Page:Motors and motor-driving (1902).djvu/134

102 all the above remarks apply, excepting those which have special reference to cars carrying motors of the gas-engine type.

Fig. 5 represents the stabling of the well-known motor-car owner, Mr. Evelyn Ellis. He places his pit outside. When this is done a wooden or metal rail must run along each side of the pit as seen in the picture, to prevent a car from being rolled in; when the pit is in the motor-car house this precaution is unnecessary. The full-page illustration opposite shows Mr. Alfred Harmsworth's motor stables.