a ltiu ts&u: uiUAHA, tsuNDAY, JUIA' 10, 1921. Focusing oi Car HeadliglitsIs ; i Feature of Law No Matter What Type of Lenses Used, Lights Will Be ' Illegal Unless Focus Correct. Focusing of the automobile head light is the all-important feature of the Nebraska Ifgal lens law which will take effect July 23, according to H. B. McCall, service manager for the Auto Electric Service corpora tion. More attention will be paid to the proper focus of the headlight than to the type of lens used and police officials will be Instructed to check the throw of light very carefully. No matter how good the lens may be, it wilf throw a good or poor light, depending entirely upon the focusing of the lamps. Poorly focused lights will not be tolerated. An automobile headlight, to be ef fective, must be adjusted or focused just as a pair of opera or field glasses or a camera. It is optical device and requirM the same attention in the proper adjustment. The Auto Electric Service corpor ation Is equipped to focus automobile headlights properly. This work can be done anytime and but a small fee is charged for the service. The Auto Electric Service' cor poration has been selected as one of the official focal stations and is au thorised to issue certificates, which will be recognized by police officials. These certificates show that the lenses have been properly focused. Studebaker Cars Set New Record 6-Year-01d Paige Tours Northwest One Is First Over Yuba Pass; Another Opens Sno qualraie Pass. News of more "first" established by Studebaker cars has just been re ceived by O. N. Bonney of the O. N. Bonney Motor Co., local distrib utor of Studebaker cars. " A dispatch from Nevada City, Nev., states that the first automobile to come over the Yuba pass under its own power this year was a Studebaker, carrying Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lister of Boise Valley, Idaho, and their children, together with camping equipment weighing nearly 500 pounds. They were en route from their home in southern Cali fornia and essayed the difficult trip over the Yuba pass without experi encing trouble. From Spokane, Wash., comes the report of another Studebaker piloted by J. H. Collins of Colville, accom panied by his wife, who drove their car to Seattle and established the record of first crossing the Sno - qualmie pass. There is always con siderable interest in the first car to come over this pass leading over the Cascade range, as' it is usually block ed with snow until late in the sea son. Upon leaving Seattle, Mr. Col lins was told that the pass would not be open, but he determined to set out and go as far as he could. On the summit he was held up for nearly an hour wating for work men to let him through. He en countered more than eight miles of snow in making the ascent, and had o resort to chains in negotiating '.his stretch. . Car With 51,000 Miles to - Credit Visits Logging Camps. After serving in various capacities, including that of a livery "bus" and touring over all manner of rough country, a 6-year-old Paige, with 51,000 miles to its credit, is about to be subjected to the hardest work of its career. Equipped with a port able welding outfit weighing 700 pounds, this tough Paige veteran of mountain trails and desert routes is pentrating the logging" country of the northwest. The car was purchased from Del Larson, Paige dealer at Spokane, Wash., in 1915, by Bennidict Brothers of Colville, who used it for rental purposes. After being run more than 20,000 miles, in which it made several trips into Canada, it was bought in September, 1917, by P. C. Hansen, an oxy-acetylene welder.. The new owner started at once on a trip to California, traveling 2,024 miles in 12 days. The route in cluded Crater Falls, via Topsy pass and Klamath Falls, Ore., and the car reached an altitude of 7,700 feet by way of a mountain trail as there was no road at that time. Two other long tours were also made. Mr. Hansen specializes in the weld utg ot cogging irucK irames. as his Paige would not wear out and remained a glutton for work he is oft to the logging camps of the northwest, carrying his 7U0-pound welding outfit with him. Liberty and Green Visor Auto Lenses Approved by State Two of the first lenses to be en dorsed by the department of public works under the new Nebraska head light law are those manufactured by the Macbeth-Evans Glass company, Pittsburgh. These lenses are known to the trade as the Green Visor and the Liberty, the latter being a modifica tion of the former. The Macbeth-Evans Glass com pany, one of the oldest in the United States, was also one of the first to develop a lens for motor vehicle headlights that would meet the re quirements of all states that have a headlight law. The new Nebraska law establishes a penalty for all dealers who sell lenses not approved by the state. As a protection for motorists, the state furnishes a certificate to every dealer who sells approved lenses. In lieu of the certificate, which is not ready at this time, dealers are being furnished with a letter over the signature of George K. Leonard, assistant secretary of the department of public works. J. H. Hansen Goes to Detroit to Attend Cadillac Men's Meet J. H. Hansen of the T. H. Han sen Cadillac company left early last week to attend a meeting of the Cadillac distributors at Detroit. Cadillac distributors from practically every leading city m the United States and foreign countries will be present to meet th; new president of the Cadillac company, Mr. Her bert S. Rice. Mr. Hansen expects to return next week. The "Old Guard" an organization of distributors who handle the Cadil lac exclusively, will also hold a meeting. Normal's 'School On Wheels' Will Make Tour of East Forty Geological Students, Traveling by Reo Speed Wagons, to Study Moun tain Formations. Indiana Stafe Normal's "school oti wheels" is headed east on its annual summer tour. This year a t cnn.mil trin through eastern U)VVU f j states is scheduled. About 40 schol ars from the normal school will accompany Professor Breese, head nf thf crpnlnciral deoartment. the purpose being to study geological conditions in the eastern mountains and aloaig the Atlantic coast. Th nfir trin will be made bv automobile. Two Reo Speed Wag ons, tittcd with dus Doaies, win, with a touring car, serve to carry the entire party. The baggage al InwrH has been limited to 35 pounds a person, but two dresses being al lowed to each girl and no more than two suits for each man. In each case there will "be one outing cos tume and one costume for use while stopping in the larger cities. Frnm fiincie the "school on wheels" will go directly to Niagara Falls, where the first stop is to K marl fnr the nuroose of Studv- inor dfenlnciral conditions in that vi cinity. From there the party will head for the Adirondack mountains, spending three days in camp. After leaving the mountains, the Speed Wagons will carry the school to Maine, Massachusetts and New York, three days being spent in the latter city. From there the re turn trip will take a road through the Allegheny mountains, with a visit at the famous Horshce Bend. The entire trip is scheduled to take 35 days, an average of 100 miles a day being covered by the Speed Wagons, One Ford Car Turned Out Every 6 1 -2 Seconds; New Record for June During the month of June the Frd Motor company, through its Detroit factories and 22 assembly plants throughout the country, pro duced 108,962 Ford cars and trucks, setting a new high record for one month. Production of Ford cars and trucks has been steadily increasing since early spring, and shows sub stantial gains over the same period last year. The second quarter of 1921 shows and output of 301,796 Ford cars and trucks against 220, 878 for the same three months of last year, or a net increase of 80,918. Despite the fact, however, that the Ford plants have been running at maximum capacity, the demand for Ford cars and trucks 15 not be ing met, and at the present time many thousand unfilled orders have been piled up ahead. Particularly is this true with respect to enclosed cars, for which the demand has been unusually heavy. On reason cited by Ford officials for the unprecedented demand for Ford cars is the present tendency toward economy. Many ot those whose names have been added to the long list of buyers might well have afforded larger and more cost ly cars than the Ford, but it is the belief that most prospective motor car buyers are investigating all of the costs incident to motoring much more carefully than at any period during the pest five years. The estimated output of the Ford factories fgr July calls for 109,000 cars and trucks, or a production of 4,360 a day for 25 days. Since the assembling of cars is being handled during an eight-hour work day only, the hourly output will be 545 cars. In other words, one Ford car or truck leaves "the assembly line every 6 1-2 seconds. Rolling chairs used by invalids and others in England have to carry motor licenses. 1,000-Mile Road Classic Is Won By Lincoln Car Victor in Nevada Race Leads Nearest Competitor by Over Two Hours ; Only Three ' Machines Finish Stephens Stores Factory Busy Making Tires The depression in tire manufactur ing and sales, generally evident throughout the country, has not been felt by the Stephens Tire Stores company, declares Harry F. Trum- ble, manager of the Omaha Stephens store. Mr. Trumble said yesterday that the tire and tube factory of th A. J. Stephens Rubber company has been working day and night shifts for several months, and the plant where the Stephens accessories are manu factured is working full time to keep l-roduction equal to orders. An . extensive advertising cam paign is now under way by tha Stephens organization, their first move being the distribution of 1,000,000 circulars to automobile owners. Opening of many other Stephens stores, in addition to the 11 now in operation, is planned within the next few months, Mr. Trumble said. J row 1. I I CHEVROLET For Economic Transportation- CHEVROLET "Four-Ninety" touriner ear averatres more than twenty miles to the gallon of gasoline, and is otherwise economi cal to maintain. This model, at the new price, is the world's most wonderful motor car value. Chevrolet Motor Company Retail Store OMAHA Phone HA rosy 7280 i I H I 26S9 Farnam St. 1 " . S Checroltt "FwNtnOiT Touting Car, $645.. . . Flint, Midi I ! I A Monarch of Motoi Cars ! The Willys-Knight monarch of motors; is housed in one of the world's finest cars. The quiet smoothness of the sleeve valve motor which emphasizes any noise has enforced the refinement of chassis and body far beyond the requirements of ordinary cars. Years, have been spent in developing the Willys Knight car to its present worthiness of this i " , ' jl. ' Wilf ertraordinarv motor. There into hntr wart- tnansMp on any car, anywhere, at any price. There is no car anywhere that costs so little to run and maintain in proportion to the extreme ' satisfaction and dependability of its service. The extremely high'mileage per gallon of gaso line is only one of the details which cause Willys-Knight to outsell all Knight motored cars. Imprroii With Ujs $ 1895 Tmmzf- TiUd$ -RtdJsttr,. $. h. Thi$ -Ctuft, .$.. TtUit -Stdan, .,. Ttltit - wst, $2195 -uu, 2195 -vm, 2845 -wtj, 2945 - tutu, - w, $1895 1895 2550 tw, 2750 Mt Ctattmmd Van Brunt Automobile Co. AUZxtrtmtb OMAHA COUNCIL BLUFFS WILL YS-KN1GBT A telegram of congratulation from the Nevada Highway associa tion has been received by the Lincoln Motor company on the signal vie tory of a Lincoln in he three-day 1,000-mile road classic over Nevada deserts and mountains. Of the 10 cars which started, only three were able to finish in the prize money, and the iLncoln led its near est competitor by a margin of two hours and H) minutes. The Lincoln, a strictly stock model, was driven by its owner, W. W. Bramlette of Los Angeles. Route ' and cars were checked by the AmericanvAutomobile association. The telegram is in part as fol lows: "In the Nevada road race classic, with an official distance of 1,017 miles, the victorious Lincoln made a remarkable record. "Less than 10 miles of the route are surfaced; the rest is dirt. An immense crowd witnessed the finish. We heartily congratulate you." The winning Lincoln is the same machine which recently knocked a whole hour off the often-contested Los Angeles-Pheonix run. This same car also holds the record over the mountain route from Los An geles to Bishop, Cal. "The Lincoln Motor company," said President H. M. Leland, "does not lend the use of its name to race track contests among 'special' cars, because it thinks that such activi ties have no significance to the or dinary purchaser of a stock model. "In the Nevada road race, how ever, an opportunity was given to test the durability and consistent power of our car." .PAone w v JA S34S FREE ROAD SERVICE EvereadyTire Service Co. .TIRE MMIRING-rULl STOCK TIRES AND TUBES 314So.l9'-h SlOmalia rvPECx mm STANDARD' Conforms to All Specifications The Price Is Only 'A PAIR 'ALL SIZES' Safe night driving requires an abundance of light Nebraska's new law demands adequate light without glare. Sun-Ray Lenses (standard type) meet both of these requirements. ' That is why it is approved by both the law and the motorist. There is a Snn-Ray Lens for every size lamp. Order your new lenses from any of the dealers listed below. P Distributed by GLASSY PAINT COME4NY l4atHarncy JOBBERS Partem & Gallagher Co. U. S. Robber Co. Master Sales Co. DEALERS Idea! Gance, 000 N. lUi St. B Mad Bartwam, 2202 BQBtaiy Ara. O. I Winner Patnt ft CHaaa, 1308 Com. Quality Tire Co, 1103 N. 18U SL Bonis Park Garage. 3104 Cmnin 8. O. L. Rhodes Garag-e, 2010 Harner SL Central Garajw. Uth and Har. Ms. . I Murphy Auto Co 48X0 8. 24th St. ALL BASKET STORES Omaha Mirror aaS Ax ffiaa Oa, tat Cnmios. CoUax Garaea, 30th and Ames Ave. Saratoca Drag- Co 24th sad Aiaav Vrad Parks. 4700 g. 24th St. O. K. Hardware, 4S31 8. 24th tt. Btr H Hardware, Benasa, a. ii. Price, NU M. ; Reduced to Only 23 SEASONS of SATISFACTION In announcing the Oldsihobile readjust ment of prices we feel privileged to recall to public attention certain facts which have stood as examples of Oldsmobile policy on prices and values. Here Oldsmobile foresight, . experience and resources made possible a value in keeping with the lowered manufacturing costs the pub lic felt were to follow. Now that material prices and labor costs and conditions have become leveled and stabi lized,. Oldsmobile policy readjusts prices to a further public advantage. In actual performance, appearance and dependability, and in the refinements that have always expressed Oldsmobile quality, there is value nowhere even approached among moderate priced cars. And Oldsmobile policy has continued to justify the deep public confidence that forms the greatest Oldsmobile asset. The Best Investment in Motorclom Other Oldsmobile Price Reductions Are Amazing Automobile Buyers!! Model 43-A 4-Cylinder ROADSTER $1,325 5-PASSENGER TOURING $1345 COUPE (Cord Tire.) $1,895 SEDAN (Cord Tire.) $2,100 Model 47 8-Cylinder 4-PASSENGER TOURING $1725 (With Cord Tirei) COUPE CCord Tires) $2,225 SEDAN (Cord Tires) $2,425 All Prices F. O. B. Laming Model 45-B 8-Cylinder PACEMAKER (Cord Tires) $1825 7-Passenger Touring. $1,875 (Cord Tires) 7-PaMenger Sedan, $2,775 (Cord Tires) Federal Tax Additional 1-Ton Economy Truck Chassis $1250 With Cab $1,325 With Express Body. . . .$1,395 (Equipped with 35x5 Cord Tires) COHPAOT NEBRASKA CHAS. A.TUCKER. Prey. OMAHA fsWr BBS MOINES 18l-k & HovOdrd St. McmAgmtkim 920 Locust St.