THE SUNDAY OltEGOXIAN. PORT!. AND, AUGUST 22, 1920 AUTO INDUSTRY IS LINING UP FOR THE FERRY AT STEVENSON, WASHy, Motor Cars Now Regarded as Necessity Everywhere. OUTLOOK THOUGHT BRIGHT San Francisco to New York 3347 Miles Days 11 TJ, M. Iieeston-Smith, Garlee Man ager, Back From Factory, . Tells of Changes. 43 Minutes 116 HID 1 ' - i K V The automobile industry is com ing Into its own from the standpoint of financial aid. and recognition of the fact that it is the second largest industry in the country, when all its ramifications are taken into consid eration, and that it has passed out of trie luxury into the necessity class. Such are some of the observations of F. M. Leeston-Smith. manager of "W. C. Garbe, Inc., Studebaker dealers and distributors for Master trucks, who returned last week from an extend ed visit in the middle west. Mr. Leeston-Smith went first to South Bend, Ind.. where he spent several days groins over the mam moth new model factory of the Stude baker corporation. This plant, which is just being completed, will be en gaged entirely in the, manufacture of the new Studebaker light six. which has created a big stir in the auto- ; mobile industry and the first of which was received here last week. From here Mr. Leeston-Smlth went to Chicago, where he spent two weeks conferring with automobile dealers and manufacturers, a majority of his time being spent with Eugene Gold man, vice-president and. general man ager of Master Trucks. Incorporated. He also visited Mr. Winther, a per sonal friend, who is head of the Win ther truck organization at Kenosha, Wis. Educational Campaign Plnnned. Mr. Leeston-Smith said: "An educational- campaign which has been arranged through an as sociation of automobile manufacturers in the east, and directed mainly to ward bankers and financiers, has been bringing results, and the dis crimination against automobile paper is passing away. The automobile is no longer looked upon as a pleasure vehicle, but as a necessary means of transportation, and in fact is surpass ing the railroad as a transportation agent. "The outlook for the industry is very bright at the present, much more so than 30 days ago. Money hps eased up, largely as a result of the fav orable crop outlook, and in this par ticular industry largely because of the publicity campaign that I have referred to. "There is a tendency among the manufacturers in the east to cut down output, and there is certainly no indication of a price decrease. Labor is the big item in automobile manu facture, and there is no tendency whatever towards cutting wages. Ma terials also are remaining up, and with no changes in either, none of the producers can see any likelihood of a decrease Track Shortage Expected. "Produotion of trucks is radically down, .and there is every indication that' there will be a shortage of trucks during the coming year. Man ufacturers are playing the safe game, holding the cards close, as it were, and will not resume heavy production until after the financial situation and the general unrest has cleared." Mr. Leeston-Smith declared that the new Studebaker light six is attracting great attention throughout the east. The new factory at South Bend, Ind., he declared, is the last word in fac tory construction. Among the features are locker rooms, showers, rest rooms and a big restaurant for workers, operated on a cost basis, in addition to the workrooms . themselves, which are abundantly lighted. The new plant will be occupied entirely in the man ufacture of the new Studebaker light six. The Garbe company received its first machine of this new model last week and put it on display here. While in the east Mr. Leeston-Smlth grave a- blanket order for all the light sixes which could be allotted to this territory, to take care of a large number of orders which have been placed here for the new car. TOURING CAR CHOSEN TO KCX DOWN AUTO THIEVES. Los Angeles County, California, Make9 Choice After Series of Rigid Tests. St I .A This picture In a powerful arsrnment In the eampalgD of mid-Colombia people for a brldsre across the Columbia river. Two ferries operating between Cascade Locks, Or., nnd Stevenson, wuh, laat Sunday were ao swamped with automobile travel that aa mnny as 20 cars were lined np at times- waiting: for pnsaagre. The capacity of one ferry waa three large cars or four mall onea, and of the other one five cars. Conse quently a good many tourlats had lone waita. Tourist travel baa been comparatively light this season at that, owing; to gasoline shortage. When it gets heavy, travel across the river will be enromous. The lower picture shows the Cascade Locks ferry landing, with a Willys-Knight going aboard. PARTY TO HIT OLD TRAIL LOCHEOX WILL BE SERVED OS HISTORIC SPOT. ! Trip Contrasts Mode of Travel of Lewis and Clark and Pres ent Century. brought to his attention, he said, where cars were sold to individuals or to dealers, . the buyers afterward finding out the cars were stolen an,d were then unable to get redress. Los Angeles county, California, one of the original homes of good roads in this country and where automobiles are as thick as mosquitoes, will chase automobile thieves with a Standard Eight touring car, according to a telegram received by C. W. Phillips. general manager of the Lewis E. Obye Motor Car company, local agents for the Standards, from head quarters of the company at Boston. Mass. The choice of the Standard was made by the Los Angeles "speed cop" department, after a series of tests in which speed, endurance and climbing performances were closely watched. Tha message is as follows: "Los Angeles county, California, lias just purchased three Standard Eight touring cars for the use of the sheriffs In running down the motor car thieves. Not only was the bid ding highly competitive, but speed and endurance tests were exception ally rigid. The winning Standard was a used car previously driven 3900 miles and had disk, not wire, wheels. rests were maae unaer the super vision or wunam uavtdson. chief me chanical engineer for the county, and the car was driven by JSddy Hearne, the racer, with three passencers After traveling 65 miles an hour on the San Fernando valley road, the machine at the Los Angeles speedway was obliged to maintain a minimum speed or 60 miles an hour for 30 miles, doing this handsomely by stop watch. It is conceded that the tremendous reserve power of the Standard alone made possible this performance, and me ordering of the three cars for the Los Angeles sheriffs is expected to have a salutary effect upon car thieves and Jail-breaking criminals. Gear case Lubricants. An engineer recently conducted I series of experiements with lubri cants for the gear case. He found that with grease in the gear box two horsepower out of the nominal 15 were lost. It would require that amount of power to drive the gears through the stiff grease. The prop er lubricant for the gear case Is oil. heavier tb&a engine oil, but atill oil. DENVER, Colo., . Aug. 21. Sharp contrast between the mode of travel of the Lewis and Clark expedition early in the 19th century and the present-day method of the automobile tourist is to be brought to the atten tion of the official party of the na tional park service and the National Park-to-Park Highway association when it reaches Great Falls Septem ber 9, while dedicating the 4500-mile motor highway connecting the na tional parks of the west. The party, including Stephen T. Mather, director of national parks, and Gus Holms of Cody, president of the National Park-to-Park Highway association, will visit the spot where the early American explorers of the historic Lewis and Clark expedition camped while on the long journey from St. Louis to Puget sound in 1805. They will partake of a camp dinner at the falls which, since the visit of the explorers a century ago, have been harnessed for electrical power uses. . It took the Lewis and Clark trail blazers more than a year to travel from St. Louis to western Montana, the journey being made mostly on toot and in boats, although occasionally the party" traveled on horseback. Com pared with -modern-day travel, a few weeks at most would seem along time for an automobile journey covering an equal distance. In fact, the official tour for the opening of a motor highway has a 60-day schedule over mountains and through desert stretches. If the lead ers of the Lewis and Clark expedition could see the speeding gas horses covering a part of the territory they did under so many handicaps and vi cissitudes, they would hardly believe their own eyes. POLICEMAN LAUDS CHEVROLET Car Slakes 25 Miles to Gallon of Gaaoline. One of Portland's bluecoats was so pleased with the performance of his new Chevrolet that he wrote a letter to the Fields Motor Car com pany, local distributors. LeRoy Fields, head of the Chevrolet distributors here, was so pleased with the letter that he forwarded it on to the head of the cdmpany. H. C. Bales, policeman, is the owner of the well-treated Chevrolet, and his letter was written Just after he had completed a vacation trip to Seattle and British Columbia. In view of the fact that the letter gives interesting sidelights on the automobile, trip north, portions of it will bear repeat ing nere. I drove to Seattle and from there to' Vancouver, B. C. The roads were very, bad for the greater part of the trip, but I did not have to go into low gear once, and only into intermediate on a few occasions. I did have to back up a bad hill for a short distance, mile past tne Doraer into Jirltlsn Columbia on account of gas being low in the tank. I drove to Seattle from Portland in 12 hours and about the same on the return. I also drove around quite a bit in Seattle and Vancouver, and in all drove 1292 miles, and used exactly 52 gallons of gasoline, which is close to 25 miles to a gallon. There were four grown people in the car." MORTON SPEEDS ROAD WORK National Park Highway to Elbe Re ported in Good Condition. MORTON, Wash., Aug. 21. (Spe cial.) The National Park highway between Elbe and Morton is now in better condition than it has been in for many months. State road 18, to the east of Morton, is now being fixed up also. The county has a tractor on ea'cTi of these roads and both are kept busy. The temporary planks on 18 are being taken up and the road scraped preparatory to putting on a top dressing. , Very good progress le being made in laying the plank on the Highland valley road, and within a few days this will be completed all the way from Morton to Riffe. The Morton streets are rapidv beina repaired, so that within the next few days travel in and around Morton and in other parts of eastern Lewis county will be at its best. The road down the Tilton river to the west is in good shape, with a few exceptions. State road No. 5, north of Randle, is reported not in very good condition. DODGE BROTHERS SCORE MACHINE NO. 500,000 PUT OUT AT DETROIT PLANT. TO REGISTER AUTO SALES Spokane Attorney Prepares Meas ure for Automobile Chamber. SPOKANE, Wash., Aug. 21. An act providing for the compulsory regis tration at county auditors' offices of all bills of sale where automobiles are concerned, with the names of at least two witnesses attesting to proper description of the car, its en gine number and the interest in the car which the owner may claim, has been drawn up by Joseph R. Lindsley prosecuting attorney for Spokane county, and submitted to the Spokan automobile chamber of commerce for discussion toward passing such a law. The act provides for a term of be tween one and five years in the pen! tentiary and a fine of $1000 for the person -who makes false statements concerning a car, and Is expected by Mr. Lindsley to be a factor in pre venting the sale of stolen automobiles to unsuspecting buyers. Mr. Llndeley said he had felt th need of such legislative action for some . time. Many cases have been Appearance of Car Event at Fac tory; 15,000 Autos Are Now Turned Out In Month. An even half-million Dodge Broth ers cars had been produced when recently the car bearing "500,000' passed through the inspection depart ment of the Dodge Brothers' fac tory at Detroit. This accomplish ment within 67 months after produc- ion was first started at the plant marks, according to the vice-presi dent and general manager, F. J Haynes, not so much a record of auto mobile production, though it Is no small feat in Itself, as it does the results of a system of industrial and commercial co-operation which i larger in its scope than any mere production. The arrival on the ship ping platform of car number "500,000" was the occasion of a quiet celebra tion in the plant courtyard. And here it was that Haynes told 'his audience, men from the big Dodge Brothers plant, something of the history which had led up to this accomplishment and its promise for. the future. It was just six years previous that the Dodge Brothers - finished their contract with a large producer of automobiles and turned their atten tion to the car which they intended henceforth to build and market, a car bearing their own name. By Decern ber. 1914, all experimental and road work had been completed and in that month 245 cars were built. In the month just passed it is made known that in spite of hindrances that have been felt everywhere in the industry. tranio delays inward, and shipping obstructions Outward, more than 15,000 cars were made and shipped. You builded better than you knew." Haynes told the workmen from the factory. PUTTING ON TRUCK CORDS Here 19 Approved Way of Changing Huge Tires. IiV the application of cord truck tires the tire should be allowed to drop down evenly until the valve stem is reached, when the valve stem Is pressed down sideways- and toward the end of the flap. The stem is held in that position, taking care that when the tire slips down the rest or the way the valve stem does not catch in the locking groove. During thia operation a valve cap should be put on the stem to protect the threads. The later types of rims are made with valve stem slots to facili tate application of the tire. Lowers Transcontinental Record by 12 Hours 48 Min. Another Essex Going froni New York to San Francisco Broke the Rec ord for That Direction by 22 Hours 13 Min., Completing the Trip in 4' Days 19 Hours 17 Minutes t , s . . " - So Essex Holds the Transcontinental Records Both Ways Two Essex touring cars, carrying U. S. Mail, each one making the entire trip' between San Francisco and New York', have set the time records for their respective directions across the American continent. And thus comes to Essex another distinction for reliability' and endurance. Except for one airplane record, these two Essex cars have crossed the continent in less time than was ever recorded by, any traveling machine. The fast est time possible . between San Francisco and New York by train is slightly less than the itme taken by the light-weight economical Essex. But. in the case of the railway train, many different locomotives are used, each pulling the train only a few hundred miles. From Cheyenne to Omaha the route taken by the Essex was 43 miles longer than the 550-mile route of the famous Overland Limited, yet the Essex time was but one hour longer than the express train time. The World's Most Coveted Records - i From the days of the Prairie Schooner, the Pony Express and the completion of the railroads men have sought to establish new transcontinental time records between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. . It has called for the highest development of skill and courage. And it has, as in the case of the motor car, blazed the way to mechanical reliability. The purpose of this Essex test was to prove its reliability. In the period of 14 hours was crowded more strains, more calls for endurance and mechan-( ical strength than the average owner demanda in a life time. - Every requirement of motor car performance was met by these two cars. And the fact that they so consistently met their tasks proves Essex uniformity. The speeds at which they traveled were not so unusual, for another Essex stock car had on a speed way track gone 3037 miles in 50 hours. But in the transcontinental runs, some 350 cities and towns had to be crossed.. .Crowded traffic imposed its obstacles to consistent) going. Mountain ranges in the east and West with grades such as the average driver never encounters, called for the utmost of hill-climbing ability. Few will ever motor all the way across America and therefore cannot know the extreme varieties of conditions encountered. But let each reader apply to his consideration of what Essex has done, every experience he has eve"r met in his own driving. It will give some appreciation of Essex reliability. Light Weight Now Establishes Reliability How gradual have men come to a realisation that a light-weight car can also offer reliance and per formance. - ' Essex has led the way for that was its purpose from the very first. Economy is of growing impor tance. Men want to save in fuel and in first costs. But they want no sacrifice in performance and they demand unquestioned reliability. Essex offered itself to the public without claim. Now more than 40,000 owners know and praise its worth. Owner cars that had been driven upwards of 25, 000 miles were used in the recent nation-wide Essex week to establish reliability, economy, speed and hill climbing records. To Essex owners the winning of the transconti nental records is not a surprise. But those who do not know Essex performance and reliability must regard that these two trips across the continent are as important in marking mechanical advancement as any similiar event in the history of the motor car. . L. BOSS AUTOMOBILE CO. " 615-617 Washington Street, Portland BEETLE PUTS UP FIGHT COLEOPTERA 4 INCHES IONG AND INCH ACROSS BACK'. Overloading to Be Curbed. Believing that overloading of mo tor trucks is largely responsible for the disintegration of improved high ways through the state of New. Jer sey, the state highway commission has decided to erect scales, capable of weighing up-to 60,000 pounds at various points, as an aid in the cru sade to prevent the overlodiiig of motor trucKav Shipment of Rubber From India v Contains Myriad of Queer Objects In Bales. DENVER, Colo.. Aug. 21. Traveling more than 12,000 miles from Singa pore. India, to Denver. Colo., surviv ing nearly six months of voyage and freight transportation without food and imbedded fast in the center of a bale of rubber, a savage beetle ended its life by passing between the whirl injr cylinders of one of the huge cal enders in the plant of the Gates Rub ber company. The live beetle was only one of the many strange, objects which were found in the centers of the rubber bales comprising a shipment of nearly 1,000,000 pounds of India rubber re ceived by the Gates Rubber company recently. The specimen .of the genus coleoptera was nearly four inches long and more than one inch across it back. A workman found it when he cut open one of the bales to be prepared for tire stock. The beetle snapped its long pincers at him, and with scurrying rush scampered from the bale of rubber to the floor. One workman stepped on it, but its Bhell was so hard and tough that it was not injured. Finally another workman picked the beetle up between two sticks and tossed it into an empty calender and the two great cylinders crushed it flat. I As near as could be ascertained, the rubber had been baled nearly six months before in the Gates Rubber company's warehouse in Singapore. Apparently the beetle had thriven on its diet of rubber. Judging by the fight it displayed when it was re leased. It was one of the species which infest the rubber trees of India non poisonous, but savage. A myriad of queer oojeets were found in the thousands of bales which made uo this big rubber shipment. Some of them showed that the sup posedly "simple" native .is not so sim ple after all when it comes down to sharp business practices. Stones as big as a man s hand were touna in tne center -of some of the bales, and in addition, the workmen took out four knife blades and three knife handles, old shoes, a fancy carved moccasin made of pure rubber, . a ' centipede measuring nearly seven-inches long but safely dead, hundreds of small OLDSMOBILE SPECIALIST 14 years' experience In manufacturing and auto service. Bring your car where mechanics are Oldsmobile trained. G.J.MALLON 888 Flanders Between Ninth and Park ' D greeif rubber bugs, said to be deadly poisonous when alive, and many other objects, all of which added weight to the rubber bales. Adjusting the Carburetor. ' When it s necessary to adjust a carburetor a few general rules apply to almost all of them. Begin with the air inlet and gasoline needle valve both closed. Open the air inlet about half of its full capacity. Then open the gasoline needle valve one full turn of the knurled top. If the en gine can be started with this the more nearly accurate adjustments can be made by first changing the needle valve very sll g-htly In elt her direction as may be Indicated t)y re sults until maximum efficiency is ob tained. If this does not give a satis factory mixture then begin with the air adjustment and vary that as in dicated by the effects. Then go back to the needle valve and suit the feed to the air supply. When apparently good results have been attained with the engine running Idle,- mark the adjusting nuts with a file to show a beginning and perfect the adjustment with the car running at an average speed on the road. Concrete roads, with curves on a 800-foot radius, eliminating right an gle corners, are under construction in Illinois. Ft t 3 Fresh new tires from the j factories of the world's most famous makers i bought at inside prices now sold at $5 to $25 un der previous prices. Site I Pl.lnl Vnn . T n (Trsdl Meld iTnbee x3 .. SOx.1 . . SOxSVi 8Sx3V 31x4 .. 82x4 .. 38x4 . . Sx4 .. 3(1x4 ., 32 x 4r-i 83x4 S4i4Vi S!Sx4 8Sx8 . 375 11JS0 11.BRI 13.1.1 14.30 1S.90 lS.AOl 19.80 19.101 JO. f0 20.0A II. RS 20.S01 2.4ft .5 15.35 . . IS.flOl tfl.15 7.20l 30.151 ZS.40I 81.40 18. KOI Sx.Oft xft s! x n S5.:S! 39.25? S1.90 8.05 S.60 L 8.13 I 4.I5 4.85 1 S.SO S.S5 Eagle Tire Company 12 "orth Bro4way. Portland, Oregtm. Phone Broadway 1619.