t the Day Bowman‘s Milk trip to Washington so| that he i ‘pass through New YFork by @man‘s Milk reaching you rich and pure as when m the cow. . + ve never tasted Bowman‘s so today. Telephone our istributing station or order of our courteous milkmen. no place to be after t, for vim, for all day drink Bowman‘s Milk. th cereals, on fruit, and OM PANY s dispatches report hot fight. tween rebels and government in Nicaragua but so fir as can wdnmmmmm h and Adams Reliable:â€" No gas pilot No electric â€" ignition of the precioys vitamines thâ€"food beyond compar¢. 1 favary deliciopsness ‘s Milk that wins instant Efficient:â€" . Continuous flame Mechanical draft Burner Homes DAY, h / THURSDAY, OCTOBER.14, 1926 EXPERT GIVES SOME HINTS (By H. Clifford Brokaw, technical adâ€" visor, New York City West Side Y. M. C. A. Automobile School). It costs about ten cents a mile to operate the average automobile. That is when you figure in everything such as gasoline, oil, tires, maintenance, deâ€" preciation, interest, insurance, gaâ€" rage, and license, For instance, on a light six coach the amount is esâ€" timated at 11.73 cents per mile. Of this sum, however, 2.4 cents is put down for depreciation. Here is an imâ€" portant item which can be lowered by the owner who takes unusually good care of his machine. He can add years to the vehicle‘s usefulness if he will use care in connection with a few vital matters. ) Describes How Cars Wear and Urges Care in Use and The piston is provided with several flexible rings in order to secure a gasâ€" tight contact with the cylinder wall. These expand outward and form a perfect contact with the cylinder wall. They have sufficient elasticity to keep this contact as the cylinder expands and contracts due to the changes in temperature. When the engine is beâ€" ing operated the piston slides back and forth in the cylinder and because of the construction of the engine the piston is forced with considerable pressure against the side of the cyâ€" linder. Operation The‘ pressure of the expanding gas which produces the power for operâ€" ating the engine tends to force the piston straight out of the cylinder. But the resistance of the crankshaft which is connected to the piston by means of the connecting rod causes the piston to be forced with considerâ€" able pressure against the side of the cylinder because during the power stroke the . crankpin is traveling through an are at one side of the center of the piston instead of directâ€" ly under it. Regrinding Cylinder After two or three years of service the cylinders of the engine will probâ€" ably need to be reground. When the automobile engine is built the inside of the cylinder is turned to a perfect circle. The piston cannot be fitted to form an airâ€"tight joint because the temperature of the engine varies in accordance with the amount of heat generated in the engine. The piston and the cylinder expand and contract with the variations in temperature but not to the same deâ€" gree. Therefore a piston that fitted the cylinder perfectly at a certain temperature would expand enough to stick fast in the cylinder at another temperature. Perhaps at still another degree it would fit the cylinder so loosely as to cause. considerable noise and to permit the gas to leak by makâ€" ing compression of the gas impossiâ€" ble. The result of this side thrust on the piston is a tendency to wear away one side of the cylinder wall. The rapidity with which wear takes place is afâ€" fected by a number of factors, perâ€" haps the most important being the perfection of the lubrication of the Becomes Oval The cylinder loses its true circular shape and becomes oval as this wear takes place. The piston rings not beâ€" ing sufficiently flexible to fill in the worn space, leaking is the natural reâ€" sult. This leaking causes several kinds of trouble. The gas which is being compressed passes by the pisâ€" of oil may be drawn past the piston into the combustion chamber where it burns causing smoke and forming earbon which causes knocking of the engine. This carbon gets under the valves and causes loss of compression SAYS PET RABBIT ton thus reducing the power generatâ€" ed by the engine and as the gas conâ€" denses in the crankcase the oil is diluted and its lubricating quality soméwhat impaired. Second, on the suction stroke an excessive quantity Permanent recovery from these troubles can be obtained only through restoring the cylinder to its original form of a perfect circle and fitting new pistons and rings to it. The most satisfactory way of restoring the eylâ€" inder is to regrind it. This is done by the use of emery or carborundum wheels on a machine designed especâ€" ially for this work. This is a rather delicate operation ‘@and requires thé service of a high grade mechanic skilled in this line of work. Where the proper grade of work is done the results are even superior to those atâ€" tained in the new car at the factory. Why not eat the pet rabbit as well as the pet hen? The department of agriculture advises the use of doâ€" vestigations show that it is of exâ€" ceptional food value and of delicious fiavor,. It says that properly fed, rabbits with a:. diet consisting chiefly of ocats, barley, and alfalfa hay, proâ€" duce a meat that ‘tastes very much and short circuits the sparks plugs which in turn causes the engine to miss fire. OF THE AUTOMOBILE Must Be Restored IS GOOD FOR FOOD Public notice is hereby given that the Board of Public Improvements of the City of Highland Park, County of Lake and State of Illinois, has filed in the County Court of Lake County, Illinois, a certificate that the followâ€" ing improvement has been completed, and that it conforms substarntially to the requirements of the original ordiâ€" nance for the construction of the same, toâ€"wit; The construction of a system of concrete sidewalks in Burâ€" ton Avenue, Pleasant Avenue, Broadâ€" view Avenue, Green Bay Road, Blackâ€" stone Place, <Washington . Place, Highland Place, Roger Williams Aveâ€" nue, Bellevue Place, Crawford Place, and Alvin Place, Highland Park Speâ€" clal Assessment of said Court Docket No. 296, and that application has been made to said Court to consider and determine whether or not the facts stated in said certificate are true. t W# »ï¬.; M;afl Order The Chicago Daily News _ delivered to your home _ 4 aace Te ts y oe K CHICAGO I o O NEWYS W m Fill out the coupon below and News today. â€" | j ' ‘ No matter what kind of net interests you mostâ€" 414 Now you can have The Chicago Daily News delivered to your home even though you don‘t live in Chicago or right in a town. Thousands have already welcomed this new delivery service and are receiving The Daily News every night. For seventyâ€"five cents a month you can have The Daily News delivered to your home. _ .. e Simply telephone or write to The Daily News, 15 North Wells Street, Chicago, Illinois,and you will receive Chicago‘s home newspaper every afternoon by supper time. . _ °. Fill out the coupon below and mail it to The Daily NOTICE House, at Waukegan, in +i¢ Lake Public notice is hereby given that| County. : f *,f > the Board of Local Improvements of|._ Objections may be filed id apâ€" the City of Highland Park, County of | plication on or before the hour of Objections: may be filed to said apâ€" plication on or before the hour of nine (9) o‘clock in the forengon of said day. .« udn tings 3 Xp BAMUEL M. HASTINGS, FRANK L. CHENEY,.: vrel on e Ahv d e rev o You will find it in 0e de : | vs or type of feature ATILY %ï¬m’ï¬o&hï¬om_d BAMUEL ‘M. HASTINGS, FRANK L, CHENEY, â€" JOSEPH B. CARD, W. M. REAY, ‘:*_ := ~> LYLE GOURLEY, â€" â€" _ Board of : Local Improvements ‘of the City of Highland Park. Dated at. Highland Park, Ilinois, SPWWNM * Notice is hereby given to all perâ€" sons interested that the Council of the City of Highland Park, County of Lake and State of Illinois, having orâ€" dered the construction of a connectâ€" ected system of cast~ iron water mains in Western Avenue, Eastwood Avenue, Greenwood Avenue, Blackâ€" wood Avenue, Woodcorte, Onwentsia Avenue, Chicago Avenue, Underwood Avenue, Derrick ~Street, Westwood Avenue, Livingston Avenue, all in the City of Highland Park, Lake County, Fae mA / |} _2 4s Bf f 300 t Bd ts ?.@; l’-é:m_ e Nodlsw uced Pï¬(&»}"‘éé A & and an assessment thereof having been appear on the hearing rate of six (6) date ‘of ‘issue of , A her, â€"â€" Al persons desiring m ‘in wmwmu ~day and may ar as soon ingâ€"on file in theNoffice pf the City Clerk of said cify and haying applied for an assessment of the costs of said Te »pee t Seorrm Priil be hnd en of the court will ‘ Said assessmer (10) installments the same beâ€" C lz ‘a lA k Lo C Meuis CÂ¥