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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1913)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, TORTLAM:. SEPTEMBER 21, COST OF FIRES IS SUBJECT OF STUDY PIERCE-ARROW COMPANY ANNOUNCE MANUTACTTTEE OF TWO-TON TRUCK. "SIX" Six Cylinders Six Passengers Electric Starter Electric Lights 1550 Replacement Biggest Item of Expense, Next to Salary of Driver. jfl. isJII llll I III llll1 Irl' 6 m&ir-- REDUCTION IS FORECAST Trouble at Present' Attributed by Automobile Chamber of Com merce to Indifference and Also I jack of Knowledge. For more than a year the subject of solid tire wear ana destruction has been analyzed and studied by the com mercial vehicle committee of the Na tional Association of Automobile Man ufacturers and its successor, the Au tomobile Chamber of Commerce. This study has included the effects of pay ing conditions and topography in dif ferent cities of the United States from Boston to Ean Francisco; the greater tire mileage obtained from solid tires in European countries; the effects of overloading and excessive speed; bad distribution of loads; sudden starting and stopping: inadequate tire equip ment for load capacity; diameter and contour of tires, and other factors on this subject, even to differences In temperament and mental attitude of truck owners, shipping clerks, gar age superintendents and drivers and the helpful effect of the system of bonuses to drivers. Next to drivers' wafres, the largest single Item In the cost of operation of a gasoline motor truck in America Is the cost of tire replacements and in the larger siies of tlectric trucks it equals or exceeds the cost of battery upkeep. Truck users in England, how ever, are obtaining to or three times the mileage from solid tires that is usual in this country. Lwer Cot la Foreesmt. The truck makers here believe that by the adoption of proper methods the users of commercial vehicles on this side can greatly Increase their tire mileage and thereby cut the cost of operation and maintenance very materially. It is felt that the trouble lies partly in the Indifference of the heads of houses using power vehicles to the de tails of their operation and partly to the lack of knowledge of the cause of tire destruction and wear on the part of shipping clerks, superintendents and drivers. With a view to remedying this condition if possible, the board of directors of the Automobile Chamber of Commerce, at its regular monthly meeting this month, adopted resolu tions recommended by the commercial vehicle committee, which Included the publication of a pamphlet by the com merclal department, request for aid from the press and the procuring of information from truck and tire man ufacturers as to causes of wear. It is desired particularly to impress on users that abuse of tires not only makes their first cost higher than it would be if the tire companies did not make good the damage done by such abuse, but that the burden of making replacements under the guar antee falls on those who take proper care of their tires as well as those who do not; also, that In saving tire wear the user at the same time reduces damages to the vehicle Itself and so saves on his general repair bill. All Standards ladoned. Another recommendation approved by the directors was to the effect tha the executive committee readopt th motor truck standards adopted last year, as embraced in the speed ratings. body weight allowance, caution plate against overloading and overspeedlng, frame widths and lengths back of seat. and demonstration charges. These standards, together with a uniform guarantee covering material and work manshlp for a period of three month after delivery of the truck to the pur chaser, were established with a view to correcting numerous abuses exist lng among users and within the trade Itself. BOOKLET TELLS ABOUT AUTO Ford Manual Gives Information About All Parts of Cars. Quite a new departure In the way of brochures has just been issued for the first time by the Ford people. It is entitled the Ford Manual, and It con tains some genuine Information of the sort likely to appeal to owners and also to those who Intend buying a car but who wish first of all to understand what they are buying. The whole book is got up in the form of question and answer, practically 150 of them, with clear illustrations and drawings to supplement the written answers in every case where there might be the least difficulty in under standing. The brochure is divided into sections dealing with the important parts of the car, such as the engine, the car buretor, the ignition system, rear axle assembly and so forth. Not one word of advertising matter Is contained in the book, and the company Is deserving of great credit for Its effort to supply a really long-felt want. PACKARD FORCE TAKES CRUISE Dealers, Salesmen and Factory Ex ecutlxes Make Trip on Lake. About ZOO Packard dealers, salesmen and factory executives left Detroit aboard the steamer City of Detroit II on September 10 for their annual con' vention cruise. Three days were consumed in the trip, which extended as far as the Soo. A stop of several hours was made at Macklnao Island. Business meetings, talks by execu fives of the company and open discus sions were part of the dally pro gramme. The Packard factory band furnished music and the Packard or chestra with professional vocalists from Detroit gave a programme every evening. Six cars of the new Packard "38" model were taken aboard the boat so that the dealers could become familiar with the details of its construction Kissel Kar Makes Fast Time. Nicholas Walsh, of Escanaba, Mich., claims record time between that city and Green Bay, Wis., a distance of 120 miles, largely over heavy roads. Mr. Walsh, In his Kissel Kar, made tbe run in four hours and 30 minutes, al though six hours bad theretofore been considered good speed. The roads part of the distance are of sand and fre quently motorists experienced no little difficulty In making the trip. Mr. Walsh's party consisted of Ave passengers. Hunting antelopes by motorcycle Is a sport enjoyed by Harold Eastman and a friend of Ean Diego, Cal. tISIiii'iiliH TWO-TON TRUCK OUT t-.!' 1 Pierce-Arrow Company Has New Worm-Driven Motor. HORSEPOWER ABOVE RATE Four Speeds Are Provided fand Oil Tubes Arranged So Possible Leakage Drips Back Into Pumps and Is Not Lost. After an exhaustive period of experl. m.mitlnn the Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Company has placed on the mar vf a two. ton. worm-driven motor truck. tvi j cran,rR 1 deslarn of this new pirm.Arnw nroduct is along ex urtlv the same lines as that of the five-ton truck, which has proved so successful. The motor is rated ry the S. A. E. formula at 15. horsepower. It actually develops 30 horsepower at 1000 revolutions per minute; Dore iour- Inch diameter; stroke, five and one- hif Inchon: f our-cvlinder. rour-cycie, rntr.mnl a utomatlcallv to a speed of insn revolutions ner minute, or with tnndarH fearing. 16 miles per hour on the road. The cylinders are of the T-head type. while the valves and valve-operating mechanism, the cam shafts, crank shaft and gears are designed and man. ufactured exactly as on the five-ton truck. A large rotary pump directly coupled to the cam shaft takes oil from a well t the bottom of the crank case cham ber and delivers it under pressure to large tube running the length of the crank case. Easy passages run from this tube to the main bearings, and thence through drilled holes In the crank shaft to the connecting rod bear ings. Lubrlcatloa Is by Spray. The cam-shaft and wrist-pin bear ings, as well as the cylinder walls. are lubricated by the spray of oil thrown off by the crank shaft. This spray falls into the base of the crank case and Is thoroughly strained before being used over again. Practically all oil tubes, passages and connections are inside the motor crank case, so that if a small leak develops the oil merely drips back into the pump and is not lost, thus econo mising the oil. Only two tubes go outside; one up to the pressure gauge and relief valve on the dash; the other the return pipe. There are only four outside Joints to keep tight A Bosch independent magneto -gen erates the current producing the spark Inside the cylinders. Ignition is controlled by a single switch on the dash, leading directly to the magneto. The high tension wires run through fiber blocks and are strung through the air, thus affording the maximum Insulation possible. Modified Carburetor Used. The standard Pierce-Arrow carbure tor, modified to Butt the special de mands of this truck motor has Deen used. A centrifugal pump directly coupled to the engine gears forces water under pressure through the engine system. thence to a vertical tube radiator. The clutch is of the Pierce-Arrow standard cone type, faced with leather, Surfaces are of large diameter and width. Withdrawal Is effected by pedal, throwing out two ball bearings mount ed on a fork. These, in their turn, act on the flange of the clutch, throw lng It out. There is a double universal Joint De tween clutch and transmission to com pensate for any small errors in align merit. This Joint is of the internal and external gear type with large bearing surfaces. The Joint is com pletely cased in and its shape Insures the grease reaching tne Dearing sur faces and keeping them constantly lu brlcated. The transmission, or gearset, is of the three-speed, selective type three speeds forward and one reverse. By means of a safety catch It is Impose! ble to have more than one gear in mesh at a time. The speeds are as follows: Maxi mum on direct drive, 16 miles per hour; maximum on second speed, eight miles per hour; maximum on low speed, four miles per hour; maximum on reverse, three and one-third miles per hour. The design and construction of the rear axle follows that of the five-ton worm-drive truck. The worm drive MID THE FOREST TREES IN CENTRAL OREGON. V tsK ?F'Jw. Z J. ill i 2 u vf ft it . I riil I rr jk. ,i c H -vVrv I HL il l' " JOH.V STEIDL A.VD PARTY IN Hl'DSON -37." John Steidl. a large property-owner of Bend. Or, is one of the owners of a Hudson 37," which, for light running expenses, he con siders cannot be beaten. He has had the car five months, has run over 6000 miles, and has yet to experience his first repair bill. is mounted rigidly in a dust-proof case of steel that carries the full weight of the load, the shafts to wheel transmitting the power only. These shafts are of extra large diameter, giving an extreme factor of safety to take care of road Ehocks and vibra tions. The engine and transmission are mounted rigidly on a subsidiary frame. Itself very rigid. This frame Is secured to the main frame by a hinged Joint at front, two widely apart fixed Joints at the rear, thus giv. lng a perfect three-point support. AUTO TOPS ARE FITTED PRACTICE OF TTSIXO "MASTER BODY" GOIXG OUT. "Look Around To Your Heart's Content You'll Surely Come Back" Your Studebaker dealer is not only willing, but glad, to have you "look around", after you have seen the Studebaker "SIX". He means what he says. He feels perfectly safe. There is nothing in the market that can win you away. It is not easy for him, or for us, to tell the simple truth about the car without seem ing to indulge in braggadocio. Because the simple truth is bound to sound disparaging to competing cars. The Question of Price Let's assume that you do "look around". The first thing you discover is that the Studebaker "SIX" is in a price division all by itself. You've got to begin several hundred dollars higher up in your hunt for a car com parable with it. Check One for the Studebaker. The Question of Size You are astonished to discover that the lesser price of the Studebaker is not explained by a lesser size. The Studebaker "SIX" is a normal six which means a six of the most generous pro portions. A seven-passenger six, in other words, (if used to its utter most) with perfect freedom of movement front and back. So you. lose nothing here in the lower price and gain noth ing in the higher. Check Two for the Studebaker. The Question of Beauty There are those who contend that the Studebaker is the handsomest Six on the market. Never mind that it is a distinguished-looking Six at any rate. There are none more beautiful none more graceful. So you won't be won away on that score. Check Three for the Studebaker. The Question of Workmanship Bear in mind that you are sup posed to be hunting for some thing that will justify you in not buying a Studebaker. And immediately you encounter an insurmountable objection to buying any other car. The Studebaker "SIX" is a manufactured Six. Practically every other Six with which you will compare it is an assembled Six. We mean by this, Sixes which are no larger, no more beauti ful, but which sell for con siderably more. This almost ends the hunt right here, doesn't it? Add fifty points to the other three we ve checked for the Studebaker. The Question of Fitness Studebaker will build mart Sixes than anyone else in the world this season. Almost as many as all the other makers combined. That accounts largely for the price. It accounts also for that ac-1 curacy without which a Six' is a dangerous experiment. It accounts for mechanical niceties and full jeweled work manship which amaze you at the Studebaker figure. Buy It Because It's a Studebaker We say to you what your dealer will say to you "Look around to your heart's content, you're bound to come back". You'll buy this Six because it's a Studebaker "SIX". You'll buy it because its superiority will be forced upon you by comparison. $885 Studebaker "25 $1290 Studebaker STUDEBAKER, Detroit, Mich. Portland Dealer-EN?dMs?TOR ccx 35" Dealers in All Important Citiea Up-to-Date Firm "Tailors' Cover ings of Cars to Each Individual Machine, Avoiding- Wrinkles. If you ever went through & body department of an automobile plant. you probably noticed that in fitting the tops, there was a so-called model or "master body" on which each top is fitted, as a dressmaker fits a garment to a model. In other words, top fit ting as defined by other 4 motor-car builders is analogous In meaning to a ready-made clothing manufacturer's practice of fitting a certain size gar ment to a definite form and fashioning all garments bearing that size label on a specific model. This Is why one sees the collar of coat worn by a man with a long neck, purchasing that sice garment, sagging ridiculously out of line, or why the sleeve-length is too long for another man wearing that size. In other words, the individual devi ation from a standard cannot be- com pensated for, in any ready-made meth od of fitting a garment or an automo bile top. It is true that the bodies may be built on the same model to ex act measures, but when the top is fit ted tne slight deviation in its measure ments will bring about elight disallen ment of the body and the too which develop into wrinkles or sagging or warping of the top at some point. in tne btevens-Ouryea body plant tuey band-tailor each ton to its own body. There is no such thing as a model to which all tops are fitted each Individual body is its own model for its special top. This process posi tively prevents the slightest variation in the uniformity of fit of the top. It is claimed by the company that the Stevens-Duryea plant stands alone ot all body building plants in this coun try, in lis oennition of bow to fit a top properly to a motor car. FIRESTOXE "WTXS COROXA RACE Tire Takes Firth Victory In Contest Since May 30. Victory came again to Firestone tires at Corona, Cal., September 9, when Earl Cooper, in a Stutz, won this great annual contest at a speed of 7r miles an hour, distance ZSO miles. This is the fifth great victory for Flrestones since Ma vO, and Includes all the important racing events of the season, namely: Indianapolis sweep stakes. May 30; Panama-Pacific road race, July 4; Montamara Festo races, July 5 and 7; Santa Monica race, Aug ust 8; Corona race, September 9. Never before in the history of tlre- dom has one make of tire captured such a string of unparalleled successes. The victories are doubly' significant, when one considers that Firestone makes no racing tires,- every event be ing won on the regular tires that any motorist getfc when he buys Flrestones. Frank E. Smith Elected. Announcement has Just been made of the election of Frank E. Smith, for merly of the Maxwell-Briscoe Com pany, of New Castle, as vice-president of the American Motors Company, in direct charge of production. Mr. Smith s probably one of the most experienced nd best-Informed men In the automo bile industry and his connection with the American Motors Company 1b in keeping with Mr. Handley's well-defined plans of specific concentration and efficiency. XEW RECORD IS HUXG UP Cadillac Establishes Mark Between Detroit and Omaha. George F. Reim, of Omaha, recently broke two Tecords in driving his 1914 Cadillac from Detroit to Omaha. Mr. Reim, who was accompanied by four friends, covered the 911 miles between the Tullea Hotel in Detroit and the Rome Hotel of Omaha in a total elapsed time of 31 hours and 54 min utes. The actual running time was 29:12, stops aggregating two hours and 42 minutes having been made, which is not much in excess of the time required to make the run by rail road. By this performance Mr. Reim beat his own time of 36 hours, 57 min utes, which was the record up to the recent performance. In reality two records were shat tered, as the party established a new time for the north transcontinental route from Chicago to Omaha, driving the 600 miles in 19 hours, 32 minutes, as against the previous time of 21 hours. The 1914 Cadillac on its arrival at Omaha was simply washed and put Into demonstrating service. The start was made without preliminary tuning up, Mr. Reim simply taking the car out of the factory and beginning the Journey. manufacturing, receiving direct reports from Max Wollering, production man ager, to whom report the superintend ents of all the plants of the system. Mr. Heaslet retains general charge of the designing and other departments of engineering at the Studebaker plant 10, which is, however. In Immediate charge of Assistant Chief Engineer Austin. Studebaker Man Promoted. By virtue of a recent increase in re sponsibility, James Q. Heaslet, chief engineer of the Studebaker Corpora tion, has been placed in general super vision of all Studebaker automobile Xew Route to Yellowstone. Under the auspices of the Chicago. Black Hills and Yellowstone Park Highway Association, a party in a Studebaker car has Just laid out an improved and direct motoring route to the park from Chicago. The route runs through Madison, Racine, Man kato, Pierre, Rapid City, the Black Hills and Cody, W'yo. It is said to be both shorter and better than the for mer route by way of Denver. Wastern Australia produces more oI4 than any American etatp. sands more pearls to Europe than any other country except Ceylon, and Is said to hav9 the rlcbeai belt of hardwood timber In the world. m m m m mi,. ,11 if W'riisrntm'' & iBri i& m ?J vm isssswfljlj1' iaissawk IjiTiit.j'ri.iw.i; THE STANDARD OIL mm iiln Ti Irnil r lift "11 1' ipl j-.Sl hMirm FOR MOTOR CARS STANDARD" because it is recognized by automobilifts as the best or standard product for motor lubrication. STANDARD" because it is standardized or uniform in quality. STANDARD" because it is a produdl of the Standard Oil CoMPANY-which in itself is a guarantee of absolute quality. v ci -"Jtr Sold dealers everywh at all agencies of th rS$r Standard Oil Compaq (CALIFORNIA) PORTLAND SAN FRANCISCO k&'wv ill Mil ere ana j-jx..,ir