THE ' SUNDAY OREGONIAX. PORTLAND, JUNE 1, 1910. OF A PIERCE- 5-Ton Truck in 74-Mile Run Daily for Six Years. MILEAGE TOTAL 145,000 Old Power Wagon, Only Once Over hauled, Still on Job and Good for SeTeral Years Yet. Permanency as applied, to motor truck performance is an elastic term and depends upon a thousand and one conditions that enter into the manufac ture of the product in the first place and a grain upon the care given the ma ter, when heavy snows -are frequently encountered the gasoline consumption is greater. Tires have averaged 16. woo miles on the front wheels and 12,000 miles on the rear wheels. Some sets htrve served more than 20,000 miles on the front wheels. Repair and mainten ance charges on this machine at the time of its overhaul were only $1314, including the overhaul cost of $1116.68. The original mechanism of the 14S,-000-mile power wagon Js Intact, includ ing the worm-gear. This statement ex cepts a few minor replacements. The accompanying detailed statement of costs tells its own story: Fixed Overhead Expenses. Interest at 6 per cent t CO 8. 00 Insurance Fir at 1 'V7 per cent 72.00 Property damage. J1O00 30.OO Collision at 2 2-5 D.r Mnt fl25 de ductible) 115.20 Liability - 75.00 Garage at 12 a month 144.00 Driver at X24. a week 1248.00 DIAMONDS USED OH AUTOS COSTIiY GEMS PART OF. JfASH MANUFACTURING EQIIPMEXT. Fixed charges per year $1992.29 Fixed charges per day (1-365) 6.45 Operating Expenses. Tires 1(5. 0OO miles front at 16. 12.- OOO miles rear at $503.SO, per mile. .$ .051 Gasoline, d miles per gallon at 27 cents per gallon .045 Motor oil. 250 mllea per gallon at 60 cents per gallon .002 Lubrication allowance 002 Repair and maint-nance -(overhauled at 78.050 miles for $1,314, Including . . repair parts) .Olo Depreciation at 150.000 miles, deduct ing tire cost .027 Operating; cost per mile .....$ .143 $50,000 Worth Annually Used in Production of Xash Trucks and Xasli Cars. Fifty thousand dollars" worth of dia monds are used each year in the pro duction of Nash passenger cars and trucks. The diamond, regarded gen erally as a luxury, is not so classified by the production department of the Nash Motors company, where it is looked upon as an essential and as such is held responsible for some of the most important machine operations that go into the various parts, of the Nash Six. The jeweler has developed for the diamond settings that inspire admira tion; poets have enshrined it with a lralo of romance, but the automobile manufacturer, quick to perceive its more practical possibilities, has literal ly put the diamond "in overalls" and set it to work. Instead of its more familiar back ground of gold and platinum, the dia mond as seen in the Nash factory is EASTERN OREGON MEN TAKE DISTRIBUTING AGENCY FOR ELGIN, WESTCOTT AND HARROUN CARS. rsssL . ijuj mwwrm " i i ' hiiihh i mi mi i "Will. 1 i; 'j. ' ' ' " ' " "' ' ' '",,kC I ftl w w rziirr"') lA p i- n Xg$kA CylT fsm- : I J. , A . tAi 5T Ph " ' ri'-. .: t - ' . - t 'I ,.v,.,., x. cW -t. . J... - CSSSBC BfcRE THEY ARE JC5T BEFORE LEAVING PORTLAND FOR PENDLETON, AFTER SIGNING UP. FOR AGENCY. Four of the mn in the picture are: W. H. Royce, Boyd Lawrence, J. E. Sophy and E. C. Olsen of Pendleton and Ia Grande. The identity of the fifth must remain a secret to Oregonian readers, as it was not divulged to the automo bile editor. These live young men will handle the Elgrin, Westcott and Ilarroun in nine eastern Oregon counties, with ueauquariers at renaieion and sales agencies at l-a urande and valuer. chine and the strain under which it fria.H to work. The record of one motor truck, a five-ton Pierce-Arrow, owned by J. B. Prescott, milk distributor, of Concord Center, Mass., furnishes good evidence of what may be expected of a, well-built machine, even under the most straining tests. This motor truck was placed in op eration May 27, 1913. Since thn this power wagon has covered a 74-mile route almost every day of each year. Karly in 1919 the 145,000-mark was passed. During this stretch of years this motor truck did not miss its daily trip except during a month's period when it was given the overhauling due a.11 machines after a lapse of time. Be cause of the conscientious care given it, it required no overhauling until Au gust, 1916, up to which time it had traveled 78,050 miles. It so happens that the Prescott motor truck has been called upon to do what no other machine has ever done so far &s can be learned. Here was a real test, if there ever was one, of real per manency. A 100 per cent mark must be accorded the contestant. Other motor trucks are older, in point of service, than this one; others have traveled farther some having covered more than 200,000 miles, but none of these machines, so far as is known, was called upon to perform a daily task without halt over an extended period cf years. How much longer this veteran is go ing to maintain this record no one can tell. Any method of figuring depre ciation writes the original cost off the books. Yet this motor truck stands ready, apparently, to repeat in a large measure, its record performance. Today this old power wagon is called upon to perform a more strenuous daily task than that performed by a. second machine purchased by Mr. Prescott. This second motor truck is required to travel 50 miles, instead of 74 each day. Like its mate, it has never missed a trip. It has been in operation since Aujrust, 1916, and has covered nearly 0,000 miles without overhauling. Nothing more than ordinary care has Ibeen given these motor trucks. Mr. Prescott s sole requirement of his driv ers is that they oil the machines thor oughly and with intelligent care. Performance details are more In Rtructive than general facts ever can be. The life of Prescott motor truck No. 1 may be written as follows: Korty stops are made - in the morning at farms in the vicinity of Concord Center, where about 600 two-gallon cans of milk are loaded. These cans are car ried to four or five retail milk dealers in the suburbs of Boston. Kmpty cans are picked up and on the return trip axe delivered to the farmer. On this work the machine averages eix miles to a gallon of gasoline; in summer the average is-higher. In win- Daily cost at 74 m11s pr day 1.V!2 Cost per gallon fVJOO gallons pr day) .013 LICENSE LI IS ENFORCED FAirCRE TO PAY FEES 3IAKES OWNERS LIABLE TO FINES. Attorney-General Black ot Idaho Gives Ont Ruling on What Con stitutes Common Carrier. BOISE. Idaho, May 29. (Special.) The state has decided to enforce the automobile license law and bring: delin quent auto owners to time. The law enforcement department will take charge. Owners operating automobiles as common carriers, hat is. on regu lar routes, charging; a passenger fee, must pay to the public utilities com mission a stipulated fee. If they fail to do this they may be convicted of a misd-emeanor and heavily fined. Attorney-General Black has ruled that in his opinion the following can be classed as "common carriers": Auto stages, motor vehicles or any other self-propelled motor vehicle for use in the business of carrying either passen gers or freight, or both, whether oper ated over any particular route or routes, or between specified terminals for hire or compensation with the fol lowing exceptions: Such as run on rails or tracks, hearses, ambulances, hotel busses operating solely between hotels and trains, automobiles or automobile trucks used for carrying United States mails on star routes when actually en gaged in carrying such mail. "Under the statute, as it is now amended," says the attorney-general, "it will be seen that the words "taxi cab," touring cars or automobiles from garages from call, which have no spe cific routes, were omitted from the exceptions. The law intended to in clude all motor vehicles whether they accepted employment to run over cer tain routes to certain designated places, or would' go any place within their territory on call." , Famous Stevens Still Rides. Thomas Stevens started in the spring of 18S3 to ride around the world on a bicycle. That was in the days of the old high bicycle with solid tires. Ste vens successfully performed this re markable trip and the story of his great ride was told in a popular magazine of those days. Mr. Stevens is now a hale and hearty old man' who still rides a bicycle. "set" in a small socket at tbe end of short and unromantic steel bar. Both diamond and "setting" are covered with grease and grime and in this un sightly but practical garb the job as signed to the king of gems is the more or less prosaic though vitaly impor tant duty of regrinding- the surfaces of emery wheels. It is the emery wheel that is depend ed upon for the high degree of accu racy demanded in the Nash factory for bearing surfaces of the crank shaft, the cam shaft and for pistone. trans mission sleeves and similar parts that must be smoothed so that the surface will not vary as much as a one-thou sandtb. part of an inch. In the Nash plant are scores of wheels used for this purpose and each is manned by highly skilled operator. After each operation of the emery wheel the diamond is brought into play. Pressed against the spinning wheel, the diamond is made to rerind its surface so that subsequent operations of the wheel on surface of steel parts will produce accurate results. The diamonds used for this purpose by the Nash Motors company vary from three-quarters of a carat to eight car ats in size. CYCLE TAXES ARE EXPLAINED Motorcycles and Parts Come Under Xew Schedule. LOS ANGELES. May 31. The new war taxes on motorcycles went Into ef feet May 1. Here la how they are In terpreted by one of the big distributors who has studied the provisions of th new revenue act closely: Tax on motor cycles, S per cent, an increase of 2 pe cent compared to the old tax. The per cent tax also applies to motorcycl parts, sidecars and sidevans, and all equipment for same. This is a new tax which previously did not apply to these Items under the old revenue act. Motor wheels and parts thereof are classed i motorcycles and come under the 5 p 1 ability to discharge road shocks, and endur- Lzj-i ' If co. mm i X " J V 'v. '..I 11 J? V JL if m" 'Wjmt n m 11 n i i mm p ' -iu i . ECONOMICAL tires are built by hand for ability to discharge road shocks', and endur ance to give maximum mileage. Ordinary tires- are made by machinery for quantity output aifd to meet a price. Economical tires mean long life and increased effi ciency to your automobile, and low operating cost. Ordinary tires mean short life and decreased effi ciency to your automobile, and high operating cost. The price of Globe Tires (Fabric or Cord) averages about 10 more than ordinary tires, but they give you 50 more miles. Globe Tires, built slowly and surely by hand, for real resiliency and maximum mileage, are the most economical you can buy- M- SELLER & PORTLAND, OREGON Distributors. for the Northwest Mide by GLOBE RUBBER TIRE MFG. CO. Executive Offices: 1851 Broadway .-NcwA'ctlc Factories Trenton, N J branches in NEW YORK. CHICAGO. PHILADELPHIA and BOSTON Dealers in open territory are invited to writ' for information about our exclusive franchise Z2 cent tax rullnp. No tax on bicycles or equipment. The law provides that the tax be added by the manufacturer to the cost of the machine when sold from the factory. Thus it is passed alontr to the distributor, thence to the dealer, and latterly to the consumer. MOHAWK TIRE BROUGHT HERE Munnell & Sherrill to Handle Tire of Well-Known Make. Announcement was made last week that Munnell & Sherrill of 40 Kirst street have taken the distributing agency for Oregon, northern California, most of Washington and a portion of Idaho for the well-known Mohawk tire. This tire, which is manufactured In both cord and fabric, is a hand-made product. It has a guarantee of 6000 miles for fabrics and 6500 for the cord. The deal was arranged through W. J. Fitzgerald of San Francisco, coast man ager for the Mohawk. HUDSON OWNERS LEAVE PORTLAND ON OCEAN-TO-OCEAN TOUR. i j -J . V . ? - , Z j-Ti V ol : FHOM PORTLAND, OR, TO FORTLAXD, MPi, AT BACK IS THEIR GOAL. Mr. and Mrsv H. M. Carlock of 318 Sixteenth street and Hudson Super-Six In which they started last week on cross-country tour to Portland. Me, and re turn. They left via the central Oregon highway to Los Angeles, whence they will ta'i the Grand canyon of the Colorado-and drive easotthrougb. Arizona, Texajv Orleans. ANNOUNCEMENT It is with considerable pride that we announce our good for tune in having secured the ex clusive agency for Oregon of the famous " GRUSS AIR SPRING We are now ready to install this shock absorber on cars or trucks. BURNESS & MARTIN 501-503 Alder St. tV lK-3'' -'fi , r- - - -. , i l fh , ' f" ; Y ' . J f , ill - '&ssf( y v , r . c il i,fj !f ' - DOUBLE THE RANGE OF PERFORMANCE V. 5 " ;I J , HALF THE COST OF OPERATION . s f . 1 - ' ' Eight Exclusive Hody Styles ' - 1 I'"'', ' !: t ilf'lllll NORTHWEST AUTO CO. if! ...A '"tr't V'1 'I W i "The Line Complete," - 4 I I' ' lii 'I'll ' EIGHTEENTH AND ALDER STS. .jfijJJ , j fl! f ; LMOTOR CAR COMPAIYN U&A ' ' , Ji ijlill illllliiiSi ISSii Mi fill!