6 mtmmsaensasmma^mam Chandler Purchasers Share in Chandler Profits CHANDLER LIGHT-WEIGHT SIX SIE? This is the new Chandler Profit * M Sharing price. It is the figure m at which the most famous M light-weight six touring car and roadster for 1915 will sell. The fixing of this price is the second epoch-making move on the part of the Chandler Company. The first was when Chandler built the pioneer light-weight six, a strictly high-grade, six cylinder car of medium size and marketed it for $1785. It changed the whole trend of motor car manufacturing. It showed the practicability of building high-grade sixes for the average purse. And now, prosperous and with doubled output for the coming year, the Chandler Company is dividing its profits with Chandler purchasers. At any similar price there is no similarly high-grade six-cylinder car on the market ft. p ] n D_' £ Chandler long stroke motor, with silent imported chain driva 1 I'C ill unci f or mo tor shafts; separate unit electric starting and lighting system; Bosch magneto; cast aluminum motor bane; body design pure stream-line; luxurious comfort; left side drire; center control; 120-inch wheel base; five-passenger touring car. tonneau seat 47 inches wide. $1595; handsome roadster. 51585. Come see the Chandler and its marvelous motor ANDREW REDMOND THIRD AND BOYD STREETS CHANDLER MOTOR CAR COMPANY, CLEVELAND. OHTO | The Truck does THE three factors that II should govern your truck-purchase are capacity —low operating cost—mod est investment. The Reo carries a load of 4,000 to 5,000 pounds. It has been operated at a cost of 78 cents a day for three months. J t e It costs $1650 —chassis. wl Want anything better? Q I Call or write. /?eo^ Harrisburg Auto Company Quality Master Light Six Teuring . . $1,800.00 i Master Light Six Coupelet . . $2,050.00 Above Prices are f. o. b. Detroit Keystone Moto 1019-25 Market Street ■■■. ■ - - ■ . . - nCOIIOS. fiRES Grip the Road Like a Cog-Wheel STERLING AUTO TIRE CO. 1451 Zarker St VULCANIZING SATURDAY EVENING, &ARRISBURG TELEGRAPH AUGUST 15, 1914 OVERLAND MODEL ARRIVED IK CITY New 1915 Model Received by Redmond Shows Improvements of Vital Importance While the 1915 Overland, designated by the manufacturers as Model 80, fol lows In most of its general features the Overland of 1914, the latest product of the big Toledo plant of John N. Willys embodies a number of improve ments and noteworthy changes over last year's model which make the Overland a more attractive 'proposi tion than ever—whether it be viewed from the standpoint of the dealer or from that of the purchaser. In making its public announcement at this time. The Willys-Overland Company has adhered to the practice of former years, to vouchsafe detailed information concerning its new lines only when the regular distributors have been furnished demonstrating cars; these are now delivered and ready for inspection. The points of the new car which re ceive the tirst attention of the observer are graceful, strictly up-to-date body designs and improvements that are perhaps less noticeable to the average motorist but nevertheless of vital Im portance tg him; all these improve ments secure greater riding comfort and more quietness and flexibility of I operation. The body conforms to the most modern notions of streamline design, yet is without the suggestion of ex aggeration or freakishness. The radi ator with a shell consisting of a single steel stamping, joins its curve admir ably to the characteristic slope of tlte Overland engine hod which gradually leads t£> the entirely new cowl dash and sweeps, without angles or abrupt curves, to the full-curved tonneau back, Frame, running-board bracket, and battery box are concealed by mud shields which add materially to the looks of the car by giving it that much desired long and low appearance. Though the wheelbase remains 114 inches, the body offers considerably more leg and elbow room. The rear seat, for instance, is 49 inches wide inside; the front seat is 4 0 inches wide, while the back are 21 inches high in the rear and 19 inches In the front. The seats are twenty inches deep with cushions sloping toward the rear, which permits the passenger to ride in the easiest possible position, least likely to result In fatigue. In developing the new body design much attention has been given to in terior refinements, which may not force themselves Into the eye of the motoring novice as much as they will be appreciated by the seasoned auto mobilist. An example is the storm curtains which are fastened and un fastened from the inside; in fair weather they are stored in a conve nient metal box placed directly behind the front seat and the usuai tedium or' having to disturb the tonneau pas sengers when curtains are to be used is done away with. Heretofore it used to be the prac tice to hold the folded-down top in position with leather straps. The new Overland has a unique clamp which holds the top so securely as to prevent all rattling;. Leather pockets are pro vided in all doors, which, in addition, have a metal beading for protection from the weather. The doors are hung on concealed hinges with inside-oper ated latches placed so as to make it impossible for them to catch on pas sengers' garments. The Overland 35 horsepower motor remains practically unchanged, with the exception of improvements made to the oiling system, which now in sures that all cylinders receive an equal amount of oil, both on a level road and when ascending the steepest grade. The piston has been light ened and the design of the piston rings has been changed to improve balance and reduce noise. For easier assembly and to do away with metallic sounds a union Joint has been placed in the exhaust pipe. The ignition is by Bosch high-tension magneto, which is driven at crank shaft speed through a leather couplng, which eliminates all noise. The car bureter is of new design, having a hot air attachment for both primarv and auxiliary ports and affording protec tion to the valves from dirt. The steering column is place at the left. The speed control gate is amid ships and set forward of the front seat to permit one to get in and out easily. A switch box, shown in the illustra tion is attached to the right hand side of the steering column, two inches be low the wheel, through which the elec tric horn, lights and ignition may be controlled without the effort of stoop ing forward to the instrument board. The transmission gear ratios of the first and second speeds have been re duced. The gears themselves are nickel steel, double heat treated; the transmission countershaft has been made adjustable by the addition of two adjusting screws, one at either end. The Overland floating type of rear axle is continued and the brakes are unchanged. A new front axle of the I-beam type is employed which to gether with the drop frame brings the body of the car closer to the ground. The front springs are semi-elliptic. The rear springs are three-quarter el liptic, 48 inches long, two inches wide, and slung under the axle on supports which swivel on the axle housing. The possibility of side-sway is eliminated by the use of well-proportioned eyes and carefully fitted shackle bolts. 3 4x3-inch tires lessen tire wear and TIRES! All manufacturers say— Get ready for another ad vance. Better get yours now. EXTRA HEAVY Double Cured Wrapped Tread FIRSTS 28x3 *8.43 30x3 $8.64 32x3 $9.U2 30x3% $11.30 31x3 *4 sll. SS 132x3 \ 2 $12.29 34x3 % sl3. 31x4 $16.03 32x4 $16.63 33x4 $17.30 34x4 $17.96 3 fix 4 $19.75 36x4 .. $21.39 35x1 Vz $24.80 36x4 >4 $25.54 37x4% $26.26 37x5 $27.25 NOX-SKIDS 10 rail. CENT. MORE HEI» TIBKS AT CHEAP I'ltlCKS FORD OWNERS Do you know that in 30 minutes you can convert your Ford into a comfortable Limousine or coupe. Ask for full particulars. Demountable llliuat nnd Parta, all makes. J. A. P 1017 MARKET ST. Phone 33A9 Kaxt to Keystone Motor Co. OPEX EVEXIXG9 1915'S "SIX" SENSATION! Now We Make the Announcement of a Great New Milestone in Motor Car Values! An Auto mobile Wholly Designed by a Famous European Engineer a Car Whose Leading Features Will Dominate at the Paris, France, Automobile Show This Fall —the Most Beautiful Stream-Line Body the Industry Has Known and the Most Economical " Six" Engineers Have Conceived. ANEW automobile epoch is crystallized in the wonderful new Lewis "Six" which we now announce —a remarkable 6-cylinder, 6-passenger car of 135-inch wheel base, luxuriously finished and upholstered—bristling with myriad new luxuries and conveniences that S3OOO car buyers a year hence will be offered—at $1600! The history-making car of 1915 is the Lewis, New LEWIS "Six" ENSMINOER MOTOR CO. c !MBd ;:s VIEWS ON CHALMERS speedometer, demountable rims and ■ lUllw Ull UIUILIII l»l IU an electric starter and generator of .. _ _______ directly CfQC HW RY MflßTflW with the geared fly-wheel rim with no lllllljllll■ II I ||lM|| I IIIU other reduction, and is capable of «»-vwiwi» w l,lun,u " turning the motor over at 180 to 200 revolutions per minute. The Over land manufacturers claim simplicity and reliability for this starting and lighting system. The two separate units offer the elements of a miniature power plant, and a separate means each for generating and applying power, each unit giving its entire ef fort to accomplishing one function. The price of the standard touring car model, seating five passengers, is $1,075.00. The two-passenger Road ster is offered at $1,050.00, while the four-passenger Coupe, which comes equipped with 35x4% non-skid is listed at $1,600.00. Texan Covers Thirteen States in His Cadillac Dr. C. D. Johnson, of Thrall, Wil liamson county, Texas, with his son of nine years and daughter of four, is making what will probably be a rec ord trip through the western, north western and southwestern parts of the country. Traveling in a Cadillac and carrying a complete camping outfit, the doctor expects to be gone three months and to cover thirteen States. Starting at El Paso, Tex., the doc tor's route carries him to Los Angeles by way of Phoenix and San Diego, through Yosemite and Tahoe, Cal„ to San Francisco to Portland, Ore.; Seat tle, Wash.; Boise, Idaho; Butte, Mont.; Salt Lake. Utah; Cheyenne, Wyo.; Denver, Col.; Oklahoma City, Okla.; and back to his home at Thrall, Texas. The trip started a month ago. and so far has been without mishap. From his home to K1 Paso, the speedometer registered 1,000 miles, due to the nu merous detours necessary to escape washed-out roads. Dr. Johnson re ports considerable travel over the -southern route. He says he helped at least a dozen cars out of bad holes in Texas and New Mexico, and several parties joined him. but after a day or so dropped back because the pace was too stiff for them. "I had hardly left El Paso." said the Texan, "when I began hearing about the mammoth wash-out. This was to be positively the worst seven miles of road in the whole world. The nearer we got to California the stronger the talk and even when we arrived in Yuma we were told that we could not expect to get through. "One man listened to the talk so much that he finally shipped from Yuma to Imperial Junction, but I had come all the way from Texad with out having any help and 1 knew if any car had ever crossed this dreaded wash mine would make it. I went into It with more or less fear, after deflat ing the tires to 35 pounds. On the low the car made good progress and I finally slipped it into the intermediate and as I kept on rjoing I finally got into the high and finished that much talked of sand hole on my high gear. If I don't have anything harder than the mammoth wash, I vill be pie; ed." THE BIG DAY AT THE COLONIAL This is the big day at the Colonial. Saturdays always loom up big on the Busy Corner. There is a good vaude ville and picture show on the boards for Saturday theatergoers to-day. All of next week the Fountain Nymphs will appear, at the Colonial, not in mo tion pictures, but in actual life. They are three girls who have a big tank of water to use as their ocean for bathing purposes, and they will give some diving exhibitions that will be well worth seeing. On Monday Tues day and Wednesday of next week the Colonial will offer a seven-reel mov ing picture production of David Cop perfield, from Dickens. On Thursday and Friday there will be another pic ture masterpiece, "The Greyhound," in v/hich Elita Proctor Otis and the original Bradway company appears. —Advertisement. DITTY SAWMILL MOVED Rife. Pa., Aug. 15.—Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Romberger, of Gaylton, toon an auto ride to S. A. Iloltzman's on Sunday.—The Rev. Mr. Smith, candi date for the vacancy in the Reformed Church, preached an able sermon on Sunday.—David Shrlver and family, of Millersburg spent Sunday at the home of his father, B. O. Schriver.—Frank Reefer, school teacher, bought a new automobile. Dan Ditty moved his sawmill on the I. M. Koopenhaver tract last week. i Manager of Keystone Motor Car Company Comments on the Value of Convention "Only a man who has attended the convention of Chalmers dealers from which I have just returned, can ap preciate the importance of such a great selling organization in the eco nomic activity of the country," said Robert L. Morton, distributor of Chal mers cars in this territory. "The Chalmers dealers' convention attracted to Cedar Point, Ohio, where the main business sessions were held, one of the most prominent studens of big business in the United States— Isaac F. Marcosson. Mr. Marcosson is at present making a tour of the coun try to study business conditions. Hearing of the Chalmers convention while in the east he asked permission of Mr. Chalmers to attend and study among Chalmers dealers themselves conditions in the automobile business. Mr. Marcosson, who is prominent as a writer for the Saturday Evening Post, Collier's, Munsey's Magazine, and other large national publications, made a two hour talk before the 500 Chalmers dealers at the Convention. "In his opinion a group of men who sell annually between eighteen and twenty million dollars worth of Chal mers cars must include in their num ber the best and most prominent deal ers. He said he believed the Chal mers Company one of the best estab lished in the country. "Mr. Marcosson made in his talk some very pertinent points on sales manship and service. "Governor James Cox of Ohio was also to have addressed the convention, but owning to mining trouble in east ern Ohio, he was unable to attend on the date set for his appearance. In- ANNOUNCEMENT SIOSO with Electric Starter and Lights, Oversize Tires, Demountable Rims. Former price SI2OO Non-Starter Model $950 IMMEDIATE DELIVERIES NEIGHBORS MOTOR CO. HUPMOBILE DEALERS 116-118-120 MARKET STREET stead he sent a message in which he said that an automobile company could get together a group of dealers whom he considered more represena tive of the best in the automobile business. He congratulated the Chal mers Company und Chalmers dealers on the wonderful increase of their business during the past year. "Among the other speakers at the Convention were some of the largest automobile dealers in the United States, men who have been in the business and associated with the Chal mers Company since its beginning." "The convention unanimouslv en dorsed the policy of the Chalmers Company in manufacturing Its cars complete rather than assembling them, and manufacturing on a quality rather than on a price basis. After hearing reports on business prospects from 500 I STOP, LOOK AND LISTEN AUTO OWNERS Why pay high prices for automobile tires when MAX-' OTIRE will enable you to get all the wear out of your old tires. MAXOTIRES are absolutely guaranteed against blowouts and rim-cuts under any conditions. The MAXOTIRE is a combination of a straight side tire, floating tire flap and an end less scientifically constructed tire-reinforcement made accord ing to a six years' tested patent process—making it the MOST USEFUL AND PRACTICAL tire-and-tube saver yet invented. MAXOTIRES are SEMI-CURED and will not pinch nor chafe the tube . In fact MAXOTIRES fill a long felt want for the motorist because he knows that if his car is equipped with MAXO TIRES he need have no fear of blowouts or other serious tire trouble. It will well pay you to investigate the MAXOTIRE before buying automobile tires at advanced prices. THE SHAFFER SALES COMPANY 80-88 SOUTH CAMERON STREET Harrisburg, Pa. Agents for K. & W. Rubber Company products. men. who represented every part of the United States and the greater part of Canada, tam convinced that thfc Chalmers Company entering on art even bigger one than the one just, closed. I learned during this Con vention that my own territory is the rule rather than the exception in the matter of good business among all Chalmers dealers." Tire Vulcanizing Oldest mtahlhbfd place In city. Only expert Workmen. Harrisburg Auto Tire Repair Co. 137 SOUTH THIRD STHHET Temporary location. \>w bnildlas aoou completed.