I 10 THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 25, 1920. 1 II Maine Prospers As Thirsty "Tourists" j Flock to Wet Line l DRY 1 WET MAINE. CANADA I i ??-'S;l 1... : ""' ' zzicj"' -'- Tliis is the "T-lnr House" wbcrc thirsty ' Tourists" gather illfrlit l . They enter "Dry"i cross v r t the "Wet" i-id and conic out the "ir" Mdo tanked. IB LORRY A JACOBS N E . sinff Correspondent JACKMAN', Me., July -4. Booze IS flowing through Maine like water through a fire-hose. And. of course. It's Canada's faun because Canada grew so near u Maine. Maine is eclebratinf Its one hun dredth birthday this year and the cele bration seems likely tj continue for u long time unless the hootch m i -1 I in Canada gives out Maine prospers. Tourists are thick .as ants. They're eating the f oou grown on the farms and washing it down with Canadian hootch supplied by the natives What could he more: nearlv perfect? JACKMAN'S FIRST STOP ON DIM SIDE I sat on the veranda of Jackmans1 good hotel, "The Mens.- RIv r House.' 1 Jackman Is on the main automobile road to Canada and the main line of the Canadian Pacific being Ui- firsi station this side of Hootchland. it was Saturday night, and the hotel wma Jammed to the guards. Down tbe street Jackman was enjoying itself at the weekly dance. All was quiet ana lovely as the pun slowly sank behind' the majestic pine trees of the Maine woods, j "This Is n quiet place ' said I. "Hm," said the hole clerk. "It ain't begun yet." He will never say anything truen For, the sun down, a steady stream of automobiles began to appear. nc after another the headlights Clashed ' and on and on they came one whirl-j Ing after another From them camel no noise but the whirring of the motors. I ZULU CHIEFS GREET RETIRING SOUTH AFRICAN DURBAN. South Africa, July 21. The chief of the Zulu nation, his ring ed headmen and many minor chiefs, recently assemble d in the court house I at Marltzburg and delivered speeches of affection and esteem for Lrd Sld-j ney Charlc3 Buxton, retiring governor- j general of South Africa. and Lady Buxton, who nccompanled him on the farewell visit. There was an enthusi astic demonstration. The court house was packed with the courtly, dignified Zulus, some of them in frock couts and wearing med als received for bravery In the war, but others, also wearing medals won On European battlefields, were clad in only the primitive Zulu fashion. Chief Manzolwandhli, son of Tete wayo. as a chief of the Royal Zulu Mood voiced his thanks for "the bene flclcnt British rule." Then Chief Mini spoke. He said "The Zulus gave assistance In the great war and If assistance Is needed "Must be a meeting some place," I observ ! "Yeh. ' said Hie clerk. "Meeting at the Line House. The Modern and Fraternal Order of Hootchseckcrs meets there every night." mm I what's the Line House?" 1 qucrled- "The first watering place on the border. sold he. Half of it is hullt on the United States side. That sides as dry as a d-sert. The other half is on the Canadian side and that sides as wet as the ocean Ml Alls PASS ON YVY TO I INE HOUSE." The procession kept up. One would have thought thai someone hao conceived the Idea of having ull the ars in the world meet at the Line House There was every Imaginable make, size and variety. Counting r.s best I could I totalled 541 cara In three hours. In the meantime, the dance over, all the male residents or Jackman apparently disappeared, fol lowing much whispering, much talk ing of Canadian-French and mucn cranking of autos. And then about midnight the cars hegan to whizz past, going the other direction. Only now came from them the sounds of much merriment, mucn laughter and most of them were driv en recklessly and with cutouts snort ing. Well," said I. "I guess I'll go to bed." What for"" asked the clerk. "You can't sleep. No one can here Satur dn nights. The cars make too much noise." Thit was the most truthful clera I have ever met again lhc arc prepered to die for tli.-ir king and country." Tin- governor-general thanked the Zulus Tor their excellent behavior dur ing the war. and for their aethe as sistance. As he finished speaking the "bayete" salute rang out, anthem-like, in a final farewell. oo SIXG Till. DOXOl OGT 1 ELM Its S I,I (.ONE (Hv International News Service I WASHlNGT N The Glycrrhlzae Aromatleum highball Is doomed, the tLcvendulao Compoalta cocktail Is ban ned. I John P. Kramer, federal prohibition ' r 6in mission er. dcult a body blow to no Leas than twenty concoctions, ea.sy of access at any drug store, and which were capable of Inspiring the Imbiber to such antiquated songs as "It's Al- ways Pair Weather" and "Another Llt itle Drink Won't Do Is Any Harm." Kramer ruled that drug stores sell ing these tinctures, elixirs and com pounds would have to take out the regulation hermit to handle lntoxl cantS, '"id that purchasers would have to be armed with physicians' prescrip tions. I 1 MAKE NIGHT 1 I DRIVING SAFE I f&A Safe for you and safe for the other fellow Road I i courtesy demands elimination of glaring lights in ; the city, ordinances prohibit them. i Use the Conaphore j t'l A lent th.it is easily attached to your 1 hcadllnhts. This li what It does a H Gives a rjngc of at leaet 500 feet when H used with a standard 21 candle power VA bult). $j Cuts out all glare; uses the llciht I j lllumlnatek the dcie of the road makes ig green etand out so you can easily dls- I tlngulsh ditches and bushes. PJ Penetrates foo, dust and imok" ; Never clogs with duct or mud In sum- is met, or with Ice or trow In winter. '.J Easily attached to your headlights, Let Ogden'3 mo- j toring hcadquo rlers furnish you with a set fcr safe li night driving. $2.50 to $4.50 per set. I Cheesman Automobile-Qo. ! I Qgdcn Phone 325 Utah 1 KAE SHIFTING IS iEEEO Some Auto Drivers Don't Know Reasons for Machines Having Shifts Has it e'er occurred to you that the reason there are three different speeds In the car Is that they were built there for use In climbing hills? Many of us do not think so, and when we have to shift gears to get over a steep hill, we begin to curse. Gear shifting should be Ihe simplest thing fibout driving, but main operators have an awful lime with It. The modern automobile Is made to Climb almost anything hut trees But 1 wish to demonstrate that to climb D steep hill on the high gear Im poses the hardest kind of work, not only on the engine, but also on every other part of the car, says G Bern thai manager of Hnwley King and company The low geur ratios are pro vided for hill climbing and the should be used for It HIM. (LIMBING ' It mn he well here to consider a little mom carefully the amount of work performed by .in automobile climbing a gradient on, say, a gear ratio ot three to one A ratio of three to one means thut one revolution of tne gear wheels is produced by three revolutions of the engine shaft. With ihe lower gear ratio, the Intermediate und the low, the number of engine involutions becomes still greater as compared with the number of road wheel revolutions It is not so difficult to compute the engine cylinder and the power con sumed In hill climbing The circum lerence of a 32-lnrh wheel g approxi mately luo inches, and in covering one mile the wheels revolve 6S3 times. With the motor turning oer three times M fast as the road wheels. It will n quire 1891 revolutions of the gear shaft to propel the ear one mile Thus. If such :i car should proceed at the rate of thirty miles per hour, approx imately 9f0 engine revolutions per minute are required With two power strokes at every revolution there are t'.-OO revolutions per mile and each explosion propels the car one foot and lour and a half inches. OX LEI I L GROI M "This estimate assumes thut the car be propelled over level ground. To mount a hill simply mentis that grade resiMtum-e is added In the various frie- tionul and othor stresses An automo bile weighing 2000 pounds cllmbnlg a hill 200 feet high (measure vertically 1 simply performs the task of overt om ing the action of gravity or lifting and the calculation of the power required to do this must Involve factors from which the horsepower unit Is derived. To lift 2000 pounds 200 feet high in one minute is the same thing as lifting "-hi multiplied b 200 which equals 00.000 one foot High in one minute. Thcoreiicallv , then, the lifting of 2000 pounds 200 feet high requires 12.12 horsepower and the losses through friction, air resistance, etc., consumes the remainder of the theoretical horse power output. "FTom all of this It must become apparent that rushing up .1 steep hill on the high gear must subject any car to enormous stresses, which are likely to affect the llfo and service of the car to a considerable degree Gear shifting is not a cumbersome task, and the mounting of gradients will not be ; Mended by harm If the gears are put to the use for which they were in tended hy thee utomobile designer" CARBURETOR IS FUELSOLUTION With Low Grade Gasoline on Sale, Motorists Should Pay Attention An editorial in the July Issue of the Automobile Trade Journal brings to mind some facts which our present gasoline shortage, with the advances In price, emphasize more fully, al though these facts have been known to us for some little time: "It Is a well known fact that the supply of gasoline Is not keeping pace with the demand, and that we are drawing more and more heavlK upon our reserve stocks. We should, there fore, adopt at once every possible means: To conserve the present sup plj and make it last as long as pos sible, to refine gasoline from the shale deposits of tho west, and from every other available source, to develop the processes of distilling alcohol to the point where it can be produced in tre mendous quantities and at a price to compare with that of gasoline and to develop engine and carburetor design with a view 10 running on cracked gasoline, alcohol or any other fuel which gives Promise of abundant sup ply at a reasonable price " WnllK ON PROBLEM. Many manufacturers have been working along these lines, but the above program is too big for any one 1 ompany to undertake. it requires th.- Concerted action of the whole in dustry our sugges.lon Is that a sc-p arate company be formed b a group of the larger manufacturers, with ample capilal to carry on the neces - u pp riment .1 work 1 nlcss the automobile Industry takes hold of the situation In some such way as this, tho prle.. of gusoline is likely' to go high er and higher, and the cost of operat ing motor vehicles to increase pro I portlonatel v FUEL ECONOMY. Fuel economy Is going to be a more and more Important featuro of motor car design. F.ven today It Is possible to double the mileage per gallon of fuel of many cars merely by a change of carburetors. But the carburetora which give the best results are seldom used as standard equipment on ac count of their cost. The Insurance I underwriters place their stamp of ap proval upon certain locking devices, which make it difficult for n thief to Steal a car Whv should not an lnde I pendent fuel development corporation or body give its approval to certain makes of carburetors which give the best results in the wav of fuel econ omj1 Development of our gasoline and other fuel production would be the greatest field for such a corporation however, and the field in which It could render the greatest service to the Industrv. Such work need not bo In opposition to that of the oil com panies, in fact, the best results vvould be obtained by working In harmony and close co-operation with them The market for motor car fuel Is stupend ous, and there will be plenty of room for all the present producers, and oth ers, too, for years to come 1 Kernels of some varieties of apricots are edible T0 NOT allow the high jLJ praise given Silvertown Cords to make you think they must be expensive. They are i best in the long run cheapest in the end. H S Goodrich J ilvertown f ' America's First Cord Tire j: Tfctf Goodrich Jldjustment 'Basis-. Silvertown Cords, 8000 Utiles j FahricTi'res, 6000 Utiles j 11 J' 1 Ogden's Motoring Headquarters y for i i GOODRICH TIRES and TUBES j J Cheesman Automobile Co. I 2566 Washington Ave. Ogden p UW ONCE DROVE AUTO FROM ROAD Machines Were Legislated From England's Roads in 1830, Records Show It would strain the imagination of the greenest cub reporter ever filled full of fake murder stories by the old-timers on the police beat, it might even defeat that well known charac ter ld Man Ready to Believe Any thin?" but It Is nevertheless so There was a time when the automobile was legislated off the highways as a nuis ance, because it scared not only horces. but people as well. "Back in 1S30 records show that tho automobile was actually legislated off the highways of England For one hlng Its wheels were breaking up the hlghwavs, and it was alarming the in- habitants and the animal. of the coun try its noise and weird appear I ance The automobile referred to in I this legislation was probably more of I a steam wagon than anything ap proaching the modern automobile, but the contrast between then and now Is nevertheless very great," points out I, M. Field. "It was not until the neventlfs that the, motor truck of today was con ceived," continues Field ' George B. Selden's first combustion engln.-. op erated with laughing gas. proved to him that the primary explosion must be within the cylinder thence camo the Internal combustion engine. Sel den started to build a three-cylinder engine, but only one cylinder was completed when tho poor Inventors money ran out "It took him seven vears to work his Idea out, and twenty-eight years later his three-cylinder model was perfected and the first Selden truck was produced. This was in 1905. This the first Selden truck, caused a great mi neatlon and demonHtrut'.l Its right to the title of "Daddy' of all paa-pro-pelli '1 ro.'id wagons. Compared to the Seidell trucks of today, this machine Is peculiar, indeed. UO MOT( LIR TO BUILD .MOM MF.NT ON MOUNTAIN (By International News Service.) MONTCLAIR. N. J. The Montclalrl Memorial committee, comprising deb-! gates from all the organizations and churches of the community, have i decided that the memorial to the slxtv -five Montclalrltes who died In the war shall take the form of a geat monu-j meat to be erected on the highest' point of the mountain from which the town takes its name It Is estimated that the monument Will cost in the neighborhood of $300 -1 000. The funds will be raised by sub-ascription. OO MOHOS GOING TO MK( MANILA. P. I Scores of Moham-! medan Moros.are reported assembling' at Zamboanga, isiana of Mindanao, I to make the pilgrimage to the great Mosque at Mecca. Many have saved for years to make the trip, which ac cording to Mohammedan faith, every, believer should undertake at some time during his life Government of-1 ficialM at Zamboanga say many who have made the pilgrimage in years I pas I have returned broken in health I And stripped of their belongings. Often thr-y have been brought home at gov- 'ernment expense KING EDWARD'S TALK TO EMPEROR IS REVEALED KEMPTEN", Bavaria, luly 81. England s lute kuig Edward VII, once tried to persuade Emperor Franz Jos eph, of Austria, to break away from Germany. sas General Conrad von Hoetzendorff, former commander-in-chief of the Austrian army. Tho gen eral declared In a speech ben tbe Other day that th- fidelity of Franz loeeph to the Gei man-Austrian alll ur.ee was often questioned but. In spite of many temptations, he had remained fultbful to the pact 'Fifteen years ago," he went on. when I had just become chief of the general staff, the emperor remarked to me In his peculiar way, 'bo you know thut King Edward has been vis iting tue at Ischl and earheetly trying to wean me away from our alliance with Germany? But I refused." "The emperor saw the war danger coming but he kept true to the alli ance, whose spirit still lives in our na tions, What Yxuh existed for more than 30 yenrs in peace and war will I ever die out. Surh a countrv as Ger- muny can never perish, and Austria will always stand by her side." VATICAN CHOIRS AGAIN TO MAKE TOUR OF AMERICA NEW YORK. Word has been re 1 ceived from Janus Slevln, the imprcs ario, now In Rome that by special per-' mission of Pope Benedict XV, the fa-' uious Vatican choirs will be permitted; again to tour Ihe United States. Last year the pope, for the first' time in the history of the Vatican, per-' niltted the choirs to leave Rome They had a limited but triumphant tour of th.- United States, and Cardinal Gib i bons and other eminent churchmen i and atudents of higher sacred music I urged Mr. Slevln to retain the choirs in the United States for additional X concerts This was impossible, as the jf1 choirs were required in Rome for im- if portant functions including the beatl- f fication of Saint Joan of Arc. ill -- It is not known at present who will 11 direct the choir here Monslgnor Casi- BJL B ruiro Cnslmlri Jin-cted thorn last year. jj- R oo mmi TO ANNOUNCE GENERAL !( CENSUS IN SE PTE M BEP . I W ASHINGTON The total populi 1 lion of the United States will be an nounced about September 1, according to a statement given out by Dr. Joseph I A. Hill, chief statistician of the con sus bureau. He said that during the Intervening period population figures for all the towns, cities, counties and states in the country will bo made pub- ; lie The agricultural census will not be completed until after the popula tion census, while the census of man. ufactures will follow that of agrlcul- The bureau has decided that detailed tatfetica covering the number of per sons of different nationalities residing public until next year, in the United States will not be made SON CLEANING REVOLVER; '' BULLET STRIKES MOTHER NEW YORK While Alphonse Can Delia, 19, was being arraigned in Mag- 1st rate's court In Brooklyn on a charge I Of violation of the Sullivan law his ' mother, Mrs Anna Cannella, died in Hi the Holy Family hospital. H She had been shot bu an automatic 1V pistol that was in the son s hand. It VI was said ho was cleaning the gun at I I the time and that It was discharged I I accidentally. W t