IpLIAPILF Rest I"sed Cars. Are Seen Everywhere 1918 OLDSMORIL.R touring,] 1916 BKICK n u , : f- Wmm •*«•»•«« cond* iJole^ld^h;^* 44 road#ter f§§§b VeTo. • pUndW,y Mil MERCER touring. -23-70.- , of extr ® B - Bargain. ggsps&g practically new. Bargain. LP to »flng. used very 1915 BUICK touring. D-45 little, tires new. 1676. PSSSPS «bape. Snap. 1»1« OVERLAND touring 191® DODGE roadster, used •Plendidly equipped, run only little. S6OO. 1400 miles. 1475 7 >»" PAIOB tourlnr "•-«».» Ml touring excellent mechanl- practically new. SS26 cal ron dltion. 14 75. 192 ft ovt'ni avn . Hp 3;7"i.=' •«"» mm IT OOTH road- 1 11)18 CnEVRrM v-p £ in. n « ul Es. , ' (J - f "!!y equipped. SSOO. ' In*, electric ,tarter ami trie s^arter®*n , rt^ r 'n *'» c "J," DSO ' V tonrln*. 3n.n. Hthts. $450. and Ug.its P full* equipped. »SOo! HUP "20" Koarlater. <2OO 1015 Bt'lrK « .-, 1010 OAKLAND touring, ><>« M SsS?.v.r» ut - isst^rsßr 1 m m M a. p ssatf , j& i ss- ,9 L m m uso - iRS?. »«»• " ,lonili) ilr t ±° con. M f| TRUCKS AND DE . L | V E R / WAGONS. £., on to 5-ton capacity. M "■? style body desired, from $175 up fpH? RELIABLE AUTOMOBILE COMPANY >/ {All That the Name Impliet) k s 4sß . M . 249-251 N. BROAD ST., PHILADELPHIA. tsi Send for rto renin Bulletin. . t v 'i'c] Los Angeles Buys Dodge Brothers Car For County A striking tribute to Dodge Brothers cars has been given in I.os Angeles, where the county has purchased a fleet of seven Dodge Brothers cars for use in public work. In no place in this country is compe tition more keen In motorcar selling than in Southern California, and when a purchase is to be made by public of ficials, this corporation is intensified, as the prestige of being selected is very desirable. Dodge Brothers cars were selected in the present Instance after a careful in vestigation, and turned particularlv on the cost of up-keep. The officials found, according to their statement in recom j The Sign fpEoT"! rr* i £ Inside Wall g of Style B¥£d K j j With Service j '"pHE new Firestone Factory Branch is J ± ready with plenty of those elegant new tires, the distinguished Firestone Red Side * Wall and Black Tread. Harrisburg motorists ?' want quality outside as well as in. And all dealers for miles around can easily supply you. x | Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. I 1231 Xortli Second Street, HarrUhurg, Pennsylvania J Home >Office and Factory! AKHOX, OHIO J j H Used Cars I Ml < fgj Tliat are wonderful values; traded in fj«} ®| on Cadillac "Eights" £ g Si j Packard "88." I jg 'lj I ; Chalmers 6-50 1 If 111: 5! I Chalmers 4-36 £| Chalmers 4-30 |g!; Haynes 6-cylinder :g| Overland Touring Overland Roadster Sf Chandler Touring M Xatfonal Touring Ij' Michigan Touring Several Cadillacs of different models. 3^l A chance to get a good car—cheap. HI Crispen Motor Car Co. |||l How Good Your Car Is Depends on What ji h\t;, Care You Give It j\ We are fully equipped to take care of your motor troubles. l! ;! Light and heavy repairs on all makes of cars. Specialists in mag- |i 11 neto6, carburetors, speedometers, horns and batteries. !! New Auto Repair Shop 60-08 SOUTH CAMERON XT. | jj Cumberland 711-W H. N. NELSON, Mgr. | SATURDAY EVENING, mending the purchase, that the Dodge Brothers cars were particularly low in f' repair costs as well as general operat i ing expenses when service rendered was considered: in fact, they led all '! of the cars tested by a wide margin. t mSTRICT S. S. rOWEATION i Columbus. Ph., June 24.—The Sunday School convention of the Fourth Dis . j trict of Lancaster county was held , here yesterday in the Presbyterian ' Church. At the evening session the principal address was made by Dr. Don ■ i S. Colt, of Baltimore. TWO I) lI'GHTEItS KXfiAr.KD Waynesboro, Pa., .lune 24.—Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Wolf. Chambersburg. announce the engagement of their daughters. Julia to Hutchison Collins, of New York City, and Sara Chrisiin« ■ to Dr. Woods Derr, of Williamsport. Pa. Goodrich Advertising Suggests Economy The B. F. Goodrich Company has sounded a new note In advertising. It is a nota that is likely to make an Im mediate appeal to people who think. "Why spend Your Money With a Spade?" nsks one of the recent Good rich advertisements. When one thinks that question over for a moment it begins to have a deep significance, which is brought out in the following epigrammatic sentences: "Thrift does not mean penurious ness! Its first principle consists In get ting full value for each dollar of In come expended. "Too many Americans indolently act upon the shallow theory that an ar ticle 'must be' worth more, merely be cause it costs more. "They work hard, industriously and Intelligently to acquire money. Then they 'spend it with a-spade.' "They 'spread' it without a fraction of that shrewdness and thoroughness with which they acquired it. Do people become wealthy who ac quire the careless habit of 'spending money,' instead of intelligent, thought ful buying with it?" Such advertising ought to be help ful. It is not a mere appeal to people to buy goody. It is rather a sugges tion, or a series of suggestions, that will be likely to prevent wasteful or extravagant buying. "It is hardly necessary" comments an official of the B. V. Goodrich Co., "to say that the organization which publishes such advertising must have thorough confidence in the excellence of Its products and In the fairness of its prices. "That the B. P. Goodrich Company has such faith in the many kinds of rubber goods its produces, including the famous Goodrich Safety Tread Tires, is only natural In view of the enormous and steadily increasing growth of its business. "During the past year the additions to the Goodrich plant at Akron, Ohio, would in themselves be sufficient to take care of a business mounting Into the millons. "Few people probably have any Idea of the immensity to which the tire business In this country has grown. "The mere statement that some 200 ] concerns are manufacturing tires in | the United States will indicate the im j portance of this industry. I "When it is said that about 12,000,- OCO tires for motorcars and trucks were made and sold in America in 1915 the average citizen will begin to understand the vastness of the tire business. "A striking fact in this connection; is that, of these 12,000.000 tires, fully! one-fourth wore made in a single fac- j tory—that of the B. F. Goodrich Com- i pany at Akron, Ohio, j "Three million tires from one fac- j tory in a single year requires a planut ! of enormous dimensions. The Good- ! rich factory extends over about a dozen city blocks and is one of the j largest industrial Institutions in the j entire country. "During its latest fiscal year it made j nnd marketed 50 per cent, more tires | than its largest competitor, the big j business making an important en-| largement of its facilities necessary. "But it must not be supposed that there is anything mushroom-like in the B. F. Goodrich rSompany's busi- j ness. This organization has been pro- 1 ducin« rubber goods for 47 years and in addition to the manufacture of [ tires it has an immense business in all othtr kinds of rubber products. "The raw material purchasing pow- j er of the Goodrich Company is indi- j cated by its manufacture and sale of j over 130,000.000 pounds of rubber products In 1915. "If it confined itself to the manufac- j ture of tires alone, however, the B. F. Goodrich Company would require thu ' largest rubber factory in the country. ! "Such a business, officials of the! Company insist, could have been built j upon integrity, square dealing, and! manufacturing skill and efficiency only. It is easy to understand the rea- 1 sonableness of such a claim." National Car Will Be Increased in Price According to the announcement just made by the Xational factory the price of the National Twelve-Oylinder cars will be increased in Jluly. "We have been producing Twelve-Cylinder cars for one year," said George M. Dickson, general manager of the Na tional Company "and even though our costs continued to increase after we announced the original price we did not increase the price until our year was ended. Effective next month our price must necessarily be advanced. In spite of the fact that the Nation al Company Is one of the three larg est producers of high grade cars in the country and in spite of t he fact that the National factories have been doubled in size and doubled in the number of employes they can not con tinue to sell the Twelve-Cylinder cars at the present time, according to sell the Twelve-cylinder cars at the pres ent price, according to Dickson. "It must necessarily belncreased there is no alternative," he stated, "it would If Hair's Your Pr,de Use Herpicide AUTO STORAGE— First class, fireproof garage open day and night. Rates reasonable. Auto Trans. Garage —N 6-Passerger Touring 5665 Roadster Type $540 Ensminger Motor Co. THIRD AND CUMBERLAND STS. Bell Pliouc 3515 ~~~ -j—x American /amjy Jr ENSMINGER MOTOR CO. ' •THIRD AND CUMBERLAND STS Distributors. I HARRISBtJRG TELEGRAPH J HOAK'S Milk: Cream : Buttermilk The Best By Every Test ihe only dairy in Harrisburg employing a bacteriologist. Our milk is tested at 1 I every step in the process of modern pasteurization. i Vy e know by actual tests that our milk is pure and clean. I ! It pays to be clean in everything. Look at our wagons, our employes, our Mod- J ern Pasteurizing Dairy, and the milk itself—Cleanliness everywhere. The proof is in C » every bottle. Our customers must have and always get the 'richest milk obtainable. I l Why experiment further—phone to-day for trial order. # Hoak's Modern Pasteurizing Dairy 1 | Bell 3512-J PENBROOK, PA. United 226-Y j | lie folly for the National Company to I attempt to hold the present price by reducing the quality of material. For, j during the past year, hundreds of buy lers bought National Twelves, sight un seen. This sales record was possible, only because these buyers had utmost J confidence in the National factory, j After sixteen years of conscientious ef-1 fort to build up this confidence, it would not do for National to jeopard ize its reputation by reducing quality j in order to hold a certain price. Thisj is why we will increase our price in j July. Of course, all deliveries prior to. that time will be made at the present i price. "Practically every piece of material | that enters into the construction of j National Twelve-Cylinder motors has increased in cost," continued Dickson, 'furthermore, our mechanics are now receiving the highest wages in the his tory of our company. We build our own Twelve-Cylinder motors and re- j gardlcss of costs we do not allow the : quality or the strict inspection to de preciate in the slightest degree. National-built motors occupy an en viable position in the automobile in the World's Stock Champion four-cyl inder motors, in addition to the dis tinction of having built the first Am erican Six-Cylinder motors. National was a pioneer with the twelve-cylinder motors. Some of the best motor spec ialists of the country are National em ployes and many of the men in the National motor building department have been working on National mo- Auto Dealers NOTICE The Paterson Motor Sales Co., inc., 2029 Market St., Phila., has open territory for dealers and sub-agents for the Paterson "Six." Continental six-c.vlindcr motor, Stromberg carbure tor, Delco-Donble unit Ig nition, Weston Mott rear 117-inch wheelbase; bal ance specifications same standard; price $995 f. o. b. Flint, Mich. Correspondence solicited. i, tors continually and constantly for j fifteen years. Empire Will Continue the Present Models According to announcement made by ithe Empire Automobile Company no j change from present models Is con templated _ before about the time of the New York show next Janpary. I "At the New York show last year we medc practically the first announce i ment and display of our present mod ! els. It was an introduction that brought such popularity and success j for the car that we have decided to | follow the same plan for next year." says F. A. Babcock, general sales man ager of the Empire Company. "This season has continued unbrok enly and the approval of the present types has been so marked that it will Ibe impossible to complete our orders lor these models before the end of the year, despite a steadily increased production. The reason for the suc cess with these models is found In the fact that they still stand out as ad vanced models. "In the six we have a big, light weight car that is withal economical in upkeep and operating expense. In it are found the features, such as in dividual front seats, surved cowl body, etc., that characterize the up-to-the minute car. In the four we have a lighter, smaller car of exceptional power and ability. Both these models are featured by exclusive color schemes. "In addition to these touring cars we have recently brought out a most attractive four-passenger roadster on the six cylinder chassis—a model that has met with such approval that we hove already increased our production schedule 100 per cent. "Back of this decision Is a belief that the Automobile Show to fulfil its real purpose, is the time and place for the announcement of new models and it is our intention to continue this pol icy of introduction in future seasons." Wins New Fame in Mexican Campaign In the recent attack by American troops in Mexico which resulted in the killing of Colonel Julio Cardenas, a Villa leader second in importance only to his chief. Dodge Brothers motor tars wore the vehicles used in a thrill ing charge. Without the fast going, sturdy cars it would have been Im possible to have gotten to Colonel Car denas. The Cardenas ranch Is so situated that it was Impossible for the troops to approach within three miles with out being sighted. Spies had reported to the American troops several times that bandits were making their head quarters there, but when cavalry would proceed to the ranch the bandits would have escaped and only the women and children would be left. General Pershing finally ordered three of the Dodge Brothers cars at tached to his division to be'filled with men and started for the ranch. They proceeded quietly until they topped rise nearly three miles from the ranch. Then the drivers "stepped on it" and raced for the ranch at a speed of nearly sixty miles per hour, JUNE 24. 1915. although the goinp was so rough that the men In the tonneau of each car had to cling desperately to keep from being thrown out. Colonel Cardenas, with two men, were at the ranch. They hurried out ARGUMENT has persuaded car owners by the thousands to try out a single Quaker Tire. But the service the "test tires" rendered has induced these motorists to replace other makes with Quakers. Here are characteristic records made when two or more Quaker Tires were used on the same car: Respective mileage, 3 tires, 14,000, 12,085, 13,000 ; 4 tires, 10,183, 10,281, 10,213, 11,000; 4 tires, 11,000 each (still in use); 4 tires, 9000 each (still in use); 2 tires, 12,500 (still in use), 12,500; 2 tires, 8,200, 7,387 (still in use); 2 tires, 7,000 each (still in use); 2 tires, 11,227 each (still in use) ; 2 tires, 14,000 each (still in use). Such results ought to settle the question for you. At least to the extent of making the "Quaker Test"—tKe use of one tire— on your car. The local Quaker Dealer ha* an interesting story to tell you Why not drive around and see him? Shaffer Wagon Works 50-100 S. Cameron Street HARRIS ~ URG and attempted to escape, but the motor column was on them before they could get away, and in a pistol duel with Lieutenant Patton, Cardenas was wounded and afterward killed by troopers when he tried to escape. 13
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers