A merica lavish Periodical Carter

CLIFTON AVENUE • CINCINNATI 30, OHIO

li16/ATBC 111',/L1IiI8ii tit (ION ICAX

H. C. S. BUILT OF
MOST DEPENDABLE
MOTOR CAR UNITS

TALES

tal
ger o f
•0:36
n der
trade
I trade
ounces
his old

"In the new 'models of II. C. S.
cars is expressed the best engineer.
ing and manufacturing experience
of !tarry C. Stutz—an experience
that• has run the gauntlet of every
Twist and turn in automobile build-
, ing during the last 22 years," said
Mr.. Al Weisman of the. Weisman
Motor Sal. s Co.
"It is difficult to explain exactly
what you obtain in a car like the
II. S. Only the closest study of
every unit of this car's construction,
and a reasonable amount of time
spent in driving the car, will ever
give you a true idea of the value of
Harry C. Stutz's offering to the pub-
lic in the II. C. S.
"In November, 1919, Ilarry C.
Stutz crystalized his ideas of what

\ ND

AID

public
stations
for
Upper
Ass,
e lath.

'

AKE

the public wanted in a moderately
priced, fine ear, and with his cus-
tomary speed and directness started

TINE

11 Jew.

el Bel-
tentioo
la tour. ,
0 take
for
stitute.

PAGE SEVEN

to build the first II. C. S.
"It is a tribute to his skill and ex-
perience that he exhibited at the
1120 New York Automobile Show
the first 11. C. S.—a 'pattern car,'
in nearly every respect, for all the
cars that were built this past year.
In other words, the first H. C. S. was
was
afraid
to
buy
anything
else
and
preferred
to
CIMON W. BAKER, of Shamokin, Pennsyl.
so nearly correct that only the most
wait,"
says
Mr.
Baker.
As
patient
as
you
may
vania, waited nearly two years for this Buick
inconspicuous changes were neces-
be, you do not want to wait so long for your new
K-Six-5o, in which he is seen. Mr. Baker ordered
sary in later cars.
Buick. Whether you want a Buick now or in the
"Immediately following the show
the Buick Thanksgiving Day, 1918, but because
season, work was started on the new
spring or summer, it is best for you to give your
of the demand for Buick cars, he was unable
manufacturing home of the B. C. S.
order to your dealer immediately. Present put•
obtain it until September, 1920. "I had such pleas.
in Indianapolis, and today the II. C.
chasing is receiving the attention of wise motorists.
ure and satisfaction from other Buick cars that I
S. is being produced in a most mod-
ern and up-to-date factory. For effi-
ciency and ideal working conditions
it will be impossible to find a finer
automobile plant anywhere in the
United States, regardless of size.
"Ilarry.C. Stutz builds a good us-
tomobe
il because he has never been
led t o experiment with engineering
practices that were not staple and
sane. Ile is a sincere advocate of
—
One of the season's new automo- taking the best approved methods
dp .
bile models which bids fair to make an:I.Tmheakifnagathichmatfihtehisisnreeet,ons
responsible
a circle of warm friends among the
medium priced automobile buyers is for the success of one of the best,
the Anderson "Six" distributed b y known cars in the country is a ;rood
indication that his engineering j ud g•
Coleman 5,r Myers, 4851 Woodward
has attractive lines, ment is sound and his manufacturing'
avenue. The car
being uphostered in genuine leather , ideas fundamentally in line with
and possessing an individuality of Public demand.
"Ilarry C. Stutz is offering in the
design which is unusually pleasnig.
W. A. Coleman, who heads the H. C. S. a ear composed of the latest
Mr. ,. O. Simons, director of the which successiul merchandising is
concern,
is
a
well
known
Detroit'
and
moat dependable motor car
National Automobile Dealers' Associ- necessary as applied to the automo-
business man, identified for a num. units. He is offering a car of ex-
ation, has been on a Into through bile business, no rel., all of howei"•r
ceptionally
distinctive appearance in
Michigan sliming the past ten slays' small, so long as it \vas sonic part of ber of years with Mandy & Coleman,
line and equipment, and yet a car
e wig with the automobile dealers the business, but w hat it was of automobile insurance, with offices in that
is
very
rugged, staunch and eco-
aswiciations in Saginaw, Jackson, Lan- enough importance to he a part sat the the Union Trust building.
During the world war Mr. Coleman nomical to operate.
busin ess.
sing and Port Huron.
'When
a
chassis of almost me
-
saw service over - seas in the air serv
At each of these meetings N11%
I'hrsr meetings WM• intensely in- ice, being a captain and commanding' chanical perfection is the foundation
Simons has outlined to the dealers teresting and beneficial to all becati.e
for
a
car
of
grace,
beauty and smart-
and distributors the importance of the of the exchange of ideas, one of the officer of the 500th Aero Squadron,
returning to Detroit at the close of ness—and when this same car can be
automobile industry, emphasizing the charts illustrating
Men the war, where he was given an en- comfortable, enduring and economi-
fact that automobile men are selling uuet ■ tn.I c‘change dollars. each has a
thusiastic ovation by his hosts of cal c at the same time—then you have
transportation, which is the ma in stellar aNc r the exchange. two men
an automobile that is as near the
friends.
artery of COMillerfe, "t0 get anywhere meet and exchange ideas, each ma,
Speaking of the Anderson Six, Mr. acme of motor car perfection as it
we must move" automobiles. more has two ideas," the more men, the
Coleman says that it offers more 15 possible to build."
people and freight than all . other more ideas, the more pn , •ible good.
value for the money than any car
forms of transportation combined.
The possibilities of the getting to- on the market today.

Value Per Dollar
Invested

Waits Two Years to Get Buick He Ordered

G. 0. Simons Exchanges
Ideas with Dealers

There is a Vivid suggestion of rnart
liness, character and physical prowess in
the vraceful lines and appearance of the

sturdy Stutz.

Every Stutz car is built to withstand
conceivable strain or shock. By
exacting comparison-feature by feature
-with any other car, Stutz gives you the
greatest value perdollar invested. Proof
is here ready for you.
We will be pleased to show you the
complete line of Stutz cars.

every

NEW AUTO MODELS
WIN BUYERS' FAVOR

Stutz Detroit Motor Co.

Makes Trip Through Michigan and Visits Saginaw,
Jackson, Lansing and Port Huron.

\I r. Simons illustrated his talk with
a series of charts, saying: "Eighty
per cent of the knowledge we have
we get through our eyes." His talk
was not made to boost the Overlain!
amt kVillys-Knight cars, oh which he
is distributor, l ie u rather to give oth-
er.. ihe ',vela of the SLICCe ,, of his
organization which leads in the dis-
tribution of this make of ears in dm
United States.
The charts slisiwcd the detail to

1

4467

Woodward Ave.

STUTZ MOTOR CAR CO. OF AMERICA, Inc.

AUTO SHOW SPACE 94

SYMPHONY TO GIVE
ALL-RUSSIAN BILL

gether of the dealers and the value
of these meetings was illustrated by GERMANS BLAME JEWS
the chain with the weak link, this
ALLIED ATTITUDE
showed the weakness of the idole
BERLIN.--At a meeting of the
Two numbers will be contributed,
chain, one dealer not working iu liar
German Defense Association in Bres- to the Detroit Symphony Orchestra
loony with his as:on:it:les jeopardize Ian, a number of anti-Semitic speak- concert Sunday afternoon, March
20,
the po,,i1olitie, of all of them. N1r. ors asserted that the Jews were re- in Orchestra Hall, by the Detroit
Su ei ni. was rs 'octant to mention any sponsible for the unfavorable atti- Symphony String Quartet.
geed that lie may have done, but AV:I• tulle of the Allies at the London Con-
The program will be all Russian,
ent1111-iii•tie ab o ut the benefit he re

FOR

reli ed.

-5011 1 16'56 FEEEM MO

ference, according to a Breslau dis- by request, and the quartet will play
patch.
the Andante Cantabile from String
Quartet Opus II and the Scherzo
from String Quartet in E Flat Minor
of Tschaikowsky. The members of
the quartet are Ilya Schkolnik and
William Grafing King, violins;; Her-
man Kolodkin, viola; Philipp Abbas,
cioloncello.
Mr. Gabrilo•itsch will conduct the
orchestra in the Scriabin Third Sym-
phony (The Divine Poem), Rimsky-
Kosakov's Spanish Caprice and Glin-
ka's overture, "Russian and Lud-
milla." The Scriabin symphony is
being played at a Sunday concert
by special request. When it was
given its first presentation in this
city at the New Year's pair of con-
certs, its success was unmistakable
and it was repeated at the last pair
in January in response to popular
demand. So far-reaching were the
reports of its fascinations and the
superb manlier in which the Detroit
orchestra and its gifted leader played
it that road managers wanted it

TillIMM 61 FIE M M MESSL,fr:

placed on the programs to be given

by the orchestra sin tour. And now
again is the demand fur another

hearing overwhelmingly insistent.
The fourth concert in the Young
People's Series will be given Satur-
day morning, March 19, at 10:30
o'clock, in Orchestra Hall. Mr. Ko-
lar will conduct and Herman Hoot-
ter will tell the story of the instru-

'oh

On

On

Our

Our .

Fourth

Fourth

grit

overture to "William Tell" (Rossini)
and Coronation march from "The
Prophet" INteyerbeer).

- ii

HELP EUROPEAN JEWS
MEET OWN PROBLEMS

Hebrew

Sheltering and Immigrant
Aid Society Reorganise Work
Across the Seas.
---
NEW YORK. Judge Hugo Pam,

eft Clean. Car

I t

t I

will increase the delights and benefits . of touring.
Come early and arrange for the fitting of dust covers
on the upholstered parts of your touring car,
roadster, town car of brougham. We have the
approved fabric for any style body now in general

use.

On Our Fourth Floor

z

weecx4
.-- :- teaeolf 6 mpaq

Scripps Xoolh*del

these instruments at their best in
Tschaikowsky's delightful ballet suite
"Casse-Noisetts" (Nutcracker), the

Floor

Floor

0111"

new

ments, composers and compositions.
The program will be devoted to the
special and percussion instruments in
the orchestra and will "show off"

Max Meyerson and Adolph Held. the
Commissioners of the Hebrew Shel-
tering and Immigrant Aid Society of
America, together with the unit
which accompanied them, are al-
ready in Warsaw and Danzig and
have taken up the work of reunit-
ing Jewish families separated by the
war, begun by the Society in Febru-
ary. 1920.
The European activities of the so-
ciety will now be so reorganized to
make it possible for the local Jewish
communities in Europe to take
charge of these activities themselves.
The Society's Bureau for work in
Foreign Countries is giving to the
thousands of relatives who come to
the Home at 229.231 East Broad-
•ay, New York, and through the
mail, every available information in
regard to the steps necessary to
have their relatives join them. New
regulations are made practically
every da }and this often entails the
adoption of a new procedure alto-
gether.
The latest new regulation is re-
garding affidavits made by persons
here for their relatives abroad. In
the past, the nearest male relative,
regardless of law nr blood ties, was
the one who had to assume retiponsi-
bility for the immigrant. According
to the new ruling, the nearest blood
relative must sign the affidavit. In
cane where • woman is the blood
I relative and is economically de-
pendent upon her husband, both the
husband and wife have to sign the
affidavit.

SPACE
40
AT THE
SHOW

Being Exhibited at the Show

A beautifully appointed body, a sturdy economical motor. a scientifi-
cally designed chassis, the whole perfectly balanced—thus Scripps-
Booth acbieves in its latest production the exceptional in appearance
with the exceptional in performance.

The closed bodies of the four models that comprise the Scripps-Booth
late are Fisher-built—low, straight-lined and lustrously finished. The
enclosed models are upholstered in the finest all-wool coach cloths
the open models, in genuine leather with Pantasote tops. Their
equipment includes many unusual features found only on Scripps-
Booth Motor Cars.

The power plant is of six-cylinder valve-in-head type, equipped with
the latest of fuel saving devices. It is exceptionally compact, eco-
nomical to operate and accessible—developing over forty horse power.

A wheelbase of 115 inches with wide flexible springs and long spring
suspension insures the greatest possible riding comfort for cars of this
weight, ;,:t permits a short turning radius in congested traffic. The
seven inch frame, steel helloed wheels, dependable steering gear and
large braking tarhce provide for sturdy construction and safety.

&11=-Nootil eorporation-Detroit,Nichiqan

Retail Store, 8231 Woodward Ave.

Phones Market 2084 and 2085.

