10 NEWS OF INTEREST TO AUTO OWNER AND PROSPECTIVE BUYER " ■ *■ * J £§i^|gj NewßranchSeßice Signs of a new standard of service! Service worthy of Harrisburg and the courtesy and efficiency its motorists have a right to demand. Service of that specialized, intensive quality which motorists and dealers everywhere have learned to expect from Firestone men and Firestone tires. Inspect the new quarters at f your earliest convenience. Complete [service for truck operators. , The Tire Shop Temporary Address 108 Market Street, Harrisburß. Pa. I Distributor* for Firestone Tire and Rubber Company, Akron. Ohio "America'* I.argeM Exclusive Tiro and Kim Maker." Jfrestotte Revival of Interest in Bicycle Club Runs Bicycle riding: lias increased to such an extent during: the past two years that the prediction of a million new bi cycles this season bids fair to come true. Bicycles are lighter, cheaper and bet ter than when the fathers of the pres ent generation of youngsters, made "No Hill Too Steep— No Sand Too Deep" Jackson Light "Eight" has one horsepower for every 57 pounds. Here is a Jackson extraordinary. It is an "Eight." It is light in weight—it is light in price. A Demonstration Cheerfully Given at Any Time P. H. KEBOCH Distributor, 15 South Third Street *'" Both Phones The Overland-Harrisburg Co. i i Automobiles 212 North Second St. - yg # «sl©eve*VeJv» Moto* SATURDAY EVENING, their weekly club runs on the old heavy "safeties" over rough, uneven roads. Already "bike" clubs are being form ed all over the country and a revival of weekly club runs will be seen on all of our automobile roads this season. The Fisk Rubber Company, of Chico pee Falls. Mass.. is taking special in terest in boys' clubs. It lias appointed a club chief who is sending instruction books on forming clubs as well as ban ners. arm bands, and other parapher nalia without charge to bovs. Chalmers Tells What Public Wants in Motor Car Advocating closer co-operation be tween the salon and engineering; lieaaß of the automobile industry. Paul smith, vice-president In charge of sales of the Chalmers Motor Company, rt*- cently delivered an interesting address before several hundred members of the Detroit section. Society of Automobile Engineers. The occasion was unique In being tha first time a sales manager haR been In vited to speak before a body of auto mobile engineers. Mr. Smith s topic was "What the Pub 11c Is Looking For In An Automobile." He advised the engineers to study the public from the standpoint of the sales i manager In order that they might em body Its ideas In the finished product. "In the automobile industry, as else where, team work is all Important," said Mr. Smith. "The engineer Is the pitcher and the salesman Is the catcher. Without the catcher's aid, the pitcher Is bound to have some trouble in lo cating the plate. I believe the sales man should be called In as consulting engineer, because he is In closest touch with the public and knows what the . public will buy. ; At the present time, the automobile business Is in greater need of milliners and tailors than Inventors or innova tors. Refinement in the way of dress ing up the product should supersede efforts to put across something new. The big success in the motorcar busi ness have been achieved by those com panies who have conslstentlv given the public what It wants. Carrying out this idea. 1 know of several companies who send their cars to dealers in a dozen i different communities to try out new ■ models before they are even turned I over to the production department. If I the cars stand up, they go through: if not. the necessary changes are made. "The problem of the engineers is similar to that of the dramatc pro ducer. Both must please the greatest possible number of people and the pro duct must stand the test of time. The purchase uf an automobile is. next to marriage the most important event In the average man's career. It his sec ond and most expensive venture and he consequently gives every consideration to the subject, before making his final decision. j "In buying a car, the prospect of to j day considers five noints: Reliability, appearance, performance, economv and price. The order of importance in which those attributes are arranged de , pends on the price field of the car. But whether a man is paying SSOO or $5,000 | for a car, he places reliability at the ; head of the list. That, to me, is the rreatest single thing we have to strive ! 'or. Without reliability. the finest body lines in the world will not sell | cars. The public of to-dav is buying performance and it is up to the auto mobile engineer to emphasize this fea ture as strongly as possible." Dodge Will Descend Into Grand Canyon "Death Valley "Dodge," the Dodge Brothers motorcar that has Juing up a record for surpassing performances on the Pacific coast, is now to-be sent on a trip that daring motorists have manv times contemplated but never attempt ed. With O. K. Parker, one of the most daring drivers In the world, at the : wheel, the sturdy little car is to at | tempt a trip to the bottom of the Grand I Canyon of the Colorado. Mr. Parker Is now driving "Death Valley Dodge" across the desert from IJOS Angeles to the brink of the Grand 1 Canyon. Incidental to the main object J of the trip he is trying to find a short j | route between the points and expects i to cut some sixty miles off the dis tance. | But It Is after the Canyon is reached that the real feat will be tried. If Mr. | Parker is successful In making th« trip It will be the greatest achieve ment in the history of.motordom and will prove that automobiles can go anywhere that man or beast can go. At present the descent Into the Can yon by tourists is made on the backs of carefully trained burros over trails that i have been virtually whittled out of the rocky walls of the Canyon. The Grand Canyon is one of the most stupendous natural objects In the ; world. Here the whirling waters of the I Colorado have eaten for years into the j sandstone and drifted a passage that 1 runs nearly a mile deep across the Arl- ! zona desert. The surroundings reach the acme of desolation and the trip to the bottom of the Canvon with careful guides and on the backs of the burros is regarded as a big sensation and manv j tourists are afraid to try It. In attempting the trip by motorcar, | Mr. Parker will set a new record in i motor daring and, if successful, will leave a mark at which other adven turers will shoot for a long time to 1 j come. | Mr. Parker is a mining engineer and has been well known on the coast for a number of years because of his dar- ! Ing prospecting trips. About a year j ago he startled the world with his trip I i through Death Valley In a Dodge Brothers motorcar. On this journev he j 1 covered ground never before attempted I by the motorist and established a num- ' i her of records. The fame of the trip 1 was such that the car was called] ! "Death Valley Dodge" and Is now well 1 known throughout the coast district. i Only a few months ago Mr. Parker I took the car Into the Santiago Vallev j during the California floods and cover ed territory where every semblance of I a I oad had been washed awav. He i also led a rush to a new gold "dlscov- ! ! ery near Barstow. Cal., and won sev- | eral claims for himself and H. 1... Ar ' nold. Los Angeles dealer for Dodge ; I Brothers. who owns "Death Vallev I : Dodge." And Mr. Parker Is not the onlv I I one to win glory with the car. Teddy ] Tetzlaff, the famous racing driver, took ' the car over a mountain trip at night ' several weeks - ~0. making a Journev I that the wiseacres declared was impos- i sible. On his trip to the Grand Canyon Mr. Parker Is accompanied by several mo tion picture operators and a film record I ; of the trip will be made. Mil Ensminger Motor Co. Third & Cumberland Sts DISTRIBUTORS *■ . > LOOK FOR irr^ell Distributors for Exide Batteries, the recognized best. EXCELSIOR AUTO CO. 11TH AND MI I.BERRY STS. H. 1,. MANAGER. Manager Bell N4I AUTO STORAGE— First class, fireproof garage, open day and night. Rates reasonable. Auto Trans. Garage HARRISBURG TELEGRAPHS jjj ; s '^"ZZS etai,s j! ml If II Prevail If ill deny,,roma7ua ''*LM IJ lh Ze Ca"e%™f: n to scruti- su ° IT 1 | f the kn °w*«l manufacture ' • If I I I n . a Hon the sum . e xami- X an,n e^ly e I*l 1 if 2v ti ° n - ove/tlf appre " mva,Ua We to yo» Sfac " If I € ■ tf y men whr* i ec oun- , May w G y°u. I II 2"2 ards are Case details of comT «iese M J If isfled with lesser s . at ~ that you,too mav" Ction so | I < II «•> AtSllqn ' es ' h'f wfla t effect a th Preciate M I 7 1 SL find if; y°u Will fe ve . on youT/n they will f J | f I! T'f h *to°°c£ bl O to 'Xnl°eV OU tmem? m Wf w ~ Our tanrJf i imnor ■ I #5- JL M, A If P| v 3? nes a „d years If If Wm* COJVOVEP - Speed - I®%} if I tm 1 171 3-1717 Mnu-n & A/ltyr ■ l"W! V I - sr M£ HR/JV g W I I*| * TOF T • _ T▼ . ««CHANLT A| ■••>:-V. if I H|fc| utrn ' ARR ISBUI?r r> l™:'" SifwE I Packard Aircraft Motors of the Twin-Six Type Work of removing trees, filling In low places and generally grading and smoothing off the Packard aviation field, which borders on Lake St. Clair, near Mt. Clemens, Mich., Is well under way. Practical tests of the first big aircraft motor manufactured by the Packard Motor Car Company will take place early in July. These tests will be made with a Sloane aeroplane of the tractor type. The big motor will develop 300 horsepower. At Sheepshead Bay recently, J. G. Vincent, vice-president of engineering, and Inventor of the Twin-Six motor, and Ralph De Palma, racing man, made tests of a smaller motor which the Packard Company has developed for use In the acout type of plane, in a specially designed speedster that Mr. Vincent calls the "aeroplane car." The I track trials verified all of the previous findings made in laboratory tests at i the factory experimental shops. ! The purpose of the speedway try- i j out was to make sure of the prlnci- 1 | pies of Twin-Six design for aircroft j J motors. The motor was run continu-1 ously for long periods on the speedway! at 3400 revolutions per minute.. The | | necessary horsepower and engine speed ] for aeroplane usage are developed at -100 revolutions per minute. Hence the j | track work is a much severer test of I j the engine than actual flying. The aeroplane car made 102 miles In , 59.56 minutes. Several laps were taken j at from 100 to 110 miles per hour. On ; i the straightway, a speed of 118 miles; { per hour was reached. The car will not be entered in any racing competi- ( tions, as it was not designed for a rac ing car. Its only purpose is to make ; ; tests of aircraft motors. But Mr. Vln- ! I cent says it is probable that some pub- | j lie demonstrations will be arranged, i Such exhibitions of speed work will be ! ! carried on under A. A. A. supervision, j The aircraft motor tried out on the ! Sheenshead speedway is different from I the Twin-Six motor used In the Pack- | | ard motorcars in a few particulars, al | though the basic principles are the i same. The cylinders are cast in blocks j ; of three, and have two overhead valves 1 to each cylinder. There are, of course. ; I overhead caVnshafts. one to eai h set of six cylinders. This construction per- | I mitted a development of 135 horse power from the scout plane motor. The I larger one, which has approximately ; r>oo inches piston displacement, will be built exactly like the smaller, except, j for the difference in dimensions, i The aeroplane car is of beautiful de sign and many admirers expressed their regret that it will not be seen in com- j petition. The two halves of the rear j axle housings were turned from a solid I i billet of chrome-nickel steel. They ] cost 1350 each. The cost of the rear; axle alone is well over SI,OOO. Automobile Demand Will Exceed Supply Says Willys "Unless T am greatly mistaken, the demand for automobiles this summer will be far In excess of the supplv, not withstanding the fact that this'vear s production of motor cars will be the largest in the history of the industry." j The above statement was made by ' John N. Willys, president of the Wil lys-Overland Company, who has just i ! returned to Toledo from his winter home in Pasedena, Cal. Mr. Willys spent several weeks on the coast and I although he went there ostensibly for a rest he could not resist tha tempta-J tion of investigating business condi tions at first hand. "My reason for predicting a shortage of cars this year is based on informa tion that I have been able to gather from Overland dealers and from my own personal observations of condi tions as they exist in the west." stated Mr. Willys. "On every hand could be seen evidences of increased prosper ity and if this prosperity is indicative of conditions throughout the country my advice to prospective car buyers is to shop early. 1 firmly believe that the rush for cars this summer will surpass that of the last three years combined. "Without exception, every one of the | Overland and Willys-Knight dealers. that I interviewed had the same story to tell. Business had been good, in fact they claimed it had never been i better due largely to the fact that manufacturers have catered to a larger market by bringing lighter, more 1 economical and lower priced cars of i which the Overland Model 75 is an other example. "When I explained to them that the! factory was shipping on an average of over 800 cars a day. which is three | times the number shipped at this time; a year ago. they had to admit that we were doing our share toward meet- | lng the emergency. "People in all walks of life seem j T ▼ ▼ ▼ T V'V ▼ ▼ ▼ T ▼ ▼ T T ▼ T T ▼ ▼ ▼ T T T ▼.T ▼_ T T ▼ .T ▼ T T ▼ T (J)upmobile 77te mmrM ofport*r motor emr J I As to Price —We Tell Our Salesmen: — ; ► TALK PRICE LAST, NOT BECAUSE WE FEAR COMPARISON BUT < ► BECAUSE WE FIND THE PUBLIC WANTS A GOOD ARTICLE—NOT < ► A CHEAP ARTICLE. < ► JOHN RUSKIN SAID:—"ALL WORKS OF TASTE MUST BEAR A J ' PRICE IN PROPORTION TO THE SKILL, TIME, EXPENSE AND RISK < ► ATTENDING THEIR INVENTION AND MANUFACTURE." < ► THE HUPMOBILE IS HIGH PRICED ONLY IN ITS PROCESS OF < ► MANUFACTURE; IT IS EXCEPTIONALLY LOW PRICED CONSID- ' ► ERING ITS INTRINSIC VALUE. < ► $1220 Delivered : : m ENSMINGER MOTOR CO. m i ► IXJ Distributors UJ " ► Third and Cumberland Streets Bell 3515 i ► MAY 20, 1916. jto have awakened to the necessity ofi ! the motor car. Business men have; | found it a necessary adjunct, in their 1 different lines of endeavor and no 'othe- vehicle of transportation affords |as much pleasure and enjoyment for I the whole family as does the smooth 'running:, distance defying automobile, j "I believe this combination of neces sity and all-around pleasure-Riving qualities is chiefly responsible for the i , present day demand for automobiles. | Even though money is plentiful and reports show the country to be in a wonderfully prosperous condition, I do not believe the vast number of cars j now being sold would be possible, had it not been for the public awakening j to the fact, that they needed them in- i stead of wanted them." Jackson Painting and Trimming a Feature j The Jackson Automobile Company has always laid much emphasis upon j | high quality trimming, painting and finishing. They have steadily adhered to the conviction that in order to with- I stand the rough tests of winter weather j and mud, Jacksons should have the I best finish that it is possible to put on a car. The Jackson Company Insists on n, finish that looks good and stays good, and In order to further this idea, the finishing, painting and trimming "f all Jackson bodies Is done in the Jackson factory, the best qualities of material only being used. A large department in the factory is devoted exclusively to this work. This is in harmony with the idea of comfort, which has always been a strong feature of the Jackson cars, also expressed through the four full elliptic springs. 5-Passenger Touring 1 $065 Roadster Type $340 Ensminger Motor Co. THIRD AND CUMBERLAND STS. Hell Plionc 3515 V. ,J