Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 129, Ed. 1 Monday, January 12, 1920 Page: 6 of 8
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AN
WHY NOT INSTALL A
r'-'
T?SU
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• PLANT NOW?
."•tc.
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H. W. DAVIS, Dealer
HOWE TUBES
He
Ey1
£
. 1 N
arisen for
out.
9
TRIANGLE SUPPLY STATION
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He had j
f
By Albert L. Clough
Editor Motor Service Bureau, Review of Reviews
—
ROLAXUUH.L
REMEMBER
SHOP
p-
-
CITY GARAGE
Fhona 729
East Hickory St
FORD SHOP
FOR SALE
J
B7"; ;
I
Buick, Dodge Bros. Cars and Samson Trucks
FRITZ & RALEY
4
SERVICE—SERVICE
-j
)
•T
EVER READY SERVICE STATION
9
Any Part
CALI. 11 —BASEMENT BARBER SHOP
W L. PIERCE. Prop
1
L’.r
'ving
“ j
=
—
£££
Ataas
I
I
WE
i
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|________
THE RIGHT GARAGE
I -----.-----
1918 Ford Car and Dodge Bros. Truck.
. Phone 620.
There’s only one thing to do if
you ever suspect battery trouble.
That is to take your battery
right straight to a place where
they know how to handle it.
We’re equipped to repair or re-
charge your battery, and we have
Bone-Dry Willard Batteries with
Threaded Rubber Insulation right
here in stock.
Know Howe by trying one. They
are “Everlastingly Good.”
HHminiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin
, ISIS. Ths Bobba-Marrin Company
Have your Radiator fixed so it will
hold Johnson’s Anti-Freeze.
:-.T
When you bring your car to us for mechanical attention you get
REAL SERVICE
That we are Agents for
BRUNSWICK TIRES AND TUBES
sure
eyes
Electric Service Garage
ROY SUBLETT, Prop.
DENTON TRANSFER
S. W. SMITH, Prop.
I
Seven-passenger cars, Hudsons and Willys-Knight.
Also Ford Rent.
. Last but not least first-class truck for transfer work and
-» picnic trips .
FEDERAL TIRES
Double Cable Base
6,000 Miles
1
DENTON BATTERY CO.,
5D WEST OAK ST.
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HITE
.. ■U-.fcL. _ '■ >'■... CWL,
I
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O-y
Er?;
Krv
------
Grife. ..Afi-
ink that It ean be
J ■
DELCO-LIGHT
-----j
CHAS. KEELER
iHr®
LET US HAUL YOUR
BAGGAGE
Truck Delivery to
of City.
Or when in need of Service
Car, call us.
PHONE 51
( YOU EVER?
r:
>
Hk*
which I can get at without removing
the engine dr what can you suggest?
Generaty speaking, the
Blowouts in “Howe’’ Red Tube
small round hole,
which is easily and inexpensively
repaired. Practically all injuries
to “Howe” Red Tubes can be re-
paired on the road, because they
are small.
Know Howe to get more mileage.
Howe began this industry with
one idea in mind—To make the
best Red Tube and to dominate
the Red Tube business.
(Copyright, 1919, by The International |
Syndicate.)
DAY OR NIGHT
FOR QUICK CAR SERVICE
CALL 56
TIGER-FOOT
Cord snd Fabric Tires
9,900, 7,500 and 10.000 Mlles
r .’. %
III
MOORE’S SERVICE
- PHONE H.
i
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JLHONE 60S
P- ""
STKKET.TAX DVR
The city street tax la due and pay-
able on or before January 11. If paid
by that time the tax ta It; if paid af-
ter February 1 it will be W. _
shown an almost tfficanny tact In fore- T** *** 0
seeing and preventing the embarrass-
Ing situations that one would have
thought Inevitable under the circum-
stances of their life together. He never
forgot. He had called her “my deaf
girl" once and she hud shown that she
hated it. It was enough.
»• t®6w old are you, White Man?" Sh
asked.
“Thirty-four, normally." '
swered Instantly, and went on with hli
absorbing reading almost without a
break.
Andrea fell silent, even her thoughts
stopped talking. Gradually the flow-.
Ing voice possessed her, picked her up
lightly, bore her -away and away. In
other wortln, she slept as children
sleep when put to bed in the good old
way.
When she awoke, hours later, ths
room was heavy with the acrid smell
of lanterns burned too low, but to
make up for that, the rain had ceased
and sunlight poured In through the
open door. M'sungo was sitting as he
had sat. rending as he, had been read-
THE ONLY THING TO DO
’ -1
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merely leave a
B&’-h
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We’ll be glad to tell you more
about the Bone-Dry principle and
the Threaded Rubber Insulation
that made it possible.
. Did you ever find us out of gasoline?
Did you ever find us out of oil ?
Did you ever find us out of water?
Did you ever find us out of air?
Did you ever find us discourteous?
Did you*“ever find us too busy to wait on you?
Think it over—Did you?
troubles over with us.
■ AU Work l.uarauuwd
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boHeciaed to cry a little more ano
Mate couldn't. Tears had wlth-
Varhcfore *n Ineffectual rage. Her
0 hardened. Well, if she couldn't
.smoothing must happen; if not on
It must be forced. She
adered what the white man was
Hg, Perhaps he was sound asleep;
haps he was eyen snoring! What
she know about this man, anyway?
mho human? Had he live points of
•tact or was he an Impalpable crea-
> of her sick brain? Perhaps ,sbe
Standard Vulcanizing Co.
NEXT TO McCLURKAN’S
Let us help you got 50 per cent more mileage out of your Tires
by repairing them when they are first injured for little cuts
■neglected soon make big ones and little cuts are inexpensive
td repair while big ones cost much more. Talk your Tire
Dry Lure Retreading a Specialty
Ku., ■ , • 1
Mcac-gJ
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PREVENTING RUST IN COOLING
SYSTEMS
R. B. asks: Can you tell me of
anything to use in the water system
of a new car to prevent the forma-
tion of rust in it? Will--Rad-
iator Compound do this, *is they ad-
vertise it will? J
Answer: We have not tried any of
this compound, but we have no reason
to believe ttyaf
it are unfpanc
within the wa
seemed to us of sufficient importance
Ford cars requiri a minimum of attention. Anyone can run a Ford
and care for it, but it is better to have repairs and replacements taken care
of by those who are familiar with the work, have the tools, and skilled men
to do the work promptly.
esfa By
George
Agnew
Chamberlain
The New Overtone
■ in and See It. W
., r.-..If
Oyerlan
' it the claims made for
faded. Rust formation
water system has never
to warrant any investigation as to
how it might be prevented and we are
thus not in a position Ao tell you what
you can uso to stop it. It should be
remembered that a tiny amount of
rust colors, the water noticeably and
looks much worse than it is. In reality
the only parts of the system that rust
are the water-jackets and these rust
so slowly that the loss of metal in
this way is absolutely unimportant.
Th^ only objection to rust and other
solid matter in the wgter is that it
may clog ’ the fine passages in the
radiator and, as it is practically im-
r-- - -... possible to prevent the introduction
ly your trouble is that this parities wHh-the water
dutch has worn so that it slips. By BUppUed Bnd evaporated, the radiMtor
■iodically for this
aloneCBn* gotten rid of
r ’
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—o--
THE FROZEN “GAS” LINE
Keep Water Out of the Main Tank
And it Cannot ReRach the Carburetor
One of the meanest tricks that!
Jack Frost perpetrates upon the un-
wary mqtorist is to cut off the supply
of gasoline to his carburetor, by
freezing the water which may have
entered the fuel line. Cars left stand-
ing out on cold nights are specially
prone to this very annoying trouble,
which is very hard to locate and re-
move in the dark,, with numb hands
and no hot water supply available.
Really there is very little excuse for
being caught in this way, for the car
manufacturer takes great pains to
protect the user against it.
i Because “Howe knew how,” an in-
sistent demand has
Howjj Red Tube
She Haw bls fig-
ure, keyed to one sort of combat, relax
only to grow slowly tense again,
turned, laid the shotgun aside and
came I
strides.
steadied
pinned against the wall.
She felt herself HiruggHtutus against
gasoline and water do
the latter liquid settles to
of all eoritaitiing vessels, .. pc,»v.w- - -
ly easy, with care, to keep water from pulling hard on a hill and not when
getting into the piping. me mount x -• - , . .
Of the pipe, through which gasoline is that the knock in your engine
drawn from the main tank, is not -_r—-.- . .. .-
flush with the tank’s bottom, but
considerably above it, thus preventing
the last of the liquid from leaving
the tank through the draft pipe, and
so long as water does not accumulate
in the tank nearly up to the mouth of
the pipe, hardly any will be drawn in-
to the system. In the bottom of the
tank is a removable plug which,
when taken out, permits the draining
off of the water and this should be
made use of rather frequently, es-
pecially in winter. Occasionally,
through the jolting of the gasoline,
some water mny enter the draft pipe
and reach the vacuum tank, but here
is another chance to eliminate it "be-
fore it can reach the carburetor, as
the supply-pipe to the latter instru-
ment is arranged just as is the pipe
from the main tank and some, little
accumulation water will do no harm.
However, the cock or plugged open-
ing in the bottom of the vacuunj tank,
should frequently be opened and 'all
water l«t out. If, despite.all precau-
tion, wfater enters the carburetor
bowl, there is still an opportunity to
reject it before it gives trouble,.by
opening the cock in the bottom of the
float chamber and letting it escape.
HIGH SPEED CLUTCH SLIPS
C. K. writes: I have a car of old
model, with two forward speeds. The
drum transmission and the differen-
tial are mounted on the rear axle.
When I start on low and shift into
high, it will not pull properly. How
- can I take the rear axle off? I jack-
ed it up, but cannot se<!m to see what
holds it in place.
Answer: As we recall it, this trans-
mission is of the planetary type, with
a band, engaging on a drum to give
low-speed and a clutch (probably of
the disc typ.e) to produce high-speed.
_. Most likely yt
take hold harder on the discs. If
you have to remove the axle, you
might as well remove the whole rear
end by disconnecting at the universal
joint. The yoke that holds the front
end of the drive shaft will have to be
disconnected and the rear-spring clips,
brake-rods and gear shifting rods de-
i tached, so that the whole rear system
san be rolled out under the car.
-k -- 'f
, ’ ■■
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ANOTHER CASE OF KNOCKING
W. V. writes: My engine has a
knock that is heard plainly when the
car is running on the level or down
grade, but hardly at all when it is
pulling up hill. As I have tightened
the connecting rod bearings, I think
that it must be the main bearings.
Would it be advisable to tighten up
protect the user against it What-(the first and center main bearings,
ever water enters the fuel system does I
so with the gasoline supplied^ and, as I
gasoline and water do not mix and Answer. - . ,—
the bottom knock from a loose crankshaft is espe-
1, —*«-----*“-J ig.
BARGAINS
-A. M .
in New & Second Hand
CHeyrolet CW’s J
z-x J XT’S T5 / ■
K is Here. C<
as oi
iHints for the Motorist
........■■■■■■■■■........... ....... —2, , ........... ................
EST THE QUALITY VULCANIZING SHOP
ra’""" " ■ 'x '*
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.
S,-„ , A
B ’ •
\ WE FIX RADIATORS—WE
. DON’T EXPERIMENT WITH THEM
WE CAN MAKE IMMEDIAlU
DELIVERY.
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.....
smsah iete sTSs^w’iJr* kreahwd.T”®
would Aunty Gwen 4*n* running Itt ? aB
or— Her eye*, following tke sequence
of her thoughts, fell upon the barred
door.
She arose, put on her slippers and
her bathrobe, walked deliberately to
the door, grasped the bar with two
trembling hands aud threw it up with
al! her strength. The clang of the far-
swag gong rang out above the din of
the droning rain. Following It Instant-
ly came the thud of a falling chair.
The door, released, swung slowly open
with a long-drawn „ creak of unolled
hfhjpes Andrea was suddenly fright-
ened.
Coming through the covered way
she could hear the swift crush of hur-
steps. Ai sungo, fully dressed,
>u» the center of her room and
, In ht« hands, held at the hip,
•rigger, was a villainous
sawed off shotgun. Only his long train-
ing to look twice before he fired saved
Andrea when his eyes brought him the
startling conviction that besides him-
self she was the only other living thing
la the room. She trtared at him, wide-
eyed and trembling.
Located at Right Garage
I V •
, CALL AND SEE OUR NEW PLANT.
__ WK GUARANTEE FIRST CLASS WORK
~~ And the Beat of Service.
\ , BE ONE OF OUR SATISFIED CUSTOMERS
W. ^ MARTIN, <
______________________________________________ ■___
,x _____________________________ •
dnsK UXU-KM t«
the white man'a bowed head. He had
not iboved and she herself had lain
very still, more through languor than
by volition. She bad been in that state
of aubdued consciousness which
sweeps troubled humanity back to the
borderland of childhood, but now her
mind awoke. A deep flush stained her
neck and crept up through her cheeks,
carrying with it to her eyes a look b'f
sudden age. Her hand, imprisoned
under the man's cheek, doubled and
contracted into a hard little flat. He
looked up quickly and saw the transi-
tion that had come to her face. "Don’t
give in to it,” he said, throwing one
arm across her knees. "Don’t give in
to age. Do you think I am so blind
that I don't know where I found you?
Why do you think I ain on my knees?
It’s in reverence before the glimpse
that I caught of the girlhood, of An-
drea Pellor. My arms are trembling
because they have ffwred to carry her
clean youth, soft and warm as it was
before the touch of the world and
years, and my heart 1b aching with a
memory that will never die.”
"White Man,” said Andrea, her face
unsoftened, “would you pay three
pounds for me?"
He stared at her, leaped to his feet
and started pacing up and down be-
aide the couch, a look of thunder on
his brow. “No,” he said, “I wouldn’t."
Without looking at her he wfnt to the
bookcase and, after a moment, drew
out a worn volume; then he placed u
chair close to the couch so that the
light of the lantern would fall over bls
shoulder, sat down ami began to read
aloud.
Very gradually the hardened and
cheapened look In Andrea’s eyes died
They grew wide again and dw^lt
dreamily on the man's slim figure. She
Haw many things about him she had
never noted before. His hair was
crisp and touched 'with premature
gray at the temples; his shoulders
were broad and his hips very narrow.
He had a good "boot leg,”9>ut his feet i
were Small enough to preserve bal- |
ance even there. In spite of hg> height, !
he was well knit by grace of the life ’
he had led.
“He Is very strong,” thought Andree
as she remembered how lightly he had I
swung her into his arms. Then she j
began to think of other things about j
him. He never wps too tUed to shave f
before the evening meal- T’ *- J
Nice clean cars—Safe Drivers. We meet all trains and make
special trips anywhere anytime.
i’*
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ' .....
urinary organs It has proved Its value.
Prloe *1.16 per bottle.—-The Curtis - - j
Company.—Advertisement. " - T.
' u„<■■■.■<■/.•*, nx>u« -• ■'* .■■fc.J-,
v ••.
H. V. HENNBN. Mayor. , X32J
■ • »
.X s si _ _
had b*eu caught In a currant ,
would not let him stop.
Andrea’draw a qulTsrihg breath.
She saw Instinctively the workings of
his mind* Ha wished her to awake
without awaking—to come to the new
day with the selfsame smile In her
heart that had been there when she
slept. He called upon her to play the
game through and she decided to do
IL She stretched her bare arms,
yawned, rnbhed her eyas with doubled
fists, laughed1 and then threw out both
bands to him.
"Take me back," she said. ].
The book fell from hie hands. He
turned and stared at her with the
hungry eyes of a man who sees for the
first time one at the rarest of God’a
creatures namely, a woman whose
youth stands by her In the disheveled
morning, defies the ugly finger of
gross slumber and proclaims her love-
ly beyond the limits set by the Wrin-
kling eeams of coarser and leas
blessed fabrics. For a moment his
gaze wavered as though before too
strong a light, then It steadied and his
face grew stem. He arose.
“Come on,” he said.
Bhe threw her arms about his neck;
I he picked her up, sarong and all, and
‘ passed solemnly the length of the cov-
ered way. He could feel her face
pressed hard against his shoulder and
her loosened hair was like a cloud
beneath his chin. Her arms clung to
him tightly, her body trembled, her
eyes twinkled and her lips murmured
—___IIL1- 4«TT___-____ A__S___ __
I audibly, "Remember, Andrea 1’ellor,
you’re just a kiddle.”
He dropped her on her cot with a
I thud that surprised the six straddling
legs of that sturdy campaigner into
stringent protest and incidentally
startled one young lady.
“There you are, you little devil,” he
■ growled and strode from the room
with the satisfied air of a dog who haf
I just carried Ihhu« eight pounds of
prime roast intact.
Andrea watched him go, then she
arose, took the cord from her bath
; robe and advanced upon the door to
the covered way. She closed it, let.
down the bar and with thl cord bound
it in place. She tied knot after hard
knot, and as she drew each ohe of
them tight she said, “Just to give you
I time to thiuk twice. Andree Pellor.’
(To Be Continued.)
I
toward her with swift
For an Instant his
wavered but as he dfew nearer they
to transfix and hold her
1
of all containing vessels, it is perfect- c’a\\V noticeable w^en the engine
The mouth ’8 running light and it seems hardly
is a main bearing knock. It 1s not
considered advisable to readjust main
bearings unless they are exposed so
that all of them can be properly fit-
ted at the same time, but if. you can
remove a shim from one or more of
yours without having the shaft run
too tight, it is Evidence that these
bearings need attention. Are you
perfectly sure that connecting rod and
wrist pin bearings are in perfect ad-
justment? From the way that you
describe it, it seems probable that
your knock may still be in these parts,
although it is almost impossible for
us to determine with certainty...
DENTON. TEXAS, BtoOOMD-OHabMICLaC MONDA^ ~ ------
unjhst accuuUdn. ThOHr Yl«r
trembling hands, her heart beat with
great irregular throbs. A lump rose
In her throat and it seemed as though
it must strangle her if she did not let
It out. In her desperation she hurled
herself forward, threw her arms about
M’sungo’s neck, pressed her face
against him and sobbed.
“Oh, White Man,” she gasped, "I
was so lonely—I am so lonely.”
The embrace of a woman is one
thing; the clinging of a child quite an-
other. The sternness in M’sungo’s eyes
died suddenly; the hard look In his
face faded, vanished and gave place to
one of great tenderness. He gathered
Andrea up in his arms and carried
her quickly through the covered way.
He told himself there was every rea-
son to hasten, for he could feel her
soft warin body, shaken with sobs,
wrapping Itself round his heart and
^crushing It beyond repair. He laid her
on the couch in his room, made a nest
for her in the many pelts with which
it was covered, pillowed her head In a
bundle of furs and drew over her a.
gayly figured sarong.
“You were cold,” he -said, as he
tucked her In; then be knelt beside
her, took her hand in both of his and
suddenly laid his face in her open
palin, still moist with her tears.
Andrea drew a long whimpering
sigh and nestled down against the
warm furs. Her eyes gazed imperson-
ally and a little wonderingly at M’sun-
gO’s bowed head; then they wandered
about the room. So this was where he
had lived and worked during many
months I It was a bachelor's room,
arranged at once for comfort, utility
and sloth. On one side was his cot,
permanently Inclosed in mosquito net-
ting and having at its head-a lantern
for reading in bed. Next to it, came a
high draughtsman's desk roughly
made of packing eases. On each end
of it, guttering candles, still lighted,
rose from mysterious pedestals, empty
bottles, disguised under cascades of
molten wax(
In the shadow of the high desk stood
the one utterly Incongruous bit of fur-
niture, a glistening mahogany phono-
graph. Andrea's eyes passed it and
then went back to linger for an in-
stant in vague wonder. Why had
M'sungo never brought it out? Never
played it? She was not Interested
enough to ask aloud.
Andrea's, eves finished, their slow
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 129, Ed. 1 Monday, January 12, 1920, newspaper, January 12, 1920; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1235857/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.