GERMANS FIGHT FIENDISH WAR Ambassador Pcnficltl De clares Kaiser's Armies Are "Nature Murderers" New York, May 19. Frederick Courtland Penfleld, ambassador to Austria-Hungary, who left Vienna a month ago after the breaking of dip lomatic relations between that coun try and the United States and reach ed New York Thursday, gave out a statement with regard to his person al observations in the zone of North ern France evacuated by the Ger mans. The trip, which took him up to the very firing line, was made about two weeks ago. Mr. Pentield character ized the behavior of the German sol diers against the population as "bar barity and fiendishness," and their destruction of fruit and shade trees as "systematic murdering of nature." With regard to conditions in the dual monarchy, the ambassador is unable to speak at present, as he has not reached. Washington, but he does not hold out any prospect of immediate collapse. Chalmers Driven 603 Miles in City Traffic Under conditions that were un favorable, Paul Gee. Chalmers dis tributor at Grand Rapids, recently drove a Chalmers seven-passenger touring car 803 miles in and around Grand Rapids in twenty-four hours. The car was locked In against low and intermediate speeds, giving the driver access only to high and re verse gears. Gee's run was remarkable. Three newspapermen. American Automo bile Association representatives, checked all the details. An official stamp was placed on the seal bind ing the gears and the gasoline tank was filled and sealed. The start was made from the Chalmers service sta tion in Grand Rapids. No set course was followed, • the car plunging through the heavy traffic up the heavy grades of the city lind through the heavy going of the outskirts. Paul Carlton, a Chalmers salesman, relieved Gee at the wheel and dur ing the major part of the afternoon and evening four other persons were passengers. At 8 p. m., the day of the race a stop was made for gasoline and checked. All through a heavy down pour of rain, so tierce at times that the driver could not see the road and was forced to stop, the contest con tinued. Gee and Carlton were wet to the skin, but they hung tenaciously to their work and again at 8 a. m. more gasoline was taken. About noon it was evident that a great Chalmers performance had been made, and at 1.50 p. m. as the car poked its nose in the garage, the speedometer show ed to the newspapermen that the motor had traveled 603 miles. Dur- that time t}ie average consump tion of gasoline was 13.2 gallons to the mile. This was low test gas. From every standpoint the run was remarkable. The conditions nil the way were far from ideal. In criss crossing the city locked in high gear, all sorts of impediments to speed were met with. And the heavy going assisted materially in holding down the average. Without the rain and muddy streets and roads the mark of 603 miles would easily have been bettered. This test, which is exclusive high gear driving, is most severe on the dutch and back axle parts of the ear. It -was a convincing test of Chalmers endurance. Testers Will Make Ideal Aviators For War Purposes TVhen the United States is ready to wage spectacular warfare in the air the men who have served as automo bile testers will be at the wheels of Uncle Sffm's aeroplanes. This is the opinion of George M. Dickson, president of the National Motor Car and Vehicle Company, ot Indianapolis, under whose supervi sion many "testers" have developed I into world famous automobile race j drivers, including Johnny Aitken. the j 1916 speedway champion. Dickson i says that there are great possibilities I in connection with the Indianapolis j speedway which, at the declaration of war, was closed to automobile racing and offered to the government as a training camp for military aviators. "Indianapolis is the logical place for the establishment of a school for the development of army flyers," said Dickson. "Not only is it centrally lo cated, but the speedway is ideal for aviation purposes with a field already laid out and hangers built and in the automobile factories of the city there are at least two thousand men who have the courage and motor knowl edge that qualifies them for flying. "These two thousand men are test ers or former testers. Although the day of the tester is passing and his work now is largely done by dyna mometer. there are about one hun dred on the job in Indianapolis at the present time. The others have left the stripped chassis. A few of them have become race drivers or mechan icians. The majority are classed as skilled automobile mechanics in mo torcar plants. "Here are two thousand men of proven courage and daring, who have, driven cars at high speed- through the mud and around the speedwdy at a dizzying clip. And iiteel nerve Is not their only asset. They know a gaso-. line motor, how to make and repair one. They possess a wonderful con ception of distance and speed, a knowledge that all aviators must have. "If a military aviation school is established in Indianapolis x don't think that you .will And many slack ers among this adventuresome two thousand. I am told that there are about one hundred men In the national plant alone who are ready to enlist In the aviation corps, provided the government gives them an opportu nity to learn to fly at the Indianapolis speedway. Many of them are waiting until an aviation school is established before answering the call to colors, preferring the more spectacular and hazardous air fighting to sea and trench battle and rightly believing that they are especially qualified to handle a warplane." —the efficiency car. More miles Less gasoline— More comfort — Less weight— E. W. Shank ST. SATURDAY EVENING, MOTORCYCLES IMPORTANT "The motorcycle has not only ful filled but exceeded all expectations," says Capt. Louis Keene, an English officer now in the United States on j special detail, who brings with him | the most comprehensive and valuable j fund of information that has so far j reached this country concerning mo- i torcycles in European warfare. Capt. Keene spent two years behind j and in the trenches in France, and during most of the time was in charge of a motorcycle machinegun j battery. That the motorcycle finiis its greatest importance in modern J military tactics as a machinegun unit' is the contention of Capt. Keene. "I do not for a moment wish to be- ! little the great service of the dispatch ' riders, for there are heroes among ! them by the score, but I cannot avoid i the conclusion that in the final analy- j sis It is the motorcycle machinegun • unit that weighs heaviest in the sales ! for victory," he says. "We consider one machinegun equal in fighting j strength to 100 men, and when it is possible to such a weapon j quickly from point to point by means j of the motorcycle, you will under stand that the combination is a won- ! derfully strong one." A surprising bit of news revealed i by Capt. Keene is the fact that more j motorcyclists have been killed so far 1 by the motor lorries of their own I army than by enemy bullets. "Trans- ! port trains have orders to get through | at top speed, regardless of other road-1 Motorcar Pays For Itself in Hands of Busy Man "An automobile owned by an alert and activfc man pays for itself quick- ' ly," says Jno. D. Mansfield, general' sales manager for the Dort Motor- Car Company. "Estimating conser^; 1 vatively, a half hour each day is ' saved the typical businessman | 1 through the use of his cur. Jn the j course of a working year of 312 1 days this means l'.ii hours, or about three weeks of his working time. It is not necessary to remind Mr. Husyperson that a lot can be done in three weeks. "Figure uut what your own time is worth and you realize the import- ] ance of a half hour saved, but go a < little further. Consider the thing i from the standpoint of public wel-'s fare. With three million uutomo- ] biles running in this country, an ag- 1 gregate of one million, five hundred ] thousand hours time is thus saved i each day. "Based upon six day's work of nine j i hours per day, what does it amount j i to when you reduce this gross sav ing of time to actual money value? ] .If the ownership of these three mil- < lion automobiles represented only an j i || You Can Buy a, Cadillac j j j I Eight at Your Price \1 1 1 sKI Not a new Type 55 at $2240 perhaps, but a Type ft 53 or a Type 51 like your neighbor has. |. if | ijN Each year many Cadillac owners, for the sake |S| of having the newest car, ask us to sell the cars they are now running. We take in these Cadillacs and go |I over them carefully, make replacements where es- 1m U sential, repaint them and brighten up the trimmings ugj i ! so they are practically new again. H|j j i A Cadillac, no matter what its age is still a Cad- |g j 185 iliac. It has in it Cadillac design, materialsand o|j j IHI I workmanship—the things which make a motor car Ilg 131 worth while. I Hi ' Come in and see the Cadillac Eight which we | lip offer af your price. I!|j Crispen Motor Car Co. |j 311-315 S. Cameron St. ||| Harrisburg HI! "Crispen Merit Maxims." M |j S S "Crispen's Merit Maxims." Mj fH 1 B PJ J mi L -m I J 1 users^—and they follow these orders. If they run through a motorcycle squad and smash them right and left it is all in the day's work —and the motorcyclist knows it. If a huge motortruck would simply bump a cyclist oft the road and let it go at that, the case , would not be so bad, I but they usually hurl the rider fifteen i or twenty feet ahead on the road and ; then run over him. "Under no conditions can a motor lovrie train stop without orders. Tons of high explosives, or equally precious foodstuff, must go through at any \ cost once they are started. So a very important part of the motorcyclist's work is to keep out of the way. In the early stages of the war I believe the motorcycle sections were allowed to ride pretty close to the front, but it was later found advisable to leave the motors behind when the lads went up for the, fighting." When asked, In the light of his nct.ial experience, what the biggest lesson is that America has to learn concerning the motorcycle in military service, he replied that "motorcycle service in war is not a circus or a carnival, it's a business and a bloody business at that, and you have failed to grasp that idea. You could hardly be expected to understand It for you have not seen blood spilt as yet. "Dispatch riding is now considered rather tame by our boys. They pre fer the machinegun motorcycle serv | ice. as it is there that they get ac- I tion." average income of four dollars a day, six days a week, it amounts in cur rency to about $220,000 a day. Bring ing the argument back to a personal basis, put yourself in the average class and only concede that you save 22 cents worth of time each day through the use of your car. The money that represents would buy nearly 275 gallons of gasoline at 25 cents, or enough to run your Dort more than 5,000 miles. Light Car and Huge Truck Useful in War United States' entrance into the European War has given., a new phase to the discussion among army officers of the part played by Ani erican-madc motor cars in the struggle being waged, in Northern France. It is a well-known fact that the huge armies on both fronts are al most entirely dependent upon motor trucks for their supplies of food and ammunition. A large number of these trucks were manufactured in the United States and it is highly probable that the American overseas forces will be accompanied by the most completely equipped truck di „ =•£ . - • ■ grsf v -■ •. • HA.RRISBURG TELEGRAPH vision which has ever left American! ports. According to the most recent available information, the govern ment has approximately 2,600 heavy duty trucks ready for service. A majority of these were used on the •Mexican border last fall to supply the troops of General Pershing's ex pedition with food, ammunition and water. This precious freight had to be carried by truck trains from Colum bus, N. M„ to Namlqulpa, 284 miles south of the border. And in order that tho officers in command of tno various fleets of trucks might ac company them, approximately 300 Hodge Brothers cars carried them back and forth over what is known ns "the worst road In the world." It was at the latter point that General Pershing received his sup plier by truck trains, each of which was accompanied by a Dodge Broth ers car. South of Columbus, the | cars had to cross alkali flats, which i wero cut into axle deep ruts and fight their way up table lands and' slopes covered with m'esqulte bush, boulders, grease wood and sage brush. Between Columbus, which has an elevation of ,062 feet, and Oasa Grande, whose elevation is 7,- 104 feet, there are numerous moun tain ranges which had to be crossed. ■ Soon the roads, became so badly cut that the drivers of the cars were forced to take to the brush and smash their way through as beat they could. How the Dodge Brothers motor car withstood the test and enabled the army to keep on the jump is in-i dicated in a typical experience of Edward Ruoff, of Grand Rapids,: Michigan. Mr. Kuoff drove a Dodge Brothers car for Generals Kirk and Covlll. In thrtee days less tJian eight months the car covered 17,521 miles —more than the averafe car travels in two years' service. During the entire period the gasoline consumption averaged between 16 and 17 miles per gallon. while the repairs amounted to $1.35. There are scores of instances even more un usual than this and as a whole the record of the Dodge Brothers motor car on the Mexican border is a note worthy tribute to the builders. Many Touring Parties to Western Coast i If inquiries received by Don Lee, Cadillac dealer at San Francisco, are an indication, the coming summer will be a big season for motpr tour ing to the Pacific Coast. Mr. Lee reports thqit he is in daily 1 receipt of letters asking information about the roads of California. Judg ing by the inquiries ttie early travel ers will take the Old Trails High way, but those who start in June will favor the Lincoln Highway. Each year the number who travel to the coast by one route and return by another is increasing. In this way the motorist usually makes the run between San Francisco and Los Angeles, with a chance to visit the Yosemite on the way south and see the Lake Tahoe country on the trip over the Sierras. "'So many Cadillac owners made the trip last year," says Mr. Lee, "that the arrival of a car from New York or Chicago was no longer a matter of notice. Last season it got to be almost a daily occurrence in our garages about the State. One | afternoon in Los Angeles, four trans-continental Cadillacs camej into the garage within two hours. | This year should see more eastern ers in California than ever before."' HUPMOBILE Touring Cars With Elec tric Lights and Starters S4OO a u n p d We Have Given Up the Agency Ensminger Motor Co. Green and Cumberland Sts. Duplex Truck a Success in Road Building Duplex 4-Wheel Drive- Motor Trucks ara playing an important role In- the construction of roads in various sections of the United States, according to reports which are being received by H. M. Lee, president of the Duplex Truck Company of Lansing, Michigan. County road' commissioners In several States have declared in let ters to Mr. Lee that the cost of operation of Duplex trucks has been so low, in comparison to teams of horses and mules, that the saving effected has been sufficient to cover the cost of the trucks. W. J. Sutcliffe, Duplex distributor in Waterloo, la., asserts that u Du plex truck gave a remarkable dem onstration recently and out-per formed a big' tractor which was be ing used In road bunding work. Mr. Sut6liffe's letter follows: "We surprised the natives a little yesterday when we went out and hitched onto a road leveler that was here giving the county commission ers a demonstration. They were spur T prised when they unhitched their 40-60 tractor that was going along at a snail's pace, and we substituted the Duplex. In a mile traveled we gained a quarter of a mile on the r PHK moat ronvlnilnir >nil ///tUP I 1 ■ntlufnctory proof of the ///THE USED CAR)] / VvOF QUALITYyy "v h „ UKh , , rom / will ntavid every teat you #OO I'SRD CAR* ON OL'R 9ALE9FLOORS 1916 WHITE 4-passenger; like new; 1917 STEARNB-KNIOHT 8-cylln plendld equipment; a ansp. der Touring; beautiful shape; new 191(1 MEHCKR 4-ps**enger Sport*- tires; bargain, men model, wire wheels. 2 extra. 191H OAKLAND SIX Touring; tip -1917 CHANDLER Tourlni: shows no ton condition. wesr whatever; extra tlrea. 1916 REG 4-cylinder Touring; like 1917 BUICK six-cylinder Touring:, new $550 LM.V tip-top condition; *np 1917 PULLMAN Tonrlna: run only covers. 1500 miles: lots of extras. 1917 SI PF.R-SIX HUDSON Road- 1910 CADILLAC 8-cylinder Touring; Mer: A-l condition; a bsralii. 7psHHenKerß. 1*17 BTI DEHAKER Tourln*; four- 1910 VEI.IE SIX Touriug; fine cylinder: 7-pasaenger: splendid shape $5?0 mechanical condition. 101H OVERLAND Touring: 83 model $375 1917 OVERLAND q-cylinder Tour- 1910 BTI TZ Touring; 4-passeiiuer; > in*. A-l condition; fully equip- A-1 condition; stin covers, t>sr ped; low pries. enln. 1917 DODGE Touring: run on'y 1916 RRIBCOB 4-cylinder Touring: HOC mile*.: 1 extra tire; bargain. splendid light car #3TS IDte OLDSMOBILE 8-cylinder OW- MAXWELL Touring: 80-H. i\ ; In* $775 equipped $225 191(1 Touring: starter and 1910 CHEVROLET Touring; baby lights $573 grand. 1917 CHALMERS Uaht Six Tour- 1910 JEFFERY Four Touring; eaual In*: equal" to new; tip-too con- to new; full factory equipped; dltlin. bargain. 1917 PAIGE 6-cyllnder Touring; 1910 Maxwell Touring cars and mechanically perfect: wire wheels; roadster*, a* low a" S3OO slip covers. 1910 OVERLAND Roadster; equlp -1910 HI PMOBILE Touring; excel- ned $350 lent condition• new tlrea $625 1910 SfRIPPS ROOTII Roadster; 1910 CHANDLER. 0-cylindcr Tour- run only 2200 miles SSOO ing: nerfect shspe. 1910 BTEARNS-KNIOHT 4-cylln -1910 GRANT C-cyllndcr Touring; der Touring; fullv equipped .... $625 eoulnped $425 1916 DODGE Roadster; equal to 1910 SAXON SIX Touring: A-1 new. shape. njT 20 Roadster: A-l condition.. $175 \ Agent* \ Ope* *nday B |\ AV " n< ' d ' ( Reliable Automobile Co. 94 ® *• I \ (all that the name Impllea) 1 Write For I X __ _ _ _ I Free Bargain I 249-251 N. Broad St., - - The Studebaker What You Get fo WHEN you buy a Studebaker SIX, you get baker to offer so good a carat so low a price, the best work of one of the largest auto- ... fc . ~ , . ~ . . . mobile manufacturers in the industry. The quality of Studebaker cars is evident in their nmsh and equipment. You get a car which has been perfected by four ~ , , ~ , . i years' experience with the same basic design. Studebak . er bo^ s are obviously substantial in Each year improvements and refinements have construct on. The crowned fenders are of heavy made it a still better car. gauge steel. These improvements and refinements are based Th 1 e f aint and varni , sh work " excellent. The on the experience of 800,000 Studebaker cars in u P h ? lster y } s n , ot only genuine leather, but high the hands of owners in all parts of the world Rrade B enuine leather. Ihe cushions are soft and / comfortable. The auxiliary seats are folding The Studebaker SIX is not an experiment—it is armchairs. The front seats are adjustable, and an evolution. the right hand one reversible. The Studebaker SIX is made of carefully selected But the real proof of quality is durability, materials developed, perfected and tested in the Studebaker cars stand up and give long, contin great Studebaker laboratories. uous service under the hardest usage. The workmanship in Studebaker cars is experi- Studebaker cars are guaranteed by the manufac enced, painstaking and carefully supervised. The turer for one year against defective workmanship inspections are rigid and exacting in the extreme. and material. When you buy a Studebaker What is true of the Studebaker SIX is also true you get pro Y ed P ro ? ed economy and the of the Studebaker FOUR. Both cars are of the uarante e of a great manufacturer, same basic design. Many of their parts are inter- Let us demonstrate to you the many points of changeable that is why it is possible for Stude- Studebaker quality and economy. ™ DRISCOLL AUTO CO FOUR Tourinu Car att A-'VV/JUij IM.\J AV/ VV/* SIX Landau Roadster . . 13M FOUR Landau Roadster .* 1150 *{* ££?■ S * dan \* • g FOUR Every-Weather Car 1185 147 S. C&lIlGrOll St. SIX Limousine. '. *. ! 26M All prices /, o. b Detroit AUpricmf. k Drtnit tractor, trailing along behind the Duplex. "The supervisors tried to stall the Duplex by getting onto the end of the leveler's blades and shoving them down Into the ground. This leveler has two blades of twenty* four feet each. While we were obliged to go into low gear on sev eral occasions when they rammod the blades down Into the sod they were unable to stall the Duplex and to-day all of the spectators who wit nessed the stunt are busy helping us advertise tho Duplex." Thomas .H. Hlizzard, one of the Ingham county, Michigan, road com missioners, says that two Duplex truoks have been used by the com missioners in the hardest kind of service. Mr. Blizzard says: "We can cheerfully recommend the Duplex as being a success In the road construction work. Further more, can say that it more than paid for itself tho ilrst season In saving over the same work done with teams besides doing the work faster and when we wante^^t. "The second purchased the first of July, equally satis factory and Is In first-class condi tion. "We have proven that the trucks can bo operated anywhere that teams can be used and take tho place of from seven to # ten teorns "MAY 19,1917. on a haul of live or more miles round trip. "The best evidence 1 can give you of our satisfaction with the Duplex truck is that we expect to Install the third truck this spring, and do near ly all our work with this fleet of trucks." PAPER MOVIE FILMS AM) MOTOR-DRIVEN CAMERAS Paper lilins are among the latest inventions in the motion-picture in dustry, according to the Popular Me chanics Magazine. They are really not films at all, but are composed of Satisfied Owners Endorse The Jeffery Six . Jeffery Six combines dependability, power and comfort Consequently the nation's list of sat isfied Jeffery owners is steadily growing. The Jeffery Six Motor, S3 horsepower, insures all the power and speed you can use. It accel erates on high gear from two to sixty miles per hour,without effort The straight lines of the Hammock-slung body have found wide favor. Both tonneau and driving compartment are comfortably large, accommodating seven passengers. You'll find this car exceptionally strong value at *1465. Bentz-Landis Auto Co. 1808 Logan Street i ■ , r . m liny photographs taken with a mo tion-picture camera and printed on a tough photographic paper the width of the regular celluloid film, with the usual perforations along j the edges. Those paper substitutes (ire especially adapted for use In the home or school, both because they are non-explosive and because their cost is so much less than that of transparent films. A special pro jector is employed in displaying them. The same Inventor has also brought out a motion picture cam era for amateurs, which can be us|pd without a tripod. 11