10 GARFORD ROAD BUILDING TRUCK Meets Demand For Modern Ap paratus; Company Strong Good Roads Booster order to fully answer the ever present demand for more mqdern road building machinery, the Garford Mo tor Truck Company, of Lama, Ohio, has introduced a new model which is known as the Garford road builder and is specially designed to build and maintain roads of all types at a lower cost than ever before. It is most fit ting that the Garford Company should be an important factor in the manu ture of road building trucks, in jriew of the fact that it was a pioneer in the good roads movement, and since its formation, has been one of the country's staunchest advocates of road improvement. At an expenditure of many thou sands of dollars, this company has waged unceasing campaigns for the construction of good roads, and the announcement of the most practical and economical road builder ever produced will be of more than ordi nary interest. The Garford road builder will oper ate over any kind or condition of road, as it is so designed that it will perform work on roads under con struction on fills or sub-grades. This modern vehicle for road build ing and road maintenance has a body capacity of five cubic yards, equivalent to six tons, and its strength is insured by its heavy type of steel construction. The body is Hanged at the top and at the corners, and is reinforced with extra heavy gusset plates. It is supported on two four-inch I beams running length wise and connected by live four-inch I beam cross sills. The body is ten feet long, twenty-four inches deep and is six feet wide at the front and six and one-half feet wide at the rear end. making impossible any binding of the load while being dumped. An important feature of the body i-onstruction is the regulation of the tail-gate opening for the spreading of material to any desired thickness. The hoist is operated by hydraulic pres sure and an automatic cut-out is pro vided at the extreme dumping angle. The entire mechanism is controlled from the driver's seat' and is so simple that any truck driver can quickly be come accustomed to it. The standard equipment of the Garford road builder includes two draw bars, one of the double spring tvpe for trailer work, and one rigid drop bar for pulling plows, scarifiers, graders and scrapers. The front wheels are equipped with wide center rims and the rear wheels with cleats of the herring hone type, all of which may be easily and quicl>- iffHj 5 Tests and Water For I STORAGE I I BATTERYi i 5 > and [EXPERT JREPAIRS I I at ii j FRONT-MARKET j | Motor Supply | Co. > 109 Market St. :• |; Prest-o-lite j | Battery \ | Service j r— —^ (•Passenger Touring 9BBS •-Passenger Clover Leaf Road ster - $695 Ensminger Motor Co. THIRD AND CUMBERLAND 6TS. Bell Phone SSIS | rSB] -•the efficiency car more miles— less gasoline more comfort— less weight— E. W. Shank h / Utf MAJUUH' ST. SATURDAY EVENING, SIMPLE BUT EFFICIENT DEVICE USED TO TRUE OVERLAND TIRES As an example of the thoroughness and accuracy with which even the minutest details are performed in the automobile industry no better illus tration can be furnished than the in spection of tires at the factory of the Willys-Overland Company. Each tire, after the wheel has been assembled, is thoroughly inspected and tested for alignment. It must be lined up evenly with the rim before it can be placed on a chassis. The inspector mounts the wheel on a pivot, then swings a roller into place against the rim of the wheel. Along ly detached. The herring bone cleat gives better traction in mud or on sub-grades with less vibration. The chassis carries out the well known Garford design, the exclusive and popular feature of short wheel base—only 12 S inches. This is secured by the motor under cab construction. The engine being in front of the driver's seat, is acces sible for adjustments without leaving the cab. The short wheel base makes turning possible on very narrow roads and cramped quarters, where such trucks usually have to go for loading. At the same time a short frame length re duces weight and adds sturdiness to the construction. The four cylinder, heavy duty mo tor affords simplicity in construction with greatest efficiency in operation. Its three heavy plain bronze bearings provide for any readjustments. Speed of motor is controlled at all speed changes through a Garford governor of ball or centrifugal type. Transmission of power through work drive jack shaft to rear wheels through sprocket and chains provides for greater gear reductions, thereby giving a maximum of power. This jack shaft construction is unique and at the same time highlv efficient. A worm of hardened steel, operating in conjunction with a bronze gear gives high power producing pos sibilities and insures long life to these parts. The jack shaft is splined into the differential, which is carried In side the worm gear. Drive sprockets at tha outer ends of the jack shaft carry chains to the rear wheels. All of the wheel bearings are of special design of heavy roller Timken type, permitting readjustment when necessary on account of natural wear. The transmission has four speeds forward and one reverse with direct drive on fourth. This gives proper gear reductions for pulling under all conditions with the necessary speed in fourth for the better stretches of road. Other details of design anfl con struction are in full accord with Gar ford practice and up to the usual high standard of the Garford Motor Truck Company. The road builder has been tested out thoroughly and has exceeded ex pectations. Its pulling power is as tonishing, and being constructed for operation over all kinds of roads, it fulfills a multitude of the needs of contractors in this and other lines. AUTO STORAGE— First class, fireproof garage, open day and night. Rates reasonable. Auto Trans. Garage -for service day-in-and day-out Spring days give a wonderful thrill to mo toring after the long, dreary season indoors i and if you wouldn't miss a day of it, order Velie at once. Velie-Harrisburg Co. Kisili and Hrrr si>. RXRRISBUBG C&1S& TELEGR3QPH side of this roller, pressing against the bight point of the tire he firmlyvholds a marker, while he revolves the wheel. Naturally he marks the spots which are in alignment, and misses the por tions of the tire which require further adjusting. The defects are then quick ly remedied. This test, coupled with the inspec tion for the alignment of both front and rear tires, is performed to insure purchasers of all Willys-Overland pro ducts with minimum wear on tires. Every wheel that leaves the Willys- Overland assembly rooms has been aligned and inspected in this manner. DEFINITE FIELD FOR SI,OOO CARS By Hugh Chalmers Probably the most important de velopment of the automobile industry during the past few years has been the gradual defining of price classifi cation among those manufacturers turning out a large volume of cars annually. It has been fairly veil set tled, for instance, that the four-cyl inder car is destined to lead in the lowest priced fields. And the sixes, eighths and twelves have their mar kets almost as sharply defined. Because the SI,OOO field offers the automobile manufacturer an oppor tunity to incorporate improved fea tures of construction with quantity production. I believe the future of the car selling near that price to be already assured. When we pay $25 or S3O for a suit of clothes, we do not expect to obtain the quality of goods for which we pay SSO or S6O. But as our worldly prospects increase, we gladly pay the difference tp ob tain long wearing qualities in our ap parel. For exactly the same reason, we know that the buyers of cars in the SI,OOO field are recruited to a great extent, each year, from former owners of cheap cars. time to time we hear the pessimists haul out and dust off their little talk on the "point of satura tion" in the automobile industry. To the men who have followed the au tomobile industry from its inception, this view point appears ridiculous. In the first place we must remember that the industry has been passing through a steady process of evolu tion for over ten years. Hundreds of thousands of automobiles have been turned out in that time, but I will venture to say that a big majority of cars now on the road are products of the past four years. Each succeeding year sees thousands of cars relegated to the scrap-heap. Which answers concisely the question, "What be comes of the old cars?" We were not familiar in the early days with the heat-treating processes or the metal combinations which make for long life. If we had been, pur first models would still be doing yeoman duty on city streets and coun try roads. This natural process of elimination has made room each sea son for a fresh crop of better motor cars, and the probabilities of over production, it seems to me, are large ly confined to the cheap car field. Briefly, the most difficult problems in the automobile industry are what kind of car of cars to .build, at what prices and how many. Due to the rapid development of the enginering end. changes in the automobile in dustry have been kaleidoscopic in the past. Severity of competition and caprices of public demand have caused changes of policy not always for the best. There was a time when automo biles had but one cylinder, then two, three and four. When fours first came out we often heard the remark that a four simply multiplied your trou bles by four. Yet when fours were perfected, the old types were thrown away. To-day the four is practically* relegated to the very low-priced cars or to racing creations. In the field selling around SI,OOO, the six-cylin der car is pre-eminent. This is so not because manufacturers artificially stimulated a desire for this type of car, but because the demand for a smoother, more flexible motor al ready existed and the six demonstrat ed that it filled that demand. Havink decided upon the type and price car he intends to build, the manufacturer is at once confronted with cost of manufacture. The Chal mers Company was one of the first concerns to realize that manufactur ing from the raw material was the only plan by which the middlemen's profits could be eliminated from the selling price of the car. we have for a long time manu factured the big majority of parts for the Chalmers cars under our own roof. But during the coming year we plan to still further Increase our activities Along this line. Operations are under way whereby we will oper ate our own drop-forgo shop, paint ing and trimming departments and several other Important branches of our business now being taken care of by outside concerns. With $5,000,000 recently added to our working capital, we are planning a production of 28,000 to 30,000 cars for 1917 on a basis that keep our big Detroit plant working at full ■peed for the next twelve months. We have Just achieved a record years' business entirely Independent of war profits or other outside con siderations, and our manufacturing schedule will go through regardless or whether the Kuropeiui *ar la get-I tied utxt month or next ycau j Finds South America of 0. Henry in Six Months Trip Through Countries The South America of O. Henry, with its barefoot-soldier, revolutions ai.d yellow fever, and the South America of wondrously beautiful cities, rich in art and culture and splendid architecture, peopled with diplomats and genteel folk, were found by Fred Cardway, who has just return ed from a six-months' visit. His trip was made in behalf of-riTe Packard Motor Car Company, the purpose being to discover methods American businessmen would best i follow to establish a good, friendly | footing of trade rotations. Cardway says the American desire to make business dealings prompt and entirely practical, from the American point of view, will not do in South America. The man who attempts to sell goods in that manner invariably fails, for the Knglish, German and | French people who have extensive i trade interests in the South American j countries do things more to the liking , of the people. "Your Frenchman, Englishman or German goes to Buenos Aires or Rio. and makes his home there. He be- I comes a citizen and takes an active i interest in the welfare of the city and j the nation." said Cardway. "Yet there is no doubt that goods of American manufacture will be welcomed in South America. "I found many of the wealthy, edu cated people of Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires and Montevideo, who were as tonished to know that there was such a thing as a twelve-cylinder motor car, or that America produced a motor car that surpassed the cars made in Kurope. "Since the beginning of war, prac tically no high gradecars have been sold, because of the difficulty of get ting them from Kurope. It really had not occurred to the majority of South Americans to even consider American made cars for high class usage." Cardway was accompanied on his trip by Mrs. Cardway. They were re ceived everywhere with cordiality, especially in Brazil, which has the | friendliest feeling for the United States. Government officials were ex ceptionaly kind and made it a point to make their visit pleasant. They were given a short undersea voyage in a Brazilian submarine, and were taken for a flight over the harbor at Rio de Janeiro in a naval airplane. On their return they traveled from Buenos Aires 800 miles across the continent to Valparaiso, Chile, on the new railroad, which has been complet ed only two years. This road crosses the Andes and reaches an elevation of 18,000 feet, far above the timber lino. They stopped for a day at Callao, Peru, and made a trip inland to Lima, the capital. There they obtained a number of Incas relics, some of which Cardway values highly. There, also, they found a revolution in progress, and got into the yellow fever zone. Their return was through the Panama canal to Colon and via Jamaica, to New York. A monkey and two parrots that were presented to them in Buenos Aires was included in Uieir return luggage. D'Orey & Company, bankers and steamship agents in Rio de Janeiro, were appointed Packard dealers, and in Buenos Aires a company was form ed to handle the American car. Louis Mitre and his brother, publishers of "La Nacion," the foremost newspaper of Argentina, Carlos Alfredo Turn quist, a banker, and Gustavo Landivar. manufacturer of the famous "43" cigarets, are the chief stockholders in the company. Pedigreed! £.*850 Jydnsf^iAgll£> sg" *985 | :i ; W - II Prices Effective April Nine years of continuous, consist- More than three hundred thou -1?t ' 1017 ent development, improvement, sand owners and more than L . htF refinement! . four thousand dealer and fac- I • Ml: si tsw— —- M'frrasft; P v ' their experience with these cars Big Fours Over three hundred thousand now and their helpful suggestions of Towint. . . tsja in use' improvements. . ~ I;™ Roadster . . fSjj u , -f *1 Coupe ... sl2so .... , , - .ja sedoH .. . si4so That is the history of the car that i: || built Overland because it repre- In their new beauty, in their per-; Light Sixes sented integrity of value. fected easy riding qualities, in gj i tuSIiSZ- l : l?,l . , , f , ~ , their proven sturdiness and S°.Z • ■ • f'rfsl And as steadfastly as this car has mechanical excellence, ;in their I t represented original integrity of admitted tire, fuel and oil | Wiiiys-Six value, so also has The Willys- economy, these cars are worthy lj Touring . . . fwj Overland Company sustained of the confidence we have, that that integrity of value through- they will further enhance.Over- I 1 Willys-Knights • ou t j^ g service in the hands of land prestige. H ' i Four cZpe!liiji those who purchased it. i sj!. Four Sedan. . fioso ■jife EitU The Overland Big Four of this The prices are SBSO for the Big season and its twin —except for Four, $985 for the Light Six, ntdulHlsix £d'ei,. B tia?""It the motor —the Overland Light ' while we have them to deliver account too late to correct adter- Six, are the direct outcome of until May 1st —thereafter $895 ifu all this development. ... and $1025. of April, I The Overland Harris burg 1 Vis ode In U. S. A.'J W; Open Evenings 212 NORTH SECOND ST. Both Phones '''.. n The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio > MaoulLtuieriol XVi^s^ AutomobUce 1J In the short time Cardway was in South America, he cabled to Detroit and brought with him personally or- All Your Hauling MoJml 10, Stahm or Exprmßß a n m rn Dody and Bou> Top All the Time / O/I . _ At Less Cost UL|i THIS is the Republic idea of • Quality—proved by more than 10,000 Republic Inter nal Gear Trucks operating in every State of the Union. With these sturdy trucks goes j § Republic Sizes Republic Dispatch Model 9, max imum capacity 1500 lbs., furnished f "T .''V In express body with can- 'rtf'rtn v |i opy top, side curtains, glass front, j| or express body and bow top, $1195; Model 11, 1 -ton chassis, $1375; Model "A," 2-ton chassis, $1785; Model "T," 3K-ton Dread naught, $2675. . Moa .ir , a Penn Mar Auto Co. Kast J'.nd Mulbcrr> street Bridge, Republic MotorTruck Co., Inc, Aim, Mich. '| —- ' ~ 1 . T?T-rTTT'TV '"... " -.rr-T ■"'. U- .. ~-4 ..... .. TT -I.'. Ijii^ 1 APRIL 14, 191/. ders for 23 Twin Sixes. Ho believes this is an Indication that If American manufacturers In various lines will establish friendly and dignified trade relntlons with South America, a splendid field will be opened to them.