A Till; OMAHA SUNDAY MKM: DKl'KMDKIt (. 1!U 1. Jl AUTO SHOWAJtEAL HUMMER' Troblera of Manager! is to Find Suf' ficient Exhibit Room. MANY CONCERNS TO SHOW Indication Are th (omlni hnv Will Far fturpa Any of It Pmlror.i.or In MnvnW tude and nrnotr. H hen the sixth annual Automobile l-ow opens at tlie Auditorium February J people attendlntr th liow will be given an opportunity to witness, a irlxpW of car more munificent and beautiful than etcr before seen in Omaba. This how promises to far excell all previous exhibi tions In every way. ' Po numerous have been the requests of automobile companies In the city for Kpace reservations Manager Olllan of the Auditorium lias found It necessary to rlrar the basement of the building and use it In connection with the upper floor. Matay companies desiring reservations have been refused by the board of di rectors of the show because of scarcity of room. Tn previous years but a por tion of the basement of th Auditorium w-a. used by the show. This year all the scenes and other property of the Audi torium which have been stored In the basement will be removed ao as to allow more apace for display. This year the apaoe to be allowed to each company will be less than In previous years and there will be more cars on display. During the last six years the decorating of the Auditorium has been the same. This year the board of directors have arranged to have the building decorated In a new anu magnificent manner, far surpassing the decorations of former years. 'ine main floor will be used for display of automobiles and th basement will b devoted to the exhibition of commercial vehfcles. Firms to Exhibit. So f;ir the following companies have been granted floor space for their dis plays: Apperson Auto company. Baum Iron company. jCadllao Auto company. John Deere Plow company. I'erlght Auto company. JOlectrlc Oarage company. K, M. F. Auto comapny. Firestone Rubber company. Freeland. Auto company. lrtj Motor company. ' Krederlckeon Auto company. Huffman company. International Harvester company. , JohriBon-Danforth company. JVR. Kimball Auto company. KlsseIl Auto, company. j,"'. .Inlnger Implement company. , Mitchell Motor company. .Andrew Murphy & Co. - ' jMarion Auto company. .; r ',-Vtbraska Bulek Auto- company! jJ,U. Northwall company. i 'Omaha Auburn Auto company. , Omaha Rubber company. Powell Supply company. Kambler Motor company. Guy L,. Smith. United Motor company. Warlon Auto company. Van Brunt Auta ompany. i.i R. Wilson Auto company. "Aj'allace Auto company. AVestern Auto Supply ompany. . , Th following have applied for'flior tar,,but space has not yet been allot ted to them: 'v' v Xtrawka Regal Sales comapny. '' Traynor Auto company. ("nrter Car company. '.Interstate Auto company. Jack Sharp Ureat Western Auij company. Molina Auto company. The companies which will have exhi bitions in the basement are: Andrew Murphy. lerlght company." J,, G. , Northwall company. Jqhnson-Dunforth company. Ttebrauka Bulek company. W' U Huffman comapny. IJlectrlo Garage company. Jnlerratlonal Harvester company. YEAR'S OUTPUT OF CARS -NOW MADE IN ONE DAY '"Time In Its flight has treated lightly Mitchell cars of ancient vintage," sold I Dick Stewart in talking of his car. ."One , of the most satisfactory proofs was evl , denced by our receiving' parts order for a I Model B, two-cylinder vertical air cooled J runabout, which we manufactured In 1903. The gentleman who originally purchased i thla car sent In the order for repairs and says that he is not ready yet to give up his little runabout. He is using It daily arijj he hopes to continue It in use for ' sotrotlme to come. , "fn the season of 1903 we manufactured , eighty-four curs, to be exact, and this at the present time would hardly make more than a good day's work." Test for Tire. The road conditions on the GUdden tour were exceptionally hard on hard tires owing to the large amount of new macadam road and the numerous fords through which the car was forced to pass, All of these fords were of the rock bottorn variety. In spite of all difficul ties riot a moment's trouble was experi enced" with the Goodyear tires and they are apparently due for considerable mlle V Motorcycle Moles. Chicago can boast of 2,tiS8 enthusiastic motorcyclists. Hetiry . Kaxwlale of Pan Angelo, Tex., recently ' completed a 2,8.00-mlie motor cycle Irlp to Syracuse, N. Y. The Illinois Valley Motorcycle club recwitly parsed resolutions condemning the use ol- the open muffler on the city treetu. . Tne Carpenters' union of Houston, Tex., added a motorcycle to Its equipment re ft nily to aid its officers in the work in thatvclty. If all the (notorcyclists of London, KiiHlHr.it, were to organize a club there would be &t.OH) member, for th largest city jn the world calms ' that many lldeis. The Riverside (Cal.) Motorcycle club believes in the good will of city officials, it recently tent a communication to the city council thanking it for Improving a public highway. 1 Savannah, Oa., motorcyclists recently received F. A. M. cards ami pins hi the Chamber of Comrueive. tnere, following their attlllatlon wit a tlie national organ isation. The Birmingham (Ala.) Humane society recently enaorsed the motorcycle as a means to laci.itate prompt reponses In csaes or 111 treatment to aulmais in all tarts ct tne ciiy The motorcycle la aiding the telcgrsph. A tx-legtapn ofticn In Ke.llunda, Cal., Is IE latent to inxtsll machines for the ULlefc ticliveiy of ineMtisei to persons .i.tDrf in the uutulttrt' ut thu city. Motorcycle I'olii'eman I.lnebaugh of York, 1'a., rode v.tAA miles on Ina iiui-cUlii-3 in fivu nvmtns end uiaJu fiity I Ml v arrtajti. Two other members of tlie lurc i owtroii ovtr i vtj mile In a year, wltU illly arrtstj esclt Ijf U1J: 'six High Honors for Car Which Takes Three Top Places Kver since the Tledeman trophy race, which opened Snvannnh's nnnual carnival of motor speed, men have beMi cuilsrlins; their memories ami frisking the records to flmt an Instance of another event In which three motor cars of the same make, comprising an entire team, finished a big race In first, second and third positions at the finish. They have all given It up. The performance of the 1C-M-K "30 s" driven, respectively, by Witt, Kvans and Towen Is absolutely unique in the annnls of road racing and approached only by the grand prise performance of the Hens, which last year won first and second, though falling to cop the third position. Accurate record was kept of the fuel and oil consumption of the cars. The 170 miles of speeding were covered on an lavrrsge of nine gallons of gasoline and .Tour of lubricating oil. ItenmiknMe figures when It Is recalled that. In the I straight stretches the cars ivere coci- pcllel often t "'beat It" atfawter than seventy-five miles an hiir to make up for the tortuous lurhs "on the Course, some of which required slow downs to a rate of only thirty-five. PACKARD CROSS-COUNTRY TRUCK SHOWN IN THE EAST The Packard Transcontinental truck, which was the first heavy duty vehicle to cross from ocean to ocean, Is now touring the raet, and will be exhibited at the New -York show in January.' Since arrlv Ing back In letrolt, after completing lii remarkable Journey, the truik has been exhibited In Cleveland, Buffalo. Cvwhcs ler, Syracuse. Albany, Sprlnjfl.-ld pnd Boston. Its picturesque appcii'.i i'e lias attracted crowds In every city it has visited. Good Roads Double Automobile Sales The reut agitation on good i,.,ls has provoker con si clem He conjecture as to Just what would be the situation In the automobile business in the I'nlted StHlc If we had as gotxl rouits ns our cousins in F.nglnml. tine eminent man In the profession, who has Just returned from an extended trip V Knrope In the Interests of American made c.irs, re marked last week th.it If we had as go.d roads as are found In l:tmlnd the auto mobile business In this country would he doubled. "This statement may nound Venture some." said Secretary J. V.. I.ahihert of the Regal Motor Car company, w ho made It, "but I am firmly convinced that It Is true." Onaerte Tlnilnar of limr llnanetn. "A very slight alteration In the mag- tioto will hae h rnnshlcrahM effect In increasing the speed of the car." said Charles Splltilorf, head of the famous house of Splltilorf. "Advancing the mag neto one tooth will Increase the speed sliflve five miles nn hour, yet by ad vancing two teeth n knock may remit Ihat will Imperil every rod and hearing In the eiiKlne. Caatlotia experimenting Is the only way to learn the correct adjust ment." KNIGHT ENGINES ARE SHOWN AT BERLIN SHOW from an American point of view one of tho most striking features of the recent lierlln show was the entire absence of six cylinder cars. Not a single German ex hibitor exhibited a rar of this type, the only one shown being en Kngllsh lalniler six-cylinder chassis equipped with a Knight engine. Another very marked tendency was the oTliiRlng out of low powered and low price models by nianv of the Kurnpe.in manufacturers with the evident Inlonllon of M-e ontlmr the cantuie of this cIhhs ot trade bv the American manufacturer, who are now niakin-r a strong effort to secure the market for Ion- priced cars. e Itenirit for nnderlillf Ilm'C. Seventy-four and se en-tenth miles per hour was the nvetage upeed of Mnlfoid's l.oilir. winner of the l?'ll Vanderhllt up iscc, setting a new mark for the distance. Close behind the winning car came lie I'alina In hi Mercedes, and he also broke the former refolds, ns did Spencer Wi.Mi art In another Mercedes. It was a gixst race, and Giant's I.ozler, Parker's Flat and IHsbrow's Pope Hummer, finishing In the order named, made fast enough time to win ony ordinary contest. Kvery car to finish was eiiuipped with Michelln tires. Aeto nnlaes tlood. After a two months' sojourn In Kurope, luring which he visited litigland, Scot land, I'rance and Germany. C. J. Butler, vice prrslrlent of the l'n1td State Tire company, Is back In Detroit, fcellnii pretty well satisfied with automobile trade conditions as they exist In this country. American Made Cars Near thejforth Pole Northern Norway Is the nearest ap proach Overland have made to the north pole and southern Africa I the nearest to the south pole. Thriving Overland de.ilcrs ere at each place. Ncnrly hi! tars will go to New Zealand for 1IM2 delivery. Fight Overland have been shipped recently to Porto Rico to bo used In government service. Fifteen car have been ordered from Denmark and what In believed to be the largest single shipment ever made to the Philippine consists of thirty-two Overland now In transportation. "'ffii-iS Gas rub b1; -? fczzi ic.fcia fcd bg tes '. PFTP1 frirrm CCCI i HmmnM. l..!trv. ''i2"Fi.. p.......rT.nri..r.Mim ' ' -CC3 ECr i m r" "I iir.ira 1 1 . - o - - - - bv wua, Twr til UiW"1 J 1 Hapmobile Long-Stroke "32" Fire Passenger Touring Cafe $900 F.O. B. Detroit, Including equipment of windshield, gas lamp end generator, oil lamp, tools and bora. Three speeds forward and reverse; sliding gear. Four cylinder motor. 3V(nch bore x 4-tnch stroke. Boacb magneto 19inch wfeedbue. 30 x 3'i-iach tires. Color Standard Kupmobil blua Tk naw touring ear wfU V first exhibited at th Grand Central I'alac New York. January iu-ii: maa suDeequentty at toe principal auto suaws Uifougiuiut La country. A car that gives yon a tbMlly new idea of what yon ought toTget for $900 A new and larger Hupmobile which immediately thrusts upon your attention a score of tangible superiorities which set it in a class apart from cars of its price. A five-passenger Touring Car for $900 which rejects every characteristic of commonplace construction ; and makes clear its invasion of the field above that price ; by points of difference and departure which no motorist can mistake. Evolved out of the experience which has built thousands of the Hupmobile Runabout the quality car today, as it always has been, of the runabout class. Designed by E. A. Nelson, Chief Engineer of the Hupp Motor Car Company, since its inception and designer of the original Hupmobile Runabout. To him and the skilled shop organization which he has continuously maintained, we owe the inimitable lines, the marked simplicity, the efficiency and the high quality of workmanship incorporated in the Runabout Impressed with the same strong individuality as the Runabout ; and still further removed from comparison by : Firt, the small -bore, Second, the body design and construction which attains the purpose Third, the Americanization, after close study abroad, of inval long stroke motor. of the "underslung" and avoids all of its disadvantages ; and uable engineering principles entirely new .to this country Some of the points which make the price unprecedented The three chief characteristics of the mew Hupmobile are Durability, Efficiency, and Ability. Bv durability we mean that we believe that there are r m a. A. MM f a ... a .a a ine Hupmobile cranksiialt has three large mam bearings, more years of quiet, competent service, and a greater capacity for withstanding hard knocks in this Car than have ever before been incorporated in a car at any figure near this price because every part is made of good material and more than amply strong for a car of this size and weight. By efficiency, we mean lower oiland gasoline consump tion : a lesser tire cost ; and a smaller outlay for repairs. By ability, we mean 60 more pulling power for moun tain work and heavy roads; 4 to 50 miles of speed at any time and all times; and ability to throttle in stantly to a wajking gait or to pick up quickly with out feeling the weight of the car. These latter advantages are due in large measure, of course, to the motor, one of the first of the small bore, long-stroke type peculiar to the finest foreign cars, ever manufactured in this country. bronze back, Babbitt lined less wear fewer adjust menis longer lire. Other bearings include high duty Hyatt roller and F. &. S annular; while the wheels are mounted on Bower bearings. The valves all on one side are enclosed by a pressed steel cover, which keeps oil in and dirt out ; and because dirt is kept out, the valves remain noiseless, show mini mum wear and require minimum adjustment Many a car of 50 to 60 horsepower carries a clutch no larger than the clutch of the new Hupmobile. Multiple disc type, with 13-inch discs gives positive action and starts the car smoothly and easily. Transmission gears are amply large for a 40 horsepower car; run slowly and are quiet at all speeds. This excess strength extends also to the full-floating rear axle large and strong enough for a seven passenger car. The gears have an unusually large number of teeth Another precaution against wear and the possibility of trouble. Oil is fed to all parts and bearings of the unit power plant under pressure the flywheel runs in oil and its centrifugal force takes the place of a pump. One kind of oil is used for engine, clutch and transmission instead of oil and grease, and it circulates and lubri cates until it is literally worn out a self-evident economy. Body and chassis design embody a low center of grav ity, and minimize skidding. The springs are strong and unusually flexible; the rear spring is, the patented Hupmobile cross type; the upholstering is deep and soft all features that add to the comfort of those in the car. Hupp Motor Car Company, Detroit, Michigan Huffman Automobile Co., Omaha, Keb Sioux City, la. Distributers for Nebraska, South Dakota and in Iowa west of and in cluding these counties: Dickinson, Clay, Buena Vista, Sac.' Carroll, Audubon, Cass, Adams and Taylor. Hupmobile Runabout $750 F. 0. B. Detroit, including top, windshield, gas lamps and gen erator, three oil lamps, tools and horn. Four cylinders, 20 1 1. R, sliding gears. Bosch magneto. In the new Hupmobile plant now rearing com pletion, which will hive when finished a capac ity of 15,000 to 20,000 car ayear. the Runabout always a car of unprecedented popularity will continue to occupy the same large part in our manufacturing plans that it does at present. Hupmobile Coupe Chassis same as Runabout Si 100 f. o. b. Detroit Hupmobile Roadster Chassis same as World Touring Car $850 f. o. b. Detroit. M'fl IH '.'') - -Ms- 1 IiIiiiXi :!r'.1V '.'j-y .'.m Vf"iv?i-ii