The evening world. Newspaper, January 4, 1916, Page 11

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, 7 Tone eer: ¥ Type of Car That May Be Used Soldiers in Next War MULTI-cYLINDER CARs. By U.S. 0OGb6 66-4464645006 eee R} The MAXWELL CABRIOLET Sem me orem Se ene mee ae THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1916. | VETERAN APPERSONS Cars of eight and twelve cylinders ® never fail to attract thousands of $ visitors at the Grand Central Palace Auto Show. In this class of muiti- cylinder exhibits the Apperson cars are conspicuous. Elmer and Edgar Apperson, though veteran automobile builders, refused to be converted to the extra cylinder made up for lost time by turning out an eight-cylinder car now on view at the Palace that is remarkable for its power and lightness. — To Show State Waterway Needs, All New York State Congressmen and United States Senators have been in- Vited to attend to-day at the City Hall a conference on the introduction in Con- gress of appropriations for New York waterways. it is anticipated that reso- lutions designating waterways for which Sppropriations are needed wil! be passed. 1@ Invitations were issued by Congross- men Charies Pope Gaidwell of Queens and Frederick W. Rowe of Brooklyn. $13,500 ENGLISH DAIMLER IS THE PRIZE BEAUTY OF THE AUTOMOBILE SALON. ‘The Importers’ Automobile Salon opened at the Hotel Astor yesterday with an elaborate display of the most expensive cars made on both sides of the Atlantic. The most conspicu- ous af the costly models was a $13,500 Engtish Daimler, the most expensive maohine ever exhibited in this coun- try. The car is an exact duplicate of one used by King George and was Ce ah a ee eS AN THE NEXT WAR UNCLE SAM WILL G0 INAMOTOR CAR A Fresh Incentive for Patriots to Buy and Operate Their Own Machines. By Walter E. Flanders, President the Maxwell Motor Co., Inc. If Unole Sam ever again goes to ‘war, be will go in a motor car. I am making a prediction which I hope will never be tested, but T am making tt with the full confidence "TH FOR TED AND SORE FEET Use “Tix” for puffed-up, burning, achiag, ealloused feet and'corns. Why go limping around with aching, puffed-up feet—feet:s0 tired, chafed, sore and swollen you can hardly get your shoes on or off? Why don’t you get a 25-cent box of “Tiz” from the * drug store ‘now and adden your tor- tured feet? “Tiz" makes your fect glow with com- fort; takes down swellings and draws the soreness and misery right out of feet that chafe, smart and burn. “Tix” instantly stops pain in corns, callouses and_bunions. glorious for tired, aching, sore No more shoe that, If the occasion arises, the motor car will be found playing a part in- finitely more important than that fn | which It now appears in the conflict raging in Burope. Not only will Uncle Sam go to war in a motor car, he will go in @ car owned and driven by the typical American man of moderate means or, | perhaps, by his son. Your car and mine, and the cars of our neighbors. | ‘When war comes Uncle Sam will need | all the cars he can get. Thousands of them he will buy—enough perhaps to take care of the U. 8. regulars available for coast defense. The rest of the cars he nevds—and it will be! @ good many—he will commandeer where and when he can find them. From the citizen motorists of the nation the authorities will be able to get fleets of cars larg enough to move the entire citizen soldiery to the seat of present or anticipated hostilities. Can motor care carry them? Of course they oan and will—especially If, as by no means improbable, the attack from without has been preceded by prearranged wholesale destruction of railways and bridges, It is @ simple matter for one man witha charge of dynamite to tle up a whole railroad system. With the rail- roads out of business, there would be nothing to do but to call on the army of motor cars which our plan of pre- paredness would have ready, Could you take a load of soldier boys and their rifles three or four hundred miles in a day over a specially pre- pared road, so marked that you couldn't go astray? Of oourse you ot So could I. So could our neigh. bor. It seems to me that we must all @eree that in any plan of netional ite paredness the motor car will be! s0 great a factor that the Government should do all tm its power to en- courage its presence in ever increas- ing numbers In the European war, with short distances and few available cars, automobiles have been a factor in every movement of troops. And this is America—a country where one fam- ‘ly in every ten owns @ car and can furnish one or more expert drivers. peeeaeinan eats MOTORCYCLE RACERS KILLED, BAKERSFIELD, Cal. Jan. 4.—F, Montgomery and William Goudy, motor-| cycle racers, were killed in @ smashup yesterday. One of the riders lost control | of his machine on @ curve, The other, hy following closely, collided with him and | both plunged {rito a fence. TI n were practising on the local spe tightness—no more fost torture.—Advt AUTOMOBILES, AUTOMOBILES. T only the most luxurious riding car the world has CW ever known, but we believe the WX Eight-Cylinder Cadillac tobe the most constant aad the most en- S during car the Cadillac Company | ‘has ever produced. | —and that means the most enduring car that any maker has ever produced. HIS New Abbott-Detroit Six is the Supreme Achievement of Abbott-Detroit Engineers. Bigroomy 7-passenger body—luxuriously finihed and equipped — marvelously poverful. Every inch a Quality Car. Dent fail to sce it Section C-17, Third Floor,Grand Central Palace ‘or write for the New Catalog CONSOLIDATED CAR CO., Detroit Topnssonger Sts $1195 YONKERS: 1 Manor H. Te sho Yonkers Te TL RT a TE TT I TIE a ee _ |____ Au TOMB purchased by an American million- senger collapsible landaulet body, aire, Who was anxious to follow Eng with an extra rear seat suspended lish royalty even in the matter of | # springs of the Hogan automobile After importing | makes the extra seat his priae car ynamed American | independ all body motion millionaire hi: cause his wi scheme, w eee REPLIES TO OR. HILLIS. bh is black The car resembles a miniature pal ace on wheels more than the accept- 2 Prank L. Ferguson filed yesterday an model of av t 4 hors Geigning 6,900 pounds. fee furcun: in the sult hovght egeinat him by ings represent the last word in auto extravagance, All the fittings are solid silver plate, even to the grease cups. The star exhibit has a seven-pas- ev. Dr, Newell Dwight Hillis, pas- Plymouth Church, Brooklyn. Mr. Ferguson formerly wan Dr. Hillis's attorney and personal representative. He denics all of the claims set forth by Motor Cars No Motor, Upkeep The sleeve-valve motor is the only automobile power plant which involves virtually no upkeep expense. Instead of necessitating frequent removal, carbon only serves to make this motor run the sweeter. Instead of growing noisier—requiring the grinding and reseating of valves— this motor grows ever more quiet with use. These prices are hundreds of dollars below the price of any other sleeve-valve- motored cars. MODEL 848 Touring Car *1125 Roadster $1095 Coupe $1500 Limousine $1750 All prices f. 0, b. Toledo C. T. SILVER MOTOR CO., Distributors 1760 BROADWAY, AT 87TH STREET ‘TEL, 100 CIRCLE. BRONTE) 149th Bt. @ 94 Ave. ‘el, 9812 Melrose, BROOKLYN: 1986 a ‘Tel, 0196 Vreepest* aia: NEWARK: Broad & Commerce Ste, Opp. Post Office, Tel. 0100 Market, The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio “Made In U, 3. A.” the plaintiff and adde that & Lg him in certain capacities, reason of hii fesaton inisinows ‘compitcations, whieh sulted in unfavorable notoriety, not wish his name to appear in tion therewith.” SORE THROAT and to silitis if neglected freq ently result in serious illness. The preparstion that will give youquick relief and isso. at fifty cents at your druggists and at the Riker-Hegeman steps is BENZOMINT

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