10 TITE SUNDAY OREGONTAN, PORTLAND, JANUARY 19, 1919. HIGHWAY PONE RING 1 E BY FORESTERS Service Road Men Extending Trade Arteries. OREGON WORK IS PLANNED Operations of Department in Open ins Fp New Territory Covers Twenty-Seven States. Penetrating into the forest depths, edg-inff their way along the sides of dizzy cliffs, chancing the perils of swamp and glade, the men of the United States Forest Service today are acting as the advance guard of the road builders of the country. Where under construction with the first touch of Spring. From Canyonville to Galesville, in Douglas County, Oregon, is a trail to day which leads through the heart of the Umpqua forest. That trail must be widened that travel may flow freely along the Pacific HIgmway. Again in Oregon there is a stretch of road known as the Zigzag Govern ment Camp Way. Two stretches of that trail are impassable for machines today. Completed, they will open up for Portland a circle trip to Crater Lake of surpassing beauty. It is hoped the work will be completed this year. Timber Belt to Be Tapped. Down in Arizona there are two east-and-west main highways but no connec tions between them from the Rio Grande River to the road from Phoenix to Ash Forks in Westerrt Arizona. Moreover, people living at Clifton, but 30 miles from the cool breezes of the range, must travel to California to es cape the blaze of the Summer sun. So the Forest Service, in conjunction with the counties. . has projected a north-and-south road 94 miles long from Clifton to Springville which will not only let people into the hills but will open a market for millions of feet of matured timber which today can be brought out only by pack saddles. In New Mexico the Tijeras Canyon runs down to the east of Albuquerque. At its head lies a valley of grazing and farming lands. Firewood can be had there also in abundance. It must be brought out and so a road 14 miles CO-OPERATIVE SPIRIT EXISTS III FACTORIES Bond Between Employer and Employe Strong. PRODUCTION SPEEDED UP Pride of Workmanship Gnarantees Increased Output, National Distributor Says. In the American automobile plant, a new spirit of co-operation exists. This spirit, which runs through the shops and then passes on to the execu tive offices, came from the same source as the handicaps and inconveniences that were suffered during the 18 LEONARD HULSE NAMED SALES MANAGER FOR REGNER & FIELDS. r." 1 r j Lj :fj: r It: i , ,..,.. " . ' & Li , z". , ., ..... . ....o) .... - Tj5' IL. 'r " 1 .&.,. f p.- ; , v :'v - "t - ' ' - (J . M'.u.i....ji.a!J!'"" Mr. Hulse, Wbo W III Direct the Sales End of the Business for the Chevrolet Distributors Here. Is Stoira nt the Wheel of a Chevrolet eoupe. A"hl-h la Proving to Be One of the M ost Popular Knclosed ModrU In Portland. other agencies devote most of their, effort toward the reconstruction or improvement of roads already con structed, the Forest Service is still en caged in pioneer work and many a tale of adventure has come out of their work. From the standpoint of expenditures the work of the service is relatively in significant, but just as the prairie Echooners of the '60s blazed the way for the traffic of today, so the Forestry Department is opening up new fields for the citizens of tomorrow. Some times, it may be, they are occupied in opening a route whereby a little farm tucked off in a corner of the range may send its produce to market, again it is a. clearance for precious metals of tim ber, or it may be simply a route along which travelers may move in search of health, diversion, recreation. Sometimes It is all of these and more, for the men of the service are a versatile lot and the sound of their axes rings out in death valleys and haunts of the wild beast, that man may find his way into the far edges ofethe United States. Activities Will Be Renewed. Last year the worn of the service was the first to be cut down by the war, since for the purposes of imme diate war-making tTieir task was of little importance. This year they will be on the job again with renewed life and wherever the national forests are to be found, there will be seen the forest gangs harder at it than ever. All told, $5, 750,000 will be expended on this work this year, of winch 12.800.000 will be derived from the funds of the serv ice, the rest from the co-operative funds of states and counties. The exact mileage will, of course, be determined by labor conditions and cost of material, but the policy of the de partment will be to open up links of communication wherever possible and. if limiting conditions prevent more than a few miles of construction on some projects, these miles will be se lected with an eye to making travel able the entire stretch of road between points. It is not a question of durable, permanent-type roads wlh the Forestry Service; it is a question of any road at all, and the annals of the depart ment show that remarkable results in the development of virgin territory have been attained through their work in the past. Worts Pnea War to Bill. They are the educators the men whose work makes possible the intro duction of such a bill as that now be fore Congress and providing for the expenditure of $500,000,000 on roads in the next seven years, and while, their work will profit only indirectly through the release of state runds by the pass age of this measure, it may safely be said that whole communities will press this act who could not have understood the economic value of the road without the work of the Forestry Department to guide them. The department operates in 27 states and two territories the last Alaska and Porto Rico and wherever it had a road to build, there may be found a ' story of absorbing interest. Space pro hibits the unfolding of the background to this work in detail, but by glancing briefly at a few of the projects, some thing of the romance which rests be hind the work may be'glimpsed. In .Washington, for example, we find A crew engaged in clearing a way for a road along the south side of Lake Quinialt in the Olympic peninsula. Trees of enormous diameter block the way but back of this timber is production nd the world needs food, so in the face of uanaard ot difficulties the work goes u4k- Colorado Link Projected. In the southeastern part of Colorado rest the Needles of the San Juan, rated as among the most rugged paints in the United States. There is a section of country which has never been opened to travel, through solid rock and skirt ing a roaring creek. Seventeen miles of cliff must be dropped into the val ley below, switchbacks and hairpin curves must be located but the road will complete the last link in a 1200 mile trip and the men of the service do not turn back. On the north side of the Columbia River in Washington locations have been completed for a connecting link in the main state trunk highway. A railroad must be relocated, cliffs must be tumbled down, dynamite in carload Jots will be needed. TJie work will bu long will be pushed through the canyon. Where the Humboldt forest rests in Northern Nevada, will be found one of the most promising new gold fields in the world. Isolated in the Winter., but poorly linked up in Summer, Elko County is not anywhere near capacity production. But it will be ,for a road 50 miles long, known as the Charles-ton-Jarbridge project will probably be under way with Spring. One of the chief difficulties which travelers have encountered in entering Yellowstone Park from Wyoming has been the lack of good roads, so a project has been drawn up which will improve the road from rubois to the western boundary of the Teton forest. This in turn will be linked up with the highway through the Jackson Hole country. At Dubois the road will con nect with three transcontinental routes and will thus afford the traveler an optional route of great charm in his journey to the famed park. T tail Boad on Programme. Another line in a transcontinental route which has been seriously needed will be constructed in Utah when the highway is pushed through from Ephraim to Orangeville, a distance of 46 miles. This will link up with the road through the noted Paradox Valley of Colorado, where are mined the pre cious carnotite ores and will give the through traveler an outlet both to the east and west. In Idaho there is the Galena-Summit section of the Ketcnum-Clayton road, not only a link in an important trunk highway but a route which will open a new district for grazing, agriculture and mining a land of beautiful back ground, diverse scenery and resources. r inally, the service is planning to evade the notorious Nigger Hill west of Missoula in Montana and by a heavy construction operation will open a new roaa on grade. In Arkansas and In Florida as well as other states where the national for ests are located, the work is projected. Through it, millions of dollars of wealth will be added to the Nation's valuation, hundreds of miles of road opened for traffic. And with the release o'f state funds made possible through passage of the Bankhead bill, new sums of money will be at hand to aid the servlco In its great work. CYCLOMIZER INVENTED .HERE Device "Will Be Marketed by Wesco Sales Company. A device placed between the carbure tor and the manifold to catch the gaso line Just as it leaves the throttle valve, throw it away from the manifold wall and cut it into fine vapor, has been in vented by E. E. McClaren, Portland architect. The mixture formed is said to b such a high explosive gas that practically no carbon is left in the en gine. The inventor says that numerous tests have shown that it will clean spark plugs and cylinders, effect a saving in gasoline and lubricating -oil and prevent the engine from smother ing and choking. The device is called the cyclomizer and will be placed on the market by the Wesco Sales Com pany. Curing Brake Squeaks. - Squeaking brakes may be cured by washing the lining with kerosene ap plied with an oil gun. A drop or so of oil on the, drums is also efficacious in some cases, and soapstone is recom mended. None of these remedies will help very much, however, if the squeak ing is due Jo brake lining rivets scrap ing on the drums. In this case relin ing probably will be necessary. Oregon Rancher Praises Truck. A. C. Sidney, prominent Oregon rancher from the Hood River district, has estimated he has saved more than $500 in the four months he has been using a Chevrolet one-ton truck in place of the five horses he formerly employed on his apple properties. months when the United States was preparing to crush the Hun and ac complishing such an achievement. It is the war. "Never in the history of the industry has the automobile mechanic had a greater sense of loyalty toward his job and his employer." said A. B. Manley, local distributor for the National Motor Car and Vehicle Corporation, of In dianapolis. War Teafhei IinonR. "The lessons in patriotism he learned while the country was at war are be ing applied to peace-time tasks. He realizes that the company he works for is one of the Nation's many vital re sources, and not merely a source of in dividual revenue. He understands that if he fails to do his full part, his com pany also falls short of its maximum intent and that his country, which many of his fellow-workers fought and died for, shares the burden of hie in efficiency. "And there is a stronger bond be tween the employer and employed than ever before as a result of the war. Each knows how much the one is de pendent on the other for success. They have labored together and sacrificed together for a common cause the tri umph of America on foreign battle fields. They have met, as American citizens and American patriots, on common ground. They have had com mon obligations to fulfill, the conser vation oi iooa, tne purchase or war savings stamps, the subscriptions to liberty loans, Ked Cross funds, etc. "ater Work Reqnlred. It Is fortunate for the automobile industry that such a spirit of co-oper ation exists at this time. For it will speed the reconstruction work that all motor car factories must comnlete he fore production is restored to normal. Present and future conditions require a closer co-oraination between the var ious departments of the automobile Plant and . between the shoo and office. A irreater pride of workmanship alone guarantees an increased output with out a sacrifice of quality. Each oper ation must De performed belter and quicker than it ever was rrrfnrm.H before if American automobiles are to serve more people than they do now ami as wen. "The National company, for example, is relying a great deal on factory teamwork to build in 1919-20 one-third again as many National Sixes and i weives as were made in the most pro ductive year in the organization's hi. tory. Such an output is necessary to supply the demands of distributors In this country and the expanding foreign Beat the Car Crook. One of the best ways to foil the car crook is to neglect your tires. He would h singularly inept and inexperienced who would attempt to steal a car un less the ehoes were in good running oraer, . . BIG MOTOR SHOW SLATED SAX FRANCISCO'S EXPOSITION OPENS. FEBRUARY 6. Tractor and Truck Displays AVill Augment Big Display of Passenger Cars. San Francisco's automotive exposl. tion is announced for February 6 to IS in the Exposition Auditorium. It will be the first big style-trade congress of Northern California since the coming of peace. Befitting the Im portance of the industry, the display of motor cars and trucks, tractors and accessories of all kinds that go to aid the kings of the highway and the field, it will surpass anything of its kind hitherto attempted in the West if pres ent indications do not fail. While the announcement of the show caused more or let's surprise, it is logical that there should be an early resumption of orderly affairs in the motor world. In a business so highly sensitive to popular demands, and tak ing front rank in the social and busi ness life of every community, there has developed with the progress of the automobile a demand for annual shows. The public wants to know about the various mechanical and body refine ments: tbey like to eee their favorites ranged alongside of their rivals in mo tocracy. Above all do they like to see the latest creations in special dexigns put out la limited numbers for those J ntwo-Power-IKanqre Eioht:' Post -War Prices I Post -War Prices ; y jujjtiw uurijig, 44vu 4 passenger Koaasier, j2yoo j 4 passenger Coupe, $3320 7 passenger Sedan, $3530 i 7 passenger Sedan-Limousine, $3720 t Jj f. 0. b. Cleveland, subject to ckane without notice -. JJ IfS 1: 4 j ..e.ap J- I W , --1 Compare these priceswith those of other ' cars which you might think of in con sidering the purchase of a car of this class. We believe that a very real margin of greater value in the Peerless Eight is readily apparent, even with out considering the advan tages of its Two-Power -Ranges. 1 And its two sharply con trasting power ranges give the Peerless the most disj unctive comparative ad vantage possessed by any motor car today. The Peerless Motor Car Co. Cleveland, Ohio. U. S. A. -k ( 'jr. rv . 1 1 lh.VtV. r: vt vs.. j D. C. Warren Motor Car Co. 5-60 North Twenty-third Street Portland who are never content with the com monplace. And an automobile show is the only place where they can have their fill of such things. While the passenger car displays will hold the center of public interest, this year will ee an added interest in the motor truck exhibits. War deeds have focused the attention of the merchant and the manufacturer and the farmer on the commercial vehicle. The truck has taken Its place among the great aides of commerce, for the herculean tasks imposed by the conflict of na tions found the power wagon from the giant 10-tonner to the midget de livery car the inastrr ot every situa tion. It is estimated by conservative authorities that the mammoth truck production of America. which has ad vanced beyond the average person's conception eince the thunders of war were loosed will not begin to take care of domestic and export demands for this year. Indications are that there will be a representative exhibit of tractors, which will lend further attraction to the display. The tractor emerged from the war one of the "best advertised in ventions of modern times. Despite the fact that it is purely an engine of work, it is clothed in a cloak of ro mance which had won the interest of thousands who can never hope to have use for one. The tractora probably will draw hundreds who would otherwise stay away from the show. MITCHELL OX FACTORY VISIT Portland Dealer Will Attend Anto Show in Chicago. H. W. Mitchell, of Mitchell. Lewis & Staver Company, left last night for a visit to the Mitchell factory. While In the East Mr. Mitchell will attend the auto show in Chicago. MOToiHIlNTEO SOLDIERS' SERVICE- DEPART MEXT IS OPEXED. soldiers' service department, designed to aid these men in. getting positions upon their return to civilian life. Quite naturally, the Hendee Manu facturing Company knows of quite ex cellent opportunities for competent men in these various lines in the mo torcycle field. There are at all times a demand for good repair men by mo torcycle dealers, and the men who have "been through the mill" in the Army arc particularly well qualified for this work. Salesmen and demonstrators are also in demand at the present time by some of the largest dealers. Doubtless some of the motorcycle enthusiasts re turning from the war will have saved money, or will have the means neces sary to becoming dealers, and for such there are openings with good territory available. All soldiers returning to civilian life minus a Job, but with Army motorcycle experience, are urged to communicate with the soldiers" service department, Hendee Manufacturing Company, of Springfield, Mass.. immediately with a view of obtaining a good position "in the game." Every effort will be made by the factory to place all applicants in I the niche in the motorcycle field they seem best fitted to take up. Appli cants should give full particulars in their first letter about themselves, what branch of the motorcycle busi ness they are Interested in. whether as repairman; salesman or as dealer, where they have been stationed and what form of motorcycle work they have been doing in the service. Addrss ail communications to Hen dee Manufacturing Company, Soldiers" Service Department. Springfield, Mass. Manufacturers or Indian Will Help Former Army- Cyclists Find . Civil Life Positions. Recognizing that there are thousands of men who have become motorcycle experts through their services in the Army and that many of these men will be open to opportunities to become re pairmen, salesmen, demonstrators and selling representatives as'soon as they are discharged, the Hendee Manufac turing Company,, manufacturers of In dian motorcycles, baa established a When in -a hurry don't cut In short on another driver after passing him. Take up all lost motion in your tleer ing gear, and oil. HUPM0BILE EXPERTS General Auto and Truck Repairing Rodhain & Vollum Auto Co. 93 X. Park St., Corner Flanders Phone Broadway 609 Feature Dependable Power Heavy loads must be moved fast er business demands this. The pulling- power of Federal tractor-semi-trailer is helping- solve the business man's problem. Perhaps it's a Federal tractor you need Our engineers will help you call on us. Write or Phone for Traffic News William L. Hughson Co. Broadway at Davis PORTLAND, ORF.GOX Oldest Motor ar Organization on the ParlHr Coast, with branches at San Fraaelnea, I.os Angeles, Oakland, San Hire, and Frrilo. f eg j--.art .a, S5? f.i& 1 rr in 1 -1 - . i , . f-. ,a H