rtutite lemming bMM want Ads
Motoring News
"NUMBER 312"
VOLUME XXV.
LA GRANDE. OREGON, SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1927.
ta(S
NEW FORD GIVEN v
THOROUGH TESTS
Edscl B. Ford Declares
Car Exceeds All Ear
lier Expectations
1I:TI10IT, Auff. 13 The IV
tuning stiiU'iii'-nt was Issued lirm
by K(i'l H. Kurd, president of the
I-'onl .Motor company:
Tht new Konl n utoniobile is
now aii uceompllfthfil furl. The
eiurtnerinic problem nff":tinir its
dcsin anU equipment unU itfiectliiK
also Its iimnmut.tuie have all been
solved.
"Hut before a sinule enr of the
new typu In oftered for sale to thti
public each, part will have been
tested under every condition which
we huvu been able to discover in
more than 20 years of building
autoinoMUs for use all over l lit;
world.
ItftUT TIlAlt JtOH'.M
"Wo know now exactly wh:it this
new car is. We haw built a num
ber of these cars and I hey have
haw been performing even better
t hun wo had hoped for under a
variety of conditions.
"We Know also what is needed
as to personnel and factory equip
ment in order to produce these
ii "w Kord cars in greater numbers
than any manufacturer Jiuh ever
attempted before. The work of
retooling our plants throughout the
country to prepare for the heaviest
production schedule we have ever
undertaken, i now nearly com
plete. "Hut we realize that any new
riiitomobile that is to gain and hold
public esteem today, whether it
sunt! sell for $fto or HUtuu,
must perform exactly as it is de
signed to perform. No automobile
manufacturer, in this day and time,
should utlow the public to do his
testing and proving for iilm. The
Ford .Motor company cannot afford
to permit the automobile user to
discover Imperfection lu theso
new mode in.
"We haven't discovered any
faults in the finished new Kord
ear, but we are taking nothtng for
granted. IT there are any faults
they shtill be found and remedied
before any of the cars are offered
for stile.
"When the Model T Ford car
was designed more I hun L'D years
ago, no one could foresee the wide
varlcly of conditions under which
tt would operate. It did not oc
cur to us that" that automobile,
would bo expected to perforin as
satisfactorily in Alaska as in South
Africa. Wo knew little about the
vsryint; ef fee fit of eliiiu.tU''' condi
tions in Hoston and in Colon, up
on automobile motors and other
llAT
r
i-
Conic and see the new styling, new
colors, new upholstery, new details
of trimming and finish
Now glorifying the car for the
American family!
Come and see this showing, all the
models, all the colors, all the interior
treatments.
equipment. W had yet lo dis
cover that carburt'tion at sea
level presented one definite prob
lem, w lille carburet ion at very
high altitudes presented an entire
ly different problem.
"Many of these difficulties were
first brought lo light by people who
had bought our cars and used
t lu-iii under those diverse condi
tions. Those people put their cars
to tests which we could not have
foreseen and could not have dupli
cated in that day. We had to
remedy faults us they were dis
covered by the car owners in act
ual USe.
To llae Thorough Ti"t
"Hut years of manufacture
have taught uh that the only good
automobile is the automobile which
will do what it is designed to do
wherever it is put to work. The
experience of those L'O years lias
taught us also that the public of
today knows more, about automo
biles than ever before and expects
molt of them.
"The building and testing of
these first new cars is costing mil
lions of dollars. Hut it will give
us the complete asMii ranee that
we are offering the public a car
tested ftm proven as a new car
should be.
"Some of the things we have
discovered already in the tests of
thes new cars are interesting.
"We have accomplished with
them a speed of (if miles per hour
which is slightly higher than we
hud expected.
"We have foind t hat they can
be driven for hours at an average
speed of more than fifty miles per
hour, without discomfort to driver
and passengers and without harm
to motor and oilier equipment.
110 Miles in Two Hours
"In a recent est one of these
new cars wuh driven 1 in miles In
tw o Lours. I Hiring the first half
hnur the car traveled L'7 miles. The
cur covered exactly ti.l miles the
first hour of the trip.
"This test was made over aver
age road conditions, I 'art of. the
rout v lay t h rough level country
and p'irt through hill country
where the roads were sleep and
winding. The day on which J he
test was made was somewhat
warmer than the average summer
day in this part of the country, but
the motor was not overheated dur
ing the run and examination of the
motor at the conclusion of the run
disclosed no 111 effeets. The car
consumed )'hh gasoline and oil dur
ing the test than any of our previ
ous models we have put to similar
tests. The. ignition, cooling and
carburet ion systems performed
perfectly throughout the trip.
"We have tested this new c:ir
for getaway and pickup with many
other types of automobiles and
have found t hat it sur passes all
of them wit h one excevition in
quick hi a it in g and acceleration.
Tho tests already made show that
it is faster, nmoothor, more rugged
l, T&JftSSh n9!X:JHs. fSvJirv yrrfJrfX-Srv
OLDSMOBILE ANNOUNCES
NEW BEAUTY
N EW COLORS
NEW LUXURY
OLDSMOBILE ANNOUNCES
NEW LOWER
TWO-DOOR SEDAN Ea BODY
F.o.n. LAXS.VC
' t NOW ON DISPLAY ' '
Here is modish hcp.uty as satisfying
as the additional qualities of perform
ance and endurance that make such
staunch friends of Oldsrnobile owners.
Come and marvel, as you will, at this
Oldsrnobile Six the latest and trcat
cst, and yet at new lower prices!
OLDSMOBILE SALES CO.
1128 Adams Ave.
and more flexible than we had
hoped for in the early stages of
designing.
"We have known from the be
ginning' that this new Kord would
be a handsome car. Experiments
have been made with a wide var
iety of color schemes and body
designs and all these have been de
cided upon.
"When thl car is formally intro
duced within the next few weeks,
we shall be aide to say that it is
the best and most moderate priced
automobile we know how to
build."
(Signed) Ivlsel it, Kurd,
President, Kord Mcitor Company."
Old Oldsrnobile
Cars Win Race
Along Broadway
Hiasc Itroadway woke up the
olh r day, rubbed its eyes and pint-lied
itself to make sure it had not
been transported back to 1 :uu in
one of 11. CI. Wells "time ma
chines." There, through the heart
of the "It oaring Korties" roared
4U gasoline buggie reminiscent -of
the days when horses and hair pins
were fn their prime.
The tomorrow's edition of one of
the leading tabloids (out that af
ternoon) brought a return of san
ity. It told that the oldest auto
mobiles -of the Metropolitan dis
trict had been challenged to "strut
their stuff and that the 4t had
responded to an extra shot of gas
and were racing from iyekinan
street to the city hall.
J HI fail to Finish
1 Like many other oldsters that
have endeavored lo cavort on
jjlroadway. HI of the ancient arks
1 fell by the wayside. The jaxi! age
of 1 J 7 had proven too strenuous
for their palpitating pistons and
hardened gas lines. Of the 24 that
finished the Oldsrnobile was
crowned Kn durance King. Four
Oldsniobilee, each past its i:7th
birthday, had finished among me
first six winners'. Kven the sages
of l-'oiiy -second street admitted
that four out of six in tho money
was traveling some.
PLOWMAN KINDS CO IV
KOKT I.AKA.MIK, Wyo. Harry
I. alt a, plowing near the old fort,
turned up a half dollar, little
worn and dated lsoS. Old timers
are speculating on whether Jac
ques I. a Itamie. trapper. after
whom the fort was named, might
have had hole in his pocket, l.a
Ramie came here in 1815.
Our advice to the men of tho
American Legion going to Paris is
to dike alonjj a couple of buckets
of water. They may want to taku
a bath.
PRICES
BY FISHER
Oldsrnobile Awakens Broadway
v
(A V V-::-' e vX -i-,tf .5 , it
V ft. A i
1 & J
3
In i recent men of ol Jtime automobiles held In New ork City four
OK!bi.:oH1cs won four of the six pri:cs. One of the winners is shown above.
; U. S. Protects Fish,
on Ten Million
WASHINGTON' ( A 1 ' ) T u
lion acres of land w ill be
braced in federal preserves
the proteetlnn of fish, fowl
game when t he govei n mu m
(uiic
Hie I'pper .Mississippi wild
life game telllge In the tiorthwesl
i llegulallotifi for the new ore-!
serve were signed jointly on Jur.
-4 by Secretary of Agriculture
Jaidine and HecreUrvy of Com
merce Hoover.
Nor is the total of pi etc c ted
havens for wild life represented
by the federal acreage, for almost
every state has converted areas ol
Its own Into conservation projects,
and hundreds of farmers have
limited hunting expeditions on
their property,
j J'"igures from lie I. S. I Molog
ical Survey, issued July 1 , shriw-
i f rom IUO.duO to Com.imhi acres in-
I volved In the .Mississippi w ild M
j project, afi.oua acres of which nl-j
ready is under contract to t he j
government at $r per acre. Mosl i
of the . territory is meander land, j
unsuited to agricultural purposes, j
but a number of owners are asi.-j
lug as much as fji, u
Congress made available S 3.11011..?
mill to purchase- the refuge. Only
about S;t(ia,(MHi of that sum lun
been used, and whether
session f will Increase 1 1 i
In prit'e is a matter of
the ni'xW
e latitude
pertinen
importance.
.Much of the higher priced Inn 1
lies In . 1 Mino'ii. W isconsin has sil
piled Hie bulk of pr
fi'dera'
possessioiis, M innesota
ntlv do-
naled Its entire MissiMsipid hobl-
ings, and the rest of the refuge it-
on the Iowa side of the river.
While federal regulations will
predominate in the preserve, there
is to be no conflict with stale fish
land game laws. 11. P. Sheldon.
! Chief V. S. iame Warden, is
I pleased With the Suggested Mhl-
1 w e.il conservation code sponsored
I by the 1 1 limns general assembly
oilier states in Hie I'pper- Missis
sippi valley and the ('real hakes
region are expected to join 1 1;
j lime: in adoption of uniform
statutes.
'Such plans." Sheldon said, "are
' always desirable. They add lo
I conciseness and make coiiserva
! Hon at o
j and limn
moie piact Ira ble
asily enforced, our!
bi.st example is the migrat
(game bird Inaly w illt (Jreat Itrii
jaiii. by which wild fowls are pro
j let rc iii this county and Ciiiiad
Ion n reciprocity basis."
if I iciii Is of t he ti!og!c:il Sur
I vey emphasize th-- beiielii ol
fovmity in game laws
,-'(r thirty years." t le y
uni-
:a y.
i "tlils country has uoiked to it
'place local coun'y laws with slat
t;ind f'-deral statutes. N'otth faro
ro
lo1
lina
1 1
ent
i'ille
"School Maim"
Tho liiiiliino Mi.ss Donui. In whlih Mls Mlliln-'l Hiikhi iiml Aut-Kin
1'ptlliir liluii t'i fly lo 1 1 "ii "I u I ii in rmiipi.tiUon fur tin: imii lirl
prize oif'-ivri in ilie nut; m. Ih-i1iiIn fur Amk. 11. In pli.Uni'il Hli'ivp.
Jlelow, left lo ilKln tirp urKl' l'(.'illar. lu-r pilot : Min UoiJin ami
'v.F. Miilliiaka. ownor or t Iio pl.ui''. i'edl.ir nnd Mi-ti DornifOiik
01 01 Hi.it, .Mall., lul Un.- fa. .1.1. (.'j.isl luvtul u.iju a;j. .
s JC&TV f -Cv
SSBtftil
Fowl and Game
Acres of Preserves
... . i
mil- come into the fold, and now the
em- 1,-ws of more Ihun forty .statin
for conform tu federal regulations,
an 1 There is no other satisfactory way
je.ito systematize tpen setisons for.
especially, wild geese mid ducks.
(iovi-rinnent authorities bellev
Kiue to he increasing in (he I
it.
It is maintaining a level In the
.Middle West, while the We.it it
.self. because of drainage projects
and light rainfall, has suffered a
ilei-rea.se.
An arms manufacturing com
pany considers game to be grow
ing more bountiful In almost ev
ery state. It estimates that 30 -iMio.liim
rabbits w ere killed last
year, J.i.oimi.ikiii quail, lio.miu.o.i.i
j ducks,.
u.imn.mui squirrels, l n,-
ntiu.niMi
ese and 1 imi.oou deer.
I)odge Sedan Is
In Much Demand
Over The Nation
New
Mid 1)1
standards of perform anee
nity are to be louud in
Hi-others latest, sediiu, in
1 July 17 as t he first bodv
' odfre
I'odue
'l"'
in an entirely new line or
cylinder cars. In present In.;
sedan Dodge Brothers have
to the fore with a car so
four
this
COIlie
iii w and so advanced In engineer
ing features t hat It has been ac
corded a most, enthusiastic recep-
I tion by t lie puhltc orders for
approximately J .i,L';iO,aao of Hi
s'ai
were reeeiwed , within two
lifter It was introduced and
that time business has been
'ias
(since
so great that production has bee",
I lncren."ed.
The ' new car is advertised as
the fastest lour in America, givin;;
mill -a-iuinute performance wit li
surprising ease u nd Miioot hues
and acceleration from nothtng tr
"1T. miles per hour in less thai:
seven seconds through gears. So
gieat is the power of Its engine In
relation to the weight of the car
t hat H is never forced to labor
and is, therefore, free from th"
roughness and pounding that, re
.sult. from strain.
Steeling and parking case have
leon nee
bearings
inplished by placing ball
III the steering spllldhK
ryias Well as in the steering gear It
self The car will make a lull
t ili-ii ill a UN-foot street.
Springs on the new car are ex
ceptionally long, const it ut lug over
S.i per cent of the total wh
base. This gives it the loilge.4!
spring base of any car selling for
$1.omi or less.
The body const met ion is not
only remarkable for lis rounded
beauty but for Its high quality and
strength. It has a loll nodal root
to Fly to Honolulu
FARMERS IN NEED
OF GOOD ROADS
Two Million Miles of Mud
. . 1T
ouii Hampers rami
Transportation
Hy I'HANK I. Wi l l i It
(Associated Prens Kttnn Editor)
WASHINGTON Two million
miles of mud still hantner farm
transportation.
"That circumstance Is true." s:ivh
the American Itoad Builders os
sociatlon, "insofar as Inclement
weather halts traffic on the vast
network of local roads over which
tin- farmer must travel lo reach ar
terial highways."
Charles M. I'phnm, Hi rector of
research, believes agricultural in
terest!! will receive a far reaching
benefit through development of the
association's plan to stimulate and
standardize Improvements of all
thoroughfares connecting isolated
communities with the nation's pri
macy road systems.
"The halt-million miles of sur
faced highways we now have," ho
explains, "was constructed with no
moreVt bought of the farmer than of
the urban dweller. The routes were
Melected for the beslt public pur
pose. In serving the general wel
fare .they have been of tremendous
ail ami belt moulding Integra!
with the body.
1 hie PniOiti;iis !
In the de luxe sedan long llne.i, '
blended curves, pi'i-fect propor- j
Hons and smart coloring combine ;
to create un impression of beautvi
such as few light cars ever 1
achiev)-.
The Interior Is done In expen
sive mohair, with roller curtains,
head linings and carpet to match.
The windows are of the latest
Kreneh style, glazed with genuine
plate glass, and such fixt ores ; as
dome light, door handles, window
regulators and robe rail are heavi
ly nickel-plated. The unique In
strument board features a 7f-milc
speedometer and is finished In the
new "crinkle" effect.
In linn and proportion the
standard sedan duplicates the de
luxe sedan, differing only In col
oring and equipment. It is de
signed for an all-purpose car of
great, utilityfleet, staunch, dur
able, beautiful.
it. is finished in durable lacquer,
the rich colors being permanent in
all climates. The Interior Is up
holstered in , leather "and is proof
against wear for several seasons
of hard use.
Consistent Progress
have resulted in the most
Jlnta'0
at these V
LowPrices!
I
i
The COACH
$595
TKeTinirtng
or RmJmm '
TlieCup
TS4-Dwf
S-.l.n - - -
$525
.'625
-'695
.'715
.'745
.'780
The IjiruUn -I
hr Imperial
li TnnTWk tOOfi
y (CJtOMU Only) . J ' '
l-Ton Tnirk -KIiimjii
()M
495
All prirr. f.i. h.
Mini. MUluRitn
Check Chvrolt
Dcllrmd Jrlcel
Thry Inrlii.l. lh low
DUALITY AT LOW COST
Iiniporlancti to the farmer.
"However, there iw u great ee
I oniiary road system, reaching eveiy
county in the Tailed Stat.. ihat
must biconslden-d if the in.livt.lii.il
. farmer is to be assured ot speedy
and economical marketing, and of
Hocial and
durational int ercourse
'" '"17';t;,
,all seasons ol the
coinmui)itl H at
"These rural aveinn s, w ntre
traffic is light, ran in- improved fur
ilL'.f.mi p
tulle.
Anniial upkei p
ahould not exceed UU per mile,
and each year of repair leaves a
thicker, ltion1 strongly Knitted moi
face lo withstand future wear."
' Tho recently created Nntioti.il
County Highway Oflieliils' iihsocia-
Hon. drawing a membership 1 mm
eaeh ot" the :;,7o counties in Hie
country, is e.speeted lo save mil
lions of dollars for the local tax
payer Hi rough standardisation of
road construction and nuimt.-nahtv
1 methods, and by the exchange of
i newly discovered theory and dale. ,
I "Numerous valuable method of
low cost road construction," I'phatu
Hiiggests. ."involving the use of only
local materials, will be revealed at
a meeting of the highway research
board In December. Many of the
SHOW ME,
I'm from Missouri"
A frequent remark often heard but it works
in just right for what we. want to say.
Come in and wo will "show you" some real
buys in Used Tires they are good for many
miles of service and the prices are so reason
able. ..
And of course we do expert vulcanizing that
"stays jiut."
JOHNS BROS.
Tire Shop and Filling. Station
1517 Adams
Jar Economical Transportation
Proved Design -
in Chevrolet
Tcxlny's Chevrolet embodies the moot amazing quality
in Chevrolet history the result of 14 years of con
sistent development and improvement.
Tn carryinc out this policy, the Chevrolet Motor Com
pany has profited immeasurably from its close associa
tion with the General Motors Corporation.
The General Motors Research Laboratories
the General Motors Proving Ground
the General Motors enuinccrini! staff
the vast General Motors resources
all have been constantly utilized in making Chevro
let the world's finest low-priced automobile!
Come to our showroom and see today's Chevroletl ,
Blue Mountain Garage
M. A. IIAKUISQN, Mgr. Opposite Pnhtufficc
moie Important county roads liavo
been improved at local volition and
made valuable adjuncts to the sev
eni I state systems.
:-t.iti' highway systeiiifl. accord -
, ' lederal HurettU Of I'ub-IU-
ltoads, are now abo.ufc 66 per
e in imtiatly improved. More than
i:;,umi additional miles of earth
roads were surfaced by tho noyerul
stale highway departments laHt
year, and :,H2h miles of oid surfaco
w 'i-e reconditioned.
Night Life Tame
Even In Turkey
A MiOKA A P) The cabaret.
and night life of Turkey's capital
.- in tame and modest lo visitors
w ho have heard Strang tab s ot
harems and their veiled ladies.
The Tip-Us seldom do more for
ii' -rtalnment than take n drink
I ami which uiii'K women uuni n
i v c i iow oi a euorus uunco
i a tout in w Inter clot hen.
The conventional musical coni
I i 1 1 y costume appears to be the ex
treme limit, and the hardest thin-,'
to find in Turkey is tho famous
Turkish dancing girl.
30
History
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Tj.- 1