6 Those who are within the world of Cadillac ownership are enjoying luxuries to which you must remain a stranger so long as you are outside that world Crispen Motor Car Co. 414-417 South Cameron Street Time at on the breaker strip forms a solid unit xinreaa 1 ires onown at wlth the tlre nfter vulcanliaUon . Sterling Tire Exhibits At the booth of the Sterling Auto _____ Tire Company is shown a tir> retread- The Miller Rubber Company intro- c ' thes « btt " ds and _ dition to this Mr. Bosch says that his duced a new band for retreading worn personal car has two of these non out tires some time ago. Formed af- skid retreads on the rear as well as ter mechanical ideas it has the most two plain retreads on front wheels, all effective principle and design against done at his shop, with Miller stock. eklddlng. A series of "cogs" divided by a narrow strip of soft rubber in BIG HORSE SALE the center of the band help to make Read ex-Sheriff Chas. L. Johnson, this nonskid effect a truly remarkable of New Bloomfleld, Pa., Big Public one. It became immediately popular gale advertisement. March 23rd, of especially among repairmen as they 275 head livestock, found on page 12. found that the partially cured rubberj—Advertisement. ■ ■ New Hudson Light Six Price $1,750 The Six Forty Proves Its Econo In compeUtion with the leading Four-cylinder types. This con test was held in many cities and under varied conditions, whenever it was possible to get a four-cylinder competitor to enter th® coiitest. This was impossible in many cases and a number of fours failed to I appear after entering. The following list will be found interesting j reading: Mileage per gal. of gasoline. Test Run Hudson Competing made at Slx-40 4-Cylinder Car Remarks. Minneapolis .....16.6 11 Rpn made through 6 in. of snow. Philadelphia ....20.1 14.2 Wind velocity 39 ml., temp. 24 deg. St. Louis 18.8 17.4 Nashville 16 10.6 Rolling country, two long hills. Toledo ...17.7 15.4 Strong wind blowing. Shreveport 18.1 12 Louisville 15.5 12 Buffalo ....15 11 Road heavy with snow. Omaha 17.5 .. (Competing car failed to appear.) Hutchinson 17 .. (Competing car failed to appear.) Pes Moines 13.5 .. (Competing car failed to appear; heavy roads.) g Hudson Sixes averaged 17U miles per gal.; the 8 Fours 12.93. Showing the Hudson a winner by 3S 1-3 per cent. In the local con test a Hudson 7-passenger car used le?s gas than the best Fours— with Ave passengers. Credit for this showing is entirely due to the I muter builder.* Howard K. Coffin, the man who has designed the Dominant Six. Bold by I. W. DILL, East End Mulberry Street Bridge WE take pleasure in announcing to the motoring public that we have assumed the agency for the Partin-Palmer Automo biles. Demonstrator will be here April Ist. Phone 2423 for further particulars, or write to Universal Garage 1826 Wood Ave. HarrUburg, Pa. SATURDAY EVENING^ THE REASON FOR SIX CYLINDER DO I BY GEORGE W. DUNHAM , | Consulting Engineer, Chalmers Motor i Company The sonsation of the 1814 season has been the overwhelming tide in favor of six-cylinder cars. The buy ing public has viewed with no small amount of interest the steadily in creasing trend toward "Sixes." Five years ago there were only eight com panies in the entire country building j six-cylinder cars. Only two of the eight built six-cylinder cars exclu sively. Since that time the demand has grown so rapidly that this season 37 of the 4 3 leading manufacturers in the United States are building "Sixes." And this does not include any but the best known cars. There are in addition probably eighteen or. twenty other makes of "Sixes." Of these 37 leading companies, 14 are building "Sixes" exclusively. ; | Eleven manufacturers who last season ] ! built only "Fours" are this year build ing both "Sixes" and "Fours." This rapid increase in six-cylinder production is due to no mere whim. These leading manufacturers have not , made the great investments necessl ; tated by an entire change of produc tion plans to satisfy a persnal fancy |or a fleeting public vogue. There are jsome good and sound reasons back of i the growing dominance of six-cylinder I cars. It has been said truthfully that | no man who has ever driven a "Four" can ride a hundred miles in a good j"Slx" without acknowledging the su ! perlorlty of the more modern con | struction. j For he will find the "Six" more si ! lent, smoother running, infinitely [more flexible. He will find that it does I its work, whether .-awllng at a , snail's puce through truffle, climbing steep grades or plowing through sand, j with less fuss. The "Six" has been ' called the "effortless cur." I think [ that this is a very descriptive phrase, for the most impressive thing about a well-built "Six" is the ease with I which it does everything required of a motor car. These qualities of silence, smooth-1 ness, flexibility, are possible only in a "Six." Actual experience has proved that no "Four" can possess them in a i like degree. The very principle back j of four-cylinder construction pre- j eludes the possibility of the steady flow of power which makes a good j six-cylinder car as flexible and con stant in its pull as a steam engine. The four-cylinder motor theoreti cally applies power constantly to the crank shaft. In actual practice there is a gap between the power impulses in every four-cylinder motor. This gap Is caused by the waste in power necessary to overcome friction Aid the weight of moving parts. In the "Six" there is no interval in the power stream. The working strokes of the six cylinders overlap. In a complete revolution of the "Six" motor, one piston begins its working stroke before the prepedlng piston has finished work. This means that power is delivered constantly to the crank I shaft. And constant, steady power and proper balance of parts which makes It possible means the elimination of vibration. The result is that the six-cylinder motor works easier than any "Four." What is more, it wears longer because the vibration in a "Four" is destruc tive. It causes unusual wear on bear ings and moving parts. I don't mean to say that there is no field for the four-cylinder car. "Fours" are Just as good to-day— probably better than they have been n the past. In certain very light types of cars It would be inadvisable MOTORCYCLE CI.UR HAD BIG LUNCHEON Members of the Nomad Motorcycle Club met last night and ate a clam soup supper prepared by Victory Har lacker. Covers were placed for forty members and guests. 1 Addresses were made by George Derzon, representing the Federation of American Motorcyclists, who talked j on the good results from a State wide . movement and by Josiah Starr. Five • new members were elected. TO FORM PEACE SOCIETY Formation of a branch of the Inter j national Peace Society will bo made in this city, according to the plans of Rabbi Charles J. Freund, of Ohev Sholom Temple, who is a prominent i member of the society. Other local ! people are members and It is planned j to form these into a local society fol ! ture on peace to be given here June 5 I by Rabbi J. Leonard Levy. ' N Auto Tires- Firsts Extra Heavy Casings, double cure wrapped tread. | SIZES I'ItICE 30x3 plain tread $7.86 j 30x3]/ 2 plain tread ... #10.28 i plain tread ... sll.lß i 33x4 plain tread #15.73 j 34x4 plain tread $16.33 OTHER SIZES QVOTED OX REDDEST | These casings are manufac- I tured by a large and reputable factory and have been on the market for several years, giving good service. i Will ship C. O. D., subject I to examination. J. A. THE TIRE MAN I 80 SOUTH CAMERON ST. HARRISBURG, PA. Phone 455 R A DEALER WANTED IN EACH TOWN . V*— / (ftDEHLER, 1-ton gasoline commercial cars. Suitable for any business ..... $750 Stanley Steam Cars Pleasure and Commercial. 11.354).0A to *2.500.00, fully equipped. Equipped to burn kerosene. Paul D. Messner I 1113 OA.MKS STREET 1 Bell I'boiic. -*! 1 - HARRISBURG fe TELEGRXPH to use anything but a four-cyllfuler motor. Cars of this class ar«j not ex pected to overcome the obstacles which the larger, more powerful cars ure expected to meet without hesita tion. But the fact remains that the slx cyllnder principle has been proved vastly superior to the four-cylinder ! principle, just as the four proved su- I perior to the twin-cylinder motor. Just I as the two-cylinder motor proved su- | perior to the single cylinder motor. The superiority of the "Six" does ; not lie In the fact that it will travel 1 faster than a "Four," for this does not necessarily hold, l'ractlcally any "Four" will travel tis fast as anyone wants to go or ought to go. It Is' not that the "Six" will climb a hill any faster, or will pull the weight of the • car through any deeper inud. But the "Six" will do all of these things easier, with less wear and on the machinery, with less effort 011 the part of the driver and with greater comfort to the passongers than any "Four." A well built six-cylinder car has the flexibility of the turbine. It will crawl at two miles an hour through crowded traffic and pick up in just a few sec- t onds to 25, 30, 40 or even 50 miles, an hour without shifting gears. A rightly designed six-cylinder mo- ' tor is so vlbrationless that even at I high motor speeds it Is possible to | balance a pencil 011 end on the 1 cylinder block. Such a wide range | of speed and such entire absence of vibration cannot be built into a| "Four." I . And actual tests have prived that a "Six" rightly built costs less to own , than a "Four" of the same size and ' power. The presupposed high cost j of a "Six" has been due to the fact that "Sixes" and "Fours" haven't been put on the same basis. It has' been customary to compare a "Six" | capable of developing 50 horsepower, with a "Four" capable of developing 1 30 horsepower. This is obviously an I I unfair comparison. I Experience shows that the differ ence in the cost of gasoline consumed by a "Six" and a "Four" of approxi- 1 1 mately the same power amounts to I only sl2 to sls in 10,000 miles of! i driving. Compare this slight addl | tional cost with the difference in cost lof upkeep. The unceasing vlgration : in a "Four" means costly repairs. One adjustment of the connecting rod! j bearings more than makes up for the I difference in the cost of gasoline. A "Six" which is so vibrationless that a j pencil can be balanced on the running ' motor Is not pounding itself to pieces. ; | There are years of extra service in | the well built "Six" that cannot be l j had In a "Four." So In the long run It Is cheaper to own a "Six" than to I own a "Four" of equal size and power. These are the principal reasons why 37 of the leading manufacturers in the United States arc building "Sixes" in ever increasing numbers. The "Four" is gradually being drop ped, just as the single cylinder and the twin-cylinder motor have been dropped. Next season there will be an increasing number principle will be confined, I am inclined to think, almost entirely to the cheaper cars. The man who spends 81,800 or over for a car this season should certainly buy a "Six." In purchasing a "Six" he goes with the rising market. And if he pays SI,SOO or more for a "Four," he is buying against a declin ing market. The dominant produc tion of "Sixes" among the forty lead ing makers in the country is proof that this is true. STMEY STHU CAR UpiERS Paul D. Messner's Exhibit the Only Car in Show Not Using Gas For Power The Stanley steam car at the local automobile show has received a liberal share of attention. This is the only car In the entire show that is not de pendent on gasoline for motive power. Throughout this section there are a I great many owners of Stanley steam ' cars. The advocates of steam cars ! claim many advantages for this meth- , l od of propulsion. In hill climbing it is said that a steam ear will pass any . car on the grade, and the advocates of steam claim it is easier on tires because of a steady pulling motion. | In favor of the steam propelled car, j Charles A. Brown writes as follows in j , the Horseless Age: ! "I am gratified to see the reviving interest in steam cars of which the letter from Mr. Prior in your issue of July 2 Is an Indication. I 1 "The present gasoline automobile is a marvel of ingenuity. It shows what 1 persistent inventive genius can do in j ; adopting a machine to a use for which 'it Is naturally unlit. A gasoline en- | , gine is essentially and normally a | ! constant speed motor, which does not, I start from a slate of rest, as every- i i one knows. Hence, about the most 1 I inappropriate use to which it can be ! put is the running of a variable load I variable speed device like an auto | mobile, which has to stop and start !at frequent intervals. Inventors have i done wonders in the way of adapting | this gasoline motor to a use to which it is not normally fitted, but this has been done at the expense of compli , cation and the addition of devices' such as the self-starter to overcome the difficulties inherent in the gaso line motor. "On the other hand, the steam en gine, which has been the standard prime motor for a century. Is par ticularly well adapted to variable j speed and variable load and, witli -1 out the addition of any mechanical arrangement, produces an infinite i number of speeds from the lowest speed up at a high power efficiency. This makes steam the ideal power, particularly for commercial vehicles. | 'The greater economy of the Inter nal combustion engine, in view of the i much heavier construction of car and ! equipment that is necessary for gaso- j line car, is a delusion. There is more ! saving in tire cost, due to the lighter ' weight of the steam car of equal per- ' formance, than the extra expense of I the gnsoline required. Moreover, there is no greater economy necessary | in a gasoline car than in a steam car. A modem heavy automobile equip ped with all the accessories, includ ing lighting and self-starting dynamo and battery, is doing well to run at an expenditure of eight miles to the j gallon of gasoline. A steam car of equal performance can do aa well or 1 better, and this leaves out of account i the great Improvements In combus tion which may be expected to be ap plied to the steam generator,and which have already been made practical In certain lines, suclj as stoves and fur j naces. I refer to the Bonecourt sur face combustion process. The prac tical advantages of steam are such that, as is well known, one concern most cons;erve.tlvely managed has ben making a continuous success of the steam car business, and the revlv-( ~ j An After Consideration It's not the first cost of an automobile that counts. It's the after cost. That's why it does not pay to buy a poorly constructed machine. After a year's use you begin to have an endless amount of expense. The material in a low price car can no more stand wear and tear than can a poorly made and cheap suit of clothes stand it. The Abbott-Detroit may cost you a little more to commence with, BUT you have a car that is good for YEARS, NOT A YEAR. They are constructed of the finest material money can buy. They are made to wear and give you HONEST returns for your money. They are handsome in appearance. They have that TOUCH of refinement that can not be found on lower price cars. They were conceded to be the finest look ing and best constructed cars in the Harrisburg Show. They proudly uphold the slogan, "NOT MADE TO UNDERSELL, BUT TO EXCEL. They are made for people wanting INDIVIDUALITY SAFETY REFINE MENT—and ECONOMY. They are sold by a DIRECT FACTORY BRANCH. YOU better inves tigate, unless you want to cheat your-self. In addition to our regular line, we have some remarkable values in used cars. Give our service department a trial. It's all that can be desired. harrisburg Brarch Abbott Motor 106-108 S. SECOND ST., Harrisburg, Pa. BELL PHONE 3593 ing interest in steam cars Is shown by the article already referred to and by other articles in technical papers and by the fact that at least three new concerns are now engaged in de- | velopment of steam cars, and there j are probably others of which I am | not informed." GOVERNOR AT MUZZLE CLUB J Governor Jonn K. Tener, Secretary Walter H. Gaither, Executive Con- I troller S. C. Todd, Mayor Royal and j the members of City Council, District Attorney M. E. Stroup and Mayor Frank B. McClain. of Lancaster, to- j sether with other prominent men, will j | be guests at the beefsteak dinner of | the Muzzle Club at the Harrisburg J I Club at 7 o'clock to-night. /EFFERVI Including Cross Country j Automobiles $1,550 to $3,700 Marathon Automobiles $925 to $1,490 | JEFFERY TRUCKS 1,500 and 2,000 Pounds Capacity W. E. Garage Co. AGENTS Kelker and Lo?an Streets \ —J t \ 1914 Excelsior to $225 The classiest 1914 Autocycle on i the market. Many new features. It will pay you to see it. Can be pur chased to suit you. We also have on hand new motorcycles from $123.00 up, sold on weekly payments. We also handle the highest grade of Bicycles. Latest models. Sold on weekly payments. The only irotorcjrele to ittali ■ speed of 100 mllea ■■ hour. Excelsior Cycle Co. I 1007-9 N. Third St. The ual.r exclusive Motorcycle and ; Hlejcle Store Is Central Pcina. j L MARCH 21, 1914. Wait and See the i TWOMBLY $395 1 f'l ■■Mil- irilWTl—7M—im—l —IW—IMIIH—■ >l—■ I—IIBIB II ■■■!«--- J l|||«r I The Twombly undcrslung car will arrive the latter part of April. The car that caused the biggest sensation at the New York Auto I Show. Demonstration car will' arrive in a few weeks. A real nutn for n small Drlce: four cylinders, self starter; electric lights; wheelbase 100 inches; tread 38 Inches; tandem style; weight 600 lbs.; 15 H. P.; 40 miles on a gallon of gasoline; speed 50 miles. Trostle and Mourer, dealers for Dauphin, Lebanon, Cumberland and Perry counties. 4 (Salesroom at Alehrlng's garage, 983-939 Hose Ave. TROSTLE & MOURER Qll Q*3Q D.._ A.,« Xenr Sixth anil lion* Sts. uoo-aoy rvose Ave. Me u i>hon<- mtttxttttttmtttixxnxxtttmximnxxtitmxtttn TT H After Visiting the Auto Show g I v VISIT us H S See Our Stock and Get Our H H Prices on if I Automobile and Motorcycle Tires 1 j|j Guaranteed Automobile Casings jj tt 28x3 $9.60 33x4 $20.70 8 j|| 30x3 $10.30 34x4 $31.40 J| ,g 30x3 $13.80 35x4 $22.00 g :S 32x3j4 $14.70 36x4 $22.80 XX H Zx All kinds of accessories carried in stock XX 1 E. MATHER CO. | I 204 WALNUT ST. | ilmamwimmtmmanmntmmwnml l '■ I Try Telegraph Want Ads.Try Telegraph Want Ads.