezes. Besides
hrickfielders und southern burst
ern.. there . ,are willy...-, willies,, .,the
I'Yemantie doctor and Cock-eyed
Bobs. Willy willies are hurricanes!
that play tag up and down the i
northwest coast; , the. Fremantle. i
doctor Is Perth's afternoon cooling;
breeze from the sea; a Ciek?eyed
B.ob is a thunderstorm
"Few countries on earth do -not
have . thunderstorms. . .Arlca in
Chile d6es not have them,, indeed
It does not have rain storms of any
kind year, on end. The. United
States has a fair number; the
Canmrouns, ..which lie, in Africa's
armpit, .are the second most thuiir
deruus lands of earth, while ,tho
true land of the thunderbolt . Is
Java. At ,Bultenzorg. Java, light
ning flashes and thunder growls
322 day's of the year..
,Tiu3 Patron Wind of Iudja
"Ancient Creeks erected nn
eight-sided temple to the winds,
euch side sacred to the wind from
that corner of the compass.
Weather observatories have sup
planted the Greek temple and a
different type of classification has
replaced the Greek weather-vune
method. Now it is known that n
smull dust whirl on a city street is
a type of nearly all storms. 4 Water
monsoon is different; the unique
possession of tho Far Kast, al
though a baby monsoon, the chub
asco, has been found, in Central
America.
"In India the monsoon dictates,
politics, drives Englishmen to the'
hills, und saves the whole penin
sula from being another Arabihn
desert. Monsoon ruins stopped a
political demonstration in Bombay j
a few weeks ago and have called
a halt to salt gathering. Salt pans
that were scenes of disturbance
are now, Vith the coming of mon
soon downpours, muddy pools.
How the Monsoons" Flow
"The monsoon can be under
stood without going to India If
tho kitchen stove can take the
place, of a lO.ouu-mile sea voy
age. Anyone who has looked at
tho kitchen range, felt the heat
und even . seen tho heat waves
rising from Its top, knows what
happens in India. Tibet, north of
India, Is the world's largest nat
ural stove, a huge block' of land
raised up in tiie sky two miles
above sea. level, bare to tho hot
summer sun. Heat waves rise
And
nf nil An.
(111 Vlt
proud to own and save
be Dollars
from Tibet and o take the place
of the rising ,al new . air, called
the mohsnon, comes In from n-tlia.-'
. If the air -were smoke-colored
the monsoon winds could be
seen approaching the tip of India
in a vast stream. Upon reaching
the tip the stream divides, part
of it rolling up the east coast,
the rest up Ihe west. Then the
monsoon uir streams strike 'in
land, the - eastern stream moving
up the Ganges Valley. In north
ern India the divided streams con
verge again and the. reunited mon
soon rises over, the , -Himalaya
mountains, shedding it rain as it I miles per hour while the average
goes, ever rushing on to feed the. of Europe, which, next to Anarc
summer demand of the Tibetan tica Is the windiest continent, is
'stove' for more air to warm. .only 10 miles per hour. Kxplor-
.. "During winter the monsoon j era record that nn 'Adelle bllR
goea into reverse, retracing its) zard maintained n speed of .107
course .through i India! But it j miles per hour for eight hours
brings no rain from rainless
Tibet, only dry, .clear, cool weather
to the peninsula.
...Tho Wettetil Place on Earth
. "India's monsoon carries on the
wings of wind the .world's great
est burden of water. On Cherra-
punjl, at the head of a vulley in
the Himalaya foothills, the moon-:
soon drops more rain than does
It Is Cool In
San Francisco
A Tower of
Hospitality!
WHBTHEX rtm'r, fa Sm JW
rim fir 0 wuk, tt yttt,
mth tht amr EL CORTEZ HOTEL
ft htmt jtm'U mnr tumt tt Unit.
3 .
THIS 15-,torr Loitelrr b more than a hotel .. . ; (ft a
horn to all who Uva beneath Its hoipltable.(obf. 'jBeat
tlfully furnlfhed suite and tingle room, each with com
pletelf electrified kitchenettes, multiple radio and every
other conceivable convenience. Located in the very center
of San Francisco's busy social and business whirl . . . close
to the theatres, smart shops and great department stores.
JPalatlal dining room and coffee shop, vr If you wlah, pre
pare your meals in your own convenient kitchenette.
' Dally hotel service and gang In connection. -
the El Cortez Hotel
GEARY NEAR TAYLOR STRBET
v SAN FRANCISCO
MOaVriMSt A. SAMUEL, MmH Ommt
in Pocket, Besides
STUDY THESE FIGURES
This ileal stiutcil when the buyer told us th.it Essex
was the ear he wanted, but apparently for Tendons ot
thrift lie must buy n ear whleh was offered nt a
lower list prlee. ToRether with him we figured out
the whole deal for Essex and the other car ns follows:
ni prire you
We offered for CCfi
traded ear ...... OOU
Onxli difference AO(
lie must iMiy...
Our 12 mo.
pnynrenlji
all-cost
41.S;
4964'
fliture for Ksscx'
The net .of It all. so far. Is that for J07.20 total or
around $S.00 n month, the buyer found he could have'
KSSKX, Instead of n ear priced by its maker at
LM0 less.
Then, finally n year from now his Eisex will he
worth $115 more than the other ear he was consider
ing Or. rastlnR up nil totnls. his Ksxex in a year will
cost him $ 1 7. SO LESS than the car apparently cheaper.
So we say
Oct the Car you Want and be dollars In pocket,
besides!
C h a 1 1
Motors,
e
any other wind anywhere In the
world. In jiu turner Cherrapunjl
lives in a nature-mode shower
bath.1" "On "ft full Vi4 inches .-tff
rain a var, enough to fill nn open
tank 35 feet high. In August.
1N41. it rained 30 inches a day at
Cherrapunjl for five consecutive
duys. '
"Antarctica Is notorious fur Its
storms. The roaring forties be
came the r hawllng seventies In
Antarctica where Adelle Land has
been named the Home of the
Hii-sznrd. The year-round average
wind speed in Adelle Innd is &
( with gusts running
hlgh
200 miles per hour. Hurricane
winds Mow at least 80 miles per
hour with momentary bursts of
tpeed up to 200 miles per hour.
Men who recorded the Adclie
wind speeds lived In houses bur-
ied under the snow; only their
instruments projected above the
1 Hiirfacf. "
iiisnisrim
I
inn i
Competitor's
prlee
Prlee for
trade-in .......
740
400
340
33"
399M
llfferenee..
12-monthly
rale
AM.-COST
MOVKKN...
n g e