10 500,000 Strong «(|p Lined up for your review by General Service Talk about an army of facts—we have been able to check up the returns from 500,000 ' Diamond Tires. Just think it over for a minute. This is no puny group of isolated tire /v y V testimonials, it's a real report from hundreds • " . MitMßeWk y of Diamond Tire distributors on tires sold and / aMffMl | tires returned for replacement or adjustment. / [tj/slr l' No tire manufacturer ever dared to , (fvf|r IS speak in public about such a report, let alone ' MjfgjK |■ s offer to place it in the hands of every interested / ||g ttf 1 1 j tire buyer. ill VI ' I' Use the return coupon and receive the book of * Jftf if j I compelling tire facts showing that on an average but 111K I one Diamond Tire out of every hundred toai returned 1 ? I for replacement or adjustment. 111R: ■ I Added to tha wonderful Diamond service you can now II ilk I. buy Diamond Squeegee Tread Tire* at the following i I|M]U II "FAIR-LIST" PRICES: / !!«V t : M*t tt( _. Diamond nl „- Diamond ill «flV> r M / »"* Squeegee slze Squeegee / /Mlilf&l*/ * 30*3 $ 9.4S 34x4 $20.35 /> SO x 354 12.20 36 x4K 28.70 f / Vi**V tWJ l' 32 3>4 14.00 37 x 5 33.90 X -/ ✓ 33 4 20.00 38x5% 46.00 I PAY NO MORE / / ; Diamond Tires, Akron, ffll A H me your book antltled ; strone" • AMrtu • ■HWAfiI 1.///;.//..;//;;.;...;;;;/.........., 1 PLANK-WERNER TIRE CO. Distributer! DIAMOND TIRES Territory ' 4th and Chestnut Streets 801 l Phone 3559 Increased orders for immediate shipment of cars have been received by Dodge Brothers from the Automo bile Company, Limited, of Christlania, Norway. The steamer Guerth, which sailed from New York for Norway on March 5, carried ten cars for the Christiania dealers, and others are be- Arena, 3rd and Delaware wL Crlspea Motor Car Co. Jpif Stanley Steam Cars s fi-FASSENGER -0 H. I». TOIJ HI NO THE NEW STANLEY. A large, roomy, comfortable, 5-passengcr, 20-horscpower touring car, with 130-inch wlieelbase, 150 to 200 miles on a tilling of water, hand-made aluminum body, deep upholstery, one-man top, clear vision, rain-vision windshield, crowned mudgunrdß, clear running boards, electric lights with dynamo and storage battery. No clutch to work. No change speed lever. Entire control is governed by the brakes and a single little throttle lever on the steering wheel. yio7r> f. o. b. Newton, Mass PAUL D. MESSNER 1118 JAMES STREET SATURDAY EVENING, . HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 20,. 191.5 ing prepared for shipment. Foreign dealers in all parts of the world arc vielng with one another to secure the sales rights of Dodge Brothers cars abroad. The Dublin Motor Com pany, Dublin, Ireland, cabled Dodge Brothers on receipt of their first cars, congratulating the company on their product. LICIT WEIGHT IS 1 TO GOOD ROMS Small Upkeep Expense Astonishing on Boulevards Where Heavy Traffic Is Not Permitted By ltoy It. Cltai>in Chairman Good Bonds Committee, National Automobile Chamber of Commerce. To build and maintain good roads would bo comparatively easy and in expensive were wo assured that the bulk of their use would be by light weight automobiles. It is from very heavy cars and from trucks that roads receive their hardest use. Boulevards and parks where travel is restricted to light travel require an astonishingly small expense for uiy keep. Moderate weight on fairly large Bectlon tires should be encouraged 4>y all municipalities interested in build ing and maintaining good roads. To be sure this can hardly be attained by legislative action but much may be done by educational campaigns tend ing toward the fostering of this idea in the public mind. The oiled roads of California are famous. Yet many of them cost but a nominal sum 'to build and maintain. Florida seems re cently to have hit upon a method of building a combination oil and sand road that promise to revolutionize road-building in that delightful State. 1 look to see great improvement in the construction of cheap and excel lent roads in the near future. Could we but be assured that only light weight motor cars would be used on them tlio problem really is simple. Even a good dirt road however is a big improvement over the highways that usually are found in the major part of the United Suites, and a good dirt road, excepting In the very worst season of the year, can be had with the expenditure of practically noth ing but a little labor. Tho King split log drag can be made by any one with the expenditure of almost no money and very little time, and its regular use by those doing roadwork in any community will vastly improve even the poorest of dirt roads. It is perhaps too much to expect that con crete or brick roads could be laid through all the rural districts but it is not too much to expect that the cheap improvement of roads that al ready exist, is somothlng which should be taket up by every municipality. What is needed is not so much money as it is energy, and willingness to im prove the roads. The fact that very many farmers are buying automobiles is a big assistance, because no sooner docs a farmer become possessed of a motor car than he realizes as he never did before the advantage of the good road and the ease with which it may be constructed and maintained. Orphans' Home Band Will Have Special Reo Truck The Harris-burg Automobile Com pany received to-day the chassis of the two-ton Rco "J" truck that Is beinr,- equipped for the Trcssler Orphans' Home at Loysville to accommodate their band of thirty odd pieces and to do general work around this very ad mirably conducted Lutheran Homo for I orphan children at Loysville, under ithe management of the very efficient superintendent. Charles A. Widle. The ! body for this truek in being made by the Hoover Wagon Company of York I and is being so constructed that it will accommodate tho band of thirty boys with their instruments in their numerous trips throughout tho coun try visiting the different Lutheran in stitutions that contribute to the sup port of this home, as well as being built to be used for other purposes, if it is thought advisable. The body will be finished next week and the truck will be brought to Harrisburg for inspection by a lot of Lutherans in this territory before it is taken to Loysville. Remarkable Test of Hill-climbing Ability I What is declared to be the most I strenuous hill-climbing feat ever per i formed by a motor car in the South west is a trip made by an Overland Model 81 touring car to the "Hole-in the-Rock" near Phoenix, Arizona. In lieu of a road up the steep cliff, the car was forced, to push its way up n incline of :50 per cent, over a loose gravel trail. There were two bad turns with the path on the bare face of the cliff. This necessitated slowing down to a speed little faster than a walk, eliminating any advan tage which might have been gained from a flying start. Consequently the car was forced to make the climb en tirely on its own pulling power. The "Hole-in-tlie- Hock" has al ways been said to be inaccessible for vehicles. So far as is known, tho Overland is the only motor car which ever successfully negotiated the climb. A remarkable feature of the test is that the car was equipped with smooth tread tires and no chains were used. and CHEVROLET Motor At the Automobile Show Kelker St. Hall Hottenstein & Zech JUDGMENT SHOWN IN BUYING AUTOS Economy a Strong Factor in Mind of Prospect, Says Head of Chalmers Company "If the year 1915 is to be marked by one tendency more than another in automobile buying, that one thing, I believe will be greater discrimination than ever before on the part of the automobile buying public," says Hugh Chalmers, president of the Chalmers Motor Company. "People these daya are exercising better judgment in their selection of motor cars. They are far sighted. They are choosing their cars on the basis of the economy they will securo in the item of tire expense no longer the logical way. '"* he difference of a few dollars in first *cost between one car and another is no longer the determining factor. Neither is the difference of a few dol lars one way or tho other In the cost of gasoline or oil during the course of the year. Even the slight saving which one car may show over another in the item of tire erpense no longer clinches the decision of a motor car buyer. "It is tho saving possible in repair expense that is the big, important saving. One way in which good de sign and good building evidence them selves Is by cutting down repair ex pense. One reasoji why some cars are better than others is because they do not roll up big repair bills. "So when I predict that this year will be remembered as a year of econ omy In the automobile industry, I do not mean to imply that people will buy lower priced cars than they did before. First cost is only one phase of the question, and wise motor car buyers, when hesitating between two cars of almost equal price will buy the more expensive machine of the two providing that car can show better performance at a lower all-round cost of operation. "To the argument advanced in favor of one car over another that it is economical In gasoline consump tion, the best thing to do is to admit it—and add that In an entire season the entire saving of one 'light six,' for instance over another In gasoline is< less than $25. "Economy in oil consumption is a still less important item, for the greatest possible saving In oil expense Is a negligible factor. "Repair economy is the economy that counts. One repair bill may wipe out all the saving of a year in gasoline .and oil. That is why motor car buyers to-day are casting their verdict in favor of oars that keep re pair expense at a minimum. There are four things that people these days look for when seeking motor car economy which is real motor car economy. "In the first place, the car that is the most economical in the long run must possess right construction. It must be well built. The workmanship in it must evidence painstaking care; It must be absolutely accurate. "Closely associated with construc tion is the matter of materials. So in the second place, the really, economi cal car must be built of high quality materials. The best car In the world will not hold up unless the materials in it are also superior. "My third point suggests the ques tion of weight. I can dismiss the too heavy car merely by stating that peo ple are not buying such cars any more. On the other hand, however, they should not run the risk of buy ing a too-light car. In my opinion a too-light, car is P. worse purchase than one that it is too heavy. Surely, it wears out more quickly. Right weight, then, is the answer. "The matter of proper balance and scientific distribution of weight de serves a place among the 'big four.' The car that is so designated and built is the car that provides better riding comfort for a longer time, and holds the road more easily than any other. "These, then, are the things that motor car buyers seek, because in these things are embodied true motor car economy. This year will be re membered as an economy year. By that I mean that it will be known as the year of the newer und saner way of Judging economy." Studebaker Automobile Plants Work Overtime Using every possible man that effi ciency will permit in the five Stude baker automobile factories at Detroit, the company is for.ced to work some departments at night to keep up with the demand for cars. Not only is the American demand far larger than at tho same time a year ago, but orders from both England and Australia far exceed those on file at this time last year. Reviving business conditions in Canada have caused an influx of or ders to the Canadian factory at Walk erville, Ontario, and 200 additional men have been added to the force there. "The present situation, demanding maximum production, is gratifying in the extreme," said E. R. Benson, vice president. in charge of sales of the Studebaker Corporation, in comment ing on the necessity for night work. "Wo ure crowding every department to get 100 per cent, production and 100 per cent, efficiency. Just now we are turning out over 200 automobiles a day, and still we arc not able to catch up with our orders. "In a sense, we were prepared for the jitney bus demand, which, origi nating in tho west, is now sweeping the country. We already had a body adapted to the economical carrying of passengers. But wo were not pre pared at first for tho great number of orders that have been pouring In upon us from excited dealers who are *• Mng pushed for immediate delivery ny men who want to get the cream of this business with our 12-passcnger bus. Fifteen of these vehicles were sold in Kansas City in one week. Other western centers of population were not far behind. "The demand for another Stude baker type—the delivery wagon—ls indicative of better business condi tions and tho further development of a new system of freight transporta tion. We have found on Inquiry that these are for suburban and even in terurban use, as well as for city de livery purposes. All an enterprising man needs Is a machine to work up a profitable business in the handling of lighter freight. It can be done cheaper and more expeditiously by the auto than by any other means. The men who are first in the field, of course, will monopolize the better routes and the good roads. Perhaps that accounts In part for the present rush to buy Studebaker machines. "As for touring cars, It seems as If everyone In the country Is trying to buy at the same time. I believe the great advertising of California exposi tions with the attendant publicity given the transcontinental highways may have a great deal to do with the automobile activity. Out of 600 sta tions on the Lincoln Highway, about 500 are the homes of Studebaker Service Stations." J These Three You Should See AT THE AUTO SHOW IN KELKER STREET HALL THIS EVENING Qldsm^ ---Because It's a Studebaker A favorite with the ladies. Large / j |'J I 'll I' battery capacity; bng mileage and g BB ''' 1 I high speed; short turning radius I n< roomy body design; posi operation; automatic \:-*::r.\..:.: .:/:•■ . ;. • •':;.. a:.:.: '. '.:. ..■ .«v. . PKICES F. O. B. FACTOIIIBS East End Auto Co. Both Phones R. C. BARRETT, Mgr. 13th and Walnut Sts. Empire Salesman Puts Car Through Hard Test "Break It up it you can" demon stration is the kind that appeals to the prospective automobile buyer. The salesman in keen competition to swing favor to his car in preference to others is eager to grasp any new feat that will show his car to advan tage; any stunt that will emphasize the power and sturdiness of his ma chine. Something decidedly novel along this line is originated by the Stimson Automobile Company, Minneapolis distributors for the Kmpire car. The extreme strength of the Empire trans mission and other driving parts has always been held as a big talking point of the sturdy chassis. Such vir tues are, of course, best demonstrated by long, hard service, but as this is manifestly impossible in the case of a new car, something out of the ordi nary was required. As a test the stunt finally decided upon v.-as most convincing. It was the last word in punishment of the car and an extreme effort to "break it up" if possible. The oar was run at as high a speed as possible in low gear and without stopping was shifted into reverse. When the shift is made tho shock is so great that the car? mo mentarily pauses, all four wheels leave the ground before It starts back ward. The strain on transmission and LAST DAY TO BUY | AT THE KELKER STREET AUTO SHOW Come Early For Early Delivery | ENSMINGER MOTOR CO. Sales Room, 3rd and Cumberland SERVICE STATION GREEN AND CUMBERLAND axle gears is something terrific and, as a test, could not bo surpassed. So convincing l was it to prospective cus tomers of the Stimson Company says «-» » « »»»«»«»«««■«««»«»»»»»»»»»«»»» «-« ««»«»«»« America's Greatest "Light Six" $1485 is the result of correct design, selected materials, accurate workmanship and 22 years' experience in motor car construction. It is made manifest to Haynes owners day after day —year after year—by dependable per formance under all conditions. THE PROOF IS IN THE CAR ITSELF Arrange for demonstration at Auto Show in Kelkcr Street Hail, or phone. ROBERTS & HOIN Salesroom Central (.arase 331 CHESTNUT STREET lIAIUUSDI'IIG, PA. H. A. Fishburn of the Penbroolc Ga rage, that it was put on as a regula demonstration stunt and has attracte widespread interest in that territorj