Show I What Becomes of i Your Old Auto I There is a a. market for second handcars handcars hand handcars cars and doubtless third and fourth hand are sold but the day dav finally comes when the venerable relic having havIng having hav hav- ing ing- run its allotted miles goes to Its last resting place the place the automobile junk junkI yard There are few sadder spectacles lyard I and so ancient do some of oC the melancholy melancholy melancholy melan melan- choly wrecks appear that it is hard to believe belle the Industry is comparatively new The Tile business In ip worn out cats cars is a brisk one and It may be that when you fancy a n passerby is admiring your new limousine he Is really estimating estimating estimating esti esti- mating what It will be worth as junk When It finally comes to him it is dismantled 1 and the tires wheels glass lamps magnetos mag starting and lighting system all parts valuable In themselves themselves themselves them them- selves are placed in separate storage bins Aluminum 50 to pounds to the car Is worth 22 22 cents a pound for cast and 35 cents cens for sheet copper brings 20 cents says Popular Science Monthly while hair from the cushion sells for 15 cents There Is also lead chiefly from electrics brass and andIron andiron andiron Iron under which Is classed all Iron and steel It brings 25 cents a hundred pounds though sometimes it contains a valuable alloy like vanadium The expensive autos of C course furnish furnish fur Cur nish a richer yield to the junkman Prices of oC metals are so high that 50 to Is paid for cars because of oC what they will bring on the scrap- scrap heap This may not be quite the end however your shiny 1920 model may contain melted and reshaped I I parts Dart before of oC the one you bought ten years I I |