10 AUTOMOBILE SECTION jMm"" ■lfeM- AUTOMOBILE NEWS AND ADVERTISING HBG. MOTOR CAR CO.GETS DANIELS EIGHT Local Firm Makes Announce ment of Securing the New Line Announcement was made a day or eo ago that the Harrisburg Motor 'Car company, 104 South Fourth street, has secured the agency for this territory for the famous Daniels Eight Cars. These cars are among the better grade cars and are made in several different models, covering practically every use to which a motor car can be put. [ The Daniels is made by the Dan- . iels Motor Car company, at Detroit and has been on the market for a j number of years. It has never been represented in Harrisburg before but is sure to be among the winners While it has been used ex tensively in the larger cities, it is fast being adopted in cities the size of Harrisburg where motorists are ! getting awake to the many advan tages of the high class cars. THRIFT IN HI'MBLE PLACES [From the BufTalo Courier.] New Tork city has a pushcart citi- j Zen. seventy-eight years of age. who ; since December, 1917. has saved IS3S j in war stamps. He turned up at the Federal Reserve Bank the other day. j and for his war stamps received one of the new treasury savings certifi-1 cates. good for $lOOO January 1, 1924. | Uncle Sam is greatly in need of | thrifty citizens like the New Tork j pushcart man. IN MORE THAN ONE WAY IFrom the Birmingham Age-Herald. j | Those Boston policemen who went j on a strike certainly did spill the, beans. WE HOPED SO! [From the Albany Evening Journal] Some day, old age will "get Villa." , SCORED CYLINDERS REPAIRED (Lawrence Process) No new pistons required. METAL WELDING . of all kinds Aluminum u specialty. Machine Work of All Kinds I HARRISBLRG WELDING AND BRAZING CO. DO-OS S. Cameron St. Both Phones. "Say, Tom, Can You Fix My Tube Right Away? I'm in a Hurry." Tom was busy building up a retreading job but turning to the man of all work around the establish ment he said. "Jim go take the tire of this man's car . and bring it in here. It's a hurry up job." Fifteen minutes later the tube was back in the tire and the ' tire was out on the machine. That's what I'd call real service and fast work. THAT'S THE KIND OF SERVICE YOU GET AT BLACK'S VULCANIZING, RETREADING. REPAIRING ACCESSORIES, MOTOR OILS, GASOLINE BLACK'S GARAGE . 205 S. 17th St. Phones Leading Motorists Hail "RAYDEX" |j As Greatest Device For Headlamps jl Made of metal, it will not break and absolutely i| controls the rays of light —is within the law. ; I EVERYBODY WHO HAS USED "RAYDEX" ii ENDORSE IT. YOU CAN'T BREAK "RAYDEX." THEY LAST AS |i J LONG AS THE CAR. ( COME IN AND SEE THEM ? . DAUPHIN TIRE SERVICE CO. b DISTRIBUTORS jj forth Second Street Harrisburg i | SATURDAY EVENING, A.C.A.MAKES TEST j OF GASOLINE AND BENSOL MIXTURE Made to Ascertain H. P. Rat ing and For Carbon Deposit In recent test made by the Auto mobile Club of America gasoline and a mixture of gasoline and bensol as fuel for automobiles, disclosed soma interesting features. The tests were made to determine the relative ef ficiency between the two products. They were held in the laboratories of the club in New York City and | were under supervision of the chem t ists and engineers of the club. A four-cylinder N Continental mo j tor 3 3-4-inch bore by 5-in stroke (220.9 cubic inch piston displace ment attached to an electric cradle dynamo-meter was used. The motor was provided with a Stromberg model L. B. 2 carburetor, Bosch DU 4 magneto and Titan A C spark plugs j the points of which were set at .015 inches apart. Before each test was ' begun on a different fuel, the motor j was thoroughly cleaned, and after J each test the condition of the carbon I was noted. 1 ; Straight gasoline showed 12.4 H. P. !at SSO revolution per minute, and 31.1 H. P. at 2042 R. P. M. Straight bensol showed 18.9 H. P. at 824 R. P. M. The mixture, which was about I three-quarters bensol and one-quar >ter low grade gasoline showed 13.S IH. P. at 647 R. P. M. and 32.2 H. P. jat 2034 R. P. M. This showed that j bensol gave a higher brake horse | power throughout the speed range jthan ti was possible to attain with j commercial gasoline. The amount iof fuel consumed show, gasoline .122 1 gallons per brake horsepower, ben : sol .107 gallons per brake horse ' power and the mixture showed .109 j gallons per brake horsepower. I The general condition of the mo- I tor showed that after the gasoline i test there was very little carbon de : posit, the same in the mixture test and hardly any that was noticeable | after the bensol test. In the test of 'the bensol and the mixture the car -1 buretor was set to give a leaner mix iture and the timing was set 12 de- I srees after dead center whereas in j the gasoline test it was set at dead ! center. Better results were shown : with the carburetor and timing set at that positon in the bensol and mixture test. The mixture of bensol and gasoline ils being commercialized in this ter | ritory by the Great Western Oil i Company under the name of Crystal j Pep. This product Is practically the I same as the mixture in'the tests that were made in New York. HARRISBURG'S NE W DRIVE IN GASOLINE SERVICE STATION ' ' .., - < :.'- - '.' f : • '. - '•~A Harrisburg has at last a drive-in ( service station for gasoline and oil. 1 This new station is at the corner of Mulberry and Christian streets, one j block east of the eastern approach j to the Mulberry street bridge. It is | operated in connection with a gen- | Electricty Best of Farm Servants Thousands of Farm Homes Already Have Electric Plants. Satisfied Users Influence Farmers in Buying A traveler through the country to day notices one thing more than any i other, and that Is the number of j farms where electric service is now i used. A few years ago, three or four at • most, the coal-oil lantern and lamp I and the long-handled wooden pump, | which stood in the barnyard, and froze up soiid every winter, were j symbols of the farm, just as the i street car and the department store j ore. symbols ..*• the city. With the; | farm were associated ideas of old- j fashioned ways of doing things, of! I hard work and long hours. But what a change has taken ! place! Drive out into the country at night; and look at the farm houses you! pass. In a great many of them, in . mat Used to! come from one or two windows, or j the bobbing point of light' '* that i marked a lantern being carried up I to the house from the barn, you will I sec the whole place brigntly lighted. Drive into the barnyard. Instead ot waiting while someone nt the house lights a lantern and comes out, you'll suddenly find the whole yard flooded with light from an electric lamp on a pole in the center of the yard, or perhaps on a corner of the barn. And when your host comes out you'll find that he has turned on ! the yard light from inside the house, j Then he'll take you through the .house and barns and show you what| | a difference electricity can make on ; the farm. As you go through the countfy you j will find a surprisingly large nuin-I ber of farms electrically equipped. , Ar.d nearly all of this equipment has j been put in within the last three or j four years. One manufacturer alone j announces "over seventy-five thou-j sand satisfied users," a surprising i fact, in view of the farmer's we Ul known tendency to make a long and j thorough investigation before he buys anything in the way of farm equipment What, then, is the reason for this rapid increase in the rural use of electricity? Simply this, that elec tricity has proved to be wonderfully useful on the farm. Much more so, in fact, than in city homes. Electric light is not only superior to all others as a light, but is mucli more convenient, much safer, and, in farm usage, save a great amount of j time. The difference between turn ing a switch at the house and light ing a lantern has already been men tioned, and this greater convenience is found throughout.' Upstairs lights can be switched on from the lower hall, and even the barn may be light ed from the house. This convenience effects a great saving of time. The daily cleaning and filling of lamps is no longer nec essary. There is no walking from barn to house to get a lantern. And in the barn itself, it is found that the well-placed electric lamps, make every movement surer and faster, HAULING COAL FRO M THE RIVER IN A REPUBLIC DUMP TRUCK •: • •' • ♦ ' V y .v<# ; o%* ' jggk wHj s^WWP^W |^Mp r^ vH9H HHH > s w ft J| &BKS JHp : B HBP!''"^ 1 [:- MB C' 'JHB^ : Af * nraßnp The above illustration shows a Republic model 20, ton dump truck being loaded with river coal from a barge in the river off the sh ore above M&clay street The true k la driven into the water parallel with the shore and then pulls its loa d out of the water and up the steep bank to the street leveL It makes a haul of more than a half mile in distance. i Rxhrisburg telegkxph - eral automobile accessory store and 1 supply house by the firm of Barley and Sloan. This is a new venture j In the gasoline bi siness in Harris | burg and one that should be appeal- j i ing to all motorists. It is-now used j i extensively in other cities and has saving: nearly half the time it used j to take to do the chflres. j Electric light is safer, too, particu- I larly in the barn, where the hazard jof lire from an overturned lantern ' was formerly very great, j But electric power on the farm is i even more useful than electric light, jAn automatic water system will j pump every drop of water formerly : pumped by hand, supplying water i ur.der pressure at faucets all over | the house and barns. Electric mo j tors will do the milking, separating. I churning, washing and sweeping, I will turn the corn sheller. fanning ! mill and grindstone. Electric irons. | fans, toasters and percolators also I make the household work much eas -1 ier. | All of this electric service is en | joyed on the farm at a low cost and i with practically no bother. The best j of the farm electric plants show a I very low running cost and are prac- I tically trouble proof. Their engines | are cooled by air. which does away with fhe trouble of carrying water and the danger of over-heating or freezing. They burn kerosene for fuel. Direct connection of the gen erator and engine, automatic lubri cation. self cranking and self stop ping are other features of up-to-date lighting plants, which makes them easy to care for and operate. And of course , with each engine and gen erator is a storage battery which furnishes light and power at all j times of the day and night whether j the generator is running or not. I Where the plant has been properly I designed and made, the owner is as | sured of satisfactory service. And he's not slow to tell his neighbors [ about the kind of satisfaction he's j getting. The result is that where j one good plant goes into a rural | community it is usually followed by i several more. That there are reli | able plants on the market is indi | cated by the figures quoted above, j And they surely show, too, that the farmer as a class is taking an inter est in the subject of electricity lor the farm. Red Cross to Send Field Unit to Minsk Paris. Sept. 27. —As a sequel to I the capture of Minsk, by the polish j army, the American Red Cross has authorized the sending of a field unit into that city from its head quarters in Eastern Poland. The efforts of the Red Cross unit will be chiefly concerned with general relief and anti-typhus work. Sup plies for the new work are being furnished from the American Red Cross warehouses in Bielystock. Reports from Minsk say thai people are dying fast of hunger and typhus. Medicines, soaps and nour ishing foods are the most impera tive needs. A soup kitchen will alsc be set up in Minsk. proven highly popular. The mem- ; bers of the new firm are both well j known automobile and gasoline ex- j perts. Mr. Barley has been travel ing this territory for some time for | a gasoline and oil firm and Mr. I Sloan was connected with a local ' automobile firm. J MOTOR TRUCKS TO AID CIVIC PRIDE; Will Be Big Help in Bettering • Living Conditions in City and Country Co-operation of the Government is a reality now that the real value of interurban lines of motor trucks is rei.lized, for the farmer and for the city dweller. Motor trucks are going to be a great factor, according to Arthur T. Murray, president of the Bethlehem Motors corporation, Al lentown, Pa., in developing city pride and in bettering living condi i tions, both in the city and in the country. In the past it been the custom of inhabitants in districts off the railroads to concentrate their buying in towns along the railroads because of the inability of the small storekeepers to secure easily and quickly the goods for sale in their own towns. All that is changed now for the motor truck lines are bring ing direct to the small storekeepers from the big centers the goods they want, and bringing the material daily. The farmer and small town | Inhabitant do not have to travel now ; to distant points to find goods want- 1 ed, and pride in the development of home Industries will assist in build ing up the ' country stores as noth ing else could have done. "The motor truck," said Murray recently, "has done much in this direction, and is building up a better social condition and a community spirit which portends well for the future. Improvement of conditions as re-! gards the merchants and 1 their cus tomers is not the only great change of the day. Motor trucks are to-day making the life of the farmers more worth while. Few stop to realize the changes that have come to the tiller of soil in a few short years. Take the telephone, the rural free delivery, the automobile, the motor truck, the tractor and rural express, all unknown not so very many years ago, and there is a combination which has meant much to the man who grows the crops so necessary to existence. Motor trucks have played an important part in the new era for the farmer, and with the construction of great road systems will add still more to the life of the man who farms. Where, not so long ago, he started for the market the night before and drove plodding I horses all night long to reach the | market early In the morning, he i now enjoys a night of sleep and I travels the distance in a couple of | hours and is back again on the farm i in short order. H:s time is valuable ' and, where highway systems have been completed, the farmer does not even go to market, but piles his pro duce on the loading platform at his front gate with his city orders, and then, the trucking company which has his contract, comes along, takes away the goods he has to sell and brings back the goods-sought by him from the city. With his added time • SEPTEMBER 27,1919. *' he tills more and more of his farm, adds to the value of his work in in crease of production, and has more time to enjoy life with his automo bile in pleasure trips to the city, with which he is in touch by tele phone and through delivery of mall at his door by the mail carrier in an auto." ' ~-9—~ r '" " v /embodies mechanical excellence that ' r '-7> W&M*P,i nsures utmost in performance. * n t^lc ma^in g each car is a separate ' Un * t ' Tl ? c y are )U^t * n limited quantities i : 'I _2 Er~~~~. Demonstrations can be arranged to suit 5r OUf COnven^enee ' or te^e P^ oriC . , c,. ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■ a "a" ■ REDMOND'S ■ 2 Big Special Tire Sale 5 H ~ H Means a big SAVING for you as well as for Jim Smith, H Bill Jones and their neighbors I m ■ Have You Taken Advantage of it? ■—to Size Price Gray Tube Size Price Gray Tube H 30x3 $9.75 $1.85 32x4 $20.75 $3.50 ■ 512.50 $2.10 33x4 $21.60 $3.80 514.40 $2.50 34x4 $22.25 $3.90 31x4 $19.80 $3.10 35X4J4 $29.85 $4.90 J All Non-Skid Types—No Seconds ? p| We have been appointed the local agency for m ■ TEMME ?"."'• Hlu'i'cit ■ Save Time and Money by Calling on Us For Springs H By the way — We are distributors for S VIM TRUCKS & CHANDLER CARS ■ S ANDREW REDMOND " ■ Third and Hamilton Sts. Harrisburg _ Bell 2133 Dial 4616 H| H h ■ • ' 1 .t- . , ~ _ s IF WITH DUE CARE [From the Boston Transcript.] "Now, be careful. These canoes tip over very easily." "IVould it be safe," began the girl timorously, "to—to " "Yea?" "To shift my chewing gum to the other side of my mouth?" H. C. L. 11,1,S [From the Courier Journal.7 There is less sickness nowadays from overeating than there was be fore the war, but more from looking through plate glass at what you'd eat if you could afford it-