PATHFINDER TWIN-SIX CLOVER LEAF ROADSTER ■MBL .4t^Bti^mmm*'* t * I^^^- ShJw " - •■*•» ~ • - ' . ••dfo- Wste' - "~— - " ■ ••'... . ,•• - - . . !'*• - - ■ ■ - • :■■■» ... The above shows the Pathfinder Twin Six Cloverleaf Roadster, with J. J. Garvin, sales manager of the Pathfinder Sales Company at the wheel. Co-operating with Mr. Garvin this week in the local field is H W Prine, representing the Pathfinder factory. The coiverleaf roadster has attracted a great deal of attention locally because of its beautiful lines. A Twin-Six Pathfinder is now making a ooast-to-coast trip on high gear. This trip from the Pacific coast to New York City is officially supervised by an observer and is considered one of the most remarkable tests to which an automobile has been subjected. Pathfinder Making Coast to Coast on High Gear Miss Hilda Argall. of Denver, press d a button at twelve o'clock, Pacific time. July 3. which started the motor of the Pathfinder twelve-cylinder car in the Panama International Exposition Grounds, at San Diego, Cal.. and amid the cheering of twenty thouand on lookers, the car started on its record making high gear run across the entire continent to New York Citv. The elec trical equipment between Denver and San Diego is the same used by Presi dent Wilson in starting the Exposi tion a year and a half ago. The motor started smoothly and the car rolled away from the Exposition Grounds on the first leg of its journey to San Francis co. Fron San Francisco the Pathfinder will follow the route of the Lincoln Highway over the Rocky mountains, across the deserts and prairies on its way east. The Pathfinder Twelve is a regulation stock model with the excep tion that there are but two gears in stalled, high gear and reverse. This does away with any sealing of the years or any chance to make use of low or intermediate gear in all the con ditions of cross country touring, and is heralded by The Pathfinder Company as the greatest test of which a stocK car was ever subjected. The car is painted in the national colors, red white and blue, and carries the Lincoln Highway emblem on the sides. AzmrfcMi | ENSMINGER MOTOR CO. I TiIIRD AXD CUMBERLAND STS. Distributors. m Ensmioger Motor Co. Third & Cumberland Sts. DISTRIUUTOUS 5-Passenger Touring 8665 Roadster Type $540 Ensminger Motor Co. THIRD AXI) CUMBERLAND STS. Bell Phone 3515 HUDSON SUPER SIX SAXON Hudson Sales Agency 1139 Mulberry Phone 1396 (AUTOMOBILES! ) FOR SALE { % 1914 48 Packard Touring Car $1350 ■ J 1913 Cadillac Touring Car S6OO C 1911 6-40 Kline-Kar S3OO \ C Martin Truck Chassis Offers J / Packard Motor Car Company J & of Philadelphia % | 107 MARKET ST., HARRISBURG, PA. f SATURDAY EVENING. Hudson Speed and Power Surprised High Officials "John A. Wilson, former president of the American Automobile Associa tion, has written President Chapin of ! the Hudson Motor Car Co., con ! gratulating him on the performance of the Super-Six," said L. H. Hager ling. Hudson distributor for this ter j ritory. I "In his letter the former head of the A. A. A. said, 'I want to congratu i late you and your company on the performance of the Super-Six at New York. When I was on the contest j board of the A. A. A. at one of our i J Chicago meetings the question of a j mile-a-minute car came up, and when I I made the statement that I did not 1 1 believe any 50-horsepower car then \ built as a touring car would carry I four people a mile in sixty seconds, I i got. the laugh. Chairman Butler spoke lup and said, "W r hy don't you offer a cup?" I told him he could put the I ofter In any one of his programs he desired and make the price of the cup anything he wanted, because I knew I would not have to buy It. Stipula tions were made that the 4-cylinder cav was to have cylinders no larger than 5%, to carry four people Includ ing driver, each one to weigh at least 160 pounds, top on but down, no windshield, carrying no extras. Only one person qualified, Barney Oldfield. who drove a Knox car of the required specifications and made one way of the track mile In 1 minute II seconds, the other way of the track 1 minute IS seconds. This was the record for carrying four people In a 50-horsepower car for a long time. Then along came the Packard, Mr. Vincent driving, and he did better than j Oldfield, but his car is what is called ! a high-powered car. Then came the j demonstration of your Super-Six at Sheepshead and, to the utter astonish ment of the automobile world, you reeled off not only one mile but many miles at the rate of 72 miles an hour, carrying four people, top and wind shield up. Then to follow up with the test at Daytona at the rate of 103 ! miles an hour and then at Sheepshead | Bay, making the wonderful run of 24 ; hours, averaging 75.8 miles per hour | for 24 hours, including stops. We cer | tainly must all take our hats off to you | and your staff. Where you get your j power, how you get your speed, I, for ] one, am not able to see, but I am i rather inclined to think you have set j a mark that will keep them all guess j ing for a while'." "The Car of No Kegreis" The Klug is the second oldest auto* I mobile in the United States; 1916 model sllsO 7-Passenger Touring .. Good Territory For Live Dealers King Car Sales Co. 80 S. CAMERON ST. J Number of Cylinders Not Main Consideration "Both the six-cylinder and twelve cylinder cars of to-day are successful and there is no occasion for a dealer selling one kind to try and depreciate the other type." said J. M. Davidson, of the Pennsylvania Auto Sales Com pany, Harrisburg, distributor of Na tional cars. "The fact that one manufacturer has made a success of twelve-cylinder cars is no reason another can not make a success of six-cylinder cars. If a layman prefers a twelve-cylinder ma chine, very well; he can get his money's worth in such a car, but there is no reason why the builder of a six should try to poison his mind against twelve-cylinder cars as a class. "Any sincere manufacturer of auto mobiles is entitled to his opportunity to tell of his product and to prove that his claims are right. But no one should try to tear down the good con structive work built up by another. "National builds both twelves and sixes. We say that the number of cylinders under the hood do not de terminate the worth of a car. It is possible to have a perfect engine and still have a very imperfect automo bile as a whole. One part, or one feature of one part. Is good only when it helps to compose a harmoniously operating unit mechanism. "We believe that a good twelve Is a good car and a good six Is a good car, and that is all there is to it. The noise and row being raised over the question are foolish. People who own automobiles don't buy cylinders, gears, axles, or any other separate me chanical things jUBt to have such pieces of machinery for themselves. They want whole cars, complete units of construction. Therefore, live and lot live; let the public judge automo biles by the only true teni, by perform ance. If the right materials are in the correct place and the car is built right, you will get the right results from it." Rubber Supply Increasing and Lower Cost Possible So many Industries are face to face with constantly decreasing supplies of raw materials and ever-increasing de mands due to population growth that the contrast afforded by the rubber business looms up vividly. In 1905, according to* figures given out for publication by the B. F. Good rich Company, uncultivated or "na tive" rubber comprised 60,800 tons, while In 1914 the production had dropped back to 60,000 tons. But cultivated or plantation rubber in the same space of time had risen from 145 tons to 64,000 tons. In 1917 the Goodrich company esti mates that while native rubber pro duction will have fallen to 34,500 tons, plantation rubber will amount to 147,000 tons. By 1921, it is predicted, 209,000 tons of cultivated rubber will be available, while but 30,000 tons of native rubber will be produced. Thus 1917 will show a total Increase of 50 per cent. In crude rubber sup plies over 1914, due to the fast-growing production on plantations. And when raw rubber reaches that level of cost which vastly Increased supplies would indicate, myriad new uses will be added to those for which the present relatively limited production is re quired. As ranches and open ranges become converted Into farms, and the number of cattle decreases, lessening the sup ply of leather, while the population which must wear shoes and the fac tories which must have belting in crease, rubber will step In more and more to furnish better service at even lower aqst. Illustrations of these changes are already at hand. The B. F. Goodrich Company has announced textan, a composition solo which is said to out wear leather and is superior in many respects. Goodrich rubber belting Is fast supplanting expensive leather belt ing and is said to perform the work as well or better. Keenly alive to the Importance of to-morrow in the rubber field, the Goodrich company states that it be lieves in holding to fair and moderate prices upo nail it produces. Thus it hopes to hasten the "age of rubber," which, In its conviction, means greatly Increased benefits to all humanity. WILL MEET IV LANCASTER Lancaster, Pa., July 16. The an nual convention of the Pennsylvania State Hotel Men's Association will be held in this city October 16 and 17. Lancaster won out over Scranton and Bedford Springs in a contest before the executive committee meeting here. AUTO STORAGE— First class, fireproof rarat> open day and night. Rate, reasonable. Auto Trans. Garage HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH *635 ~ 31 'A 11 In No Other Car — | under S7OO to SBOO do you get — 31V2 horsepower en bloc motor 50 miles per hour speed I 4-inch tires Cantilever springs ! I 20 to 25 miles on a gallon of gas II Electric starter % • 1 | Electric lights Complete equipment That is why people in all parts of America are 1 1 almost fighting each other to get early deliveries. || Never in the history of the entire automobile || industry has there been such a phenomenal value. We have just received a big shipment —hence || can make immediate deliveries if you place your || order now. 11 Do so at once —quick. 11 If The Overland-Harrisburg Co. if Open Evenings 212 NORTH SECOND ST. Both Phones The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio ~ 1 -rs Time Payment Plan No need to wait any longer. Get your new car now. No need now to dig deep into your savings or to scrimp for months in order to pay for your car in one lump sum. The "GUARANTY PLAN" makes that unnecessary. You can now get any Overland or Willys-Knight Car for a small payment down. Then you can pay the balance monthly—a little at a time. That in a word is the "GUARANTY PLAN" a thoroughly organized, financially sound system of time -ayments to help people buy Overland or Willys-Knight Cars. The "GUARANTY PLAN" is one which we can heartily recommend to all. Come in right away, learn all about it and pick out your car. It's just the sort of plan everyone has been waiting for. And now it's here—an accomplished fact. Of course there'll be a rush to take advantage of it. So don't wait until we're slowed up on deliveries. Get your order in now—specify immediate or later delivery as you wish, but make sure of your car to-day. * % i Open Evenings The Overland-Harrisburg Co. 212 NORTH SECOND STREET t i I JULY IS, 1916. 13