Maxwell’s Club Sedans Gaining Much Popularity Baggage Can Be Easily Stored in Rear Compart ment—Good Car for Salesmen. Seldom, If aver, has a motor eat In Its firat year of production achieved tha popularity of tha Max well club sedan. Sinea lt« Introduc tion Into tha Maxwell Una of models last October tha percentage of club Redan production to total production has steadily risen and now represents an extremely high figure, the car hav ing become on# of the largest selling dosed models In the Industry. The club sedan la of unusual con struction,! because of which it makes an Ideal type utility vehicle. The bridge type construction of body framlng produces unusual strength without adding undue weight. It will actually withstand more hard knocks than most touring cars. The same design that has produced good looks has likewise given p*tir ’ ttcal answer to the particular busi ness or social needs of its owners, points out H. E. Rose of the Mul lard-Rose Motors, Maxwell-CJhrysler dealer. Its doors are extremely wide. The seating arrangement Is conven ient and the seats are comfortable. A tonneau passenger may easily leave the car without disturbing those In the forward compartment. The rear compartment provides generous bag gage space capable of receiving large, bulky objects—even a trunk or baby carriage—because the doorway is so wide and the seats In front Up for ward to clear the entrance entirely. Using the club sedan, salesmen can travel with all their sample cases; commission merchants can carry their produce; the neighborhood tailor can deliver clothes; campers not only en joy comfortable transportation but by a few simple changes of cushions and back seats have a snug bed and shel ter for the night without hotel ex pense. ADVERTISEMENT. MAKES AUTOS 60 40 MILES ON A 6ALL0N OF GASOLINE New Nw* Ad*need Six All model* In the new Nash line disc wheels, and have force-feed en have new body lines, are equipped gtne lubrication. with full balloon tires, 4-wheel brakes, The leader in the new Nash Rpe Here Is the new Pierre-Arrow series 80 seven-passenger sedan. The de signers have followed closely the graceful lines of its larger companion, the famous Dual-Valve Six. The new car is powered by a six cylinder engine which is said to he the most efficient mechanism ever produced by Pierce-Arrow engineers. The new car is produced in seven body styles. The standard chassis Sioux Falls. S. D.—The Western Spe cialty company of this city announce* the perfection of an amazing device which I* enabling car owner* all over the country to more than double their mileage from each gallon of gasoline used, and at the same time remove every particle of carbon from their mo tors When the device is attached, auto mobiles have made over 40 miles on a gallon of gasoline—increasing their power and pep tremendously and eliminated all • park plug difficulties. This Inexpensive little device Is en telv automatic and aelf-regulatlng and ran he easily attached by anyone In a tew minutes without tapping or drilling The management of the company ate* that, in order to introduce this .artling new invention they are willing o tend a sample at their own risk to ine car owner 1n each town who can ihow it to neighbors and handle the big volume of business which will be built up wherever it is shown. .lust send your name and address to the Western Specialty Co.. 1326 Lacotan Bldg.. Sioux Falls, S. D»., and get their fre*- sample offer. Veteran Driver to Pilot Reo Bus Dave Fassett Will Have Charge of Cross-Country Run. Old timer* In th* automobile Indus try are doing a good deal of reminisc ing these days, the occasion being the first transcontinental motor bua trip | which is now being mad* by a new Reo Sedan type cross-country bus which Is being piloted from coast to coast bv Dave Fassett, veteran Reo driver, who bears the distinction of having driven in the first double trans continental auto tour away back in 1905-08. "It is Interesting to compare the present day conditions with those which were encountered by the driv ers in those early days and the ac counts of the Journey made by the famous Reo "Mountaineer" teem more like those of the Journevs of the old ■Forty-niners',” says R. r. Rueahaw, sales manager of the Reo Motor Oar company. "The fact that Fassett Is now driv ing the new Reo hue from New York The Improved COACH on the HUDSON Super-Six For the First Time in History Closed Car Comforts Thi" Hud*on Co*cH make* history. It is the first closed car at EXACTLY « e»«ly open or co«. a~- . Ana Hudson, alone, can build it. As the largest producer wpen Vaar VaOSt of 6-cylinder closed cars in the world, Hudson exclusively - holds the advantages to create this car and this price. PXTniv Greatest of All Hudson Achievements CjE.N UlNE ^nd novr fu*l ,l7e balloon tire* are most romfortable and iteadiett riding y-j . y y /-V/-V-V.T atandardequipment. Do not confute Hudion ever built. And braking n I a 1 at H P [\ Wl,b *emi-balloon”type*.Hud*on’» efficiency n ilmoit doubled are genuine full lize balloon tire*— ... tires 33'x 6.20V Compare the difference. More than ever, Clo.ed Car Com _ „ fort* at Open Car Cott” it the Hudson ha* not limply added uppermost buying luue. Note how The Easiest Steering and *««Zr,J,e ,he CoIlh » di‘P>«c»ng open Riding Hudson Ever Built deigned focompen.ate for the‘rad.* ‘ar’ At,he'"a'’,r.d,ype ,h' Co*lh ^ ^ ^ cal *»•«"€« balloon tire, bring '"•"""'""he highest resale value $ -O g\ against the warning denrahilily of 1 I I I I l'he reiult i* the eatiett steering, the open tar. Jr eight and Tax Exit a So Why Buy An Open Car? “ OMAHA HUDSON.ESSEX CO. Harney at 26th St. Tel. AT Untie 5065 ___________________________ _ , - J^ijly Motor Co., Faraatq St., 4 0 r Nash Puts Out New Line of Cars ^t> Noah Special Six rial Six aeries, the five passenger land disc wheels, is priced "way sedan, equipped like alt other models down.’’ , with four-wheel brakes, balloon tiresj Brisk Fall Auto Trade Predicted: President of Oakland Com pany Points to Improved Farm Situation. A brisk fall business is looked for by George H. Hannura, president and general manager of the Oakland Motor Car company, Pontiac, Mich. The presidential nomination and political party ieeuee are pretty well settled, he states, so that any un certainty in business caused by presi dential elections may be eliminated from consideration. “With 33,500,000 passenger cars In service, the replacement market, alone amounts to 2.000,000 cars this year, which is sufficient to kill tile old bugaboo regarding the saturation point," Mr. Hannutn points out. “The agricultural situation Is very niu' li improved and there Is prospect of tlie farmer getting hack into the market, something which we have tieen expecting for a long time. “Rates on loans are exceptionally low and there seems to lie plenty of money available for legitimate enter prises. You will also note that tlie stock market has been a rising one lately. “A number of companies has an nounced their new models or are about to announce them, which will clarify the situation by removing the reason for many motorists deferring the purchase of a car. "In addition, there is a marked tendency towards higher prices for motor cars, which is always a favor able factor for the Yetail trade." Continental Motor? Hike? Prodnetion Itv 33 Per (lent An increase in the manufacturing schedule for August of 33 3-3 per cent over the July schedule is an nounced by W. R. Angel!, vice presl dent of the Continental Motors cor poration. "A general stiffening up in business is noticed," said Mr. An gell today, “Our August production will he approximately a third more than July." hast a 130-lnch wheel base. Balloon tires and Pierce-Arrow four wheel safety brake* are standard equip ment. The prlc* of the tourina model la I2.S9R at Buffalo, N. Y. to the western coast carries particu lar significance and that long period which has elapsed since Fassett's first and most famous trip down tT> the present time has been a period of as tounding development and equally as tounding experience* by this Indom itable ntotories," say* Rueschnw. "It will he of particular Interest to compare the trip of the Ren bus with its luxurious equipment and complete appointment* with that early voyage made by Fassett which started from Herald Square on August 19, 1905. "Surety, the present trip will lack many of the hazardous experiences and daring feat* which were man fully borne in those early days but it Is of no less Interest for all that." MEW LABORATORY TO BE INSTALLED One nf the most completely equip ped laboratories in the west is heincr nstalled this week in the new Monarch Manufacturing company aiilding at Council Bluffs. *‘The selling of motor oils and grease* has become so competitive that careful analysis is necessary,” according to Harry Scarle, jr., gen eral manager of the MonaMobib oil plant.The new laboratories will contain everything known to scienco In lho analysis work of oils and greases. Viscosity testing machine designed to heat motor oil to temperatures com paring with cylinder walls of auto mobiles running at high speed are part of the equipment. Motor oil may look good In a bottle but many prove to be nothing more than a light liquid when subject to intense heat, according to Mona Mobilc officials. These viscosity test Ing machines will prove the ahlllty Of Mona Mobile oil to stand under high temperature. Balloon Tires Increase Inbuilt Comfort Qualities T3 EO promotes Coupe comfort by balloon tires, gently flexible springs and liberal body roominess for four occupants,— Tb Re I * Driving ease, by the simple dual foot i e -eo me control, steering smoothness, easy«to* / . . 1985 reach instruments and short turning Brougham - 2235 I*adlUS» Safety, by oversized brakes (both pedal oper T-6 Special ated), balanced distribution of weight and ' Touring Reo • 1595 remarkable engine flexibility. With balloon Tim Standard Mechanical goodness, by a high-powered Touring Reo-1335 tix-cylinder engine, low-bung chassis and the r"r'°7°>iHd 7r.m* double-framed cradling of power units. and powered with tha faatooa Reo 50 h. p. 6-cyhnder re cine REO MOTOR" CAR COMPANY, Lansing, Michigan J. M. Opper Motor Co. REO DISTRIBUTORS 2558 Farnam Street WaUer~P. Chrysler Sayst Maxwell Now Excels Previous * w Four-Cylinder Possibilities I Before you have driven the good Maxwell 30 minutes, you will be revising allyour pre vious ideas of four-cylinder possibilities. For Maxwell—thanks to the rapid prog ress of the last year and the Chrysler Six engineering staff — now goes far bevond four-cylinder limitations as you have known them. It goes so far bevond them that we have no hesitancy in saving that it is the best four-cylinder car in America today, at any thing near its price. There are specific results to back up our be lief, and we invite you to experience them for yourself at the first opportunity. If you have always thought that there must be vibration with a four, you will be delight fully surprised in the good Maxwell. For here vibration is gone, so far as riding and driving comfort are concerned —a re sult of Maxwell’s floating spring suspension of the motor which you will concede to be revolutionary. You'll step on the throttle and feel the speed shoot from 3 to 25 miles an hour in a flat 8 seconds, with an ease and smoothness entirely nc\l in your four cylinder experience. You’ll ride the bumps as though you were in a car twice as heavy as Maxwell. You will steer and handle the car with delight ful new ease. Most people want such results In their cars today; and many still think thev must pay much more than the Maxwell price to get them. That might have been true up to a few' months ago; but Maxwell's new develop ments have reversed the case entirely. On the side of economy, Maxwell stands equally to the fore. Engine bearings, for example, are built to run for the life of the car without need for replacement; owners average 24 miles per gallon; valves and carbon require attention only at long intervals. These are but a-few of the things that lead us to call Maxw ell the best four in America at anywhere near our price. For the Maxwell of today is more than the good Maxwell —it has been developed to a plane of unprecedented superiority among four-cylinder cars. Tourin* Car. *e, *1025) Club _J—k — .Sedan,* I095;Sedan,* IJJS. All prurtf.o.b. V Pe.ro.« rub/erl to current government t,». ■ VIA (W lVr.ident .n4 Chairman of the Board n-, are M.a.r.l i. »««.* iH. canvantenee a/ nma- MaiaaO Motor talar Conv.radon. FUtrott. Mm*. fxivtn#fWa Aah about>4 am til a altra* f»«*# (*ian. MAXWELL MILLARD-ROSE MOTORS Farnam at 28th W. S. PETF.RSON, South Omaha. JEWELL AUTOMOBILE CO.. Ill Rr*adw*y, Council Bluff* > i