THE OMAHA RI7XIUY BKK: FKIUtTTAUV 20, X) i- MAN WHO RTOS THE OMAHA MOTOR EXHIBITION. -a 5 t mini a. .- CLARKE O. POWELL. BRIGHT OUTLOOK FOR THE FUTURE I President McClaren of Mitchell Lewis Motor' Company Enter Into Discussion of Auto Business time" among th bsnkt'rs for the tnstiu fncturrs of automobiles who dresitrd o lesrn th.lr rspotlv standing amonx th rnt-n who extended credits? A grvat transformation has taken placv Th maker vhos company la well founded finds no difficulty In foorrowtnir all tha capital ha needs for Incrvaaed business. Tha act condition of every motor plant la known In the Inner of the financial world.. The MitchelMewla Motor company haa no obligation! It cannot meet at the mo ment It la expected to meet them. The company haa Increased It business be yond the fondest dreams of Its officials; there Is nothing In the business sky that looks like a storm cloud. I am proud to be known as the president of a concern that haa lived so long and done so well. My keynote, nloftan. or whatsoever It may be called. Is: There's no time for failure, for every moment of manufacturing and merchan dising time la taken up with Dullness. If the success of the Mitchell company re flects the Industry as a whole, then 191 will mark the greatest motor car mak ing conditions ever known. Ryan of Lincoln to Handle Marmon Fred Ryan of tAieoln. haa taken on the Marmon agency for the eastern half of Nebraska and certain counties In west ern Iowa. The temporary location of the Omaha show room la at lOJt Farnsjm street. Aa soon larger quarters can be found the Ryan company will more Into them. A. Hothwell will hare charge of the Omaha branch and will locate tn Omaha. K. M. Welch, factory representative. Is very much pleased with tha oonnectton and anticipates a good showing from the Ryan Motor Par company. Mr. Welch will be here during the Omaha show. Why AC Plugs Aro Equipment of Best Made Cars Vp to a few years ago the automobile manufacturers In selecting the spark floes with which to eo,ulp their cara were considering two points, as fnr as the per formance nf the plnjs arc concerned; that the Insulator would not crack too easily and that tha plugs would not soot too quickly. At that time motors had lower com pression and were run at lower speed and the automobile buyer did not expect the performance out of the motor that he Is looking for t day. Later high speed mo tors were brought out nnd experience showed the me.titifacturera that labora tory and dynometer tests were not suf ficient; that these tests were all rlRlit as a preliminary, but when they were completed It vtas to their advantage to go In a hilly count ty to test the plugs In actual service as .- wider rangw of re quirements shows different results than could be obtained on the block. It was then found that spark plugs were pretty bad. When taking a long gre.de the motor woi'ld run all right until they reamed a ceitaln point on the hill, then It would backfire and mlos. At times the carburetor was blamed and everybody that bad tho same trouble felt that the hill waa too much for tho motor. Hut tho Champion Ignition company, manufacturers of A O plugs, made a study of these conditions and found that, tho spark plugs were to blame truest of the time for knocks, backfires and miss ing when going up a hill, also miming at hlph eed. These points were brought out t the manufacturers who took a great deal of Interest In tne matter and made compara tive tests which showed tl.em tUat It was not only necessary fo:- a plug to have a good inmilntor and not to soot too easily, bu of eiu,i Importance la the fart that It must bo g tight and stay a as tleht after tho motor becomes hot. With tht ordinary design of plugs that Is not ob tainable as the snetal shell and tightening nut will expand under heat so much more than the porcelain that la praciloally loosens the porcelain In Its sent and causes a serious leaksge. Mushy Voxels Wreck Monjee. "Many a marriage that otherwise would have been happy Is wrecked on the shoals of Idealism, falsely created by 'mushy' novels." Such la the opin ion of .'4 California librarians In session, here. "Plsllltialonments following this senti mental reading embitters young married women." declared Miss Zrvilo llrown, secretary of the association, who nlxo declared that girls should not be allowed to devour novels becauoe ft weakens their minds. San Plrso I'nlon. GETTING RESULTS FROM YCUR STORAGE BATTERY Anybody who has driven a motor car knews that It Is harder t'o start tha motor In cold weather than It In at other times. The motor, on account of tha cold, ta naturally stlffer and must U turned over more rapidly In order to start. On this account the Nehraaka fltorago Hnttery company advise that the best of rare be given a storage battery In order to have It do Its work properly. The first thing they recommend la that the battery be kept filled with distilled, water and that a hydrometer teat bo made at least once a month to make sure that the battery Is sufficiently rhnrgfd. A fully charged battery will not freeze at any temperature In which motor cars are driven. In fact It requires 9S de grera below xero to freexo the solution In a bsttery whose spertric Gravity Is kept tip to the proper point, which la FROM THE MANUFACTURING END Ily H. I.. M'fXARRW, President Mltchrll-I.e wis Motor Co. Automoiiile dealers who deal in plati tudes In discussing the manufacturing situation In 1H15 end the outlook for 1916 are wasting words. Simple truths tell a story of prosperity, profitable returns : on Investments and hopeful prospect for I the cumins season. The scarcity of materials that enter Into tho makeup of the automobile, and the consequent high payments for fln- Iinhed products required to keep dealers ur.d agents from clamoring for deliveries, put a tax on the energies of many mak ers last . year. The latter had to over- 'como a stiffer resistance to produce cara and when, finally, the machines were shipped to dealers, the cost production pi lco was out of line, to the sorrow of i he manufacturer. In every case where the automobile company waa well founded had its neighborhood, material wes bought at higher prices than those that should have prevailed but the pride r ' tiio maker offset 'this he wanted to keep up his reputation for manufacturing efficiency, nnd clipped off much profit t i tirl cars out as specified or, perhaps, as faithfully promised. Plenty of Material on Hand. Tho Mitchell-Lewis s .wotor company, with its. fine record and its origin dating , hack to 1S"4, when Its output made for the greater advancement of t.ie Badger i state, waa fortunate in having executive units that had the right perspective on tho needs of the fall of 1916 and tha spring of 1913, and there waa never an ' hour in tha production eohedule under the direction of Engineer John W. Bat. . when the factory waa In danger of com ing to a manufacturing atandstUI beoause of lack of material. . ' In years gone by the veteran organisa tion drew upon Ha stored-up supplies of materials quite aa naturally aa a. squirrel upon tta winter store of food. There was the natural dally demand and some one had followed the precepts of tha Mitchell company In providing; tha atore V house to draw upon. hortagr of Ant omsttilf. Were X to venture an optrrlaav Z might , cay: Ixjok out for a shortage of auto mobiles tho comlnr Bprtng. Not all of tha concern sow IxjUdtng cara and marketing a large percentage of tha finished product will be able to get material. That la obvious. Mat all will ba able to keep their plana cp to the 100 per cent efficiency standard. They wfll find a Beared ty in th labor market, perhaps, or a total disability problem In tha getting of parts essentially vital to manufacturing". ' Tha concerns that are run aa la tha Mitchell-Lewis Motor com pany will have little or no trouble in I providing tho factory with. ma ! terlai. Soma dealers, shrewd, forehanded I and enterprising", will havo tho cars ready for tho demands. They will clean , up and will have the Jump on tho men : whose parent companies aro temporarily ' embarrassed by tho lack of material. We expect no untoward effects, no ' matter what tho spring demand may be. i There never was a period In tho history ! of the company when it was so well pro . pared to meet every call upon its manu ' facturlng facilities. During tho last two I years tho plant has been raised to Its highest phase of efficiency and a brand 1 of prosperity that fairly made organisa tion. It makes the officers of tho oom . pany proud to scan the results. They are certain to be pleased with the results ' of the coming season. Did the call for winter types of cars come In from tho four corners of the i country the Mitchell-Lewis factory was ffiual to the demand. I Md the popular fancy become obsessed J'V the nlftv vnsHntpe thnt was nrnvMH on "'The Blx of '11" chVssts and threaten to swamp the plant with orders? Mr. Bate niet the emergency, and, as a well-known critic puts It, "Put out enough of the sweetest roadster Job to keep all the dealers pleased." Optimism tha Idea Optimism, some more, optimism, and then a lot more of this buoyant feeling. Is the message that the president of the Mitthell-Lewis Motor company would like to have reach the farthermost points of the I'nlted States. The moat wholesome dt mand for good cars produced by con cerns with reputations covering a ' long ranKe of manufacturing years Is about to make Its presence felt. Our factory is ready, the Mitchell dealers from New York to California points are keen to take away every car we can make and Mitchell owners who possess unbounded loyalty to the traditions and product of the veteran Racine company aro tho as sets that make for tha greater valuo of our Investment. New York conditions, by many con sidered a good oeonomlo barometer, never were better so far aa tho Mitchell com pany is concerned. I know little abooC the relations of tha rival mrairttio with tha Atlantla seaboard, dealera Bat I do know that wo bad orders (or so many City alone that wo had to resort to gaily shipments by express to co-operate to tho highest degree with our dealer. It waa Bo uncommon -thing to find ozproao ears backed u to tho aiding near oar plant twice a day, ao formidable did our daily IWslneso with tho oast become, JVfaat hag booom of tha "perilous 'V-ei 1 w.t j it, tM. jar "Built to ; VAI VF 4M JHIEAB " -SIXES- Roadsters and Touring Cars $950 to $1485 f . o. b. Flint, Mich. Satisfy a DemandNot to Meet a Price 99 Over 40,000 1916 Buick Sixes Sold and Delivered To Date You Have Their Experience To Back Your Judgment In Choosing 'This Model $1020.00 fe o. b. Factory PLACE YOUR ORDER AT THE SHOW At the Omaha Automobile Show is the real place to compare the different cars side by side, and we invite you toebmpare The Buick with any car exhibited. Visit our Booth, have our salesman go over the Cut Away Chassis with you, have him explain the principle of Valve-In-Head motor construction, and why it is the most efficient type motor built. Have him show you the Heavily Reinforced Pressed Channel Steel Frame The Full Floating Rear Axle The Cantilever Springs The Cellular Radiator, and its many other Mechanical Superiorities. Then go over the complete car. Note the Graceful Body Lines The Beautiful Finish The Roomy Interior, Upholstered in Genuine Leather The Silk Mohair One-Man Top with Inside Operating Curtains. -IMMEDIATE DELIVERY- By placing Your Order NOW you will Insure Delivery to Suit your Convenience, li you wait you may be disappointed, as a great many were last fall by not being able to get a BUICK. The Spring Demand will be the Greatest in the History, and the Great BUICK Factories at Flint, Michigan, are working day and night to supply this demand, but they are far behind w ith the orders from dealers .who have foreseen this demand and are preparing to take care of it. Make our Show Rooms at 1912 Farnam St., your Headquarters During the Show 14th Season of Successful Manufacture You Have The Experience of Over 200,000 x Owners to Confirm , Your Selection of The Buick Car NEBRASKA OUJECIK AUTO CO OMAHA Le Huff, Mgr. LINCOLN I!. E. Sidles, Gen. Mgr. SIOUX CITY S. C. Douglag, Mgr.