f ) ' Truck and Tractor Show Offers Public Opportunity to Study Modern Machines c.t Close Panae HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH M SIK SJtoc-Independent. TRUCK NUMBER. HARRISBURG, PA. SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 22, 1919. AUTOMOBILE SUPPLEMENT. FIRST ALL TRUCK AND TRACTOR EXHIBIT OPENS IN HARRISBURG MONDAY MORNING INTEREST NOW TURNS FROM PLEASURE CARS TO THE BIG TRUCKS Show Opens in Overland Warerooms Monday Morning at 10 A. M. for Benefit of Work-a-day Folk IMPROVEMENTS ARE SHOWN IN THE MANY NEW WORKING CARS "Out with the pleasure cars, and in with the tractors and trucks" was the sharp order at the tip of J. Clyde Myton's tongue, hinged, as usual light, to make the announcement carry all over the huge Overland plant this evening after the passenger car show was an event of history. Hundreds of extra help were notified to-day to be on the job, for the whole caravan of sedans, limou-j sines and roadsters had to be moved to give way to the; first tractor-truck exhibition ever staged in Harrisburg. j It will run through three days of next week and. while I the passenger car week beat all records it is believed that j agricultural and industrial Pennsylvania will go after | this, as Mr. Myton so aptly puts it. "like a Great Dane; eating cream-putts." Do not asked whether this or that' make is on view. The man who cannot be satisfied with , this display never will shake the clods from his feet. New and Up-to-date Everything about the machines is new and up-to-date. Here are some of the improved features as manifested by a dozen ex-! liihits of _tractors; enclosure of friction parts: weight not over j 4.?00 to e.OOO pounds; drop-forged or rolled-steel gears; accessi bility of parts; price of 51.500 to 52.000 for three-plow machine;! lifting of tractor to local conditions; anti-friction bearings and: vast application of automobile knowledge. Everybody interested in this, the lirst show of its precise kind j here, realizes that transporation and distribution in the future j will be largely by automobile service, thus relieving the short j and long-haul passenger and freight business from tbe railroads.' The motor is no longer an experiment as Uncle Sam evidently ! believes, for he intends to distribute $200,000,000 in the next three i years, in addition to the $66.000,0C0 alreadv provided, among the several States engaged in road building. Each State is to be re-! warded in proportion to its own expenditure on highways. Recognize Need of Good Roads Arc the local dealers aware of this? You bet. and if the Gov- I ernor and legislators responsible for passing the $50,000,000 roads bond were to appear at the show arena they would get an im petuous reception. "Help yourself and I'll help you." says Uncle Sam, who will probably appoint a 1-ederal Commission to insure a high standard of road building and repair everywhere. Contemplating this, the truck dealers are confident of a great demand, perhaps not immediately, but within this year, and factories should be working night and day. In the recent year or so, many producing companies, showing here now, were" on ' 50 to 50 per cent Government work, and they sav that the com pleting of these orders will not at all interfere with* the resumption of normal production. Work to Take on New Life "Contracting of all kinds, soon as the weather settles," declared one manufacturer." will again take new life and here will be a big field for those whb have models Httcd fur this work. But good roads may do more than all, indicating a sure demand for trucks i of all sizes." ■, Taken for granted that the auto truck is firmly and for ever with us, vast interest in the tractor is appar ent at the Overland establishment. Not a stone is being left unturned to accommodate the purchaser, whether farmer or truckman. Diree t'ons to dealers of this wonderful implement remind them they should select a tractor of right design for handling; get a profit-paying dis count; decide to become educators; educate the farmer in care and operation; give prompt service; get pay for service; and lastly, have backbone and common sense." The Old and the New The enterprising squad of sales men at the show appear to have all kinds of common sense, one appeal ing to the purchaser by showing the difference between the old and the new, and the latter do not vary much. They are pretty nearly as uniform in outside appearance as the new model motor truck. Most of the now types have four wheels. They have vertical four-cyl inder engines in front. They have an enclosed cone or disk clutch. They have a gearset that is a unit with the back axle with every gear enclosed. The rear wheels arc driven through a live axle shaft just as in a truck or motor car. It Is true in not a few cases the gearscts are pretty heavy and the gearbox housing the gears Is very bulky, but It is a great tractor improvement to see the gears all housed and oiled as in a motor truck and to And the uliufts carried on roller or liall bearings. The unparalleled record for sales right off the bat in the passenger ear show is taken as sure indication bv tlie Harrisburg dealers that the same will take place at the three days exhibition beginning Monday morning, with trucks and tractors,] to its farewell Friend Horse. RECORD MADE BY ARMLEDER TRUCK Ruh 21 Months With Less Than Fifty Dollars Re pair Bill One of the best records made in truck operation in this vicinity re cently was that made by an Arm ieder Truck and reported to the local distributors for Armleder trucks. The Harrisburg Welding and Machine Company at 98 South Cameron rtreet. The particular truck in question was purchased from the Harrisburg Welding and Machine Oompanv twenty-one months ago and has been in constant operation since covering a distance of more than eighteen thousand miles. It is an express truck and is used in haul ing practically all kinds of materials and in talking to Mr. Hay-ward, the manager of the Harrisburg Welding and Brazing Company he says, "This truck usual 1 hauls considerable overload. Recently it made a trip to Phiadelphia and return in one day and on the road home there was 8,400 pounds which is consider able of an overload. The actual repair work on tills truck has been less than fifty dollars since we sold it and it is in splendid condition to day." ' Armleder trucks are built in two different sizes the two-ton and the three and a half ton models by the Armleder Motor Truck Company of Cincinnati. Ohio. The local dis tributors have been handling these trucks for a couple of years and are enjoying an increasing business One of their specialties is the dump models used in hauling river coal and sand. Several of these trucks are now in operation nnd are prov ing highly satisfactory. The Show Committee That Put Harrisburg on the Automobile Map J CLYDE MYTON*. Mgr. ElgjH ■ j |Q m &&&&&&* ji is X I-'HI ay MM ; I GEORGE G. McFARLAND H. J. WILLIAMS, Treats. ANDREW REDMOND THE DAY OF THE OLD GRAY MARE IS GONE FOR GOOD Enter the Horseless Wagon and the Mighty Truck in Industrial Fields '■O the old grey mare She kicked against the whiffle-tree! "Yes, sir. the old gray mare was a-plenty in those days, some 20 years 1 ago," narrated Andrew Redmond. Har risburg distributor of the Chandler ear and the Vim truck, a pioneer agent for horse-less wagons, as he cocked up a foot inside one of his dossy touring cars at the big show. "And you may give credit _ for the fact that this city now has a' matter of 700 motor trucks to the men who were formerly in the carriage, harness and bicycle business. I We were the fellows who had the vision. I the faith and persistency. Why. I re i member attending the national conven l tion at Terrace Garden in New York, j carriage men. 53 per cent., and all but I two of us were afraid to mention the | word 'automobile.' Orders were given not to print it in the trade journals | for fear the carriage builders would j be offended, also that advertising would j collapse. Upon taking a vote only three j of us opinioned that the motor would 1 replace Dobbin and the old grey mare. I take some pride in recalling that the Harrisburg representative had enough un-horse sense to declare before the assembly: "Figure as you will, gentle men the auto Is coming to stay, and the carriage man. witli his establishment, ids paint, tools, furnace, likewise the bicycle man and the hardware stores, they are the people to handle this new American activity.' "Filled with this determination I came back home, but met with little en couragement. starting out with a piano box Waverly electric, which I converted 'into a truck and which attracted the attention of Herman Astrich. who was finally persuaded to use it for carting millinery. About the same time Harry Dodge embarked in one and we used to stand at Third and Relly to see if he could negotiate it as far as Sixth street. "I did not bother with gas at this time for the explosions were not satis factory and I waited for some standard system to heave in view. Harrisburg simply would not have a heart in the novelty. I put on a one-ton flat bot tomed" electric truck to haul the horse vehicles from freight trains which once unloaded here plentifully; bolted the machine right on to the vehicles, erected a paid of skids and you should have heard the kidding; 'Bats In the belfry, he's got' they yelled, 'selling carriages and hauling them with an auto." "Nevertheless, the wise ones began to take notice and as gas became usable. Quite a few made trucks out of their passenger cars and I believe that the first one I accommodated was Mr. Aber [Continued on l'nge B.] THE TRUCK SHOW AT A GLANCE Allspices—Harrishurg Motor Dealers Association. Manager—J. Clyde My ton. Dates—March 24-25-26. Hours—Monday, Opens 7 I*. M.; Tuesday and Wednesday 10.00 A. M. to 10.00 I\ M. Place—Overland-Harrisbnrg Company Wareroonis, 20tli and Derry Streets. Accessory Exhibits Included. Music—Municipal Orchestra. Special Exhibits—Army Tank, Aeroplanes, Liberty and Kotary Motors. Admission, 50 cents which includes war tax. Any Paxtang or Hununelstown Car takes you to 26tli and Derry Streets. GENERAL USE FOUND FOR BIG TRACTORS Clod Busters Have It on the Cloud Busters For Bringing in Returns on Investment 1 1 Talk about cloud-busters, those I nervy lads who flip and flop up in the air ten thousand feet, well, they are exciting, but have you ever seen ; Shirley B. Watts at his steady job iof clod-busting, busting the placid t earth'with a tractor, the animal which I Is going to make America the gar ' den spot of the world! An humble j employe of the llarrisburg Automo ; bile Company, at Third and Kelker J streets, Mr. Watts took it upon him- I self only one year ago, so young a monster is the tractor in these parts, to become closely acquainted with this demon of the soil and last Spring saw him ploughing up war gardens for the citizens. It was I only a teaser. The tractor will be a cynosure for thousands at the auto show, beginning Monday at 10 a. ni. Those long wide spaces will be given up to myriad styles of trucks and tractors which have proven their value and only wait now to be gath j ered in by the ambitious public. Armed with Cleveland and Bee | man tractors, Demonstrator Watts ! will have plenty of company, for all i the big manufacturers are on ex ; hibit at the show, but it is Harris | burg judgment that he will hold his I own, having drummed through the i Susquehanna and surmounted the coal • pile of the Harrisburg Power and Bight plant. What tractors mean is a big topic and the best way for an amateur to learn something Is by concentrating on one person who knows the facts. I Mr. Watts does not mind telling ' that he is but an amateur; the first I companies to inject the tractor in ■ this section were the Frlck Com pany. Huber and International. The beginning saw big clumsy four wheeled affairs and builders soon ! discovered they must produce some thing smaller and more economical. | Only about two years ago Rollin 1 White discovered the animal which • met all requirements, and thus we I have a Cleveland caterpillar. S feet I by 4 V", capable of turning on a ten | cent piece, or thereabout. "What can these tractors do?" grinned Mr. Watts. "Why, plough, harrow, cultivate, plant, haul; any thing and everything. On ordinary soil they will average 5 acres a day; on some soil 10 acres. The con sumption of gasoline is ten gallons, the oil. two quarts. It costs $3.20 to plough five acres, and the -best team of horses that ever kicked can not do more than two acres per day. "What's that, harrowing and seed ing? Why, those demons can cover 35 acres in 10 hours on eleven gallons of gas and two quarts of oil. It takes a mighty good pair of horses to ('.arrow 7 acres in 10 hours. Three teams could barely equal the tractor in ploughing and five in harrowing." "How about home folks, the man with a couple acres?" "Gee whiz! Nothing but cats for this country. Garden tractors have only been with us a year and they've made the greatest hit of any tnoto* machine. We are sending thetji out by the dozen and there are hundreds of inquiries. This Beeman tractor will do as much cultivating in ten hours as two horses; the West got onto this long before the Bast, but she's there now with both feet. The first time we showed these garden tractors here folks called them a toy. 'Too small; too foolish look ing' they criticised. Pretty soon the truck men at Penbrook, Binglestown. Enola and Sniremanstown and all about began to take an interest, espe cially when they were assured that a gallon of gas will run one of these clod-busters for S hours. Buying one for a group is getting common, and the man with 10 or 15 acres finds that he can prepare and culti [Continued on Page 7.} ' I PRODUCTION OF AUTO TRUCKS IS ON THE INCREASE 1919 Will Be Banner Year ol Ever-Growing Industry Now on Peace Basis By Windsor T. White, Chairman Motor Truck Committee, National Autoinob.lo Chamber of Com merce. So great was the demand for mo tor trucks during 1918, that the annual production of American makers increased from almost 45 per cent over the previous year, making 56,410 for the war and more than 175,000 for civilian use as against 160,190, including 16,293 for the war during 1917. While the War Industries Board, to conserve iron and steel required for shipbuilding, railroad work, guns, munitions, etc., required truck manufacturers not to exceed during j the last half of 1918 one-third of their individual production during j 1917 and the first half of 1918 for ; essential civilian uses, the aggregate 1 output for all of last year was large [ ly in excess of that for the preceding j year. This was due principally to the great increase that had occur | red in the first six months. How j large this increase was is indicated by the fact that from January 1 to June 30. 1918, there were produced for civilian purposes 90,917 com mercial vehicles as compared with 109,865 during the twelve preceding months—more than 80 per cent as many in one-half the time. Insistent Demand Production in the last half of last year was, because of the limita tions set by the Board and the in ability of manufacturers to secure, parts and materials, just about the same as during the first six months, the total output of civilian trucks for the year being very close to 175,000. This does not, however, represent the sum total of activity of the industry. In the twenty months from the entrance of the United States in the war to the signing of the armistice, the truck manu facturers accepted contracts for the production of 204,760 military trucks. During 1917 they delivered 16,293 and in 1918 completed 56,- 410 on war contracts up to Decem ber 1. There was an insistent demand for many more civilian trucks than could be supplied last year and there was ample capacity to build them had the materials been avail able. Many of the leading manu facturers were devoting all their facilities to war work, so that they were unable to fill even the urgent demands of city street cleaning de partments, public service companies, [Continued oil Page B.] WAR TRANSPORTATION PROBLEMS SOLVED BY MOTOR TRUCK CORPS Delivered Men and Supplies to Gen. Pershing a Critical Times With x No Delay and at All Times BATTLES WON ON A WAVE OF OIL, BRITISH CABINET TOLD By GEORGE M. GRAHAM Clinirmun, National Motor Truck Committee of National Automobile Chamber of Commerce The story of the motor truck in the war could best be told by someone in the Motor Transport Corps in France. Numerous reports of the work of the trucks abroad have appeared in the newspapers as cabled or written by American correspondents at tached to the armies, but the complete story is yet to appear and doubtless will have to be in the form of a book, as it will be too extensive for publication in newspapers. On this side of tlie walcr wo know 1 1 what lias been done by the Govern ment and the manufacturers to meet the huge requirements of the American Expeditionary Forces for I motor trucks for army transport, but lack intimate knowledge of the tre mendous service rendered by the I thousands of trucks shipped over seas, the varied character of the] work performed by them, the man- ! ner in which they met great emer gencies, the success of the system organized by the Motor Transport Corps for handling them and making ! repairs in short, all the details from j lirst-hand knowledge of the actual I performance of the military trans ] port service in the fighting area. Depended on Traeks We know, of course, that for the first time in history practically all the supplies of food, clothing and ammunition required by the fighting forces were hauled in motor trucks front the supply depots on the rail roads to the front line, that troops were frequently shifted in trains of motor trucks as the most expeditious method, that American reinforce ments reached Chateau Thierry In ! motor trucks at the most critical j period of the advance on the Huns j last July and turned the tide of ] battle that in less than four months i resulted in victory for the Allies and I the United States. Earl Curzon, of the British War j Cabinet, recently remarked in an j address in London that "thp Allies I tloated to victory on a wave of oil j and the war could not have been j won if it had not been for the great i fleets of motor trucks." This is high tribute to the motor truck and was Ino doubt justified. I The Allies and tlie Central Pow- I ers, of course, used many thousand j motor trucks before the United States entered the war. A large proportion of those used by the En tent came from this country. The exact number has not been reported officially, but is reflected in the fig ures of exports published by the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. The total for the four years of the war was 53,175, of an aggregate wholesale value of $152,- | 669,988. It is evident that nearly all of these were bought on order lof the Allied governments for mili- I tary use. since the imports of these j countries from the United States during the two fiscal years preced ing the war aggregated only 400 trucks, valued at $224,309, and also because England and France pro hibited the importation of motor ve hicles for civilian use. During the war there was also a notable in •>ase of shipments of trucks to Canada, Scotlund, Greece, Japan, Australia, New .Zealand and British India, and while this increase was due in large part to tho inability of England, France and Italy to ex port trucks to these countries, there is no doubt that some of the trucks exported to them from this country found their way into the war area while many more were used directly and indirectly in war work in the countries to which they were ship ped. Big Orders Placed From the time the United States I entered the conflict—April 6, 1917 ;to the cessation of hostilities. No jvember 11, 1918, the War and Navy. Departments placed contracts and orders for 204.760 rtiotor trucks, of I which 90,727 had been produced to December 1, 1918 and 36.227 were I still due on orders that had not been cancelled. A statement by the sta-' tlstics branch of the general staff shows that by November 11 there | had been produced on War Depart- i ment contracts a total of 83,330 ] motor trucks, including 55,563 two- 1 wheel drive trucks, 16,934 four-1 wheel-drive trucks, and 10.893 am-! bulances. Of these there had been] shipped overseas 30,417 two-wheel-' drive and 9,4 20 four-wheel-drive trucks and 6,981 ambulances, a total ! of 46,818. A considerable number huve been shipped overseas since. the middle of November. In the neighborhood of 9.000 or! 10,000 trucks are in use by the mill- ! tary establishment in this country, at camps, cantonments, forts and so on. Remarkable Growth What the motor truck industry undertook and actually accomplish ed for the army will be better under stood and appreciated when it is re called that the whole production of commercial motor vehicles in 1914 the last ante-bellum year—was re ported by the Bureau of the Census as only 25,375, valued at $45,098,464, or less than half the production of war trucks alone during the year just closed—s6,4lo. But trucks for the army and navy were not the only contribution of the industry to war activities. In addition to the military trucks there were' produced last year, .162.646 commercial VeMeles., /essential civilian use, the majority required by plants engaged on war orders; by farmers, commission merchants, wholesale grocers and others for hauling farm produce and manu factured foods; by textile mills and clothing factories; by contractors and innumerable other industrial and commercial enterprises neces sary to successful conduct of the war or welfare of the people. Thus, in four years the industrv increased its output eight fold to meet the demands of war time ac tivities of the nation. It is impos sible to place any estimate on the value of this contribution to the winning of the war. From every quarter came demands to speed up production of foodstuffs, munitions, I clothing and the thousand and one necessaries of military and naval ! operations and civilian support, heal iand comfort. At the same time the man power of the country was great ,ly depleted through the draft, sus i pension of immigration and the ex lodus of many thousand naturalized citizens and aliens to fight for the countries of their birth. To a con siderable extent the employment of .motor truck compensated for this loss of man power and relieved the railroads of the congestion of freight. | along their lines and at terminals which became highly critical last winter. The motor truck also enabled manufacturers and merchants lo make shipments often to distances of 100 miles or more at times when embargoes had been declared against freight and express ship ments by rail or when there was no certainty how long such ship ments would be en route. Not in frequently a hurry shipment by motor truck obviated the necessity of a temporary suspension of some department of a big factory. Back to Business All restrictions on new construc tion were removed by the War Board by the end of "the year and the industry is now free to proceed without any governmental control, A careful canvass of the plans for 1919 show a scheduled output of about 350,000 commercial motor vehicles. Some companies are still working to complete army contracts but the ending of the war releases a production capacity of about 76,- 000 trucks a year that was devoted last year to manufacture of mili tary trucks. With the war over, the industry is now turning its back on thoughts of its war efforts and devoting all its stimulated activity to getting back on a peace basis, with everv prospect of being among the first of the big industries of the country to recover. HAKRISBURG TO. ALTOONA, VIA NKWPOHT 0.0 HARBISBURG ....140.0 8.4 Dauphin 14. Clarks Ferry 26.4 Newport 32.0 Millerstown 108.0 37.0.... Thompsontown ....103.0 47.0 Mifflintown 93.0 58. Lewlstown 81.3 64.4 Reedsville 75 6 73.0 Belleville 67.0 79.7 Allensvllle 60.3 95.3 Huntingdon 44.7 103. Alexandria 36.5 106.3 Water Street 33.7 116.7 Birmingham 23.3 122.2 Tyrone 17.8 124. Graalerville 15.2 130.0 Beilwood 10.0 133,0 l'lnecroft 7.0 136. Juniata 3 1 140.0 ALTOONA 0.0