THE STJXDAY OEEGOXIAN, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 7, 1919. 13 mm shark PROFITS WITH MEN Factory Announces Details of New Plan. WORKERS TO BE PARTNERS E f stem of Anniversary Checks In a ag a rated, With Vacation on. Pay for Employes. Studebaker Is another of the great Industrial institutions of the country to adopt the profit-sharing; plan for its employes. Details of the inauguration of the co-operative system by which the employes will receive more money for fewer hours' labor have been re ceived here. In general the employes will re- damage to roads: one Is the Impact of weight; the other is wear to the sur "With a substantial roadbed the Im pact of weight does little damage. If the roadbed Is faulty, weight tends to break it. It is simply a matter of gravity. "Perhaps the greatest destroyer of road surfaces and the least condemned is the steel tire. The steel tire hits the roadway with an absolutely unglving impact. Its constant hammering crushes stones and shatters all particles that project from the surface of the road. "Steel tires are usually narrow and they wear and cut deep tracks and ruts. They pulverise the surface, so that automobiles, with the suction of their pneumatic tires, suck up the dust that la formed and scatter it to the winds. ' "The motor truck with its broad. flat rubber tires and alow speed, com pared with that of the automobile, causes practically no damage to the surface of the road. It causes no abrasion and there is no suction from the solid tires. Of all traffic on the highways the motor truck does the least damage to the surface of the road. "As to the weight It Imposes upon the highway, thia is largely taken care of by the (00-pound limit to each inch of tire width. Legislation which arbi trarily limits the carrying capacity of motor trucks simply adds to the cost of transportation and Increases the cost of living. "It Is for the people to Insist that legislation governing motor trucks be intelligently formulated. As the use of the motor truck becomes more and I S1ED-0FF SHOTGUN FOR AUTO THIEVES San Francisco Takes Up Prob lem in Earnest ALL ROADS TO BE GUARDED Special Anti-Thief Stations Built and I Cops Told to TJse Shotguns if Escape Is Tried. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. . The au tomobile thief has had his last day in San Francisco. This assurance is given motorists by Chief of Police White and the California State Automobile asso ciation, which is co-operating with the I police department. The first of a series of thief catch ing stations, in which cops, armed with f CLASS IN OPERATION AND REPAIR OF TRA CTORS IN THE PORTLAND T. M. C A. AUTO MOTIVE SCHOOL, ; m i yil Rim ;l w iSii f ' .1.1', .. , - I - - .... .... - - " - . t.-TMi ') irm 'iir.i"i n fin, unniiili iiurr iint in .. i n r it rr it'i.ii.. mn THET LEARN CHAR.CTEIUSTIC8 OF" EVERY MAKE. Courses In the operation and repair of tractors have become so popular In the Y. M. C. A. Automobile school In this city that an addition to the school building has become necessary to house these classes. Manufac turers have taken such an interest In the work of the school that they have supplied it with tractors of every type, from the "bull" to the caterpillar, and in several cases have sent representatives to demonstrate their machines and assist in the instruction of students. It has been announced that the Portland automotive school of the T. M. C. A. has been selected as a model for the reorganization and standardization of ail the automotive schools of the association in the United States. THE UNIVERSAL CAR . The Ford Model T One Ton Truck is in reality a necessity to the wide-awmlre retail grocer, not only fb Jhe economic solution of the delivery problem, but for the bringing of goods from the dock or station to hi place of business, and for traversing the country and bringing in produce- For ytar the Ford One Ton Trade with it splendid manganese bronze worm-drive, powerful Ford Model T motor, strong Vanadium ted frame, haa been serving in every line of business activity, and we have yet to hear the first complaint m to rear axle trouble or motor trouble. It hat the lowest purchase price on the market, and the cost for operating and maintaining la exceedingly small. In fact, the Ford One Ton Truck haa become a business necessity. Leave your order with any of the Authorized Ford Dealers Hited below. They will give you prompt attention and assure you reasonably prompt delivery, and give you an after service that will insure your continuous operation of the Truck. Francis Motor Car Co. E. 13th and Hawthorne Rushlight & Penney E. 3d and Broadway Talbot & Casey E. Ankeny and Grand eeive anniverssry checks, be enabled to purchase stock, receive a week's va cation with pay, be pensioned when un fitted by age or accident, be protected by life insurance and receive increased wages for a week of 4g hours, with four and one-fourth hours constituting the Saturday's work. The wage increase will go through the various departments, it being the policy to bring the scale up to that generally prevailing In the correspond ing trades. Stack for Mem at Ilalf Price. Tor the benefit of all employes whose annual earnings are under J2000 i.tj portant plans are being developed. Un der the direction of A. R. Erskine. pres Ident of the Studebaker corporation, the scheme provides for rewarding era ployes in several ways. Employes who have given an on. broken year of service will receive an anniversary check for five per cent of their previous years earnings. At the end of five years the anniversary check la Increased to 10 per cent. The anni versary check plan already has been in force -at the Studebaker plants with much success but under the new ar rangements there will be some changes more advantageous to the workers. The co-portnership feature by which employes may become Studebaker stockholders is available to all em ployes who have been In Studebaker service for three months or more. They may have stock purchased for their ac count at one-half the market price. In limited amounts each year, up to 20 per cent of the annual earnings, and to . 1400 total value. May Get a Director. The Intiial payments are 10 per cent with the remaining 40 per cent paid in four annual installments. AH cash and stock dividends are credited to the employes and they will hold voting proxies for the election of directors. It is probable that the em ployes. when they reach the total of 20.000 at the South Bend plants, will be asked to elect a director to represent them on the board. The vacation with pay Is an experi ment which is rare among the large corporations. Few factory workers are given a week with full pay. Yet this will be given to all employes who have been there two years or more. Studebaker Is preparing to double the benefits, under the pension plan. Any employe who has been In the Stude baker employ 20 years may voluntarily retire or be pensioned. MOTOR TRUCK DEFENDED XT ISX'S HARD OX ROADS, DE CLARES MANUFACTURER. narrow-minded hostility manifested in certain circles at this time will be com pletely overcome. "It is for the voters to nse their own judgment and their influence.' more an everyday matter much of the sawed-off shot guns and equipped with Steel Tires of Ordinary Wagons Are Blamed for Most of Dam age to Highways. There seems to be a tendency on the part of some who have not thought deeply on the subject to foster the idea that the only wear to roads comes from the use of the motor truck. "A few years ago the automobile met with this condemnation." says R. E. Fulton, vice-president of the Interna tional Motor Company, manufacturer of Mack trucks, "but the automobile is now a thing of such common use that hardly anyone finds fault with it any more. "The motor truck Is rapidly becom ing the nation's freight carrier, and while it is not true, there are people who believe it comes in direct compe tition with existing means of transpor tation of supplies, especially in rural communities and betweea cities. "There has been some unwise legis lation against motor trucks as a result of such an attitude. But with motor trucks hauling more than 350.000.000 tons of farm products a year, the peo ple .can hardly sit Idly by and allow legislation based on false ideas to hit at the very source of their life supply. "Of all vehicles using our highways, the motor truck probably causes the least damaarola proportion to the serv ice It renders. 1 "Tbereaeiwothlngi that cause NO SPEEDING TO RAINIER COPS TO HOLD MOTORISTS TO SO -MILE LIMIT. Pierce County Commissioners Issue Warning That Speeders Will Be Oat of Lock. TACOMA, Sept. . Speeders, beware! Here is the latest tip from Pierce county on the speed limit to be enforced along Rainier National highway. There is a special speed deputy on duty along the road with orders to "get anything driving faster than 20 miles an hour which Is the speed limit. Thirty miles an hour Is fast enough for any motoring party on the high way, tne fierce county commissioners announced last week in giving instruc tions to the sheriff's office that a spe cial officer be detailed to keep a watch ful eye out for the tourists who are more speedy than 30 miles per. Koads on the mountain have been new ly graded and cleared and" the high-powered touring cars can tear up the work of weeks in a few hours if they maintain an excessive speed, the commissioners said. "You might as well give them a warning," Commissioner J. W. Slayden said, "because the law is going to be enforced on the highway." J automobiles and motorcycles, has been erected on the Junipero boulevard, near the entrance to the Lakeside-San Fran cisco golf links, 100 yards from the San Mateo county line. Similar stations are to be erected at the county line on the Bay Shore road and the Mission road. The stations are connected direct with the central police station by telephone. As soon as an automobile theft is reported the num ber of the car and other identifying data will be flashed to the sub-stations guarding the roads of egress and in gross into San Francisco. All machines of the make stolen will be stopped and inspected and similar precautions will be taken at the ferries. If machines are stolen at night the same method will be used. An electric sign bearing the word "Stop" will be swung over the road and all cars in spected before being allowed to pro ceed. If efforts are made to escape, police officers have instructions to use the sawed-off shot guns. The automobile association has pledged its support to Chief White in stamping out automobile thefts. In San Francisco In 1918 1122 automobiles were stolen and four per cent of this number is a total loss. Hundreds of machines recovered were damaged. With all roads guarded night and day." says Chief White, "it will be Im possible for an automobile thief to get In or out of San Francisco with a stolen car. Three men will be constantly on duty at each of the three stations, accord ing to Chief White, who will also seek the co-operation of all police depart ments in northern California aa most of the stolen machines have been dis posed of In the past in San Francisco. 11 lii Palace Garage Co. S:!lliJ inn j oi i tti i v r t P j j liSin ana oiam cj. iiiuieny ana urana ; 1 1 Wm. L'. Hughson Co. p I H Broadway and Davis fflH IfT I Robinson-Smith Co. fX pju I 6h and Madison Contrary to very frequent advice, the leather of the clutch should be kept soft by liberal application of neats foot oil so that it will engage slowly instead of with a jerk. SAN FRANCISCO GOES GUNNING FOR AUTOMOBILE THIEVES. dfe mi b 1 U 4 - " us! I r t"'s t j . uwti 'A Yri f W ' ' s i . - ' ' i i ;f v ' ' , i PRETTY SOFT FOR HOBOS KNIGHTS OF THE ROAD RIDE IS AUTOS BEIXG SHIPPED. Weary WUIies Loll in Slothful Ease in Cars en Route From the Factories. "What d'yu mean, ride the rails?" Not while there's so many luxurious automobiles being shipped. The auto mobiles are airy, well lighted and have all the comforts of home, so why ride the rails? So say the "Weary Willies" of the eastern states, according to reports from the automobile manufacturers. Which goes to show that the average intelligence of the American is on the increase. But from the viewpoint of the motor car manufacturer who ships the machines the practice is becoming quite annoying. Not only do the "bo's" loll on the ex pensive upholstering of the new ma chines. It is said, but they also burn out the batteries reading some old news papers. Probably the only "hard luck' they experience is that it is not cus tomary to wrap automobiles in old papers, forcing the "Joyriders" to bring their own literature. Two distributors report that tramps recently set the batteries of the light ing systems going, one e.ven hanging lights on the wall of the freight car, while he read a bundle of old Sunday newspapers at his ease. In one case the bo, not satisfied wun enjoying Him self en route at the expense of the railroad and especially the motor car company, stripped the car of everything he could find that was ponaDie. Numerous cases are being reported and distributors and dealers are con- siderinsr orotestlng in a body to the railroad companies. Meanwhile side door Pullmans have taken on a new meaning for the nomad who seeks that mode of transit. HANDS OFF SPEEDOMETER TAKING IT APART IS FOOLISH, SATS STEWART MAXAGER. as delicate as that of a watch and must I for the purpose. They may be properely I which is a machine timer and will be adjusted by special machinery made I adjusted only by the use of a calibrator I the Bpeedometer properly. Chief of Police "White aad D. EL tVatklns, secretary-manager California State Aatomnblle asaoclatloa. Inspecting Sao Francisco's new thief-catching sta tion. Sawed-off shotguns are part of equipment Adjustment of Delicate Mechanism Should Be Left to Service Station Experts. Counting the pieces in a speedometer is the latest word In foolish practices. The practice Is about as much use as taking the spring out of a watch to see what makes it spring. At least that is the belief of Thomas A. Hart, man ager of the Stewart Products Service station in Portland. When the speedometers are turned out at the factory, according to Mr. Hart, they are made so that they will run. The Stewart Products men are ever willing to explain just wnai maass the things run but they are set against the practice of taking them apart, be cause even when they are apart, the layman won't be able to figure out lust what everything is for. Then, too, there is the trouble of getting the things back together again. Invariably after being taken apart, there are more parts than were originally in the device. They are like ' watches that way. Many speedometer users spoil their devices by endeavoring to fix or adjust the speedometers. Their mechanism is STORAGE BATTERY 4 J?t mid. Wfllard Threaded Rubber Insulation Two Years Ago and Today The story of a remarkable storage battery invention and what it is doing for Motorists. In the fall of 1917 readers of national magazines read about a new WUlard, a Still Better Willard, a Willard with an entirely new idea in battery construction Threaded Rubber Insulation. j The Still Better Willard was not an experiment for two years before that announcement a car builder put it on 35,000 cars. Many of those first Willard Batteries with Threaded Rubber Insulation are still in use after four years. What is the Secret of Threaded Rubber Success? Insulation had always been the big problem with any storage battery. Ordinary materials wore out before the battery plates did. Re-insulation was bound to come soon or late, and when insulation began to break down the plates were injured. But WUlard, for the first time, found a practical way to use rubber. the one ideal insulating material, by piercing each rubber insulator with 196,000 tiny threads to permit passage of the electrolyte. You ought to be posted on batteries and battery insulation, so that When you need a new battery youTl be sure of the best your money can buy. JUST REMEMBER Ninth and Everett Streets -Thm Witk thm W.7rrf mnd -A Mmrk urftM a Mumm ing fr y.u.: