NEWS OF INTEREST TO AUTO OWNER AND PROSPECTIVE BUYER HB When You Buy Here, YouGe^^^i^ O R S O N'S »__OOD CARS, I s ood service, OOD PRICES. Come Direct to Us—Save Time, and Money. . • ,t *" 101® KINO taurine ear: »l*bt -181/oTSKUIND c.r p3Sfi C iJi' T nMr; *' * blB HfpMOBILB' roadster: •lis "onlrrtirt tl» ,oort »*: >»l# n rociltt«r; COTVU. P "**'• • I,D „,!«■< ■'»: o« Il«t. iq]l; t\i V V. ®T! TZ roiuster; mechanlcilly miIMT »t • Si?* " 2000 Perfect: at « «nnp. S*S>. «>sSltl«a; 19, R WKSTCorr tw.rtnr o.r: -SK.. rednTtoa * b " mountti-1* rime M«trte (®§f| 1»1« OHEVROLRT tourtoc: ran 181? iffPSOV taurine m« 12W mil.. .. d,m™.t™«; SMn' "" 1! H »^lr V orX r !."£l: ttV> "**" o. *" f * c,or7 jpa, , ?r. Br « r oVi^ w "- 19t« HUPMOBII.B Marin*: R a YVES rJlrtYt,- r JB . Gorson's Automobile Exchange 238-240 N. Broad St.. Philadelphia Largest Dealer, in America. Lire Agent. Wanted. Class of Workmen Who Make Cars Important The workmen in the factory of the Moon Motor Car Company have been one of the bicgest factors in building up the business of the company, ac cordins to R. L. Cleveland, superin tendent. Cleveland announced this we»k that the factory force had been increased one-third in the last three months to take care of the increased business this Spring. "The class of workmen that we are employing at the factory to-day Is much better than we have ever had before," Cleveland said. "Besides that, we are employing more skilled labor. "We believe that the onlv way to turn out an automobile that will stand up under the exacting demands of the The Overland-Harrisburg Co. Automobiles Ml l || || ||j 212 North fort heretofore unknown in a vy SL tr.yjn ' motorcar. Roadster $823. \y Special—One Roadster for sale \®y very P little ny reasonal)le ; used Universal Motor Car Co. EASTERN DISTRIBUTORS 174K JtORTH SIXTH STREET BOTH PHONES ' 1 I "RCF""' FIREPROOF GARAGE jlf' 11 ggj |e '• factory 571.00 I fb' 24-gaugr Steel—Rear Window Wire Glass C - fra NK CLASS ' yl 111- Bell Phone 3S3S. r t • «r-> , , .ifi— P* Independent 9»\V. UnlOn 1 rUStBICg. "T^ECIPROCALrAuTOMOBILETNSUPANCE OTHERS HAVE SAVED SS I*EU CK.VT. WHY NOT Vol ! Pennsylvania Indemnity, Exchange, Philadelphia t<-k *-., i I H.mure \. j„ HALL. .\ K t.. I'utilot Hl.lg. SATURDAY EVENING, present day automobile owner Is to have conscientious labor. We are de veloping among our men a spirit of pride in their work. We want them to co-operate with us in making the car right. "We have so lined up our factory organization that each department is in the hands of a competent foreman, who is a specialist In his line. We put the responsibility on these fore men to get the best they can out of the men and we believe that they are doing it. "I believe that the success of the Moon Company in the last three years, when business of the company has been doubled each year, is due as much to the quality of the work manship that is being put into the car ps to the progressive attitude of the company both as regards price and the lines of the car. Notable Entries at Great Indianapolis Speedway With the sixth annual International ; sweepstakes race on the Indianapolis J motor speedway only a few days off. ! activities hnve assumed a tenseness nt the Hoosler track. I>arlo Resta. speed- I way champion of the 1915 season, has entered with a Peugeot car. Kestn gave De Palma a hard-fought battle ■ last year at Indiannpolis, but the latter i won. Resta. however, cleaned up at ; Chicago. He is looked upon by many j as the greatest speedway sprinter that | over guided a racing car and never \ fails to thrill the spectators by his j seeming lack of fear. He drives the | limit at all times. His entry Is 'he i finishing touch that guarantees a great ( speed affray on the paved oval May 30. ' ! The only entry that hails from west of the Mississippi is from Kansas City, i C. F. PuChesneau has built a special J race car and named It after himself. ; I He Is a prominent restaurant keeper in Kansas City and believes in sports- ; men entering speedway races for the I love of the game, incidentally he is j out to capture the fortune in prize 1 money. He will drive his car. being a full-fledged American Automobile As sociation registered driver. Krnest Schweerln will ride as mechanician. I The car is a four-cylinder machine, j 24 2 cubic Inches piston displacement, and weighs only 1,900 pounds. From Cleveland comes an entry for i a mystery car. The owner, who Is 1 j also the driver, requests that his name I be withheld until the last minute. He 1 is a prominent business man in Cleve- ' land and Is said to have spent a young ' fortune in getting a car built that has ! sufficient speed and stamina to go the I 300 miles in winning time. Both the ! driver and his mechanician are located j in the Engineers building, in Cleve land. this cue for any who care to do j thb Sherlock Holmes act. Instead of only one Premier car. J i there will be three In the Indianapolis • speedway race May SO. Tom Rooney. j It has already been announced, will ' pilot the first entry, the car that was built for the late Bob Burman. Now. •lien, comes the welcome news thai Gil Andersen will drive the second Premier. Anderson "cleaned up" in j grand style last year, winning at the I Xew York speedway, and he is easily ' I one of the stars of the racing busi- | ness. The third Premier is to be piloted by Harry Stillman. Howard Marmon, chief engineer and one of the big guns of the Marmon factory, has been given the honorary j position of referee at the Indianapolis speedway race May 30. Frank E. Smith, vice-president of the Premier company, will be the pacemaker at Indianapolis this year. This is the ticklish job Carl G. Fisher ! has always had. But Fisher believes j in passing the honors around. Smith ( will lead the starters around the two- I rvnd-a-half-mlle track once, then duck: for cover, as when they come down ' | the home stretch the race will be on. Considerable exeitement was caused a» the Indianapolis motor speedway office when the news was received by coble from London that a second Sun beam car will arrive in Indianapolis 'in time for the May SO race. One car is already here and will be driven by Josef Christiaens. The driver of the second British car is not an nounced. These are the ears that con- I aviation motors and sensational speed is expected from them. John Aitken and Eddie Rlcken- I hacher, who will drive a Peugeot and j a Maxwell at Indianapolis May 30. i ! are now in New York getting ready \ ; for the speedway race there May 13. How Care in Details Adds to Motoring Comfort How much the arrangement of les ser features can be made to contrib ; ute to the greater comfort of those driving and riding in a motor car is shown in the Cadillac Eight. These details are spmetimes considered to be of minor importance. Yet in several instances the Cadillac designers, by; intelligently handling these features, have made them real elements in add ing to the convenience of driver and passenger. Auxiliary tonneau seats in the Cadr j iliac Eight, for example, occupy ab- i solutely no space when not in actual use. When folded, they disappear entirely into pockets in the back of I ihe front seat, which presents a smooth surface. Entrance and exit' are not Impeded in the slightest, and ihe passengers in the rear have use <>f all the tonneau space. The aux iliary seats, both when folded and when in place, present nothing which , is apt to catch and tear women's and I children's clothing. At night a small i electric light in the back of the front' seat illuminates the curb side of the tonneau entrance. Storm curtains are carried in neat' pockets on the under side of the top. : They are permanently attached to the top, always ready for use. When re leased, they fall into place as they are to be attached, and this is readily done without leaving the car to sort out curtains in a down-pour of rain, and without disturbing the passengers to fumble under the seats for the cur- j tains. Another one of the innovations In- | augurated by the Cadillac is to be ! seen in its steering wheel. Instead of i the conventional type attached rigid ly in position, the Cadillac steering wheel is hinged to swing out of the way. This permits entrance and exit j at either right or left side of the car, as the control levers are so positioned [ that they do not obstruct the passage' from one side of the car to the other. This hinged steering wheel is also a boon to the corpulent driver, who can I take his seat comfortably without squeezing himself, and then raise the wheel to normal position. Among the several gauges, meters. | etc., now in use, the speedometer is on© which should be easily and quick ly read. The Cadillac speed indica tor is set in the instrument board