{WEEK 8 From HA.M. to 11 P. M | % TAKE ANY CAIt GOING XORTII TO 1 {Kelker Street Hall C The only jierfectly equipped exhibition hall in this elty with u level 1 J floor space large enough to hold the mammoth display of the | Souvenir Biggest and Best Orchestra > A . CL Concerts ) Each AUIO MIOW and I Lady | Ever Held in This City Danci »g I 11915 Ford Car Will Be Given Away i r 11FC( (RATIONS ADMISSION 25c msmv I ■ Tills show Is under the personal direction of B. R. Johnson who » originated and managed the first auto show lit this city in 1910 in the I ■ above hall and at the Rex garage In 11)11. JyCaxWfell | For a long time you have been I; promising yourself" a look at the K 1915 Maxwell. •ig Now, during the Automobile fj %■:, Show, is the time. v All of the mechanical features f$ on which the superiority of the Maxwell is based are shown by £ means of a cut-out chassis. jp ee the 1915 Maxwell cars |> without fail. jhftg. At the Biggest and Best Auto ||i| KELKER STREET HALL jW WF E. W. SHANK FL|P 3^^ D^ stributor 334 | MYERS, THE TIRE MANT T DISTRIBUTORS FOR UNITED STATES AND GOOD- i i YEAR SOLID AND PNEUMATIC TIRES t Tire repairing of all kinds. Located in new building 1 S equipped with latest improved machinery. Have ample and I T every facility to take care of antoists' needs in most approved e I fashion. jr T Cameron and Mulberry Streets 1 Who When THE L AO™'T •> WJUj THE THE AGLNC\ . CAR BE HERE? FRANKLIN 100 MILES ON LOW GEAR By 116 Franklin 6-30 Models in One Day ^ —— • IjjTA Radiators, Lamps, | 1.1*1) 1 U and Windshields % ® Repaired, Replated u $ iff liy 4 | The Nuss Mfg. Co. | J Harrisburg, Pa. ® •©©©•©Q©©©€©©©©€©©•&QC&©e#© TUESDAY EVENING, aUftKAbIMS BUSY PLANNING CAMPAIGN [Continued from I'irst l'age. ] ernor and the nest move is to place it before the voters. B.v a vote 01" 37 ayes to It nays, the resolution proposing the woman suf frage amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution was passed linally by the Senate last night. The issue now goes to the voters of the Stale for Uecisiun at the coming Fall election. The passage of the resolution was hailed by the greatest demonstration that lias marked the session up to tills time. The Senate gallery, the aisles, and even the sacred carpet whereon the Senators sit. were crowded with women, most of them suffragists. Everywhere the yellow colors and yel low flowers of tho suffragists shone beneath the face of fair women. Hire and there, not at ail In such abund ance, were the red roses of the anti suffragists. Lieutenant Governor McClain in the chair wore one of the yellow flowers, and when, just after the demonstration folowlng the announcement of the vote, one of the Senators opposed to the resolution complained about the "noise," Mr. McC'lain's answer was: "Don't you know this is ladies" night?" A significant point in the arguments of those Hcpublicans who opposed the amendment was that the members of the legislature were nominated before the Republican platform containing the suffrage pledge had been adopted. The question, therefore, at once arose whether or not the same argument would not be used against other plat form pledges. Senator Crow, Republican State chairman, who opposed the resolution two years ago, opened In its .favor last night, citing the party pledge, lie was seconded by Senator Varo. Senators Martin and Hilton also spoke in favor, Senator Beidleman spoke against the resolution, reiterating his view that the people of the State and of his district in particular were against suffn>~-, lie said he felt it his duty to vote as he did out of regard for the sentiment of his constituents. He thought nine tenths of the members would vote as he did had they made as careful an in quiry as he had. He said members elected last November were nominated before the State Republican platform was adopted and therefore not strictly bound by it. Senator Thompson, of Reaver, also spoke in opposition. Many Senators like McNlchol, of Philadelphia, believe the amendment stands no chance this Fall. Senator Crow in his address emphasized this when he said: "A vote here to support the resolu tion does not mean that members of the Legislature are obliged to stipport the resolution at the polls." The vote in favor was: ClarK McKee. W. C, Crort Moore Crowe Patten liaix Phipps Knsley Salus Farley Schantz tiran Hemmens Gyger Sensenlcli Hilton Smith, R. E. Mlndman Smith, W. W. Hoke Snvdcr, C. A. Homsher Snyder. P. W. Jenkins Sprout Kurtz Stewart Lynch Tompkins Magee, C. J. Vare Martin Warner McConnell Wasbcrs Those opposed were: Kline Grrbericli Beidleman Hackett Bucknian McNicho! Burke Soncs Cat I in Thompson Uewitt Mrs. Horace Brock, president of tho Pennsylvania Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage, commented thus on the Legislature's action: "The anti-suffragists of Pennsylva nia are entirely satisfied with the de cision of the Legislature to submit wo man suffrage to the voters. "Having made a careful survey of the State during the last two years? and having studied the national tendency toward economy, efficiency and conser vation. illustrated by the rejection of woman suffrage by eleven States since November 1, lit 14, we have no fear for the result in November, after which wo men will lie able to resume their normal life and charitable and civic activities, which have been most seriously Inter ered with by this agitation or "votes for women.' International Has Jitney Service For Visitors The International motor truck de partment are having an independent exhibit in their new headquarters, Cl 9 Walnut street. Free transportation to visitors from their headquarters to both automobile shows is a courtesy extended from the 13th to the 20th, inclusive. C. J. Stevens, manager of the Inter national motor truck department, an nounces that for the benefit of Inter national truck owners they have es tablished a complete service station, which will lie at the command of all International truck owners, no matter how old their trucks may be. This supply house will carry an abundant line of motor trucks of the popular sizes, also a complete line of truck parts, thus savins valuable time and extra expense to their hundreds of patrons. These vital features, to gether with the reliability of the manufacturing company and the sales agency back of it. speak for the per ! manency of the International motor truck department . Merchants can no more disregard the advantages of the motor truck than their daily papers and telephones. Business lirins now recognize the fact that new trade is necessary and horse and wagon delivery will limit them to a restricted territory and volume. The motor truck permits a large expansion of trade and the Inter national is constantly making deliv eries to progressive firms who believe in trade expansion. The smaller firms formerly held to the Idea that the motor truck was only practical for the larger concerns, but have now broadened their views, lost that business timidity and are pur chasing trucks as a matter of economy and business expansion. The many up-to-date features of the new 1915 models of International mo tor trucks are both interesting and pleasing to the many visitors and pur chasers now calling at the Inter national motor truck department, 619 Walnut street, Harrisburg, Pa. Gear Ratio of Hudson Is Nearest Perfection Chief Engineer G. G. Behn, of the Hudson, likes to take on technical topics. But he has a way of investing them with a simplicity and clearness that makes these dry subjects attrac tive to any motor car enthusiast. Most buyers know very little on the fea ture of gear ratio, and yet it is vital, Mr. Behn says, to real motor car sat isfaction. A twenty horse power truck motor can pull a huge load up a pretty stiff grade, and do it at a fair speed. It does it, however, very noisily and with excessive vibration. Some people think ilhat they would like fo have low power motor of this kind in their car, and have an idea that they would then gain fuel economy, and yet have plenty of power. Mr. Behn shows how this idea is a fallacy because the motor would require to turn over at such a tremendous rate In order to gain driving-wheel speed, that it would not be satisfactory for a pleas ure car. On the oilier hand, a motor that is geared too high does not produce sat isfaction because 11 must of necessity have a very powerful motor in order to overcome the high gear ratio. There is an Ideal in this, as in all automobile designing. A moderate gear ratio makes tho ideal car for a pleasure car. It gives excellent power on hills and under difficult road con ditions, and yet It is sufficiently high so that the motor operates pleasantly, and without vibration or noise. Very low gear ratios, because of tremen dous speed, are apt to prove unpleas ant and costly at speeds of thirtv miles per hour and over. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH DETROIT ELECTRIC East Knd Auto Company, 13th and Walnut Streets. Trucks in War Prove Their Worth to Commerce "Brodbingnagians of Battle and of Business" is the title of a ltvewira bul letin now being issued by the Pack ard Motor Car Company. It contains a thought for American businessmen: Mars is motorized. Gasoline is greater than gunpowder. Twentieth century war demands the power of high explosives put into har ness. Never was an engine of war sub jected to such tests as the motor true); in Europe. That the engine in this case was taken from the humdrum commercial field intensifies the tri umph. Truly, the great war will go down as the automobile armageddon. Trains of motor trucks are the chief means of transport. They carry food for the men and food for the cannon. They carry also the cannon. By their faith in the motor truck, the captains of war have shamed the lesser faith of many captains of indus try. When the Germans poured across Belgium, one saw storehouse, bakc shop, forge, and cobbler shop setting a pace which would have ditched Sher man's Atlantic Mule Express, the old time record holder as a war special. Compared to these massive steel car/ riers, Hannibal's elephantine trans ports were puny things. They were good in their day but a bigger day has dawned. On the present crazy-quilt contour of cramped old Europe, where to-day's trench is traded to-morrow, railroads do not stay put. What you don't te'ir up in your retreat, the enemy destroys. Bridges and tunnels are dynamited, embankments effaced, rails warped and terminals razed. War was the opportunie.v of Atner-1 ican motor trucks. How did they re-! spond ? The Department of Commerce shows! that truck shipments have averaged! in value from two and one-half to three and one-half millions of dollars per month since last Fall. Morel trucks have been shipped in thirty! days than were shipped during the whole of 1913. It is a war on wheels. Trucks brought up the "Jack Johnsons" that "goluinpused" the forts at Liege, Mau beuge and Naniur. Galliene motored 70,000 men from Paris to Meaux, thir ty miles, in six hours when he heard Von Kiuck knocking at the outer gates of the French capital. Thirty thousand motor vehicles account for the amazing mobility of the Kaiser's forces in the eastern theater of war. In the rear, in the van, rushing am munition lo the breech of the cannon, hurrying the thousands of wounded to the base hospitals, the truck has traveled over good, bad, worse and even no roads in every plague of weather. In the destructive work of wartime, the motor truck is no longer on trial. How long will the generals in the con- j structive work of commerce cling to | their timeworn methods of hauling? To-day In Europe, the tramp, tramp, tramp—what there is of it, is lost in the putt, putt, putt of the "lorries." The motor truck/ has even muffled i the drums of war. Along witli the I fife, the drum has passed to the mu seums. The pulse of the gasoline mo tor is the only soul ignition the fighter of to-day asks or can hear. The mo tor truck carries the superior force to j the point of contact. What the motor truck has done in ?. I few months In war, it is certain to do more gradually in the more deliberate contests of business. Never before was the motor truck so full of inter est for men who arc on speaking terms with opportunity. Valve-in-head Motors Have Won Many Races The new Buick six-cylinder road ster is the ear that attracted so much attention at the New York and Phila delphia shows. All of these the com pany will manufacture have already been disposed of to the different deal ers. The motor is the most expen sive single factor in the construction »if the automobile, representing in round numbers one-quarter of the cost of the finished product. It must be absolutely dependable, or your mo tor car is worthless. Wherever power and endurance are most needed the valve-in-head motors are found effi cient. Every winner in the American speed and endurance classes at In- P' An Instant Success JEFFERY I VIM DELIVERY THK .IF.FFKIO FOI 11. (Hp cnr \\ hllntroduced o. Made b> tiie second largest producers of trucks in America. This THE JEI''PKIIY r IIF. vi'Klt Fl I;I.U MIX. nitb worm drive roar n*le, na great achievement has been accomplished in a vear through the won exeluatvr feature, contribute* that noWelc«M opera!ion no ntrlven for kv J . i maniifnetiirerr. of electric vt'hlrlr*. $1,417,0. ' derful value built into every Inch of this light delivery car. Capacity THE JEFFKHV "Hit; MX," CheaterSclrt body, 7-pa»*cnicer, for the 1,000 pounds. Made of standard parts, that are world-famous. This ""EFFEVY'TIII:ri^". B: ii' t »w , > r «nd' *Mir.o. Cliaaala. Iruck has the "get there" qualities that will deliver the goods. JF.FFEKY UI'AI) yl->Thecl drive) Truck, Motor Vehicle Values for Every Price and Purpose. Capital City Auto Show, Kelker Street Hall. BENTZ-LANDIS AUTO COMPANY, 1808 Logan Street, Harrisburg, Penna. dianapolis, and the European classic, the Grand Prix in France, used valve- In-head motor cars. The leading 6 builders of motors for aeroplanes, submarines and marine engines 1111- f hesitatingly adopt valve-in-head mo . tors, although they cost more to build. Bulck cars still hold the twen " ty and fifty-mile world's speeij re -7 cords and more A. A. A. official speed records than any car but one. Buick cars have won the most recent reli ' ability tests—the 1914 three thousand •. mile tour of France, the most stren- I uous test ever staged by France; the l latest New York reliability run, the Z j most strenuous test from the stand s! } ,olnt of technical examinations to i which automobiles have ever been _ I subjected In this country, and the u I fourth Wisconsin economy reliability ! | tour, repeating a previous victory in j this run and averaging 24.8 miles j | per gallon of gasoline. ! i Buick valve-in-head motors have ' i won more than 500 hill climbing, . speed, reliability, economy and en d durance contests, moer than any other _ make, regardless of price. • Local Reo Agency Reports Excellent Business The wonderful popularity of the S Reo line of automobiles made by one ot the greatest manufacturers in the United States, has been very forcibly s demonstrated by the quantity of cars that the local representative, the Har i- rlsburg Automobile Company have s been handling in the last year. One a hundred and fifty-seven cars were de r Hvered in this territory during the i. season of 1914, which was considered , a very good year's business. The 1915 1 business is still far more gratifying' to the Reo Company, and up to the - present time George G. McFarland, of - the Harrisburg Automobile Company, jlias delivered to his customers 140 ! Kco cars with four carloads on the I j road for immediate delivery. A total j of 212 orders have been taken for a delivery up until the first part, of > April. In addition to this business they have stored fifty-one cars in • S. B. Uomberger's storage warehouse in South Tenth street. These stored < summer months for late buyers and t summer months for late bueyrs and - were stored by tills enterprising firm. ! who knew very well that they would - not be able to get enough cars during 1 the summer months to supply the de r mand for this most popular car. The >' popularity of the car has grown in r leaps and bounds. Keo owners find s they can drive their .cars, over all ■ kinds of roads the year around, 10,000 - miles at an average cost of between • 2 and 3 cents a mile for all expenses 1 outside of washing and storing, that • the car is always ready to go. When ' it needs repairing it is so constructed c that a repair bill is of a most moder ate amount. The Harrisburg Auto • mobile Company keeps on hand at • all times a large quantity of parts and Is in position to supply Reo owners J Instantly with what they want, even on cars that were made in 1907 and ■ 1908. They practically have a fac ' tory branch at their establishment 1 at Third and Hamilton streets. ■ ===== RESULTS TELL ! There Can Be Xo Doubt About the Results in Harrisburg Results tell the tale. All doubt is removed. The testimony of a Harrisburg eiti- j zen. Can be easily investigated. What better proof can be had? ' Mrs. William Shearer, 314 Nectarine I street, Harrisburg, says: "One of the family suffered from sharp, shooting i pains through the small of his back. ' A feeling of languor clung to him and j he had dizzy spells. On a friend's ad- I vice he got a box of Doan's Kidney, Pills and he felt better at once after using them. The pains through his | back left, the tired feeling went away I and his health improved. As soon as I get a pain in my back I take a few I doses of Doan's Kidney Pills and they< never fail to give me relief. I still j hold as high an opinion of them now j as when I publicly endorsed them." • Price 50c. at all dealers. Don't j simply ask for a kidney remedy— get I Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that i Mrs. Shearer recommends. Foster- j Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y: j Advertisement. I MARCH 16, 1915. 7'Pataengmr 3-Passenger Phaeton Roadster ▼ Its Supremacy Shows In Its Utter Refinement Any man who investigates will concede to the HUDSON* the class place among Light Sixes. Its supremacy is too apparent to be questioned. It shows in every detail, in finish, in equipment. Our whole engineering force, headed by • Howard E. Coffin, has devoted for years to this model. So every feature, big and small, shows the final touch. But the all-important fact is that the HUDSON Six-40 is the proved-out car of this popular type. Over 10,000 cars—last year's model and this year's—have been tested in owners' hands. They have run for some 25 million miles without bring ing out a single fault or shortcoming. This model now has 10,000 endorsers among men who know it well. Some of those men are near you. Your Questions We have saved in this Light Six some 1,000 pounds. We have used new and better materials. \\ e have equipped it with a new-type high-speed motor. \\ e have reduced operative cost about 30 per cent. We have cut tire cost in two. Now you want to know how these radical changes affect what a car can do and stand. Ihe HUDSON Six-40 has 10,000 answers to every question of this kind. All those questions have yet to be answered in a car that copies this. I lie HUDSON Six-40, in its beauty and com pleteness, will appeal to your pride of ownership. Its records will appeal-to your judgment. And Hudson service—the'best in America—will appeal to your wish to have a car kept at its best. Let us demonstrate them all. HUDSON MOTOR CAR CO., Detroit, Mich. I. W. DILL, Harrisburg, Pa. At the Sixth Annual Auto Show, Arena, Rex Building 1915 STUTZ ROADSTER Jtk j| • - j** 9BE3Qr - F. O. B. Detroit See Them at the Arena The Sixth Annual Automobile Show RIVERSIDE GARAGE HKlili PHUXE 373111 ItKAII 1417 NORTH FROST ST. GEOIIGG It. BK.\TI,EV, Proprietor ijMlg me " Ca ' S reatest Six A Light Six That's Different Be Sure and See It at THE AUTO SHOW KELKER STREET HALL l'honr 7-4 ROBERTS & HOIN Salmroom. 334 t'hmtnut St., llnrrlMburit, I'a. 11