if ' THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, FORTLAyPj FEBRUARY 37, 1916. AUTO NO LONGER IS FOR PLEASURE ONLY A. D. Rlughoff Declares That 99 Buyers Out of 100 Now . Are Business Investors! . . FAULTS TRACED TO DRIVER Lire r .Machine Depends Exactly on How It Is .Vscd, 'Says Overland . and Willys-Knight Agent. . Abuses Pointed Out. !!Y A. D. PLUGHOKr. Vice-rrexidcnt and General' Manager J. W. Leavitt & Co.. Pa.dnc Coast Dis tributors Overland and Willys-Knight Motor Cars. ' Xlnety-nine out of 100 who buy au tomobiles today consider that they are number of speeds forward. These vari olas speeds are for the purpose of giv ing the car momentum with the least possible strain. A car should be start ed "gradually on first speed. As the momentum is picked op the driver shifts so that the motor does nnt hpr unusual strain. If you make . ..i..ir ,,n habH wplpht it will juur.uiuiui 1"' 11 1 -m , n,i after a time, -develop noises. There vwu also be noises and grinds in tne trans mission gears or rear axle. nwnm nsuaHv attribute such trou n.. ... f.iiita in thn mr. when as a matter of fact it is the driver's own carelessness that is to blame. It is not unusual to hear that certain -r are hard on tires. Some cars are, through improper balance or small tires. Yet how many drivers do you see on the street every day who stop their cars in. say, 20 feet, when there is no reason on earth why they snouia not use i fcetT Sudden Stops Harmful. Often in approaching- a corner where .t J ,.,4r4 trnftiP 9.. PTA11 1 many LI1CIO IS l , u " ' ' ' ' ' -.1.1 J driversxmaintain their speed to witnini a few yards or tne crossing, men a vigorous application of tne oranw they come to a sudden stop. In such a case the pavement acts uae n , cuf.c file on the tires and wears away vai-. uable rubber. Quick stopping is some times necessary, but very rarely so, when one is driving in city traffic Discussion in the matter or tramc win save much or tne tire wear jiuuui which. - owners have 'sometimes com- 1 ...... m i ni.u. . The question of brakestoo. is one of the roost important in driving. Brakes are not put on an automobile for the purpose of stopping the wheels, but to compel the wheels to travel slowly. It is a well-known fact that if the brakes HUPP SERVICE iHS Company . Has 1 Established 2100 Stations in 7 Months. OTHER CONCERNS TRY PLAN Mr. Drake Says That Coupons Goocj for 50 Hours' ' Free bcrvicc, Is sued to Buyers, Being Used to Advantage by Owners. , i munthn of Dractical demon stration of the Hupirtobile Nation-wide service plan for automobile, owners has convinced J. Walter Drake, presi dent of the Hupp Motor Car Corporation.- that it is the most valuable in novation for the automobile owner in the last year. . . "We have now had our ation-wiae service plan, which we inaugurated at the start of our present season, in practical operation for seven months.' said. Mr. Drake, "and we find that it has met with the most hearty approval BIG SIX-CYLINDER RESPONDS TO 52-POUND YANK OF HUMAN ARM. y I- t V1 vmMm&&v$ A? k.' " I OVHRLD SIX ANSWKRIXC CALL OP J, W. LEAVITT 4 COMPAXY SALESJIAH, " To deinon-trate the lifrht weight and the perfect balanced the new Overland Six automobile one of the .in Tih. l w Leavitt & Company pulled off-a stunt the other day that is apt to startle the unin HlateT The cSwaV-K nd the brakes released. An ordinary scale then was attached to ! tho bumpe" in front Then the salesman set his muscles and pulled until the machine moved. It required only 52 pounds to pull the six-cylinder, seven-passenger car across the street. - making a service investment.- The au tomobile has ceased' to .be-regarded as a luxury. The general utility, as well as the pleasure-giving quality ofa motor car, has .been so well demon strated that owners no longer regard their cars as mere toys. An automobile is. alter all, simply a marhjne. A new oar is a potentiality which will run (satisfactorily for a i:iven number of miles, carrying its full qfiota of .passengers and equipment, and which will accomplish the various things for which it is desired for a 'ivtn length of time ihe life of the mechanism. Driving is the service a car ren ders the themes by whi'-h the ma chine delivers its quota. Good driving enables the owner to ' realize the full altie of his investment.. Careless driv ing and lack of care depreciate the In vestment out of proportion to the serv ice .rendered. Only by good driving I"cs one get the most out of his car. Technique .erded In Driving. Driving an automobile consists of more than merely operating the clutch, changing gears, applying- brakes and steering. To drive well, and therefore get the best service "from your car, requires a little study of the machine. Many of the minor troubles which private own er have with their cars result from not having attached the. proper import ance to the minor points of driving. It. does not necessarily follow that tlie owner of a car must take a special course in mechanics or serve an ap prenticeship in an automobile factory. It is the effort rf the Willys-Overland Company to make its cars so nearly troul-U; proof that very little tech jiirarnowledge is required to set sat isfaction. Probably nil companies pub lish complete instruction books, which thould enable an owner to handle his car well. And I do believe the greater number of owners today understand the general principle of ' their cars. They may occasionally be very careless. in such matters as luorjcation, aajust inents, etc.. but I am convinced that where dissatisfaction exists -it is large ly due to careless handling rather than to absolute abuse of the machine. One of the most common faults of driving is starting away too fast. Transmission 'gears invariably have a of a streetcar or .a locomotive are ap plied so hard that the- wheels stop entirely the result-is a flat wheel. The same conditions apply in apply ing the brakes to a.n automobile. Of course you don't hear the flat wheels, but J-ou have, nevertheless, worn flat spaces on your rear tires. Don't Let Your iJotor-"Race." Another common fault in driving -is allowing the motor to "race." Espe cially in crowded traffic you frequently see driver throw out Ills clutch and apply his brakes, reducing the speed from 20 miles an hour to. say five miles without reducing the speed of his mo tor. Allowing the motor to ,race simply uses up some of the efficiency of the car. which ought to be conserved for mileage. This fault permitted fre quently means loose valves and knocks in the motor. , When these develop don't lecture the repair man with a complaint about your ear,- but study your own driving a little and lind out if perhaps you are not at fault.' It is in the matter of turning corners, perhaps, that the average automobile driver is most greatly at fault. It remains to be proved that dashing sound corners at high speed saves any time for the driver. - lb certainly does not save tires, wheels, gears and mech anism genera-Hy. There is no reason in the world why a driver should not, in 999 cases out of a thousand, reduce his speed one-half when turning cor ners. . Car's Fault Laid to Driver. Almost every driver of a car has no ticed other cars with th? wheels out of alignment, noisy beveled gears, imper fect action of the differential and sim ilar defects. This Is, in many instances, not all the fault of the car, but rather the fault of the unthinking driver, who turns corners at too high speed and places wholly unneeessary-strain tkpon everv part of his car and extrava gantly wastes his tire service. In hill work, too, many drivers lit erally abuse their cars.. There seems to be a personal satisfaction to the average driver of a car to say that his car will take such and such a famous hill "on high." There seems to be a prejudice against the use of the inter mediate transmission speed. 1 of all owners. Hundreds of. letters have" been received by our company commending us on the excellent serv ice rendered to the owner, and we feel well-repaid for the great effort we Wive made to put this plan into ef fect. -, - "The greatest tribute to the Hupmo mile Nation-wide service plan hae been the" attempted adoption bsi other com panies of service systems of similar natures. Special equipment concerns, such as lighting and starting, battery and speedometer companies, have also adopted our plan and are making much capital of it in an advertising way. "We now have over 2100 service sta tions throughout the United States and Canada and are increasing this number at the rate of about 120 a week. Over 95 per cent of the coupons are being redeemed monthly. We have service stations all the way from Juneau, Alaska, to Miami , 'Fla. We have es- nablished service stations in the high est altitude, such as Ljeadvuie, coio., which is about the highest point an au tomobile can go, as well as at Coach ella. in Southern California, which is 200 feet belew sea level. n rti jC- Ttiess. our Newark. tf. J., dealers, have made the best record with !4 service smuuuo m uoac County. "Hverv Hunmobile purchaser is en titled to and is given with his car a Hupmobile service coupon book gooo for 50' hours' free service at any one of these 2100 stations in the United States and Canada. ' "Our Chicago distributor, T. J. Hay, has established 89 stations in Chicago alone. This means, that every Hupmo bile owner can get service in all parts of the city." Vernon Castle Buys Hupmobile. " Vernon Castle, who,-"with his wife, has revolutionized modern dancing by introducing some original movements of their own, is now the proud pos sessor of a model "N" Hupmobile, which he has-just purchased from George Leghorn, of the Atlantic Automobile Company, distributors for the Hup mobile in Boston Parachutes to trine an aeroplane safely to land after it had met with a mishap in flight are a French invention. GINT MOTOR TRUCK COMBINES WORK OF HAULING, DUMPING, SPREADING AND ROLLING ROAD MATERIAL, AS WELL AS PULLING AUXILIARIES. ' '...I."".!. ...... .: - I : t'i-r .CC- - - . 4 . - . r - , - m ; . i -1i . ' " t - WHITE GOOD HOADS TKl'CK, HBST MODEL OP WHICH ARRIVED IX PORTLAND LAST WEEK ' -Tk. r.r huiiriins- or maintaining a road depends largely upon the equipment that is used." remarl WHITE GOOD HOADS THICK, riUST MUUKL Of viiii.i Aivm,c.u v, ..., ' "The cost of building or maintaining a road depends largely upon the equipment that is use R S Hurd manager of the Portland branch of the White Company, last week, as he admi good' roads truck to reach this territory. ' ..-,.h ised," remarked red the first te emilnment "Without modern macninery a iarg pari or eveiy u h , i U ,m of rnnd costs less and is built faster. Old-fashioned equipment is being replaced by a new md more efficient type. Mules and traction engines are being supplanted in every form of road con struction and-thereby labor is reduced, work is simplified, roads are Duut better ana iunas go iurinei. "Tv, white irood roads truck, the only 6ne that has been designed and built especially for highway nite fioou roaus iiuuRf mc uinj who " " v ' ' ' work combines hauling, dumping, spreading and rolling road material' as .well as pulling graders, leveiers. drags' scarifiers and trailers. Its broad,-gauge steel wheels enable it to operate on soft ground .and fresh- , marie 'surfaces without any danger of cutting its tires on rocks and other sharp obstacles." t ighway leveiers. 7 I i ll When your wife a Reo- drives i ' Ml! You are ' certain rtZ the mere knowledge of how, to start, steer and stop it. The accessibility to the simplified mechanism gives her a full understanding; of the, power plant in its entirety. . This new interest-- ?k knowledge assures of stronger and better nerves of self-reliance of better health with its resultant pleas ure and happiness, not only for her but for the entire family who share in this economical investment. The present low prices on T? -rc, cannot be guaranteed after our original XvCOo allotment for this season has been sold. Prices f. o. b. factory:- Reo Four $875. Reo Six $1250. ft! :. - v Nor tli west Auto Company Broadway at Couch Street (Our Only Location) t '! i :,: hi' I .'I p.l! he Portland P. W. VOGLER President Oregon C. MMENZIES Salesmanager i 'i. I ,1 "The Line Complete" Marmons, Coles, Reos FUTURE DEFENSE SEEN ALTO TO BE VSJJD TO THA.MSPORT TROOPS, SAYS W. K. FLASDERS, Motors Are Declare" to Be BIB Factor in I'laas for American Ire-pnredness. When X'ncle Sam goes again to war he will go in a motorcar. So declares President Walter E. Flanders, of the Maxwell- Company. Therefore, Mr. I'liTiion. oHHs. a hi- factor in Ameri can preparedness will be our large sup ply of motorcars ana our ipimr 10 build more of them in large numbers and on short notice. ' Mr. Flanders points out that there are many spots on our coasts avail able for the landing of a hostile force, but not accessible by railroad. An in vader mght therefore mask his attack long enough to beat our defending force tc one or these points, mereuy 'establishing a foothold. But there are no landing places on either Atlantic or Pacific coasts not reached by coun try -oads roads which light, powerful cars are able to travel handily the year round, and at more tnan moderate speeds. Provision by which these nnn h. mi ci hv crreat num bers of motorcars would be obviously part of any riationai pian ui ji eola tion. Mr. Flanders believes. . - ".;.. v- AmAt1rnn Alltnmohllft IT) .1T1 - vi . v. um j, ...... - - ufacturens a month or 'two of warn ing," declares the Maxwell cnier exec utive, "and they could turn out enough .. A.fn nn uTTnv of 2o.ouo men on each coast with vehicles that would enable them to shift position iuu miies In- any 24-hour perioa. oucn an enuni- . ....1.1 .- . . i . . ,Kam fpnm t h f-i r hll T - lllt.iii. tjwwtv ...... . . racks to the very point they, might be needed. It would mane tne mnvenism of troops independent of railroads, which, it is fair to assume, might sur , i-..1-nrj. i u fmiYi fttruetive attempts of the enemy's secret service during the davs immediately prior to an at tack." the event of war Uncle gam will make great use of thousands of privately-owned- care. These probably will be attached to the citizen soldiery, -fn manv cases, he predicts, they will bo driven by their owners. Definite pro vision for such a citizen motorist re serve may already be part of the War Department programme. Mr. Flanders points out. At any rate, it is plain that Uncle Sam has apparently ceased to regard the motorcar as an object of double or treble taxation." New Car Owner in County THE following residents of Mult nomah County -have just received license tags for new automobiles reg istered this year for the first timet according to the records of M. O. Wilkins: ' N.- Anderson. Teon building. Ford; A. A. Bailey, 109 Second. Studebaker; C. E. Brown, Linnton, Reo; W. E. Bur dett, 321 East Taylor, Buick; City M6 tor Truck Company, 315 Hawthorne avenue, Marion; R. D. Cruikahank, the Cudahy Packing Company, Studebaker; Halvor Dahl. 400 Jefferson, Oakland; D. J. Ellis. 415 Oregonian, Ford: N. Freedman, 61 West Je.-sup. Ford; K. L. Griffith, 3.11 ' Fremont. Ford; I. B. Haye.. 48 Broadway, Case; A. Humph ries. 300 Williams avenue. Hupmobile; W. F. Jeffress, Fourteenth and Irving. Haynes; C. E. Manning, 54 Colorado boulevard, Jeffery: H. A. Maloney. 61 Seventy - fourth. Ford: Lorin Mclvin, 503 jr.. Ankeny. Studebaker; J. D. Mickle. 510 Worchester building. Ford; Mrs. Etna C. Hanson, 767 Madison. Ford: Rushlight & Hastorf. 354 Haw ' i.n,n. Html, .hnkr! A. E. Shank. 1-111 rKast cilisan. Ford; Western Transpor-, tatlon Company, Flret and Ankeny, Ford; John E. Wittman, 202 Grand avenue, Hupmobile Coquille prclers New Paving. MARSHF1ELD, Or., Feb. 26. (Spe cial.) The City of Coquille' has or dered paving by bituminous rock with a five-inch concrete base on three blocks Third. Elliott and Henry. The bids will be called for some time dur ing March. The Council at a recent meeting considered both bitullthic and bituminous covering Tor Tne improv.- Automobile Agency - Open Manufacturer of a good line of touring cars, the quality of which cannot be questioned, selling at popular prices and well known in this territory, desires an. aggressive dealer for Oregon. An opportunity to line up with a good seller. Don't overlook it. Address AP 316, Oregonian. menii aim me miiu-i . t ii... i was cstimutt.'d uL $1.02 ii urd. pa v In. if done hi-retoioio in v-oi conts eutirt'iy ol uiiununous i Wanlilnfctnn. D. f.. It now n nn thn ..r in., rii-uu hlalorv tho cHv km .1... tn m ..f n..1lt h iuMM hikI ttal rlulu FOR SALE A REAL BARGAIN OVERLAND ROADSTER 11(13 m del. clrrtrlmllr started and Hahlrd, with new ' battery tin manthH uariiBlff I. Strombrra mr burctttr aad raaay other ae rrorr. Paint In vend ronriltloa. Tlrf f.lr I. irrj Kood. Hua M.ooo mllr. tiiapy-appeaHna enr, vtar raotrd alve enfllrt rr lec. A baraain S7U under market prlee are want ndM. Owner lealna for California. $380 All Cash fall tnilayi i:at H.1IT or H 2.V. Call tomorrow i II S.'NI or Main tt1-. Write ll ltr, Oreuoiilmi. 4Miv Flanders also believes that in