6 I LONGER 111 THE EXPERIMENTAL STAGE Electrical System Now Integral Part of Nearly All New Models . Announcement by various auto mobile manufacturers disclose the fact that, in virtually all models priced at J9 85 or over, electrical devices for lighting, starting and lngition are now lifted as standard equipment. In most cases these devises are built into the chassis of the car und are integral parts of it. With hut one I of two exceptions, all large producers have used the presence of a modern electrical system to do away with the magneto us a piece of needless dupli cation and complexity. , Exceptions of this rule are almost solely manufacturers listing cars at two prices—with and without com plete electrical systems. Manufactur ing efficiency in such a case demands the fitting of an electrical apparatus not an Integral part of the chasls and therefore not adoptable to ignition ! purposes. H. M. Joy. electrical engineer of the Studebaker Corporation, points out tho fact that manufacturers who install duplicate electrical systems have almost always after a year of trial abandoned the magneto and gone over without reservation to a built-in system that perforins all functions of electricity, including ignition. ••That was virtually our Studebaker experience," continued Mr. Joy. "When we Introduced the first electri cal system into our cars we fully real ized that the generator was, in effect, a magneto of current. We knew that the. magneto added both weight and complexity, and used up a very con siderable amount of horse-power in operation. But we were determined not to act radically. "One year's experience proved to us that the generator-storage-battery sys tem was thoroughly equal to any added task we might impose on it. We adopted it as a built-in unit, added n distributor and discharged the mag neto for all time. "Our confidence in our electrical system was amply made good. Tho storage battery and generator have given a 'hotter' spark than we could ever secure through a magneto. Cold-weather starting is immensely facilitated, the starting spark coming direct from the powerful storage bat • tery. At speed the generator furnishes a snark as perfectly timed as the mag neto ever did. "The best proof of magneto-less ignition efficiency is afforded by our service department which informs me that, from the thousands and thous ands of Studehaked cars in the hands of owners, there has not been a single source of complaint regarding storage battery-generator Ignition." Immense Paint Shop For Maxwell Plant While dealers and salesmen are selling their cars, the Maxwell Motor Company of Detroit, is enlarging their factory space to make room for the enormous increase in material and manufacturing which is required to meet the unusual demand for the new car. A circus tent was set up on the Maxwell factory grounds in Detroit, as a temporary paint shop, where only axle housings were painted. The tent is soon to be taken down, however, for beside it has been constructed a mammoth building to be used for painting and emaneiing work only. The building is 300 feet long and 150 feet wide. It is modern in every way, having steel construction throughout, cemer.t bases and floor, with walls of yellow brick. HORACE) P. KNIGHT Horace P. Knight, 38 years old. for merly of this city, died on Thursday at his home In Wilkinsburg, following Rn attack of pneumonia. Mr. Knight was born in this city and was a student of the tlarrisburg Academy. When he was 20 he went with his father to Sedalia, Missouri. Later he returned to this State. He is survived by his two brothers, Har row W., of Sedalia, and Joseph, who 1s in England; his wife, mother and sister, Mrs. W. C. Baldwin. 2027 North Second street. Funeral services were held at his sister's home, 2.30 o'clock this afternoon. Burial was made in the Harrisburg Cemetery. Auto Tires *ll look very much alike when new— but, are likely to differ greatly In efficiency. for instance —two of the Miller Tires on the City Highway Cadillac have a record of over 5200 Miles Sterling Auto Tire Co. 1451 Zarker St., Harrisburg, Pa. WAYNES LITTLE SIX $1485 Reo Trucks AND Pleasure Cars _• HARRISBURG AUTO CO. SATURDAY EVENING, • HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 31, 1914. FHDEK PROTECT US WELL AS ADD BEAUTY Injury to Vital Parts of Car and Serions Accidents Prevented by Their Use "Up to the past couple of seasons au tomobile fenders were regarded by the general public almost as a necessary evil rather than as an Integral part of the car," says Robert L Morton, local dealer In Chalmers cars. "It Is a question if three or four years ago anyone ever looked at an automo bile fender and thought seriously of the part it. was designed to play in the general service of the car. Automobile fenders were not good to look at. Most of them were frankly homely. They were not designed as part of either chassis or body, but were simply hitch ed on to the car to cover up the wheels. "In the past couple of years there has been a wonderful improvement in automobile fenders. In the primary object of the fender, which is to protect the car and passengers from dust, water and mud. the new designs show wonderful Improvement. "It was two years ago that the Chal mers engineers saw in the automobile fenders a possibility of service and firotection, even beyond that of keep ng the car clean. They saw in them an element of beauty; a big possible factor in 'safety first' motoring. "A careful study, covering months of experiments, was made of all types of fenders. Shapes, sizes and methods of construction were tested out under all conditions, and the result was the Chalmers molded oval fender. "The perfect molded oval fender of the present season is a real protection to the finer and more sensitive parts of the cars; because of the rigidity of the construction it is a bumper against the hard knocks of constant usage. "Just the otner day a man came In to my store and told me of his experi ence in an unavoidable collision at a street car crossing. He was moving slowly down the street. Another ear came at high speed from a cross street. It was impossible to avoid a collision. The only thing injured on my custom er's car was the right front fender, which was badly dented and scraped. The other ear had the front end almost completely wrecked. And It was not even necessary to put a new fender on the Chalmers car. In three hours we had the dents straightened out and the scraped parts retouched with enamel. The fender showed no indication of the collision. "Mishaps of this kind due to the care less driving of others or their neglect of the simple signals of motoring, while not dangerous to passengers In the car are very liable to ruin the finish or In jure the body or running gear. Molded oval fenders on a car are the bumpers which prevent such injuries. I could name many instances right In this vicinity when the fenders of the car have protected it from severe dam age. • "The modern fender is furthermore an element of beauty In the rightly de signed car. The time Is past when fenders can be put on a street enr simply because they are necessary, but regard for their looks. The tendency in design toward the leal streamline and boat type bodies actually demands the molded oval fender to get a whole car of uniform grace. Chalmers cars two years ago were pioneers with the oval design and rigid construction of fen ders. At the present time this fender style has been imitated with more or ltss success by perhaps a dozen makers, among them builders of the best known cars in the country. Among all manu facturers of high grade cars there Is a marked tendency to make the fenders of the automobile more than mere shields from dust apd mud; to make them a real protection to the finish and economy of the car and to design them in harmony with the lines of the car as a whole." Safety First Car Tours the Country The Safety First Society of New York has the satisfaction of the knowl edge that the "safety first car" cam paign in charge of the general secre tary of the society, Frederick H. Elli ott, is bearing fruit. This car, which Mr. Elliott has been driving during the past seven weeks through New Eng land and the Middle West, is equipped with devices designed to promote safety, and while the tour is beinx made largely to inspire local interest in a number of cities, its ultimate purpose Is the organization of a fed eration of safety first clubs. This organization has enlisted the aid of numerous societies and asso ciations in Detroit, including the Twen tieth Century Club, the Boy Scouts and others. Police Commissioner Gillespie declares that in Detroit it is a fact that 83 per cent, of the accidents occur at the middle of blocks and not at street intersections, and that steps must be taken to teach pedestrians to cross the street at the intersection and not in the middle of the block. An other thing that the Detroit society t» urging is more playgrounds for chil dren. At Toledo. Ohio, the Toledo Safety First League is active and one of the things that It is endeavoring to pro mote is a series of safety zones, three feet wide from 80 to 100 feet long, ex. tending from each street corner, these zones to bo marked by white iines. The work of this society is being helped materially by contributions from other organizations, including the Toledo Commerce Club, Toledo Automobile Club and others. The so ciety has ordered 80,000 safetv first buttons, which will be distributed among school children. The safety first car has attracted considerable attention because of its safety equipment. The car is equipped with anti-skid chains, bumper, fire ex tinguisher. electric signaling device, lamps which can ho dimmed on un lighted roads when passing another vehicle, and wire wheels, which are considered especially safe for auto mobiles. efficient brakes, etc., together with other devices. The car Is a 1915 model Jcffery and in addition to pen nants has the Safety First emblem embossed no each side. During the 1 next two weeks Mr. Elliott will cover the cities of Washington, Baltimore Trenton, Philadelphia and Newark. ' Ready fop Further Orders. Captain Dawson was owner and pilot of the packet New Orleans, ply ing the Mississippi broke banks. There were miles of rushing waters. Only an experienced eye could tell the channel. Captain Lawson had been at the wheel for thirty-six hours. He was exhausted from loss of sleep. Ras tus, a colored pilot aboard, was called to the captain. "Do you see that north star?" asked the captain. "Yas, boss," "Well, hold this boat on that star." "Yas, boss." When the captain awoke an hour later his boat was winding in and out among the trees. The captain was in dignant. "I thought I told you to hold hold this boat on the north star!" he cried. "Lor", boss, we'« done passed dat star long ergo."—National Monthly. The Triumph of Justice. Judge Kobert Carey, of Jersey City, undertook in his younger days to pro secute a trademark suit that looked hopeless for nis client. The client went abroad, leaving his cable address and Instructions to be notified in the event of a decision. Carey won the case and cabled: "Justice has triumphed." The client wired back: "Take immediate appeal."—The Popular Magazine. 111111111111111111111111111111111111111 l ' 1015> ill i Hupmobile \ i iWHiWinl niiaiiwmiwiMnw mum niMwiiiimii Car of tta American Family || ||| For the third time the Hupp Motor Car Company has produced a car which, we believe, will prove immeasurably superior to any that assumes to compete with it. | The first Hupmobile 20 made for itself, and held against all an immense following, at | The " 32 " put the Hupmobile into another class and surpassed the "20" in world-wide popularity. This new Hupmobile bids fair to eclipse them both, as the very utmost a motorist can desire. A highly specialized, individualized, Hupmobilized motor car which gives you, we believe, more service and comfort for your money than you can find if you comb the market a dozen times over. ~ v Listen to the details: I Every Improvement I Specification. I Important K or* Power Longer Wheelbase; More Room <. >' Motor. 3%-inch bore * inch stroke; Wheelbase. 119 Inches; tires, 84x4 EaSe, Convenience and eCOnOmy of OPera cyllnders cast en bloc, -with water Jacket Inches. Itoomy 5-passenger body; 2 . „ , , , r space between barrels; valves 1%-inch inches more leg-room in front, 7 Inches tlOn are rUTtnereCl by clear diameter, mushroom tappets, with more in tonneau; full tufted upholstery; I II 1111 1111 I Yy r olUUghi cover" *&nt »£ln&°37 ft Left steer with center Swiveled pad. on fo*% sjthft contacts ar«mad y e in an B oil batV | Contro, u J New shape combustion chamber, larger oiling. Brakes, 14 Inches In diameter. Larger steering wheel Lighting and ignition valves and larger cylinder bore produce ° switches at center of more power. Multiple disc clutch, with left Sta«»r Center Control Easier steering , , , thirteen 13-inch plates. " Meer ' tenter Control „ ... cowl board Steering- wheel at left; gear change and Easier clutch action KJ ... .. I *T_„ r»-.±. . - hand brake levers at driver's right. Speed- _ . INon-skia tires on rear »yP e ometer, starting and lighting switches Throttle and carburetor More nower Horlnontal typo bolted directly to cylln- mounted flush m center of cowl board. control levers on steer der blo'k. Gas passage between cylln- Speedometer drive from transmission. ing wheel Larger valves h ders, so that intake manifold Is heated u n . u u .j • . , Its entire length, assuring complete va- "on-tjlare, Dimmer Headlights Automatic spark advance Heated intake passage porlzatlon ot even the heaviest gasoline. Hupmobile design. Upper half of head- Imoroved carhurrtion light glass corrugated. Kills reflector New starter that makes ""proved carDuretion Improved Oiline Klaro, complying with many city ordin- motor non-st«llablo Improved ignition p wi.n. s anceg and KivlnK fu „ illumination on H * «* A Bystem already hlghlv efficient made road. One bulb in headlights, dimmed Foot throttle in improved Improved motor lubrica still better. Pressure feed from flywheel at will through resistance In switch. No position tion to main bearings and connecting rod side-lamps. bearings; cylinder walls lubricated by _ . ,_ . _. ~ Larger brakes One-man type top mist from crankshaft. Equipment and Other Details 10-gallon gasoline tank In cowl; rain- „ Modern ignition vision windshield, fixed uprights, lower The passengers are afforded greater ease half adjustable for ventilation. One- j x- 1_ Ignition from storage battery, with au- man type top, attaching to windshield. and COITIIOrt Dy! tomatic spark advance. Type rapidly Crowned fendons, with flat edge and being adopted by progressive engineers. without beading. Tail lamp exclusive i t i„ r» - - , , n . , Hupmobile design, illuminates license A lar ß er bod y Deeper, softer, full-tufted e- i it >. n i c . plate and entire width of road for con- • A I t „ *. upholstery I I Single Unit Electrical System Miserable distance behind car. Non-skid Ample room for five pas- Generator and starting motorcombined.l\ r r e * ° n ,P e r !.™' SK* sengers More leg room in front and Jurr"entTr°«t»rf Lighting and ignition switches controlled Deeper seat., with same tonneau fngMgnUlon S comfortable Hupmobile Longer wheelbase non-stal!able. AVestlnghouse 12-volt sya- Color, blue-black with maroon running i tul Wider doors t£ra - Kear ' Price F. O. B. Detroit / Urger wheels and tires «... , . , . . Side curtains to swing ] Semi-elliptic rear springs with doors . This new Hupmobile simply declines to be classed with anything of like Model $ J price—in externals, in performance, in economy. With electric starter and ou can * com P are because nothing near it in price will bear comparison. lights, over-size tires, rc , . , J TT <_•« • demountable rims, tire you Ve had Hupmobile experience, go see the new car, expecting to carrier at rear and aii find all the good points you have known, and a wealth of added value. regular equipment $950 £* c u^ f r o fq b U D^ r " o "| If you know the Hupmobile only by reputation, you will fed that the new ___! car goes far beyond the best you have ever heard of former models. Hupp Motor Car Comoany, Detroit, Mich. V Bel^ h r ENSMINGER MOTOR COMPANY CUMBERLAND Sis. | )||ff| I Wholesale Distributors and Retailers I ,I! III! lil!ll!lll!!l!II!!M I! I I Eastern Railroads Show Further Losses The railroads In eastern territory now applying for an advance of 6 per cent. In freight rates have filed with, tjie Interstate Commerce Commission detailed statements of their operating results for the first two months of the fiscal year 1915. These Usurps show a lotss In operating Income for theie two months as compared with the same months of the last, fiscal year amount ing to $71,190 and a loss as compared with the same months of 1913 of *9,878,000. v Total earnings are less than 1914 by nearly $15,000,000 and operating ex penses have been reduced by almost precisely the same amount. The loss In gross revenues for the two months is represented by a reduc tion of $9,966,000 In freight and $4,216,000 la passenger earnings. The Mother's Prayer. Father, X thank thee— First, because Thou has made me a mother, and of all women the mother is most blessed. Second, because Thou hast helped me to be a true mother, by Riving me understanding that I may teach my children. Lord, continue Thy goodness unto m« unci mine. Anoint me fresh each day with waters of courage and patience. Olve me added strength, O God, and greater wisdom. Be with me in my dally tests; shed Thy bright radiance about my home that the young hearts growing here may be nourished %vith the living waters. Guard them against evil, O Father, and keep them fresh In faith nnd trust. Keep them pure of thought and deed. Bless them with love, and with that strong belief in Thee which exults the hoart and sweetens the life. Strenghten them, O Lord, with knowledge, and teach them honor the duties Thou seest lit to impose upon them. Qivc them riches of spirit, and the eternal joy which earthly sha dows but deepen. Guide them ever, O Father, and grant that thiey be well pleasing unto Thee. In the name of Thine own Sou, Jesus, I ask it. Amen —Beatrice IS. Harmon, in Women's World.