Jasper County Democrat, Volume 22, Number 18, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 May 1919 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

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Mod*/ 9Q a t end of 168-hour non-stop run, entering lobby of Lee-Hucktns Hotel, Oklahoma City. Linn Mathewson famous racing driver at wheel; beside him Dick Carhart. |

makes of cars competing. On only one day of its run did the Overland fail to exceed the official A. A. A. record. That was the third day—an afternoon and night of rain with muddy going under the axles. The car then fell eight miles under the mark, but its performance was so unusually high that it averaged 6243 miles for each day of the 168 hour run. The motorist is interested in tests of this kind only as they point him to some feature of economy in operation and upkeep. The test made by E. R. Carhart, Overland distributor in Oklahoma, appears to be replete with such features. The judges of the contest were the president of the Chamber of Commerce of that city, and the managing editors of the two leading daily newspapers. Examination of their records of the Model 90’s record-breaking trip show:

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4370 miles— 7 days—with gear sealed in high