10 Distributed In Central Pennsylvania BY THE Gverland-Harrisburg Co. = FREE BATTERY INSPECTION The life of a Storage Battery depends upon it being sup plied with pure water and electricity in such quantities as to maintain the proper Specific Gravity of the Electrolyte. Our Free Inspection Card, which is reproduced below, may be had for the asking and is good for any make of battery. Electric Storage Battery Service EXCELSIOR AUTO CO. Eleventh and Mulberry Streets, HnrrKburg, Pa. HARRY L. MYERS, Manager This Card entitles the holder to FHEE filling and Inspection of the Storage Battery in hi* car. Issued to Date 191 INSPECTION RECORD Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June July Ang. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dee. III;I, i I ' I II We are local Distributors for the " ExftC " Ratten-. |V A EXCELSIOR AUTO CO. ** Eleventh & Mulberry Sts. Harrisburg, Pa. SERVICE HARRY L. MYERS, Manager _____ __ I CAR OWNERS i ATTENTION ! We are closing out our ONE line of Automobile and i Motorcycle Tires and offer you the following stock at ; a 50% saving: Auto Tires I.ist Our Price 1 -30x3' £ S.S. Plain 811.60 85.80 ! 2-30x3'. Clin. Plain Sll.dO 55.80 ' 3-30x3 > 2 Clin. Non-Skid $12.20 56.10 ! 1-31x4 " Clin. Plain 817.95 88.97 ! 3-31x3% Q.D. Non-Skid 815.65 87.83 1 1-33x4 S.S. Plain 819.05 59.53 ! 1-33x1 Q.D. Plain 819.05 89.53 ( 1-34x4 »?.D. Xon-Skid 820.35 810.18 | 1-84x4 Q.D. Plain 819.40 89.70 > 1.35x4 Q.D. Plain 820.20 SIO.IO ! 1-35x4 Q.D. Non-Skid 821.20 810.00 These prices subject to r>ilor sale. Motorcycle Tires | 1-28x2' a 87.25 83.83 ! 2-29x2=4 88.00 81.00 ; 1-28x3 88.80 81.40 This is the only time this ad will appear, so take ! advantage of it at once. E. Mather Co. 204 Walnut St. The Largest. The Finest. Tht M#st Modern Garage in City Shaffer's Garage Fireproof, well heated and lighted. Main floor, 21,000 feet. Two drive-ways. Modern in every respect. A safe and convenient place to keep your car. Rates reasonable. Phone Bell 3303. Drive your car in here occasionally for a good wash and polish. Prices reasonable. 46-78 S. CAMERON STREET R. D. LA TOUR, Manager The AUTOCAR TRUCK has the Capacity, Power, Simplicity of Control Accessibility and Ruggedness of Parts—Gives Efficient Service under all con ditions, even when subjected to overloading or other similar abuses. IT PAYS TO INVEST IN THE AUTOCAR For Business Expansion Andrew Redmond, Distributor Third and Boyd Sts. »■ $950 to $1485, and 6ui c k Trucks with Delco starter, j|| Chevrolet. SSBO to S7BO. Al/E. Pit ICES F. O. B. FACTORY HOTTENSTEIN&ZECH SJ.T Y , HARBISBURG TELEGRAPH Hupmobile's Remarkable Growth in Seven Years "Quality cars produced In quantl i tie* is the aim of the Hupp Motor Car i Corporation," said President J. Wal ter Drake of the Detroit concern. "From the inception of the Hupp j Motor Car Corporation we have al ways exerted our efforts towards put tins on the market a car of quality, iWe have sacrificed the big profits which we might have had for the sake i of building a car of the highest type. IWe have always wanted to build a car with a reputation and from our flrst model to our present aeries "N" ; we have succeeded in doing so. "The flrst runabout produced early ]in 1909 was the first low priced car ! into which were put the high grade , material and parts used in only the I most expensive cars. In fact some of the parts used in our first cars were adopted from the foreign makers and I other American manufacturers fol j lowed our lead. As in the flrst model ! so in every one since, we have used ; only the best materials. We have al | ways spent a great deal of money in j experimental and development work ' i and have done elaborate testing of our J cars before we put them out. We have always been on the lookout for those things which might improve the qual ity of the car. We have always stood for modernizing and making the busi ness conform to the best possible prac tice. "Our financial policy together with the business policy has been not to make large profits per car but to put the money into the car Itself and giv ing the purchaser more for his money. "We feel that we have been amply repaid as we have met with unusual success and our business has shown a steady and healthy growth. Each year has shown a big Increase in busi ness over the preceding year. We turned out something like 500 cars our flrst season and this has steadily increased until the present time. We have now reached a point where our estimated production of 15,000 cars is too small and we will build at least 20,000 and perhaps 25,000. "One of the peculiar things about the growth of the Hupombile business has been our inability to keep up with the orders. Ours has always been a production problem. From the time we first started with the small cap italization of SII,OOO until even our present company of $8,000,000. We have been unable to properly gauge the demand for our cars. Our esti mates of the number of cars we could sell has always been too low and we face the same difficulty to-day. All summer long life has been made mis erable by the demands of our dealers for more cars but we have been un able to keep up with the demand. We are more than a thousand cars behind the orders for immediate delivery right now in the middle of winter when companies with big productions like ours ordinarily begin storing ma chines for the big Spring rush. "And our big business cannot in any way be contributed to war orders. Although we have a big foreign trade which extends to every part of the globe and which was developed before the war broke, we have never taken any orders for machines for war pur pose." Oldsmobile Officials Predict Big Export Trade Light cars of the luxury class will have great vogue in Europe after the war is over, according to officials of Olds Motor Works, of I-ansing, Mich., who have recently made an exhaus tive investigation of the European situation. As proof of their argument they cite a recent inquiry received | from Germany, offering spot cash if the company would store fifty of its eight-cylinder models, and hold them, until transAtJantic shipping between Germany and the United States had ! been reopened. The wealthy Euro pean is extremely fastidious in the se lection of a motorcar, state Olds of ficials, more so than the average American. Accustomed to the best workmanship and the highest finish in both chassis and bodies, he has previously paid very high prices for | his machines. Now. however, with I the production of luxury models in quantities of a ver" advanced design, such as the Oldsmobile Eight, he real izes that it will be to his advantage to buy abroad rather than at home. Oldsmobile officials, through their export department, are making prepa rations to take advantage of this turn In agiiirs. The war will have used up practically every car of merit by the time it is over, and consequently there will be a terrific demand for high class machines. Being able to furnish a product fully on a par. both in de sign and finish, w'lth the most ad vanced foreign machines, and selling the same at a considerably lower price, they anticipate a record busi ness. The inquiry for fifty cars for Ger many, incidentally, was shelved, the models being needed for home con sumption. The new Eight, with its light weight, high-speed motor, un usually well balanced chassis, and beauty of exterior line and finish, has ; struck so responsive a chord in the | hearts of American buyers that the ! factory is unable to keep up with the I demand. Foreign buyers will have to wait until they are In shape actually to use luxury cars, they saj*. Meanwhile, however, no time is be ing lost expanding the facilities of the plant with the export market, espe cially that of Europe, in view. A per manent and profitable business lies in store for the company, state the offi cials. merely for the asking. European manufacturers will have to exert every resource at their command, adopting American methods of quan ! tity production, if they would have even a show to regain their former [ markets. That there will be numer- I ous instances of failure in this conec tlon seems well established. Dodge Brothers' Engineer Heads Engineer Association At the recent meeting of the Society of Automobile Engineers, the great or ganization of the men who have de veloped the motorcar. Russcl Huff, chief engineer of Dodge Brothers, was chosen president for the ensuring year. Mr. Huff is one of the best-known en gineers engaged in the automobile business. Previous to taking the posi tion as head of the engineering de partment of Dodge Brothers, he was for 15 years with the Packard Motor far Company and before this association wss engaged in experimental work. Mr. Huff Is responsible for rnanv of the Important developments in motor |car making. I xrlnatvelr Mw« For 1916. Five-passenger 6-88 selling for $lO 60. Seven-passenger 6-46 selling for $1295. Cabriolet SI6OO. Coupe SI7OO. Sedan SI9OO. Town Car $2250. Limousine—yes, but let us tell you about the finishing touches yet to be put on. See the 6-46 at 109 Market street. Riverside Auto Co. HEAR 1417 X. FHOST STREET G'«r«« R. Hntirjr, Dealer. Ten Thousand Grants Demanded by Public The Grant Motor Company of Find lay, Ohio, is on a tremendous wave of | prosperity. Ever since the company, was organized two years ago, its fac- ' tory has been rushed to its maximum j capacity. Just recently additions to ! the factory exceeding -5,000 square feet w ere announced. At all the auto shows j Its product is making a great hit. When the first Grant six-cylinder' car was announced for the then ex- j traordinury low price. 1795.00. it was said that a car with sucn specifications I could not be built for any such price and the manufacturers continue in business, but the Grant Company, which is actively directed by President David A. Shaw, assisted by Vice-President George A. Salxman and George S. j Waltc, general sales manager, not only j made a success of its six-cylinder car 1 the first year it was announced, but ' in Its second year is manufacturing these on the basis of ten thousand cars a year, bringing it up Into the front. ranks of the big producers. The Grant Company made money the | first year it was in business, and has the reputation of enjoying extraor dinarily low overhead cost. It is the j theory of the officers of the Grant j Company that excessive overhead i usually begin in the ofTice with large ; salaries paid to officials of the com- | pany. "In the Grant Company every . executive Is a stockholder in the com- ' pany," says Sales Manager George S. Walte, "and these men are willing to, and do work for small salaries, pre ferring to earn their money on the i dividends after they have actually made it. The idea of the Grant or- ] ganization la the 'happy family' Idea —a group of men working together with a common purpose with mutual j interest and respect for each other. 1 aiming at a common end to build the best car in the world for the money." "We need no argument, however, to prove the success of this policy," con tinued Mr. Waite, "because the Grant Six for 1916 is a practical expression of the possibilities of the idea. The fact the public are demanding Grant Sixes at the rate of ten thousand cars a year, clearly Indicates wide appre ciation of Grant value." • The Grant Six is built completely in the company's factory. The motor Is of the high-speed, overhead valve type of exclusive Grant design. It has notable records for hill climbing and fuel economy. It is equipped with a Rayfteld Carburetor, an Allls-CVialmers starter and generator, and every detail is high grade. Conspicuous features of the car arc its full floating rear axle, cantilever spring suspension and the complete ness of Its equipment. The body, which is of the modified flowing line effect, is exceptionally large and roomy, and beautifully trimmed and upholstered. Europe Is From Missouri; Must Be Shown Records Should Eddie Rickenbacher, the fa mous Maxwell pilot or any of the other speed demons of premier fame —- celebrate the first race of 1916 by roll ing 300 miles in two hours, or some such revolutionary figure, the result could not be nothing more than an American record. No such thing as a world's record can be successfully claimed, when the feat is accomplish ed In the United States, under the sanc tion of the American Automobile As sociation. This strange and anomalous condition arises from the fact that, with charac teristic European aloofness, the auto mobile judiciary across the sea rec ognizes no performance in America as really authentic. Despite the fact that many recent American records excel those on the books of the automobile clubs of Great Rritain and France, recent compilations of European records placidly ignore them and still refer to venerable Euro pean feats as world's records. The American Automobile Associ ation. after vainly trying to secure mutual recognition which would re sult in a real table of world's records, has temporarily given up the battle and modestly refers to all marks estab lished under Its jurisdiction as Ameri can records only this and nothing more. One immediate effect of this condi tion is to rob the endurance champion Maxwell touring car of the technical right to claim a world's title. The Maxwell a stock touring car— recently completed, under A. A. A. su pervision. a run of 22.022.3 miles with out a motor stop. The best prior Ameri can record was less than 13,000 miles. In Europe the best prior mark was less than 17,000 to the credit of the Kolls-Royce. Yet the Maxwell can qualify merely for an American rec ord and the stolid Britons will doubt less continue to regard the Rolls-Royce as the world's endurance champion un til its record is beaten in the limits of their tight little isle. Were reciprocal rules in operation, the Maxwell would undoubtedly be granted a world's record certificate. Under its present policy, the A A. A. can. however, grant merely American certificate of record. In the meantime, however, there is no occasion for American sportsmen to feel symptoms of peeve. Regardless of the technicalities, they have the sat isfaction of knowing that the Maxwell —a popular-priced American car—has handily ecliosed the best record of the one partic ar car on which Europe has relied for exemplification of motor endurance a car of the highest price and one which bases a large share of its reputation on a nonstop feat, high ly creditable but herewith rendered ob solete. Girl Makes 9,000-Mile Trip on a Motorcycle "Miss Effie Hotchkiss. of Brooklyn, the first girl to drive a motor ve hicle across continent and back again, is typically American in her love lof the outdoors," says Heagy Bros., Harley-ITavldson dealers, 1200 North Third street, "and some day hopes to leave her position in a Wall street broker's office to become a successful, practical farmer. She and her mother lust completed a 9.000-mile trip with their Harley-Davldson three-speed mo torcycle and sidecar that was a thrill er in the number and variety of inci dents experienced. "A crark shot with an automatic re volver as well as an expert motor cyclist, the transcontinental trip had no terrors for Miss Hotchkiss. 'Mere man' did not enter ihto their plans— unless he may have been considered somewhat when Miss Hotchkiss includ ed her 32 caliber automatic in the equipment. They started across the continent last May with no more fuss than if they were going no farther than the corner grocery for the day's mar keting. "Their experiences In the mountains, on the plains and in crossing the Mo jave desert going west and the Nevada and Utah deserts on the return trip reatls almost like fiction. Many nights they slept out under the stars, rolled up in their blankets and feeling as safe, they declare, as in their home at 6900 Fourteenth avenue, Brooklvn. "Miss Hotchkiss, a slim, tali, well muscled girl, knows how to handle rod and gun equally weil. But it is with her 32 caliber automatic that she ex cels. She kept in practice on the 9,000- mile trip shooting coyotes and rattle snakes, frequently astonishing west erners by her marksmanship. Through out their entire trip they were treated with courtesy and from everv stand point enjoyed the outing so much that they already are making plans for another big trip." DAUPHIN BRIDCiEMAX FALLS Special to the Telegraph Dauphin, Pa.. Jan. 29.—Word has been received by William Irwin that his brother. Charles Irwin, a former resident of Dauphin, had fallen about sixty feet from a bridge on which he was working in Camden, N. J. Mr Irwin is now In a hospital at Phila delphia. but Just how badly he is in jured is not known. GREENHOUSE BOILER EXPLODES Special to the Telegraph AbbeyvtUe, Pa., Jan. 29.—A boiler explosion at the greenhouses of H. A. Schroyer yesterday afternoon caused considerable damage. The glass in the buildings and many plants were de stroyed. There Is a loss of {1,600. m? S Re© The Fifth. *B7* W W MA W 4-Cyl. Roadster. f. o. b. Lansing. Mich. * f. o. h. I.annliiit, Mich. We Sell Reos Only We have been in business fourteen years. Our business has increased from one car a year to about a thousand a year. \\ e have handled sixteen different makes of cars during these fourteen years. \\ e guaranteed every make of car we ever sold. \\ e started a cost sheet for every car as soon as it was sold and at the end of the year this cost sheet told us whether we had made or lost money Now we only handle the Reo car. The Reo is the only car we have handled for years. The Reo is the only car we will ever handle. One reason is that the cost sheet and the guarantee on the Reo car was the lowest of all. Another reason is Reo owners came back for other Reo cars. 1 lie same Reo owners told other people how good the Reo was. Some newspaper advertising and a lot of satisfied customers added to the trick. Our costomer told his friend that we played the game straight. Our customer has, by telling his friend that we were right, got the bene fit of a more liberal guarantee by saving us expensive advertising. \\ e deserved these recommendations because we had lived up to our guarantee. \\ e want you to be one of our customers. \\ e have 311 customers already for 1916 and will make it a thousand if we can get the cars. \\ e guarantee a Reo car a year free of repairs, A\ e live up to our guarantee. We go beyond our guarantee. W e have seventy-seven carloads stored to take care of your wants in the Spring. 1 his is not nearly enough but will help some. \\ on t you be one of our customers? HARRISBURG AUTO CO. THIRD AND HAMILTON STREETS Rw lM six, WW 2-Ton Truck, *lOl5O f. o. o. l.anslng, Mich. t . o. b. I,mixing, Mich. Rancher Says Roosevelt Is Chock Full of Sand New Orleans, La., Jan. 29.—Howard Eaton, native of Pittsburgh, but now a ranch operator at Wolf, Wyo., said here that Theodore Roosevelt had more sand than any other person in j the United States; that his grit was j wonderful, and by way of illustrating j he told the following story: "The first time I ever saw Roose velt was in 1882, when he came out to stay at my place." related the ranch man. "He ivas a pale, slender young fellow with sandy sideburns. I'll never forget the first time he started to ride one of those bucking bronchos. It tried to use him to make a hole In the ground, but that didn't daunt Teddy. He'd jump up, shake his head, grind his teeth and take another try. I never saw a fellow with so much Special to the Telegraph MRS. K. A. PFIiIEGER BVRIE1) Special to the Telegraph Dauphin, Pa., Jan. 29. Funeral' services for Mrs. Edward A. Pflieger, j who died on Tuesday at her home in j Williamsport, were held yesterday at j the United Brethren Church at Rock- 1 ville. The Rev. Clyde Lynch officiated and several selections were sung by the J rholr. The pallbearers were Mr. ! Shatto. Alfred Cristman, Mr. Aikens, j William Straw, John Turns and Cyrus j Xovinger. Burial was made in the Heckton Cemetery. j The Garage that has thrown away the key—Open Day and Night. KEYSTONE MOTOR CAR CO. The Keystone Motor Car Co. operates a complete Repair Shop. This is an organiza tion of several departments manned by experts and equipped with all the latest machin ery to completely repair and overhaul any motorcar. f PAINT 1 REPAIR 4 Wei up retop er Autos | REBUILD I RESTORE . Complete Repair Shop The departments arc under the management of C. H. Burner. Each department is directed by a competent head. Ihe Keystone Organization is therefore able to handle any business in the automobile line, from the furnishing of high-grade pleasure cars and serviceable commercial machines to repairing minor parts, in a quick and business-like manner CALL AND GET AN ESTIMATE Keystone Motor Car Co. 1019-1025 Market Street Chalmers Dodge Bros. Detroit Package Wagon "POOH MAN'S LOAN" SUGGESTED FOR DEFENSE Special to the Telegraph Washington, D. C., Jan. 29. A "poor man's loan" to raise funds for an army and navy capable of defending the country in any emergency was proposed yesterday in a statement by Perry Bel • font, a director of the Navy League iof the United States. Mr. Belmont sug j gests that bonds be issued in denomina j tions as low as S2O, so that the im perative demands of national defense may be met immediately. MARSHALL FURNACES IN BLAST Special to the Telegrapl\ Newport. Pa., Jan. 29.—After being idle for several years, the Marshall fur nace, located here, has been placed in blast and is now turning out large quantities of Iron. 1 I | Crispen Motor Car Co. 413-417 S. Cameron St ! Indian Chief Tomahawks boy in Boston Street Special to the Telegraph Boston, Mass., Jan. 29. ln sight of a number or persons who breathlessly watched the operation. Blue Sky, an In dian chief, tomahuwked Paul Quirk, an eight-year-old boy, inflicting several scalp wounds, which may prove danger ous. The chief stated that he had been at tacked by a large number of children who were pursuing him, and in an ef fort to get away from them he used his tomohawk. Blue Sky says that he lost control of himself, and even at ■ that, he had no desire to harm the chll ' dren.