UNION 
CAMP $ 
TRAILER 
198 
w, 
Including Timken 
Roller Bearings, 
Pressed Steel Frame, 
30 x 31/2 Goodyear 
Tires, Stormproof 
Tent, Spring Beds, 
Mattresses, Dividing 
Curtain, Hinged 
Folding Camp, 
Finest Quality 
Throughout. 
The New UNION CAMP TRAILER is a revelation in quality, 
compactness, ease of operation, and exceedingly low price. Multiply 
the cost of your car by two and you have its value to you with camp 
trailer attached. This comfortable home on wheels trails along without 
strain on your car. O er hills and plains, ready to accommodate t e 
whole family. Don’t be without it. 
Read These Unsolicited Letters: 
“LONGS FOR SUMMER” 
Read about U. S. Congressman Browne’s trip. Mrs. Browne writes: 
“We purchased one of your Union Trailers last summer and were so enthu¬ 
siastic over it. We hitched our Trailer on behind our Ford Sedan and did New 
England for seven weeks following the Coast from New York City up past 
Portland, Maine.; then up to Dixville Notch, N. H.; down to the White Moun¬ 
tains; over to Burlington, Vt.; and later down the Connecticut Valley to Spring- 
field;’West through the Berkshires, crossing the Hudson at Poughkeepsie. 
“We only slept in a hotel two nights and even when we visited the old 
ancestral home of fourteen rooms at Randolph Center, Vt., we set up the 
Trailer in the back yard, and cooked and ate on the back porch, looking out on 
the mountains. 
“We followed the green corn, melons, lima beans and spring chickens from 
Maryland to Northern New Hampshire. Everyone was lovely to us. Our Hotel 
de Trailer was always parked where there was a view and fresh air, and take it 
all in all, I am quite sure there never was such a vacation. 
“The Kamp-Kook-Kit, ice chest, and good beds are the three big features 
of the outfit. 
“It makes me long for summer now to think of what a good time we had. 
“NO HINDRANCE TO CAR” 
Dr. A. F. Cassebeer of Rochester, N. Y., says: 
“My family and I had a very enjoyable outing the past summer covering 
something over fourteen hundred miles without a mishap of any kind. I must 
say your Trailer is the ideal outfit. My misgivings as to the hindrance of a 
Trailer have vanished, as we covered some bad hills and heavy roads. 
“A SPLENDID ARTICLE” 
Mr. Walter E. Miles of Grand Rapids, Mich ., writes: 
“I bought this Trailer through the Overland Co. early last Spring and I 
want to compliment you very highly on the splendid article you manufacture. 
This trailer was in use constantly for over three months.” 
Write for Free Catalog—Today 
UNION TRAILER WORKS 
Above shows how 
outfit folds flat into 
trailer. No side- 
sway, not toy heavy. 
320 CHARLES ST., 
BOONVILLE, N. Y. 
THE FIRE ON ALBANY 
MOUNTAIN 
(Continued from page 175) 
to details, and striving to get the train 
under way as speedily as possible. 1 
asked him what he thought of the situa¬ 
tion. 
“We can't do a thing till night,” he 
responded gravely, “the fire’s got an 
awful start of us, and the wind s blow¬ 
ing so hard I’m afraid there’s no chance 
of holding it.” 
We saw the train and its load of fire¬ 
fighters pull out of sight with a feeling 
of relief. But on our drive back to the 
Lake our anxiety was redoubled. The 
smoke hung about us in a glaring yellow 
pall. Our eyes watered, our nostrils 
stung, and the horses were restless and 
fearful. 
“Can’t we go in and help out along 
the fire line?” someone suggested. 
“It wouldn’t do a bit of good,” said 
Rube. “Better wait till to-morrow. 
There’ll be plenty we kin do then. No 
human being will be able to get near that 
fire till the wind drops.” # 
Not a person in our little community 
at the Lake but was up betimes the fol¬ 
lowing morning. In our kitchen we 
packed enough food to feed twenty-five 
or thirty men. During preparations the 
door burst open and in rushed one of 
the neighbor’s boys, his eyes sparkling 
with excitement. 
“Mr. Cole’s gone down the lake to get 
a thousand men!” he announced pant- 
ingly. 
Rube, who was filling a basket with 
loaves of bread, paused to regard the 
newcomer. 
“He’ll have to go farther than the foot 
of the Lake ter do that,” he said sooth¬ 
ingly. 
And so in the midst of work and 
anxiety a laugh went round. Yet there 
was no one who did not feel and feel 
keenly the gravity of the situation. 
Should the wind by any chance switch 
around into the north or northwest we 
knew that no human effort could stop 
the fire from sweeping directly over to 
the Lake. The dividing country having 
been recently lumbered was nothing- 
more or less than a tinder box, cluttered 
for miles with lopped tree tops and other 
inflamable debris always to be found in 
the track of the lumberman. But by the 
grace of good fortune the wind did not 
change. Indeed on Sunday it had died 
down from a steady “blow” to a more 
squally character and by weather indi¬ 
cations would fall entirely toward night. 
A S we drove over the road to the 
scene of the fire, the summer 
beauty of the morning hung, about us 
with golden enchantment. High m the 
tops of the new leafed maples rose- 
breasted grosbeaks and scarlet tanagers 
poured forth their magical lyrics. And 
indeed the whole forest seemed throb¬ 
bing with delicious sounds—spunds . of 
birds, and rustling foliage, and babbling 
waters, and busy rodents, one and all 
rejoicing in the tender warmth of June 
sunlight. 
Page 202 
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