10 automobile NEWS AUTOMOBILE SECTION SAm " 5 ADVERTISING ALFRED P. DAVIES, Auto Editor 10-11-12-13 t=== ===r- MILLER AUTO CO. MOVES OFFICES Occupies Temporary Offices in New Location, Third and Locust Sts. The Miller Auto Company Inc., local distributor for Oldsmobile, Maxwell and Hayncs touring cars and Mack Trucks, have moved their offices into temporary quarters at their new location in the old post office building at the corner of Third and Bocust streets. Work of remodeling the building into an up-to-the-minute show room and offices as well as two large storerooms facing Third street, will start Monday morning. The Bell Telephone Company will occupy one of these storerooms as their local offices. The other will be used as offices by the Miller Auto Com pany until their main room is fin ished. The service station and parts de partment of this firm will be con tinued at their old location, 68 South Cameron street. They will maintain a full line of parts for the cars they handle and will main tain efficient service at all times. Owing to the necessity of mov- . Satisfaction in the ownership of an auto f t mobile depends upon the riding qualities, the appearance and the economy in opera- All three of these qnalities are to. be Every Amort- found in a large number of cars on the can bears the market to-day, but none to such a mark personal O. K. Ed degree as in the American Six. of Louis Chev rolet on the in- The American Six is the last word in • side of the dash motorilom, its looks arc instantly appcnl —it is your ing, its riding quality is superb, and its guarantee of su- economy will satisfy anyone. It is truly a preme quality. balanced six. American Auto Company Sales and Service Rear Second and Forster St., Harrisburg 1 Bell 2850-J. C. A. Slongli, I Dial OUSO. l, The Offices of T :, The Miller Auto Co. Inc. I have been moved to our new location j i Third and Locust Streets | \* ® ■ (old Post Office building) ? | :; Our Service Station | and Parts Department j j, will be continued at our old location ? 68 South Cameron Street | where owners of a Oldsmobiles Maxwells Haynes Mack Trucks <' can secure any part they need and also first class service '' j, _ '• Miller Auto Co., Inc. < ' Office Service Station ' Third and Locust 68 S. Cameron St. Bell 5295 Bell 4119 ;• f satuSSSY EVEimro, ing from half the garage that they formerly oocupled, they are selling several used cars cf different makes in a eale that started a few days □.go. It is understood that they still have several cars for sale. How to Make Your Battery Last Longer The man who is not used to hand ling batteries might say that the way to get the most out of a battery is to use it Just as little as possible. As a matter of fact, that would be just the wrong way to get at it. Batieries .are made to bo used and they can be used regularly and put through some pretty stiff paces and yet last a long time, if the man who uses them only follows a few simple Vules of battery care. Here are a few of the rules: 1. 13e sure your ignition switch is closed. 2. Pull out your chockcr. 3. Push out your clutch pedal, so that your starting motor will have to turn only the engine. 4. Then step on your starting button, and your motor ought to take hold. If it does not, then the thing to do is to find where the trouble is and remedy it before you make another trial. Battery life will be prolonged if these rules are observed all the year round and in all climates. Automobiles Are Being Used For Most Anything These Days; Here's a Dodge Bangaloo Being Used by "Doug" Fairbanks to Beat the Hotels | | ' * * ' ; ?■;. ■ _ """' - • •■■ Douglas Fairbanks, more or less well-known movie actor, doesn't worry about hotels and restaurants while scouring the western plains for suitable locations for his scenes. Ho travels in a "Dodge Brothers' House Car," which is tho name he gave the strange but cozy-looking vehicle designed and built for him by the Albertson Motor Co., Dodge Brothers dealer in Los Angeles. As th e illustration shows, the walls of the cars form beds when lowered. The re is additional sleeping space insi de, as well as a complete kitchen ette, ice box, electric lights and all the conveniences of home. The car seems to require no roads to travel on and has a faculty of taking Mr. Fairbanks exactly where he wants to go, regardless of whether the topography makes for smooth sailing or rough. MANY DETOURS ! ON HIGHWAYS Don't Take a Motor Trip and Expect to Follow the Main Highway In contemplating a motor trip these days through Central Penn sylvania. don't lay your plans to travel any fixed distance on the State highways, for the first thing you'll bump into a sign with the word "Detour" on it and a hand pointing the way out into some unknown and unheard of road where the rut and bumps will put you in mind of the "rocky road to Dublin." Practically every State road is undergoing a complete renovation. During the war these roads were left to deterioate and now that the work of repairing them has started many detours are necessary. As a matter of the fact the many detours through Central Pennsylvania take you into some very picturesque scenery and fully repays the motorist for the roughness encountered in travers ing them. HARRlttBu K.G. tEEEGRSPSI DETERIORA TION TlfcE TALK NO. 7 By George G. McFarlaiul What has already been said in these talks has dealt with a num ber of topics. The necessity of at tending to tires at the right time; the importance of choosing the proper size and type for a given capacity; the danger of misapply ing tire to rim, the proper care of inner tubes, particularly the value of fresh air; the use and economy of flaps; and the relation of such factors as inflation to riding com fort, have already been discussed. Let us speak further of deteriora tion, a subject that has already been suggested at least in Tire Talk Num ber 4. Deterioration in tires, up to a cer tain limit, is not necessarily a re sult of age, any more than it is in people. When a man or a tire has lasted for a long, long time, of course we allow him or it to begin to break down a little. Until tht limit is reached, however, the tb • has no more business to "go back than has tho man. The conditions under which c\tclp ment is kept have more to do With the life of a tire, especially of the inner tube, than has age. Inner tubes are not fitted by nature to en dure light and heat. Rubber is par ticularly susceptible to the rays of the sun, and rather quickly becomes dry, hard, and "crackly." As a protection Firestone tubes, after final inspection at the factory, are invariably wrapped in paper, a pre caution which also serves to main tain the of the tire. The paper covering may well be left on extra tires. If anybody has the idea that such a sheath looks a lit tle queer, and insists upon taking it off, tho tires may be put in use How to Make a Correct Test of Your Battery Many mortorists know that it is necessary to use a hydrometer syringe to test a storage battery, but they do not always know just how to use it. It is not hard to learn and it is really worth while if a man would save himself from a bat tery repair bill. Through the courtesy of Mr. Wil dermuth, the local Willard Storage Battery dealer, we are able to pub lish the instructions on the use of a hydrometer as sent out by the Wil lard Storage Battery Company. The hydrometer has a scale grad uation in the upper part of tho tube ranging from 1.150 to 1.300 with .005 graduations and reads correct ly at seventy degrees Fahrenheit. A fully charged cell should road about 1.280 and a completely discharged cell should read about 1.150 specific gravity, both of which are marked by a. red line on the scale. Tho Hydrometer test should he made before distilled water is add ed. If distilled water is added and then the test is made, the reading will not be correct. Make tho test as follows: 1. Remove vent plug from top of cell. 2. Force the air out of the hydro meter snrings by squeezing the rub ber bulb. .3. Insert rubber tube through the vent plug , hole into the elec trolyte, or battery solution. 4. Release the bulb and draw up sufficient, electrllyte into the glass tube to float the hydrometer. 5. See that the hydrometer floats freely, touching neither top, bottom or sides. 6. Move the hydrometer syringe so that the level of the electrolyte in the glass tube is on the level of the eye. 7. Read the point on the hydro meter scale which appears level with tho top of the electrolyte. 8. Then force the electrolyte back into the cell from which It was removed. Tt is advisable to rinse out. the hydrometer svrine-e with water as the electrolyte w'll in time destroy the containing case. In some cars the battery i so for a little while until the rubber surface becomes soiled. In this way the pores are filled with dirt, a preservative effect thus being ob tained. Those who have had any experi ence with photographic plates or films are aware that warmth spoils the emulsion. In the case of gum both .light and heat bring the sul phur to the surface and make the rubber minutely porous, somewhat as sugar may occasionally grain and crystalize on the top of a housewife's candy confection. "Gum checking" or oxidation swiftly de stroys the "nerve" of the rubber! with .a corresponding resultant ef fect in respect of flexibility and durability. A dark, dry room in which the temperature stays from forty to fifty degrees is best. In winter, when one's car is laid aside, or whenever it is "in dry dock" for any length of time, the stale air should be removed from the tires. The latter should be parti ally inflated with fresh air s —enough to round, them out and covered with muslin or light-excluding me dium. The weight of the machine should then be supported by blocks or jacks, in order that no burden may fall upon the wheels. When spring returns, examine your tires as you overhaul your house. Look over them sedulously for cuts on the outside; get all tacks or small nails out; reinforce any small abrasions in the fabric within; and then cause them to feel good by a dose of lubricant. Be certain that rims are not dented or otherwise irregular. Apply a thin solution of graphite, shellac, and al cohol. (The End) placed that it is difficult or impos sible to hold the syringe in an up right position over the battery. Un der such circumstances pinch the rubber tube with the left hand so that the battery solution will not run out of the hydrometer. Then lift the hydrometer out and away from the car and hold it upright to take the reading. Bo careful not to release the rubber tube until it is again placed over tho hole in the top of the cell. Why Batteries Will Not Last Forever "Most people can understand why a tire wears out, or why bearing points of a car work loose," says the local Willard service station dealer, "but they don't quite see why a battery should ever wear out." "Of course the main trouble is that it's harder for anybody to imagine a chemical process than a mechanical one, and the battery is strictly chemical." "There's not much inside a bat tery. About all there is to it is a set of plates with insulators be tween each pair, and solution that covers both plates and insulators. These plates are simply lattices of metallic lead filled with lead com pounds. The insulators may either be wood or threaded rubber." "Before a battery can be used at all it has to bo charged. The elec tric current coming in, causes cer tain chemical changes. When you turn on your lights or step on the starter, changes start, in the oppo site direction and supply you with current. "Of course this constant changing hack and forth will wear out a bat tery in time, just as contaet with the road will wear out a tire. And even if the battery is in storage and is kept charged, some wear will go on, as the chemicals are all present and are never absolutely idle. "The way to get the longest life out of your battery is to keep In mind the fact that its life depends to a great extent on how well you treat It, and to remember to add water and make a hydrometer test at least one every two weeks." SELDEN TRUCK DISTRIBUTORS TO REBUILD Erection of Three-story Fire proof Garage to Start at Once During the past few months the business of tho Seldon Truck dis tributors, local agency for Seldon Trucks, has increased to such an ex tent that larger quarters were made necessary and E. L. Craft, the man ager, negotiated for and secured the large lot adjoining their present garage in Market street which also has a frontage in Cameron street, and will begin operation at once to place a modern three-story, fire proof garage there. The architects, Markley and Starr,, have already turn/cd the plans over to tho contractor, Harold Hippie, and materials are already being hauled with the actual work starting, in all possibility, next week. This new building will have a frontage of 65 feet in Market street and will contain three large store rooms and a large driveway Into the garage that will bo placed in the rear. There will be a frontage of 50 feet 6 inches in Cameron street where there will also be two store rooms and an arch driveway into the garage. , The two upper floors will be fit ted out for storage and also in such a manner that they can be used as a convention hall, for automobile shows, eta Instead of elevators, there will be an 8 per cent, grade incline, 12 feet wide, made of con crete going to the upper floors. Since January 1, the Selden Truck distributors have sold 58 trucks. They are entered in a contest for the sale of trucks that is being held by the Selden Truck Company and stand fourth in the list of dealers who have sold the largest number of trucks Such cities as New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Baltimore are listed so that it can readily be seen that the local dealer must hustle some to keep in the running with the larger cities. With the completion of the pro posed building at the corner of Market and Cameron streets, the corner will not only be more invit ing to the eye. but will contain as modern a garage as will be found in the city. It will also add to the business of that section of the city for it is proposed to place accessory stores and automobile salesrooms in the storerooms that will form part of the building. You Fix Conditions For Duplex Demonstration We are glad to have the truck The Duplex always wins in a prospect fix the conditions comparative demonstration, for a test of the Duplex 4- j t w j ns because it always goes Wheel-Drive Truck. through and "goes more Pick out the hardest work cheaply. j you will ever ask a truck to That is why the Duplex costs do and we will have the Duplex Jess per-ton mile. f *° That is why it is the most We like to have the prospect economical and efficient haul try other trucks at the same ing vehicle offered to business v time. men today. j HARRISBURG AUTO CO. 4th and Kelker, Harrisburg, Pa. DUPLEX TRUCK COMPANY, LANSING, MICHIGAN DUPLEX TRUCKS cib,s't LeXs, .Per-Ton-milef RHMMP JULY 5,1919.^ Buick Agency Moved to Shaffer Garage in 11th St. On the Ist of July, George B. Zech, the local Buick distributor moved his offices, salesrooms and service station from 28 S. River Ave. to the Shaffer Garage at 50 to 60 S. Camcf-on Street, in the rooms that were formerly occupied by the Mil ler Auto Co. Mr. Zeck will use the large sales rooms and office of the Miller Auto Company for his salesroom and has the upper part of the garage which he will use for service for Buick cars. I I in"""' N X. Price vs. Endurance X, I y Tho Lexington is not an auto- N. 7 yS mobile for people who are waiting until automobiles go down ten dol- I / lars in price. Lexingtons are pur- I C y chased by people who can afford ( J I much more costly cars —but who think the field over from five thou- yS S\. sand dollar cars to five hundred dol | / \ lar cars, and light on the Lexington. / \ \ I\. y In Lexington there is a good deal I y \.S of the golden mean. 't The Lexington is built to grow ( if / up with the family, to stay with you f I / \ for years, like a faithful servant. / X 1 IN, / Cost does not matter. What do you y y ! I ■ care when you count what you are i ' ' J g| J Lexington Motor Company Connersville, Ind., U. S. A. Dauphin Motor Car Co. Moved to Larger Quarters Last Tuesday the Dauphin Motor- Car Co., Inc., moved their servtc* station from 126 Cherry St to tho garage formerly used by the BtllciC distributors at 28 S. River Ave. This location Is a little less than a square south of Market street on the. Ave. between Front and Second. This garage is of two story con-, struction, the lower floor being usedtj as a repair station for Oakland ex-1 clusively, the Dauphin Motor Car] Company being the local Oakland distributors. The second floor wilU be used for the parts department) and offices.