A utomobile Industry Figures Are Staggering in Size Compiled by Alfred Reeves, General Manager National Automobile Chamber of Commerce The motor car production for 1915 will exceed 1,200,000 On the basis that any person with an Income of $1,200 can own a car, there is market for automobiles to the number of 5,000,000 Retail value of ears and trucks sold in 1915 $691,778,950 PaaJenger cars sold in 1915 842,249 Retail value of passenger cars sold in 1915 $565,850,450 Motor trucks sold in 1915 50,369 Retail value of motor trucks sold in 1915 $125,922,500 Motor car sales one decade ago (1905) 25,000 Their value .. $40,000,000 Motor car sales, 1915 592,6t8 Their value $732,600,000 Money spent on highway construction last year, tending greatly to increase real estate values $250,000,000 Automobile exports to 80 different countries in 1915 increased 250% and will exceed $120,000,000 England is our hest buyer pf automobiles, taking 5,306 trucks and 8,321 pleasure cars in 1915, valued at $21,000,000 Freight carloads of automobiles shipped during 1915 exceeded. . 200,000 Miles traveled annually by motor vehicles (average of 5,000 miles per car) 12,000,000,000 Gasoline consumed annually by automobiles (average of 100 gallons per car), gallons 950,000,000 Lubricating oil consumed annually (average of 12 gallons per ear), gallons 28.800,000 Tires used annually on motor cars 12,000.000 Number of brands of tires used on motor cars almost 125 Number of types and sizes of tires 140 Cars registered in New York 231,713 Chauffeurs registered in New York State 79,899 Registered in leading 10 grain States 677,000 States in which automobile factories are located 34 Proportion of motor vehicles to number of families in United States 1 to 19 Proportion of motor vehicles to miles of road 1 to 1 Scientific engineering standardisation of main parts, skilled manufacturing, big production and efficient selling brought the passenger car to an average price in 1915 of $672 The average price of automobiles in 1899 (or steam runabouts "'as $1,284 The average price in 1907 went to $2,123 Automobiles and Improved roads In localities have increased land values 100% to 400% Automobilists pay registration fees in all States $14,000,000 Keen competition in the automobile industry brought failures In the past five years of 400 The birth of the industry was signalized by the tirst automobile race in Chicago in 1905 won by Charles E. Durvea. There were many entrants, but only 6 started, onlv 2 finished. The time for 55 miles was 10 hrs. 28 min. lowa leads per capita with onu car for every 19 persons; total car » 117,407 | Conservatism i j ; "LJIGH-SOUNDING and cxtrava- j gant phrases, as applied to motor | cars, are all too common. Thus their - force is lost, and they convey no thought : (other than the impotence of the user. Unfortunately,too,generalities are often . resorted to in the absence of significant : facts and convincing evidence. For every effect there is a cause. The prestige and favor acquired by Maxwell p Motor Cars are due to tangible and : (commanding reasons. The comeliness of design, the solidity of structure, the economy in upkeep and : I operation, the ease and comfort in driving and lastly the innate integrity | of the whole (exemplified by the b World's Motor No-Stop Mileage : Record, recently established by one of our stock touring cars) —these are the powerful contributing factors to : Maxwell eminence. : I Maxwell Motor Car Owners are people who recognize the wisdom of economy. | ; They expect surpassing service and i 1" everything that such service implies. They pay tribute to Value and Worthi- I j ness whether in man or car. | One ChuMi. Five Body Stylet | ; Two-Passenger Roadster .... $635 I Five-Passenger Touring Car. . . 655 J Touring Car (with All Weather Top) 755 i Two-Passenger Cabriolet .... 865 Six-Passenger Town Car .... 915 lj t Full equipment, including Electric Starter _ | and Lights. Ail prices F. O. B. Detroit - ! MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN : MAXWIXIi MOTOR CARS AT THE AUTO SHOW and arc sold in Harrlsburg by our representative E. W. SHANK Hell :S«6; United 120 Market Street Try Telegraph Want Ads SATURDAY EVENING, HXRRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 19, 19T6. SCRIPPS-BOOTH MEETS SUCCESS Company Only One Year Old, but Has Won Recognition With Distinctive Models A car that has had remarkable suc cess for a newcomer is the Scripps- I Booth, represented in this territory by the Universal Motor Car Company, of which Charles 11. Maulc is president. Xo automobile concern in the past ten years lias made so immediate and certain a success, and obtained so ex clusive a class of sales as has the new Scripps-Booth which made its appear ance on the market for the first time at last year's automobile shows. Starting from small beginning, this firm this year, has taken a front rank position in the automobile industry In but twelve months production period. The first five months, over a million dollars' worth of business was trans acted by this firm, and in the tirst year, over a million dollars' worth of cars have been shipped abroad for pleasure purposes in spite of war con ditions. Reasons For Success There are a number of reasons for this success. In the first place, the company had exceptional financial backing, so that it was free from the troubles which usually beset a com pany during its first year. In the sec ond place, the design of car which was produced by its engineers was so happy a combination of clever design ing and distinctive art work that an appeal was at once created for the product which lias made sales very easy. Road performances during the year's production lias entirely proved out the theories of the designers, of the car regarding comfort in light weight, and have made the Scripps- Booth proposition practical, stable and attractive. The new car was designed by Wil liam B. Stout and six months were spent in the study of development of art lines and luxury in the body itself outside of the long period spent on the design development. Following the designing period, an advertising cam paign was undertaken, based on the luxury of the car and aiming to reach the big car owners us the most logical prospects for the light car which had been built with the same class of mechanism, finish and equipment that they were used to in their limousines and high-class foreign touring cars. Is a Roadster Type The tlrm has been conducted under the general managership of R. IT. Spear who has brought the company up from a very minor position in the automobile industry to its. present po sition. The Scripps-Booth car is so well known that a description is hardly necessary. It is a roadster type with the seats stepped—driver's seat being a number of inches in front of the passenger's so that each is individu ally seated and either can get in or out without disturbing the other. The car is equipped with cantilever springs and is luxuriously upholstered in real buffed leather of the best quality. The equipment is complete from five Houk wire wheels and five tires to Bijur starting and lighting outfit and all dash and control instruments. A new model has been added to the Scripps-Booth line for 1916, this be ing the identical type of body and pas senger accommodation, but fitted with on eight-cylinder high-speed motor of the overhead valve type, which in a car weight of under 2.000 pounds, gives a road performance in accelera tion and quick attainment of speed up to sixty-five miles an hour which it Is claimed is equaled by no other stock car in America. The new modei Fight ia being ex hibited at the show and one of the four-cylinder models. JACKSON LINE HAS TWO EIGHTS Retains Four-Cylinder Model; All Have High Duty Motors That the Jackson Automobile Com pany has jumped into the "Eight" field with both feet —and two mighty good feet at that—is indicated by the fact that it offers the public the choice of two eight-cylinder models and so far is the only manufacturer produc ing Eights at different prices, viz.: $1,195 and $1,685 respectively. These two models are in addition to the Jackson "34" —a four-cylinder car with high duty motor that has a rec ord of 55 miles an hour without mo tor vibration. "In presenting two eights, the Jack son Company is simply expressing its sound conviction that the "Eight" is the ultimate car for buyers of all classes who seek that ultra smooth ness of operation characteristic of the type," states Treasurer Howard A. Matthews. "Our Model '6B' at $1,685 is a big seventy horsepower seven passenger touring car —while model '34B' is a light five-passenger car of moderate wheelbase. We have not abandoned nor do we intend to de sert four-cylinder construction. In" this field great progress has been made in refinement and development. Our now model '34' with its remark able high speed motor has a degree of flexibility and balance that up to the present year was considered impos sible to secure without adding more cylinders. We have always been ad vocates of powerful motors but these new Jacksons are really creating new standards even for the Jackson Com pany. There will always be a demand for a high efficiency four and it is to this circle of buyers that our Model '34' makes its appeal. All three models are proving very popular and it is an open secret that the Jackson volume of production will this year exceed all previous records. The eight-cylinder models have cylinder dimensions of 2%x4% for the light eight and 3%x4',6 for the seven passenger eight. It will be noted that only the large eight has seven passenger capacity, the other two models being supplied with five-pas senger touring bodies. A conspicuous feature common to nil three models Is the unusually high finish and the use of extra good leather for the up holstery. The "four" is finished in Brewster green with wheels of the same Color while the light eight has dark green body with natural wood wheels. The large eight is finished in dark blue, of a very attractive shade. On all the Jackson chasses both front and rear springs are full ellip tic, giving an unusually wide range of spring action and the ability to take bad roads in comfort. The use i of long full elliptic springs is empha sized by the Jackson Company who i have unfalteringly adhered to this ; type of spring suspension for eight [ years. Long experience indicates that besides adding comfort full ellip tic springs promote lire economy, i The rear axles of all models are SAXON SIXES ARE PROVING POPULAR Recent Shipments Nearly One Thousand Per Cent. Gain Over Same Period Last Year I Saxon cars are manufactured in De troit, by a s6,ooo,OOOcompany. H. W. i Ford is president and general man ager: Percy Owen, vice-president, in , charge of sales and advertising, and Lincoln Seafe, secretary and treasurer. ; Factory facilities have recently been greatly increased by a doubling of the factory floor space. This is the second large increase in the Saxon plant within the past year. It was made necessary by the constantly "in creasing demand for low-priced quali ty cars. Saxon shipments in Novem ber and December were nearly 1000 per cent, ahead of Hie corresponding months a year ago. In Harrisburg Saxon cars are han dled by the Hudson Sales Agency, of 1139 Mulberry street. According to L. H. Hagerling, the new series mod els. now being shown, include many refinements that mean a good many dollars in added value. The price of the cars are not changed, less than SBOO, for the "Six" touring car and less than SIOO for the "Four" roadster. The new "Six" roadster is priced un der SBOO, and a "Six" touring car with all-season top at less than SI,OOO. The six-cylinder models are equip ped with two-unit electric starting and lighting system, thus giving the Saxon the same efficient type of elec tric starting as high-priced cars use. Electric starting and lighting system is extra equipment on the four cylinder cars. The New Series Saxons show no me chanical features of an experimental or freakish nature, and no radical changes have been made in the chassis. However, a number of re finements In the design have been made. Among the new features of new' series Saxon "Six" are: The two-unit starting and lighting system, Timken axles and Timken bearings through out the chassis, silent helical bevel gears, roomier rear seat, linoleum covered running boards and floor boards. Improved body finish, body raised by addition of molding around top of body. The tonneau seat has been widened, and is now forty-six inches wide. The front seat lias been changed slightly to make it more comfortable. The seat has a more pronounced tilt than previously. Upholstery is flusli at the sides and seat arms, and is not tufted. However, it is tufted at the seat backs. Refinement in the motor is obtained by using Burd high compression pis ton rings for the top ring on each piston. This is a feature of high priced cars, and its advantage is the maintaining of proper compression at all times, resulting in higher uniform efficiency from the motor. Spari: plugs have been nipved over the intako valves instead of over the exhaust valves, where they were formerly located. The result is that the plugs are kept cleaner and last, longer. The gasoline tank is changed from a soldered tank to a two-piece sheet metal drawn tank, thus securing greater strength. The new features of the new series Saxon "Four" roadster include: Three speed transmission instead of two speed, body lines improved by doing away with windshield filler skirt, the cowl now coming up and meeting windshield, ventilating windshield larger in size, signal lamps at sides as regular equipment in addition lo the gas head lights, adjustable pedals, both brake and clutch: improved brakes of increased size, Timken axles front and rear. floating and the gear ratios on the high are 4.4 to 1 on the four and light eight and 4.25 to 1 on the large eight. The two-unit Auto-lite system is used on all models, the distributor being combined witli the generator. The starting motor is carried low on the erankcase side, and the genera tor Is between the cylinders on the eights, being mounted in the usual place on the four. Fuel is supplied by a Stewart Vacuum fuel tank draw ing from a rear tank. Referring again to the power plants, each of these includes a cone clutch with external springs and a three speed gear set. Both eights are of the same general design, having the crankcaso divided vertically, the cylin der blocks being cast integral with the halves of the case. Pressure oil sys tems of the most efficient type furnish economical lubrication. Cylinder heads are detachable, making it extremely easy to keep motors clean at all times. The wide steering lock which is a feature of all models makes all Jack sons exceptionally convenient and easy to handle for city driving or for rough country roads. The light four and the light eight each have wheelbase of 112 inches and are equipped with 32x4 times, while the large eight has a wheelbase of 124 inches and is equipped with 34x4 X inch tires all round. In addition to the regular touring bodies, roadster „bodies can be sup plied if desired on the light four and light eight chassis, but the large eight is furnished with seven-passenger body only. The company also pro vides a special "Transcontinental" body in which the seat-back of the front compartment can be lowered and a comfortable bed made with the upholstery and cushions. This latter body has met with great success since its introduction a short time ago. P. H. Kebocli, factory distributor for Eastern Pennsylvania, has made re markable progress with the Jackson line within a few years and assisted by 11. F. Willoughby, the Jackson is making rapid headway in this terri tory. A Motorcar built to cover the widest field in delivery work with power enough to meet all requirements: ——of sufficient size, yet compactly built to facilitate case of opera tion : with accessibility of parts, minimizing labor In maintenance; with simplicity of control; of rugged construction. Such a mr is The Autocar. 1 -et us demonstrate Its ready applica tion to YOUR transportation problems. / Andrew Redmond, Distributor TIIIRI) AND lIOYD ST*. HARRISBURG, I'A. At the Auto Show _ | A Rare Exhibit of PACKARD TWIK-SIJL CARS at the//ARRISBURG motor show display ing the TWELVE - CYLINDER engine destined to guard land, air and sea. A com pact combination of stealth and strength, fusing power with silence, activity with control, speed with security. Not to see it, not to examine it part by part, is to dis regard the one mechanism that is a record of motor car progress. PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY ■ o/PHILADELPHIA 107 Market Street, Harrisburg, Pa. \ TVWN'SJ^ HOLLIER EIGHT AND SIX MODELS These Cars Built Complete in One of the Largest Manu facturing Establishments The Lewis Company are now located In their new factory at Chelsea. Mich., which alls been equipped with new ma chinery of the latest typo, required for the quality of workmanship found in the new 1916 Holliery. The new models list at $785, $986, $1,185 with roadsters in all models at same prices. The manufacturing equipment, for merly used at Jackson, Mich., for many years, some of which was worn and ob solete, has been sold to another auto mobile company, and nothing but the finest kind of equipment is now to be found in the Chelsea factory. The Spring and Axle Co. are one of the largest builders of complete cars, chassis, motors, transmissions, differentials, sprig, axles, and other parts, which they have been furnish ing to leading auto builders for many years. The Hollier Eight can be term ed a car built strictly within its own factory. Lewis spring plant will now confine their efforts to the production of the New Ilolliers, and with their past ex perience and production facilities ao plled exclusively to the building of their own car, the trade can depend on satis factory deliveries and a car of unusual merit, regardless of its popular price. The leading model, known as Model 168. being a beautifully lined and pro portioned five-passenger car with Roth child type body, divided front seats, improved eight-cylinder motor, full floating rear axles, cantilever springs, 3fx4 tires, 115-inch wheelbase and lists at $1,185. It will be found unusually high powered in proportion to its size and weight, and ride with every pos sible comfort. A clover leaf type road ster is furnished in this model at the same price. Model 158, listing at $985, carries the same motor and 112-inch wheelbase, tank in rear with Stewart vacuum feed and all of the modern refinements found in the higher priced 1916 models. The same model fitted with a six-cyl inder motor will be known as IS6 and sells at $785, being a car with the largest assembly of proportions _ and Packard Cars The following are offered for immediate delivery at attractive prices: PACKARDS 1914 —"38" 6-cyl., 5-passenger. 1913—"48" 6-cyl., 7-passenger. 1910 —"30" 4-cyl., 5-passenger Packard chassis suitable for de livery body. 1914—6-cyl., 7-passenger Chalmers 1911—6-cyl., 7-passenger Wlnton Martin 1,500-lb. truck chassis PACKARD Motpr Car Co., of Philadelphia 107 MARKET STREET HARKISBTJRG, PA. specifications for its price found In the season's trade. All models --e trimmed in long grained genuine leather upholstery, and axles are full floating in nil mod els. C. D. Paxson, sales manager of the I Lewis Company, reports having prac tically sold out a season's production Economy—in low first cost and small cost to operate and maintain. Strength—ability to stand up under the hardest sort of use. Simplicity—a plain sturdy motor in a won- 111 derfully strong and light car, easy for any one to run and care for. The Ford car your necessity. Runabout, $410: Touring Car, $460; Coupelet, $615; Town Car, $665; Sedan, 765. On sale and display at Ford Sales Co. I 147-55 SOUTH CAMERON ST. BROCKWAY TRUCKS Capacity 1500 lbs. to 4000 lbs. All Prices Delivered In HnrrlsbiirK. CAR COMINGI or if Necessary, Well Go and Get It! O ur location on the State High jgVkJ V' way, leading through Lemoyne, be in £ awa y f rom *h e high rentals of the city locations enables us to pro- Jjf r| duce the highest quality workman- > ship at prices that prohibit competi tion. Ours is the oldest Auto Shop in the Capitol Dis trict —devoted exclusively to rebuilding and repairing automobiles. Next time you're in trouble, give us a call by phone. Used Car Department We always have a stock of used and rebuilt cars for sale; we can save you money in the purchase of your next car whether it be for pleasure or business purposes. Irvm H. Heigea Lemoyne Auto Skop I lattery Service Stat'"*" State Highway, l.emoyuu at the recent Chicago Show, where the car was received with an unusual amount, of favor. I. W. Dill, who has the wholesale and retail distribution for this terri tory, announces a decided improvement in tills season's car over the one intro duced last year. Three new models are featured for the 1916 season.