The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 10, 1930, Page 9

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we NEW MOTORING IDEA IN “FREE WHEELING’ { Permits Motor to Idle in Gear While Car Travels at High Speed | Free wheeling, a system which en- ables a motor to idle while remain: ing in gear with the automobile mov- ing 40 miles an hour and its shifting from. second- to high and back without toushing the clutch, is being introduced in the new Stude- baker President and Commander Eight models, according to Chris. Bertsch, local dealer. Free wheeling offers in addition to an entirely new dri sensation a host of engineering advantages not to be found in the conventional car, Bertsch said. 3 For example, car momentum never “forces” the engine with that sensa- tion of “piling up” which is so co: moy in ordinary cars when deceler- ation takes place. At any spéed, as soon as pressure is felieved on the accelerator, ‘the engine immediate! drops to idling: speed while the car continues to glide forward. Through- out this process, the gears are con- stantly in mesh, leaving the driver in complete control of his car. “Use of the free wheeling prin- ciple permits the motorist to do things with his car which at first experience seem incredible,” Bertsch said. “He may shift gears from sec- ond to high and from high to sec- ond without touching the clutch. The cluteh is necessary only to start and back up. iv “Free wheeling results in an ap- preciable saving in gas and oil, be- cause this new principle permits the engine to drop to idling speed as soon as the foot is removed from t! accelerator. % “The greatest economies are ef- fected in heavy traffic and hilly re- gions where the conventional car makes its greatest demands on gas and oil. i “Free wheeling eliminates the re- yersional strains thrown on tires, rear axle, universal joints, clutch and transmission of an ordinary car when the foot is lifted suddenly from the throttle. Carbon also is reduced be- cause the engine is never forced by car momentum to pump excess oil iné into the cylinders when “When the driver wants to’use his engine as a braking medium in de- scending hills, a slight touch on the gear level places the car into con- ventional gear and suspends the free wheeling operation for as long as the driver desires. Even this change does not require the use of the clutch.” HUNDREDS LISTENIN ON BAND CONCERT). Training Camp Organization is Proves Ably Welded by Ef- forts of Sgt. Ferretti ABOVE—The new free wheeling principle, pioneered by Studebaker in the new series President and Com- mander Eights permits the driver to do things with his car which at first seem incredible. to smoothness, quietness and thrift, driver to shift’ geats from high with absolute silence. Maximum Expenditure of $84,- 655 Planned, Compared to $81.66 ee e Bt iia moming by W. H. Seitz, city au- The silent dnerease this year was ( : eat ae in bed Pahegaie adopted may made fore July 15, but after that date no increases Several hundred persons enjoyed the concert of the training‘camp band | get, in groups around the postoffice Wed- nesday evening, while other hundreds heard the music over the radio, KFYR studio set up § microphone on the sidewalk and very good results eight regulars are among the 49 men, Harry P. Goddard, secretary of Association of Commeree, whieh when he set about welding the organs ization together. He called attention to the presence of Charles Crowell, trombonist, who is a native of Steele and received his first training under Dr. Prescott, the director of the Steele High school band. Crowell is an en- listed ‘ musician assigned from Fort . He is a fine performer on both trombone and cornet. — + City-County Briefs {| iisuine So Alfred Zuger, Bismarck attorney, and his son Jack returned yesterday from a trip to Lisbon and LaMoure, ir, Zuger attended to matters of 1 business. Mr. and Mrs. C. Joachim, Beulah, may be le in the préliminary bud- » @ecording te Mr. Seitz. Last year’: expenditures were made Other operating ‘and main- tures tenance expendi Capital and Betterment are visiting with friends in the city|*tes Mrs. ©. F. Lainbert, Arena,‘is a|°7 business visitor in Bismarck. Mrs. Alfred Larson, Sterling, ig spending the day in the city. Fresh Lake Pike at Gussnor’s. ———————{_= KK{K{{}ET]—eE=E=—_== ;|Minot Attorney to and the the ginking fund E being given in Hear Divide Action Governor George F. Shafer today appointed B, H. Bradford, Minot at- torney, to hear testimony in the case for the removal of Divide county’s three commissioners. The Daan Win ee RAG Ae Crogny dury Co., and] Five clectors of Divide county charged the commissioners with in- competency, misconduct and r J to second and return ‘at 40-50 miles an hour without touching the clutch and ;| come so hot that they cannot be ;|ed at the work of laying the pipes. ; cause of rumors that Mr. Zuger had ; | that he was recovering this morning. street |the Mandan Diamondball league dur- ; {and walloped the Purity Dairy entrant THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1930 STUEBAKER OPER | Sasser nines oe Wen never forces your In addition it allows the gasoline and oil miles per hour. PIUS ZUGER FIRST | SUNSTROKE VICTIM Is Recovering Today After Near-Fatal Prostration Pius Zuger, 45, Mandan, was in the Mandan Deaconess hospital today re- covering from a -severe sunstroke which almost cost his life yesterday afternoon. Employed at laying natural gas pipes under the city of Mandan for the Montana-Dakota Power company, which soon will supply the Missouri Slope with natural fuel, Zuger was stricken suddenly by the intense heat and keeled over while at work. He was rushed to the Mandan hos- pital unconscious, and he did not re- gain consciousness until the cooler hours of this morning: This morn- ing his condition was much improved, however, and his physician looked for his rapid recovery. Zuger is the first North Dakotan this year to become prostrated by the intense heat and humidity. Many others working out of doors in the sun but none has been stricken so severely that his life was despaired of. Pipes which the men lay for the gas line add to the discomfort caused by the weather because they act as ra- diators and reflectors. The pipes be- touched with the bare hand. About 60 Mandan men are employ- Mandan, excited this morning be- died, received with relief the news Lowly Plumbers Start 2nd Kittenball Round With Win Over Purity Kittenballers representing the Serv- ice Plumbing company, tired of being buffeted around by other teams in ing the first round,-last night turned: 16 to 12. ‘The. plumbers, as a result, went into @ three-way tie for first place in the second round with the Cloverdales and Kennelly-Royals, each ha’ The standings today: Won Lost Pet. wel 1,000 1,000 1.000 000 000 HeRooo coomem Third Big N. P. Engine Sets Out for Mandan The third big locomotive built by ‘the American Locomative works at Sonenesiany. N.Y, left EL agit today for Mandap. The second of the biggest-in-the-world types recently went through here and now is at Glendive.. The locomotives are 125 feet long, and when all have been de- livered under the road's contract with the locomotive works, the N. P. will have 12 of the monsters operating on 1929 1928 * 1930 $58,198.97 $63,350.00 10,827.66 10,100.00 12,642.56 11,205.00 81,660.19 84,655.00 47,818.41 feasance in office. A record of the will be submitted to the governor, who will then act on the complaint. The commissioners of Divide coun- ty are Carl Schultz, C. F. Bissonnette, and L. O. Bloom. ‘The petition filed with the gover- nor centers an attack on R. W. Fra- ger, Divide county superintendent of highways. The complainants allege he was appointed in violation of the law, It is also alleged Frazier is respon- sible for improper expenditure of ABOVE—With free wheeling mission and rear axle strain are eliminated, and illustration suggests, with free wheeling your engine may be idling at 8 miles an hour while the momentum of your car is turning the wheels at a speed of 40 the heavy grades between Mandan Mandan’s Budget for Year Is MRS, REKO HURT Slightly Higher Than In 1929 Mandan Woman Suffers Bruises 45-Year-Old Mandan Laborer| 2 o'clock this morning when the auto- have felt the rigors of the weather |, wing one victory and no losses to its credit. | 514 Rp Ree | Additional Society | — — Nonpartisan Women Visit Scenes Made Famous by Roosevelt Medora, N. D., July 10.—(?)—Over 100 women, members of the North X tess. scheduled for this evening has been Postponed, according to Mrs. 8. D. Cook, club president. |ing Friday evening in the church par-jand will take the Great Lakes boat/of murder in the first degree or ors, with Mrs. R. L. Melville as hos-|trip from there to Buffalo, N. ¥. zs * * John Fleck is in Fargo on a busi- ness trip. > WANT POSITIVE VERDICT Grand Forks, N. D., July 10—(7)— are {Branding possible intermediate ver- dicts of second degree murder and The young people of the First Bap-| manslaughter as “weak compromises” guilty. Shahane is Fg he! =. the fatal stabbing of father ee * 1924, ‘The meeting of the Garden club tist chuch will hold an ice cream so-/and inapplicable in the case, counsel kota Federation of Nompartisan|cial Friday evening on the church|for the defense today urged the jury ibs, are in attendance at a board |lawn. meeting of the organization at the Buddy Ranch near here today. The group gathered Monday and will re- main until Friday night. Much of the week so far has been spent by members making excusions into parts of the Bad Lands, espe- cially those frequented in early days|brief visit with her sister, Mrs. Emma by Theodore Roosevelt and Marquis | Starbuck, 602 Main avenue. de Mores. The petrified forest also was visited by the group. Last night they heard Mrs. James |street, left Tuesday on a two weeks’ ‘W. Foley of Medora recount the ca-| vacation trip. She will go to Duluth, reer of Margius de Mores, a French nobleman who settled here in the eighties and started several industrial enterprises. Mrs. Walter Ray of Me- dora described conditions in western North Dakota during the day of the cowboy. The club women were en- tertained by music furnished by young people of Medora. ee * Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Schlecter and children, James and Mildred, Third street, are spending the week eral superintendent of the Northern Pacific, lines east of Mandan, is in the city on business. Announcement for Stomach Sufferere vicinity w: Hall's brug Dakota, has dietributor in Burleigh and Slorton counties for, Pundere Tabiéts, which ave throughout the United States in the fellet of stomach disorders. Hall's Drug store tell you about them, 720 | oF write F. H. Pf Nicollet Ave. Minneapolis, Minn. ea to find Timothy O. Shahane guilty C. T. Sponsel, assistant to the gen- see Mrs. Jack Starbuck is here for a * * * Miss Mattie Hoppin, 709 Second LITTLE BLOCK _ Friday and Saturday After inventory and final clearance of all late and summer apparel’. . . everything reduced «. . . pogi: tively nothing withheld ... Warm weather frocks, re- cently included .., our dress stock consists of lovely printed chiffons, plain and printed crepes, dark and pastel colors .. . some with jackets ... mostly sleeveless or cape sleeves. Sizes 14 to 40. Stomach sufferers tn Bismarck ano 1 glad to learn that tore, Bismarck, North een appointed exclusive ained an enviable reputation Have ander, Inc. 1914 at Pelican Lake, near Pelican Rapids, Minn. They are guests at the cottage of Mrs, Schlecter’s brotheri-n-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Wag- ner, Fargo. eae Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Sayler, 309 Man- dan street, have as their guests Mrs. Sayler’s sisters, Mrs. Artha Drake, Mrs, Jennie Keller and Miss Maude Messerly, Winamac, Indiana, who will visit here for the balance of the sum- mer. Miss Messerly is a teacher in the Winamac gr — * your car momentum engine. As @ result, engine, trans- consumption are reduced. As the Mr, and Mrs. L. O. Rudser and chil- dren, 315 Mandan street, accompanied by Mr. Rudser’s father, Peter Rudser, who arrived yesterday from Minot, left today for Pelican Rapids, Minn. ‘They will spend about two weeks at their cottage on Lake Crystal. ** * IN AUTO ACCIDENT) sam vas” winc ms : Minot, where she is employed as a = nurse at the Trinity hospital, after spending a week here visiting at the home of her brother-in-law and sis- ter, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Mills Jr., 515 Avenue A West. ek * Mr. and Mrs. Ernest F. Jones and children left yesterday for their Mrs. L. E. Reko, 320 West Main|/nome in Racine, Wis, after spending several days at the home of Mr. Jones’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Jones, 611 Fifth street. ** * a ‘i Morgan Oakman, small grandson @ short distance down the side of of mr. and Mrs, W. F. Jones, 511 Fifth ee about four miles west |stregt, arrived Monday from Wash- and one mile west oflington, D. C., to spend the summer and Cuts as Car Rolls Down ‘Death Hill’ Sunny. 4 Mrs. Reko suffered no, bones, a ae . pied however, et: injuries head and! yer, and Mrs. Vernon Samuelson Cees scuba Re irae left today for their home in Glendive, Mont., after anending the past month in Bismarck as the guest of Mr. Sam- uelson’s sister, aan Fier. ‘Miss Peggy Ryan arrived yesterday from Minneapolis to spend the re- ‘mainder of the summer here with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Mundy, 232 Avenue B West. esse Ms. F..E. Hageman, Minot, has to Mr. Reko, the car turn and rolled over. The machine was badly damaged but Mr. Reko e_Rekos n 8 in the Heart river near Gavne’s shortly before the accident. brought the couple ee pete wes ee » the hospital, where she received medical n come to Bigmarek for a visit with her pada’ aes, sister, Mrs. W. 8. Rohrer, 411 Ave- | ie E . ‘Mand: q * * * | an Shorts i Miss Sarah Ida Cleveland, daugh- ri ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Cleveland, Mrs. James A. Krits and Miss Ce-|g1¢ Avenue ©, left yesterday for cile Porter were hostesses at an eve-/ pajawin to spend » week or more honer-| with Mrs. Elbin Erstrom and family. impen, * sydanl, 619 Ninth it, Malo Miss _Velvp.' Livdahl, nt Detroit, Mich’ Guests for three tables /street, left Monday for Shoreham, Were bcijen, nd honors in the games |ainn,, to spend a week as the guest is Peterson. | o¢ iss Elaine Bowman, at the Bow- and other garden flowers = peer} * | man cottage on Lake Melissa. * * * Members of the Junior Mission Mr. and Mrs. A. Tostovin will en- Band of the First Lutheran tertain church will hold their’ monthly meet- of Mindas. "Ms. Mthtnone'is | ‘This Happy Man id cee _ Enthusiastic Oe een! =~ ‘About Konjola Two Years of Suffering from Kidney and Stomach Troubles Ended Quickly by New and Modern Remedy ‘Wis., wh Will Offer Help in Hot Weather. Dicliory 18 Reduced to $10.75 Formerly to $33.00 60 Reduced to $12.75 Formerly to $45.00 Chiropractor \ 41 Reduced to $19.75 5 Silk Coats Drugless Physician | Formerly to $49.50 $12.75 Lucas Block Bismarck. N. D. Foul, Unclean, Poisonous Pests . ; . Hatched in Filth Drenched with Dreadful Disease-Carrying Bacteria Avicious gang of parasites... preying on humane . . . living in homes. You find them everywhere «+. nohouse immune . . . erawiing, flying and hatching in kitchens, din- ingrooms, livingrooms, bedrooms, closets. They sting, and bite, and contaminate . . . spread sickness, suffering . . . often cause death. Don't tolerate these merailese Kill them quickly gnd easily PLY-TOR A bepant atainios spray. Dealers near your home sell FLY-TOX is the scientific insecticide that was developed at Melion Institute of Industrial Research by Rex Research Fellowship. Copyright, 1930, Rex Research Corp,; ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS TO PEOPLE Worrying About what to eat in hot weather During this hot weather, do not fail to include Miss Namoa Hice arrived in Bis- poarch toseg with Lokery # balving local women rou; weather with & ‘atin of com- ioe for themselves and their fam- She will hove chases of the free gene ME nF BRAY clectric cookin; 1 sponsored by!" you want s medicine that does the the North Power and Light | work quickly; letely, and natur- company, which 0 Monday. Basar that medicine. Mi a . i - iiss Ble sald tha fn Georgia where she re- cently conducted cooking schools, the|ine to the test, and know that it Tete hg foal eine taunt Erte . . "+ rl were syscgssful neverthe-| risp, Towa, near Sioux City, says “we , ;about Konjola: excepting io ay Sore, hot roster, “+r nition for four years oie ex- meals.' I never knew a woman who wasn’t anxious to learn how to pre- a meal that will please her fam- on a hot summer day. That is what I will attempt to teach them in the North Dakota Power oe 2 Light company’s electric cooking school, Stine Ree said My health has re- turned, and all trace of my former ailments is gone. I recommend Kon- ‘Invaluable,’ Say are suffering as I did, Society einen it is a medicine that MELLO-GLO Face Powder is pres see for yourself why Konjola is the “medicine with more than a million friends.” Konjola is sold in Bismarck, at bloom, Very pure. Use MELLO-GLO|Hall’s Drug Store, and by all the best ace Powder. It’s wonderful, Fin-| druggists in all towns throughout this ney's Drug Store—Adv. entire section—Adv. Purity Ice Cream or Sherbet To your daily dinner. It’s refreshing and SO EASY To Serve

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