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Judge, 1922-09-09 · page 28 of 36

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Judge — September 9, 1922 — page 28: Judge, 1922-09-09

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to Gray Hair! TRAY hair bs a handicap And tn 268 South Om St., Poison Pe ar $3.00 bottle of Tr Price outside US $1.60, ¢ Be Popular—Make Money Ability to tell stories wins you friends, gets you more business or a better job. Makes you wel- comeat any social gathering. We teach you at home. All Kecrete— gesture. dialect. wumor, pathos. Make friends | 1.4 brand news sure-fire stories t big laugh laugh or ery at will. Easy Lessons No drudgery cae or CHICAGO SCHOOL OF NARRATION 1304 Garland Bidg. Chicago TAILORING $50 to$l00aweek AGENTS is erse02 gin wool tailor WANTED | suits and overcoats direct | to wearer, All one price, $29.50. Wonderful val- ues. Rich assortment of fabrics. We furnish 6x9 swatch outfit and free advertising. Protected te: ritory. Commissions paid daily. Will train inexperi- enced men who are honest, industrious, ambitious. 4. B. SIMPSON, Inc., 831 W. Adams St., Dept. 249, Chicago. WRITE for illustrated guide TENTS. and “RECORD OF INVENTION | BLANK." Send model or sketch and description of | invention for our (re opinion of its patentable nature Highest References. Prompt Service. Reasonable Terms. VICTOR J. EVANS & CO., 813 Ninth, Washington, D. C. | MOTOR DEPARTMENT cars, trucks, ace W. Slauson, MLE. jade for this service Conducted by H Making a Home for Your Car EARLY everyone who owns his home is the actual or would-be r a motor car. Auto- Possessor mobiles are now as much a part of subur- ban communities as are children and lawn mowers. In fact the appearance of some yards would indicate that) the lawn mower had been mortgaged to purchase the automobile. But no matter what the brand of the family vehicle or what its cost or present condition, it should be housed safely and protected from rain, dirt and cold. Th garage of the private home therefore be- comes almost as important as is the cellar. In planning a garage as an adjunct to or part of your home, you must remember that vou probably: spend a or part of your time taking care of y ar than you do in feeding the furnace mowing the lawn, The garage will become, ina sense, your workshop or your studio and as you are spending so much time in it, it behooves you to give thought to its angement so far as convenience and helpfulness are concerned. N THE first place, therefore, design it with plenty of light—light on all sides if possible—for a car washed hauled in the dark will look w« the face of a man who st candlelight. Artificial light, too, should he provided, as well as one or more plugs into which the flexible “trouble lamp” may be inserted for repair jobs on parts of the car to which even sunlight would not penetrate with sufficient intensity. Cleanliness cannot be obtained without water and it is therefore advisable to have the city water system connected with a tap in the garage and a drain provided in the floor to carry away the waste water accumulated from Miss Lizzie’s or Miss ard’s Saturday night ablutions. Th in in the floor will necessitate a concrete foundation and floor covering inasmuch as a wood floor would not withstand such fre- ent dampness. A conerete floor is better in every respect, however, as it furnishes a substantial foundati can be easily cle seriously effecte dirt which will constantly accuniulate under even the best behaved car. HE modern car is a year-round ve- hicle,and consequently the modern ge should be a place in which the ear n be cared for properly twelve months in the year. No man can do efficient work with half frozen fingers, and no car can run properly if kept in zero tempera- ture or, in fact, in any garage in which the mercury falls below the freezing point. 26 wnti-freezing solutions may be but artificial heat in the ge will m: winter starting as easy as is the case in summer, and will keep the vital parts well lubricated with fuid oil instead of becoming gummed with hardened grease which requires sev eral months of operation before. it will begin to flow to the parts most needing lubrication. In fact, this matter of effective lubrication is of sufficient impor tance to induce every car owner to install artificial heat in his outside garage. This heat may be obtained by direct connec tion with the heating plant of the house, or a separate, compact system may be inst t comparatively little expense which will supply the garage with all of the heat necessary for the coldest weather. asmuch as the garage will doubtle our workshop and studio it should be fitted with a work bench, heavy vise and all tools and appliances which your expe- rience has taught you are required to keep the car in the best of condition. A separate gasoline storage tank set in the floor or buried in the ground outside and connected with a hand pump. will prove more of a ne than a luxury, for gasoline will be delivered regular wholesale prices and at the same cost as sold to the garage proprietor in quantities sufficient to fill this tank. The two or three cents a gallon thus saved will enable such an installation to. pay for itself within a few y To be sure, used in the radiate HE fact that your garage requires so much of the same equipment asis found The Folding Davenford in your house—electric light, running water and heat—makes popular the type in which the storehouse for a ear is a part of the cellar or is built on to the dwelling in the form of a separate addition placed under a sleeping porch, sun parlor or other sightly and practical extension. When comicbooks.com