TIIE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 17. 1911. MANY NEW LINES DISPLAYED IN LATEST AUTOMOBILES TO ARRIVE IN PORTLAND. ".'it'- a' -i V ' , SAVANNAHTHROUGH WITH AUTO RACING Disastrous Result of Recent Meet Causes Georgians to Make Decision. CALIFORNIA MAY GET PLUM Oldfleld Pwdlcta Gigantic Merger or Automobile Manufacturing In terrt aa Rsalt of Studehakrr Poller. BY PARSE! OLDnEI.n. Copyright. 1:11. firn.y Oldfl:t.) Where will the Vanderbllt cup and the (rand prise races be run in The reaaon thla question haa arlRen In my mind and will, without doubt, be aaked throughout motoring circlet borUy, la because there la little chance that there will be a racing car nlral In or near Savannah next rear. This news win surprise many well posted automoblllitts who have consid ered that the hustllim Ucorgtana solver the road-racing; problem when they provided an excellent course. and promised that visitors would be fairly treated during the carnival period. The real reason there will not be a 1911 race near Savannah Is that with all the rouging- and overc-hai-glna- the citizens j snu DUBiufii concerns were g"UIlty or. the recent meet lost a lot of money and up to date there has hen no scramble between the members of the automo bile club or business organizations to aee who would put tho amount of the deficit. The first week I mas In Savannah thlnics went fine. It waa two weeks before the ractna dates. But as soon as the crowds began pourlna- In. rates for hotel accommodations soared sky high and restaurants put out new bills of fare on which the prices were trebled In many Instances. Newspaper writers, usually nrot?ted by reception committees, were "stuns;" Just aa hard as the most hapless victim. Nine-tenths of the visitors went away from the town declaring- they would never re turn. - I remained In Savannah for almost a week after the grand prize race and am qualified to spel: of the manner In which the different automohile club officials who posed In tne spotlight be fore and during the races, are now trying to "pass tho buck" to each other, since-tne meet was a big finan cial failure. m "We've had enouah racing" Is the popular cry In Faranoah. "We've had enough of Savannah" la the cry of the rarlnc drivers and en trants who were hel.l up for rent for training camps and supplies. . I endeavor to give my readers ad vance Information whenever possible. From an authoritative source comes news that Los Angeles Is going to make a strong bid for the two racea next year. A Los Angeles enthusiast purchased the car which Bruce-Brown drove to victory In the grand prize. Thla man wired to the Coat there was a chance to have the two great races awarded the Santa Monica course for next year. A reply reached him a few hours later to the efret that the Cali fornia sportsmen would raise any rea sonable amount of moaey necessary to stage the races and would guarantees that there would be no hold-ups in their dealings with visitors. I am strongly In favor of the grand prize race going to Los Angeles, but the Vanderbllt event should stay In the East. In the first place. It Is a moat unwise plan to pull the two races off less than two montha apart. In the second place, the name of Vanderbllt. which spells magle In portions of the East, does not mean anything to the people of the West. The Vanderbllt race should either be abandoned alto gether or be assigned to Philadelphia to be run In conjunction with the Falrmount Park rare or over the Fair mount course as the Vanderbllt cup race. There Is no questioning the fact that there are far too many racing events. It should be a survival of the fittest Philadelphia haa shown that It can run a big road race In an almost perfect manner. New York has shown clearly that It cannot do the same. It should simply be a question of whether or not the Quaker City crowd would accept the Vanderbllt trophy In place of their Founder'a trophy. . In every mall I receive at least one query aa to whom 1 consider the cham pion driver of America. Of course, I have my own opinion aa to the driver 1 believe to be the best and moat con slstent of them all. but I realise that my readers do not want my opinion on the subject, but rather they are ask ing me to decide which driver haa made the best all-around record during the past year. The year which Is about to end has produced many champions, all of them occupying the spotlixht for a ahort length of time. "W:ld Bob" Burman came to the front In March as the sen sational performer In the straightaway beach record trfxla. Then Burman stopped for quite a while, only com ing up now and then with a spectacu lar drive on mile horse tracks. While Burman Is unquestionably the most apectacular and riarlnir driver for short distance and exhibition races, he has failed to win even a place In the all around championship of the year. Kay Harroun. when he won the 125. ot Indianapolis sweepstakes event on May 30, waa proclaimed the greatest of them all. Then Harroun retired from the racing game and. of course, be cannot be accepted aa the all around champion. ... len Zengte won the Elgin Road Hace In August, but aside from a transitory lot of handshakes 1 pre dictions for his great future, Zrngle failed to win another bl race. Harvey Herrick. the Callfomlan. won tbe Santa Monica Koad Race against a fairly representative lot of drivers snd broae the world s record In a race at a distance short of the ac cepted Idea of ti-.e length of a road contest. Herrick also won a roal race at Bakersfield, Cal.. on July 4. but the class of his opponents was below the standard anil the race waa of such a local character that It snould not count. Herrick a. so won a desert aand plur.ge from Los Ar.geles to Phoenix. Aria . and wht.e thla was a most grill ing event from a standpoint of en durance. It should hard.y be dignified by te name of a race. In California, however, they would protab.y lynch anyone who chanced to question t.-ie claim that HerrUk la the champion of the world. Ervin Berg lull, a wealtriy lad of Philadelphia, vim the Kairmotinl Park race after a great drive, but Berg-doll hlmeelf would hardly claim the cham pionship title. Then Muiford won the Vanderbllt against a great field. i s Mjeso-o cow I 11 HVi! Ai . ' - " laB-.'-..-'Jm 'au-JUJSBr- Bruce-Brown drove in the Indianapolis sweepstakes race and the Vanderbllt. He did not win either. But he won the grand prize for the second time. So, there Is the lot of winners for the year. It Is certainly hard to dope any one of them aa the champion. While my readers are trying to fig ure out which driver they want to crown with the laurel wreath. I am go ing to whisper a word or two about my pick of the drivers of the country. Ralph de Palma Is the fellow I con sider the best all-around driver of them all. be Palma failed to wtn a single big race of the year, but his seconns and thirds in many big races. coupled with his greet and consistent driving on the dirt traeka. give nim. In my mind, points enough to win titu lar honors. De Palma Is a thrifty soul. At lesst a dozen times thla past year he haa driven care which had no chance to win. But Ralph got his retainer and did the best he knew how. De Palma wss close up at Indianapolis. In the Vanderbllt and In the Grand Prize. He won almost all the track races in which he started and holds a big- ma jority of the circular track records. The announcement a week ago that one of the largest automobile manu facturing concerns In the country, do ing most of Its business direct with retail purchasers from Its own branch houses, will henceforth sell automo biles on the Installment plan, came as a flash from a clear aky to the ma jority of dealers and manufacturers In the trade. Owing to the standing of the cor poration and the Immense number of cars Its factories turn out, there can be no meaning; other than that other makers will have to come to the same basis of trading with the carbuyer. For years the automobile business has been conducted along lines nothing short of arbitrary. No matter how highly concern waa rated, it had to pay a deposit on a future season'! order. even where the machines purchased were yet unbuilt. It was only a ques tion of time before the end would come to such a policy. Competition is now too great and there are too many dealers In the field. It costs too much to sell a car. Concentration of dis tributing methods will have to come. Cars must be sold to men who either have not the ready money to plank down for an automobile, but who are able to meet monthly payments on a moderate-priced car. The announcement In question will hasten the formation of a glgantlo merger of the biff automobile factories of this country. Wall street haa fur nished money at times for many more manufacturers. The "sure-thing' fi nanciers will soon become aroused to the crisis of the selling situation and then the formation of a huge automo bile trust Is aure to follow. Too many millions are tied up In the manufac ture of automobiles to permit individ uals to dictate the selling policy of so great an Industry. Combinations have always taken place In other vast manufacturing lines, and one is cer tain to occur before a year passes In the automobile Industry. (rntralla Realty Gets Roomi CCNTRAUA. Wash, Dec. I Spa clal).lt ia evident from the plans and speclflcatlona for the new passenger depot In Centralla that the cost will be a great deal mere than the original 150.000 estimate. The beginning of ac tual work on the depot has already made Its influence felt In the real es tate field In Centralla. and the price of downtown property haa isen IS per Cent during the last- few days. The monthly payroll of the Seattle concern awarded the building contract will be approximately 11500. , v ' VAX i m -Jin J -Ch -A - i J y C -Tlx -""J my go up Continual Addition of New Features Is Cause. AUTOS NOW AT LOW FIGURE Public's Demand for Something New Each Year Must End In Man ufacturers Getting More Money, Says Dealer. "Glancing over a Hat of the equip ment furnished by the average auto mobile manufacturer with 1911 modela, one cannot help but wonder bow the motor-car buyer of five years ago took his machine and was glad to get It," says V. W. Vogler. Northwest distribu ter of the Reo and Apperson. "Radi cal changes in the construction of the mechanical end of the automobile have taken place since it emerged from a dreamer's fancy to a stern and Im portant factor in the world's progress. Vet these changes are as nothing com pared with the 'nxin's' that oome with the well-made automobile of today. The transformation of thla phase of the Industry perhaps Is more notice able because It is in plain sight, while the mechanical features are closed from view. "Your modern automobile comes from the factory equipped with nu merous little luxuries entirely un known to the motorist who enjoyed bis Joy Jaunts In an antiquated car, when automobile manufacturing waa In Its swaddling clothes. The people of that day paid far more money for a ma chine than Is charged now, and the product they got would bs scorned by the 1911 purchaser. Accessories Are Provided. "Mohair top, fitted with a covering to protect It from the duat when It is folded up and not In use; wind shield, speedometer, prest-o-llte tank, de mountable rims; head llghta and side lights, a heavy coco mat for the floor of the tonnesu, a full kit of tools, robe rail and foot rail, tall light, bulb horn and a complete kit of toola for the re pair of tires, are aome of the Import ant accessories that the automobile Is fitted with before It leaves the sales room. "In marked contrast with the new code of things waa the system in vogue a few yeara back. In those days tbe customer frequently even had to pay extra for aide and tall llghta, and In variably had to stand the cost of the rest of the little incidentals that en hance the pleasure of motoring. But' now all that la done away with. The purchaacr does not have to stand the heavy cost of fitting his machine with these thlnxs. It Is all attended to be fore he buys the car. i . "And then aome people persist In saying that the price of automobiles haa not underwent the cut that it should have. It la true that the actual figures have not been lowered a great deal; In fact, in some lnstancea, they have been raised. But look at the qual ity of material and the grade of con struction that one gota today. There la where the big cut haa coma In. The , PRICES cheap machine now turned out la of far greater value than the car that sold for 12000 and $3000 five years ago. The improvements made in construc tion and selection of material In that time are so numerous that It would take columns to enumerate them. Prices Mar Be Raised. "Unless some motive power Is dis covered that will prove cheaper than a gasoline engine, you can look for no further lowering in the price of ma chines. Any one familiar with the au tomobile industry knows full well that the rock - bottom price has been roached. It is safe to aay that there la aa much money lost as there is made in the manufacture of automobiles. Better construction Is demanded year after year; finer quality of material and more artistic body designs, Is the hue and cry of the public And that same public does not want to pay for it, it Is demanding something that it expects for nothing. Because of this there are very few automobile manu facturing conoerna paying dividends. "Our business has reached such a stage that It would not be a great Christmas Suggestions USEFUL, PRACTICAL PRESENTS Automobile Plush Robes) - All Styles Steamer Rugs ------ All Colors Blankets - -- -- -- - All Prices Miniature Frm Wagons for the Boys An Acceptable Holiday Gift Studebaker Bros. Co., Northwest 330 East Morrison Street PENNSYLVANIA VACUUM CUP TIRES 1Jp- f pery streets are 1 THE BEST NON-SKID tires IN THE WORLD. They will not skid in any direction and are guaranteed for 4000 miles actual service. A. J. WINTERS CO., Agents 67 6th Street, Bet. Oak and Pine Auto Supplies Auto MOTORCYCLES INDIAN AND EXCELSIOR BALLOU & WRIGHT, 80-82 Seventh Street, Cor. Oak Bob ten Burman says : "Polarine Oil is the best ever.' Indianapolis, Ind, May 29. 1911 "Standard OS Company: At my first trial today I broke all workfs speedway records from quartet to one mile Time for quarter-mile, 8.16 seconds; hiii-mile, 16.63 seconds; kilometrcv 21.41 seconds; mile, 35.35 seconds. Used your Polarise Oil. a always. It is the best ever. Bob Burman." World's straightaway records made with y.TI . ITS TLJ.ffct rS KHecMtr 1S.88 Mil SS.40 Two mil 61.26 141.73 miUs per komr Leo It far tbe Aal. CtxnrmMnl Polmnae cu tlloi mmd iMM-tallott mix. It ju iua ia the tool-box. FoUnne aUocoartesia tiroIloo ctUM. lf brmeH 4Urd buTek. Standard Oil Company (bwofpormtod ) surprise to those on the 'inside' to see prices gradually raise before very long. Foolish competition will wear out; when certain companies come to a realisation that it is hard to make a success of the work, they will back out. Then it will be left to the se lected few who thoroughly understand the business. And in this elimination period a veritable 'survival of the fit test' test it would not surprise us much if the increase besan to come. The raise, if any is made, will come in the medium-priced cars those be tween 1100.1 and KaOO. It is different with the high-priced product. ThOBe manufacturers do not have to give the value for money received that others do, and with their big leeway of profit there Is no occasion for them to boost the price." ACTO IS PUT TO XOVEIj WORK Electric Lighting; System. Furnishes Lights for Sickroom. The loss of many lives may be traced to the automobile, judging from the many casualties reported in the daily papers, while occasionally one reads of the motor car being instrumental In the savlne; of lLres. Usually this ia done by record-breaRIng runs In which valuable time has been soved. Dr. T. B. Noble and Dr.- A. C. Kim berlln, two of the most prominent phy sicians In the Middle West, are using their Premier cars in a new and origi nal way in their practice, and It Is be lieved other physicians In all parte of the country will copy their methods By the use of an electrical apparatus they provide their own lights for the sick rooms In which they minister to patients and In many instances they have been provided with perfect light In houses that were deficient In this re spect. Both - Dr. Noble and Dr. Kimberlin drive six-cylinder roadsters, both of which are equipped with an electric lighting system. Plug sockets for two lights have been fastened on the dash. To these are attached wires of any length. These wires are passed through a window or door Into the sickroom. One of the wires Is attached to a globe and shade that fastens around the neck of the physician, while the other is attached to a hand light similar to those used in repairing automobiles, and is carried by a nurse or an attendant. It is surprising, according to the physicians, how many houses are Inade quately lighted. Many of the best houses that are lighted by electricity do not have lights near the sick bed. The new lighting system Is particularly valuable In lnstancea of this kind and where lights are poor Drs. Noble and Kimberlin would be pleased to see all physicians use a lighting system of thin Kind. Portland, Oregon Tire and Tuba Repairing Massy bootis FOR CHRISTMAS Archer & Wiggins Co. NORTHWEST CORSER SIXTH AD OAK STREETS Auto and Sporting Goods BALL008 WRIGHT Largest Stock Automobile Accessories M. & W G. & J. and Hartford Tires, Monogram Oils 80-82 SeTenth St, Cor. Oak. Portland, Or. Atterbury Truck Columbia Carriags & Auto Works, Agts, 209-211 Trout Street. Phone Main 2892. General Anto Repairing. Bodies and Wheels Built to Order. BOWSER Braly-Du Bois Auto Co. IMMEDIATE DtLiVERY Phones A 3881, Main 4880 31-33 N. 19th, Near Washington Crowe Sixteenth and RAMBLER STUTZ MAIS TRUCK (Gear Driven) The Best American-Made Truck Distributers for Oregon and Southern Washington. Iole Unit Power Plants Patterson $ 1 885. All Part T WrrCHELLi MOTOR CAR CO, 16th and Washington Phonea Mala 6468, A S20& FORD Ford Motor A. J. Edwarda, See. and Her. E. 8ta nd i&M$$fflttt' TIRES Vnlcanlxlnc Retreadln. R. E. BLODGETT, 29-81 N. 14h. THE AMERICAN 1913 UIVDERSLl'NO. A Car for the Dlaerlmlnatlna- Few The Safeat Car on Earth. GARAGE STORAGE fiEPAimNG. Nob Hill Garage & Auto Co., Inc. 690-98 Kearner Bt, Between Twenty-Mret and Twentr-aeeoad. APPEESON NORTHWEST AUTO CO. DISTRIBUTORS F. W. VOGLER, President Fifteenth and Alder Sts. Phones Main 7179, A 4959. PREER CUTLERY & TOOL CO. Headquarters for and Automobile Tools 74 SIXTH AND 311 Schacht Motor Gar Co. COMMERCIAL AND PLEASURE CARS COR. FIFTH AND HOYT STS. Our Motto: "Quality and a Square Deal" Western Hardware & Auto Supply Co. SEVENTH AND PINE STREETS , Vulcanizing, Hardware and Auto Supplies- Phones: Main 8828. Home A 2016. Aobura Motor Car Co. EOBT. SIMFSOtf, Mgr. 5057 Burnside Street A 7339. Main 2674. GASOLINE and OIL TANKS STORAGE SYSTEMS FOR PUBLIC) AA'D PRI VATE GARAGES, S. X. Stoddard. Art.. 308 Colum bla Bids. Mala 1-aTfl Auto Co. Alder Streets MARION K-R-I-T $ 1250. Enclosed JOHN DEERE PLOW CO. Northwest Distributors, EAST MOEBISON AND SECOND STS. Phones: E. 3SS7, B 1625. The car that comes folly equipped Best for the Money Car Agency Hiwtkorne Avenue. Phone Eaat 648. Main 7005. J.W.LEAVITT&CO. Tom A. Deerina-, Mutt. 528-531 Waahlnft-ton St. Dlatrtbutor for Oreson, Washington, California and Nevada. STEARNS EE0 Shop Supplies OAK STREETS