10 FALSE ECONOMY BRINGS DISASTER Vi re-President Morse,of Glial' mcrs. Says "Conduct Your Business as Usual" The worst thing that could happen to the world right now would be a business depression in the United States. With the country unpros perous, with business dull, money tight, either through fear or false economy, would be a calamity. War in itself docs not cause busi ness depression. Billions of dollars have been appropriated by Congress for war preparations. This great sum of money, put into immediate circulation in this country, will create new wealth for use in the world-struggle for humanity. It would be a tremendous error to halt business now through an un patriotic feeling of panic and a mis taken idea of patriotic economy. Patriotic economy calls upon all to eliminate waste and extravagance. It demands that we conserve our food products, and our natural wealth. It also demands that we guard our health, our energies, our labor, out very lives; that we should put more efficiency in everything we do. our President, in his inspired war message to the people said: "It is very evident to every thinking man that our industries, on the farm, in the shipyard, in the mines, in the factories, must be made more prolific and more efficient. The way to accomplish this Is for the people to buy and use the mer chandise produced. Business cannot grow and remain healthful unless the whole people buy as usual and keep money in circulation. America will show the world that a war built on the principles of righteousness and freedom need not impoverish the people or stop the wheels of industry. America will prove that prosperity can go hand in hand with war when ■waged with clear-headed intelligence. The American people will continue They stand ' hard wear / There is no luck in the unusual service / wf rendered to motorists by Lee Tires. / [/ //// Remarkable service-yielding qualities are // > built into them. // // The carcass, the tread, the side walls— / j all are made so that the finished tire will //• j afford the greatest possible resistance to f ! unusual wear and tear. j / The fabric is so uniformly wrapped that j ) \I/Z/// each ply has even tension, thus adding I / /Z/ / 7 materially to the strength of the tire. The /' / , rubber and fabric are so unified that it is f // almost impossible to separate the tread from / j" //''' the carcass. / i! Lee Tires are made in plain and non- / / skid treads in all sizes, regular and puncture- / fj/j proof construction. / jit y' tot? And Lee Puncture Proof Tire* are guaranteed lor j I I rUf//.'! f/h rJZnr/tf 5000 miles of service and guaranteed puncture • // <1 / Ifw proof for every mile of it. j Ij !j V ' COHEN'S Sporting Goods Department I 431 MARKET STREET SATURDAY EVENING, to need food and clothing. They will not give up the luxuries of life. They will continue to buy motor cars and stocks. Theaters and baseball and other amusements will go on. All these must be supplied, as well as lighting men, and supplies for the lighting men. | In doing his bit to help, every in . dividual should labor, more now I than has been his custom, in every line of industrial endeavor. The | greater tax of labor imposed upon us by the unusual conditions of the , present hour necessitates a greater activity and greater efficiency on the part of every individual in order to l meet these extraordinary conditions. I Caution is warranted, but we should j buy goods and lead the lives we have been accustomed to. Factories must | be kept going to their full capacity. I Labor must be kept employed. Our > I homes must be kept up. We must I cheerfully pay war duties in addi- I tion to usual peace duties and ex ] penditures. In doing our bit, every one of us ' should buy up to the limit of our ! ability, to the end that money shall | be kept in circulation. Let us take as our slogan and j spread this slogan everywhere, for j our own good, for the country's I good, for the world's good, "Business I as Usual." J Velie Used to Save Business Records at Fires In Los Angeles there is an organ ization called the "Merchants Fire I Dispatch." They have four Velie j cars which are kept in constant * readiness to go day or night. The cars are first to a fire when I the alarm sounds. They offer early I aid with hand extinguishers and I smothering blankets, but if the blaze | looks serious and the owner Is home, j his 'phone rings and the Velie car is jat his door almost before he can j draw on his clothes. Then there Is a mad dash back to the fire with the man who best of all | can accomplish or direct the saving ; of valuable papers, books or other ; records. Mr. Coates, manager of the ! service said, "In practically every | fire of any consequence during the j past twelve years, some of our Velie i cars have been the means of saving | thousands of dollars of property." A new Velie Biltwell Six was added to I the fleet a few days ago. Beaten by Hudson Super- Six, Mexican Buys One "General Jose Lechuga, million aire sportsman of Mexico City, ven tured an opinion that he had to un derwrite at $20,000 during the April motor racing carnival at La Condesa track," said L. H. Hagerling. "The general bet $20,000 on his ! Fiat against the Hudson Super Six independent entry, backed by Phi!- ' lippa Lauria. The Super Six a week previous had cast a tire hi the fourth | 1 lap of a 30-lap race, and running on j the naked rim retained the lead until : the last lap when an accident forced jlt from the race. The bet resulted. ] The following Saturday the Super j Six and Fiat were entered In a race | with a Packard, Peerless, Lancia and ! a I-llspano Suiza. Amaury Million I drove the Super Six. He won in 51 1 minutes. 17 3-5 seconds. The Fiat was second in 5 4 minutes and 29 sec onds. "With the same dip of the pen lliat General Lechuga used to scribble j his check for $20,000 he wrote an | order for a Hudson Super Six. I " 'Difference of opinion makes horse racing, motor racing and raar . riage possible,' he wrote. 'But here- I after my difference of opinion won't be opposed to the backer of a Hud ' son Super Six.' " Courthouse Notes Mile Radiokovlc yesterday brought a $5,000 damage suit against Mita Vovunovie, of Steelton, alleging the defendant sought to alienate his wife's affections. Wiekershani and Metzger field the papers. ! Alleging she was permanently In | jured as a result of an accident at Sixth and Cumberland streets, last December, Jennie Bower, through her attorneys, Walter R. Sohn and Thompson S. Martin, brought a $5,000 damage suit against M. Brenner & Sons. The account of George H. Calvert, receiver of the Columbia Savings and Trust Company, Pittsburgh, was con firmed finally by Additional Law Judge S. J. M. McCarrell. WANTS DAUGHTER I Nick Besantis, of 1016 Hemlock street, last evening asked the police 'to help locate his four-year-old 1 daughter, Tresa. Nick's wife and ] daughter left at the same time and although he isn't so particular about the wife lie is very anxious to have j his daughter returned. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH USE STOCK STUFF, j ECONOMY RUN TIP Economy Dealers Get Sur prise in Secret Advice on Big Go "Do not change any of the regu lar factory equipment or adjust ments in the stock Maxwell car and you will be certain of the greatest measure of success." This injunction is the paramount note in a list of instructions for 2,- 000 or more Maxwell dealers who next month are to travel over roads j everywhere In the United States and Canada in a national proof demon stration of Maxwell upkeep econo my, participating in a contest for $5,000 in cash prizes, with a silver and gold championship cup, to be awarded by the Maxwell Motor Sales corporation. The event is to be known as the National Maxwell Gas oline Economy Proof day. The Instructions were prepared by Ray F. McNamara, the famous Max well road engineer and the world's most experienced motor car pilot. In his advice McNamara, who has driven over 700,000 miles at the wheel, lets loose a series of helps that are educational in value for mo torists generally and of such sur prising nature, considering the ex perience they are based on, that the Maxwell company plans to put his deductions into booklet form and distribute them to automobile own ers everywhere. "Do not change a thing in the stock cars as you borrow them from their owners for your run," McNa mara points out in his instruction sheet. "See that you have a fair compression in each cylinder, use a speed of 15 miles an hour, don't tamper with anything the factory has put into the regular stock car, and you will be certain of about 30 miles from your one gallon of fuel. With practice on your course and careful driving you can do anything from 30 to 45 miles per gallon. "Do not make your run with high test gasoline. The stock Maxwell motor is engineered to run best on ordinary gasoline bought at the street filling stations. High-test gas -rives more power but less mileage. Do not change the factory dash ad justments in the least. Contrary to theories, too, lean a mixture cuts down from two to four miles on the gallon. "By all means do not tamper with the regular Maxwell carbuetor. Keave the float level and the needle taper exactly as the factory engi neers have made them. Do not' change the valve timing and do not attempt to change the valve setting. If the car has been run 3,000 miles or more you need not grind the valves. Carbon deposit will not af fect your mileage either way. "Be assured that I have made gasoline economy demonstrations with Maxwells in every part of the United States, with my record to date being 45.6 miles on one gallon, and I have yet to discover a way in which I could improve upon what our engineers have given the regu lar stock car. I have tried to bet ter them, but have lost mileage In every instance. Stick to the regu lar stuff and any owner's Maxwell will do the rest." McNamara's instructions were sent to Detroit from Los Angeles. In the contest demonstration upward of 5,000 Maxwells will participate, each mount being an owner's machine. Each of the dealers entering is re quired to run two owners' cars to gether over the same route, with three official observers in each car. THEYKNOWTHEIR COUNTRY NEEDS 11 THEM 11! 1 111 mil nun m II 111 HF PUff * nn HP Igllr sm & B. FRANKLIN ETTER B. Franklin Etter, son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Etter, 209 Fine street, a member of the senior class at Princeton University will leave with the Princeton Ambulance Unit for the French front on May 26. He is 22 years old and is well known in this city. He is a graduate of the Harrisburg Academy. EVAN J. MILI.ER Evan J. Miller, son of Herman P. Miller, librarian of the State Sen ate, a member, of the senior class at Princeton, expects to leave for the French front in a short time with the Medical Reserve Corps organized at the Post Graduate Hospital, New Vor'K CUy. Permanence an Important Factor to Car Buyers "Prospective buyers of motor cars; could see a fine object lesson in what industrial stability means if they were to go Into the offlce of Howard A. Matthews, treasurer of the Jack son Motor Car Company, at Jack son, Mich.," says P. H. Keboch, Jackson representative. "On the wall he has a large sheet j upon which Is printed the names of, the motor companies which have! been formed, built cars and died! during the 15 years Jackson cars; have been on the market. There are j just 241 of them. And as you go I down the list every letter in the alphabet is represented except UI and X. "These cars now bear the title of! 'orphans.' And there are to-day | thousands of them running around\ giving very good service. But when; anything happens to one of them it j is then that the owner learns the value of permanency in the motor in-! dustry. Ho has to go around here and there looking for a part because there is no dealer, no salesroom, noI service station. "It is possible to get a spare part! somewhere. But when he finds out where the place is he has to send on for it. Then there is the long wait ; and the uncertainty as to whether or not he can get it. It is sent him C. O. D. Here comes the awakening. The price he has to pay may be much more than he expected. "He has very little choice. If he refuses to accept it his car is tied up. So he generally takes the part. Then he puts it in and right away j he tries to sell the car so he can get j one that is not an orphan. Here again he has to learn another lesson. The car gives fine service; it looks! good and is apparently all right. "However, no one seems to want it. Ordinarily it is worth as much as any other used car of its power and size in the owner's mind. But i not so the dealer. The price ho is offered for it gives him chills. It is a very effective lesson to such buyers, and so the next car they get is one that is not likely to become an orphan. "That is why the buyer of a Jack son Eight to-day gets real value for his money. He is sure of a cashing in value just like that of a life in surance policy. The Jackson com pany is a permanent organization that has lived through panics and near panics and kept right on mak ing cars for the last fifteen years, and is going to continue doing so. The company has built models to meet the public demand so that they are popular everywhere. And a Jack son Eight owner is a satisfied motor ist who need never fear that the value of his car is going to drop 90 per cent, over night through the makers going out of business." ■ The Studebaker From the Standpoint I • IF ECONOMY is to be your consideration from roads, day in and day out, at the least possible now on, especially in the purchase of your maintenance and repair expense, motor car, you should by all means investi- j n the metropolitan cities where style is a factor, gate the Studebaker SIX from that standpoint. there are thousands of Studebakers in daily use. Where people know cars, at all probabilities they j n rat j o to poW er, the Studebaker SIX is most buy that car in greatest numbers which gives economical in gasoline consumption. them the greatest value for their money. T •*. i • *.. J In ratio to carrying capacity, its light weight j therefore, in Detroit, where 80% of all cars are and perfect balance make it most economical in made, where people know cars, the official regis- tires —Studebaker owners frequently get from ' trations show that there are more Studebakers 8,000 to 10,000 miles on a single set of tires. in use than any other car costing over SSOO. ~ , ~ ... x , . 3 , Studied accessibility reduces inspection, adjust- I Where people prove motor car value and quahty ment an( i repa j r costs to a minimum. by the continuous test of twelve months in the ~. , .. . . , . . , year service, they probably buy in greatest Therefore, if economy is to be your watckword. numbers that car which stands up and gives a Studebaker. the service. Buy it as an investment —not as an expenditure. Therefore, in California, Washington, Oregon and If you want to sell it, or trade it in, it will bring the Rocky Mountain States, there are more a higher re-sale price in ratio to first cost, than Studebakers in use than any other car costing most other cars. over SSOO. The Studebaker SIX is the best work of a great In the far West, people prove motor car value manufacturing organization; it bears a great and quality, they test it out, twelve months in name, it carries a splendid reputation, and it is the year, on the longest, hardest, hilliest drives protected by a year's guarantee against defective in the United States. material and workmanship. The careful, keen, shrewd buyers in the great Come in and let us show you, point by points Middle Western farming states use Studebaker the quality features of this car, the features that cars because they have found that Studebakers make it one of the Dest* automobile "buys" in give consistent service on the rough country the world. -■sr —•„ DRISCOLL AUTO CO sssST.TTia FOUR Touring Car . . 985 V/XIV I V VV/t SIX Landau Roadster , . 135* FOUR Landau Roadster . 1150 Jouring Sedan . . 17M FOUR Every-Weather Car 1185 147 S. Cameron St. lixLimSUie: : : : •! AU fincttf. o. b. Detroit AUpricaf. * *. DrtrtH if! ' ill j gjjl| and had decided to buy a new cheap car. For | S| tunately I stopped in here where I found my j | I jjjll money would buy twice as much." aj 111 I ! | |g|M This is what a buyer said in our exchanged AHi j | g§|W department yesterday. But he did not buy 'H m l] 1 Sir an ordinary used-car. He bought a Crispen .53 = j |g| MERIT Car which was known to be worth H \\ I jglft "twice as much." ||| if I g| A cheap automobile is a cheap automobile. It is intended to be sold at a low price and it I |BH; must be made accordingly. A Crispen I !g MERIT Car is a high-grade car, high-grade M _ | 1 H " design, materials, workmanship which has *} | | iSH had a year or two's use. You can buy it at is I 1 ggjß your price. It is high-grade. I jj iS Crispen MERIT Cars are known to be re- Pr liable and will give more actual service and (J - | 1 IB satisfaction than any new car which could be | 1 jgit bought at the same price. |j 1 i .. jM We have some particularly good ones on $ I I our floor now; overhauled, repainted and M 1 | "!jN ready for the road —and one can be bought at W 1 1 the price you wish to pay. d | Stop in to-day or to-morrow and talk it I I I Crispen Motor Car Co. j 11 j§! 311-315 S. Cameron St. 111 Harrisburg | lj -: |S Send a post card for 'M Hi B "Crispen's Merit Maxims." |j MAY 12,1917.