TTTE , SUNDAY OREGONIAN, TOIIIXAXD, FEBRITATIY 12. 1922 BIBJUmG MOTORIST IS PROJECTED MOTORIST IX OVERLAND CAR VISITS UPPER COLUMBIA RIVER HIGHWAY, WHERE PATH IS CAR OlffllEBS URGED TO MARK MACHINES BEING CUT IX HUGE ICE DRIFTS WHICH HAVE KEPT HIGHWAY CLOSED ALL WINTER. American Association Is Out for Members. Identifying Stolen Autos Is No Easy Matter. Demi-Sedan $2850 MUCH WORK IS AHEAD THIEVES CAN BE FOILED An exclusive model, combining- the chief advantages of both open and closed cars. Removable, non-rattla glass panels give thorough weather protection. Permanent top, 4 doors, for 5 passengers. Energies Will He Bent Toward Get ting I'nlform Traffic Laws and Expert Tells of Means by Which Owners May Readily Distin guish One From Others. This is the way to find out why the "Franklin sold twice as fast as the. industry in 1921, and why today's car is having such a fine 'reception. Desirable Camp Site. - fL . S" - ' -ill lis --w-r .v - . . " '"0fl !ir .. . 1 . w. ' ill XKW YolJV Feb. 11. Big. power ful ami inf laentlat an !t unquestion ably i today, the Amerlatu A'Vomo bila association. the world's greatest nrr&n iution of motor car 01 now propones to reach out and bring Into Its fold by means or intensities and concentrated effort In each eeo- tion of the United States STery mo torist in the land, wherever he or she may be located. Tills was tna aeci. aion reached by the A. A- A- icn tlve board at a meeting- held last weel in New York city. Not only does the A. A. A. Intend to weid into one . gigantic organisation all tho car owners of the United States, but it proposes to set before each individual motorist every con ceivable variety of reasonable service that such an association should ren der to its members. That this should be done was the unanimous verdict at the executive board. Feeling that Its years of efforts to bring aoout a comprehensive road- bulidtna- proa-ramme have advanced to a point where almost complete success may be boasted, the A. A. A. now intends to brine closer and make mora readily available to its mem bers all the lesser comforts and con veniences for which the tourinff mo torist frequently finds need. Pnirai "Mapped Oat. Henceforth, according- to the execu tive board s recent decision, the A. A. A. shall bend Its energies in obtaining- for its members uniform traffic laws, national motoring reciprocity. reliable tar ace service, dependable aid when accidents occur., the estab lishment of more and better regu lated camp sites, and the giving of belter and broadened touring direc tions as well as a multitude of per sonal services that will make 'the organization invaluable to all who may be fortunate enough to hold a membership card in the national body or one of Its affiliated clubs. According to President Ueorge Diehl the A. A. A. does not Intend by any means to abandon any of its previ ous activities, but rather to add to them. In a statement dwelling; on . this point. President Dtehl says: "The A. A. A.'a psst achievements In behalf of road-bullding and vrovld lng map service are generally recog nised and praised by all who motor. But this work has now reached a de cree of success where attention can be given to other needed activities without losing ground, and the opin- ' ion prevails among our executive hoard members that more direct and personal service to the individual mo torist should be taken up and carried along." The New York city meeting was held primarily to pass on the many suggestions received at the recent De troit conference, where there were present several hundred delegates rep resenting practically every motoring and promt roads organisation in the I nite.l States, and at which time it was the consensus of opinion that the good roads programme in this coun try and the individual motorists in the I'nited Ststes would benefit more through one large, influential organi sation combining all roads and motor Interests rather than through several smaller associations of naturally lesser strength and Influence. Bryaa l ra-ea Orgaalaatioa. The meeting also followed the re cent rally of moterists at Jackson ville. Fia.. where a southeastern division of the A. A. A. was success fully launched with a membership In cluding the bulk of the car owners of Florida. Georgia. Alabama. Missis sippi. Tennessee and the Carolina. It was at this meeting that William Jennings Bryan addressed the as sembled motorists and urged organi zation as the quickest and most ef fective means of bettering motoring conditions generally. So successful was the Jacksonville fathering and so evident "was the en thusiasm for the A. A. A. that no doubt was left In the minds of the executive board as to what procedure should be followed in other sections 1 of the country. 1 New Kngland is the next territory to be invaded by the A. A. A. and plans are now well under way for a meeting in Boston to include all roads and molding Interests in that section, when It is hoped to form a New Kneland division which in its potentialities should equal If not sur pass m strength and character any other division of the national organi sation. The A. A. A. drive will be under the direction of Kxecutive Chairman L. Morgan, who thus comments on the organisation's activities: "Kver fini-e its Inception in 1901 the -V. A. A.'s activities have accrued to the benefit of -every person who owns or drives a motor car. but the organization Itself has never' made the Intensified and concentrated drive for the membership it deserves and can unquestionably muster. The Pe troit meeting and the Jacksonville Catherine, topether ith a genera survey of the national situation, have convinced us that motorists every where want and would welcome es tabltshed A. A. A. divisions. Hence we are goitiif ahead, for the will of the motorists is our guidance. The A. A. A. Is not a commercial enterprise and piles up no profits for any perr son or persons. It is co-operative and Us officers serve without salary. They are just everyday motorists doing their part in a programme of mutual help fr motorists. All revenues are expended for Its members, and the more revenue the more the individual member will receive." KOAI CREW IS OUTFITTED Preparations Made fur Work on Loon Lake-Mill Creek Stretch. EEEPSIVUT. Or. Feb. 11. (Spe cial.) C. A. Catching, construction foreman for I'ouk'js county, and a crew of men have been outfitted to start work on the Loon lake-Mill ereek road, one of the feeders of the Kerdsport-Uoscburg highway. Mr. Catching expects to put sbout 4J men to work on this 11-miie stretch right away and as soon as this and the Reedsport-Scottsburg sections are completed the rich Loon lake section will have easy access to market. loug'as county's road programme In this section and out to the county seat is held to be one of the most im portant in the slate at this time and 1 causiug a fioo.1 of inquiries to the Keedsport chamber of commerce as to homestead, business and Industrial opportunities in this little developed section. Obey the traffic cop. 'ftr-g-- . w -4 i . - ill Sf Z. - . "r; 111 ti " ZiZs ' ' 111 IrJ I f . :H vVs .'.,: ' --'.Vs. . Abeve Breaklac way throaa-a ao-feat Maltaemak falls. Center, left Crew at work clear lax blab way at Wahkeeaa falls. Center, right Cattlaar the trail at Mist falls, the first barrier am the blgbway east af Portland. Btlew OTerlaad ear am aichway Juat west-of Mist falls, ahewlag how high way Is Uttered with lew aad reck elides, wklek ara ew belag reaaaved. Operationa are now well under way looking toward the removal of enough snow and Ice Kiver highway to make a pathway through to Hood River. From that point east the high way is already open. Excellent progress was made by the big crew under county supervision expected another week or so will see a width of ten feet all the way to the Multnomah eounty line. The above photos were taken on a reoent trip up the highway with Pat Blalte. territory photos show, the ice. Is packed so hard dling it has been to cut off great chunks of ice with cross-cut saws and then hitching them to a team of horses, or to break up the chunks with picks and the road. LELAND TO BE COVTIXCED AS HEAD OF BIO COXCEHX. No Change In Foliciea Expected, but Deal Holds Center of In terest in Motor World. DETROIT. Feb. 11 The past week was a big one in the American motor industry, the week seeing Henry ana Kdsel Ford, in association with Henry M. and W ilfred C. Leland. who orig inally founded the Lincoln Motor company, take over the entire plants and eauioment of that company. This is believed to be the beginning of one of the most far-reaching affil iations in the motor car industry. It brings to the Lincoln' company Ford's almost limitless resources, ana iaca of finances w-as the only handicap the Lincoln Motor company -had ever experienced. It also brings together two men who are recognised as un questioned leaders In their respective fields. Ford as the master manufac turer in quantity production, and Henry M. Leland as a master of fine things mechanical. While the new Lincoln4 company be comes affiliated with the Ford Motor company, the executive personnel of the two concerns will be held separate and distinct, the management of the Lincoln company continuing with Henry M. and 'Wilfred C. Leiand: in fact, this was one of the conditions Insisted on by Mr. Ford at the out set of the negotiations. An Increased manufacturing sched ule will be inaugurated immediately, there being a large amount of stock la various stages of completion and much which is finished and ready for assembling. The former Lincoln man ufacturing organisation has largely been held Intsct and preparations were all made in advance so that everything would be in readiness to go forward as soon as the necessary fi realities had bee 1 completed. It is apparent that many persons have been misled into the idea that the Ford connection indicates a rev olution in policies, particularly as those policies concern manufacturing practices and selling prices; but it is contended t.ial this will not be the case. Both Mr. Iceland and Mr. Ford have NEW INTERNATIONAL MOTOR TRUCK GOES ON "MEAT ROUTE" IN CITY. t 5 Tmi-ee-vartcr-lateraatleaal speed track Jaat added t the fleet sf .Swift A C. for ase of the city branch. The aale was naada by th track departasrat ef the Partlaad breach of the Iateraatioaal Harvester company, distrl fe at era ter IateraaUeaal track thrangkoat this dlstrtct- ear ' ' . ' . ' IU iee drifts on the Columbia for automobiles last week and It la the road cleared to man for the Wlllya-Overland Pacific that it cannot be shoveled until after emphasized la the strongest possible terms that any thought of change in the Leland manufacturing standards would be out of all reason. ! AITO STAGES ARE BIG ASSET Seven Passenger Lined Operate In Cbehalls District. - CHEHALIS. Wash.. Feb. 11. (Spe cial.) The automobile stage business Is one of Chehalis most substantial assets in the matter of bringing, busi ness to this city. At this time there are seven stage lines operating-. In and out of Chehalis on regular daily schedule. In addition there is an ex tensive business carried on in the line of motor freighting, not to take into account the many trucks that haul produce from the farms to the mi!k and other factories In the city. Crockett Rose, who claims the dis tinction of being the oldest stage driver In .Washington, in point of years of service and mileage traveled. has a line between Chehalis and Kiffe. This he has operated regularly the last 14 years without having missed a triD. and after wearinir nut 2 ti auto mobiles he has covered upward oP 528,000 miles. W. H. Belcher runs the line between Chehalis and Onalaska. the thriving milling town 16 miles southeast of here. Between Chehalis and Olympia the Blair Motor Trans portation company is operating a stage de luxe line that is proving profitable and that relieves an old time question as to how one could get to the state capital and back th4 same day by givlr.e- local folk five round trips daily. E. M. Dubold takes care of the traffic between Chehalis and Raymond. The Moffltt Auto company has five stages on the Che-halis-Toledo run. Light & Nelson run stages regularly to Aberdeen and re turn. The Chehalis-Morton busses affords people in that part of eastern Lewis county daily access to the county seat and western Lewis coun ty points. K. L. MiddauFrh hss a suc cessful freight truck business be tween Chehalis and Tacoma. connect Ing with the resular service between Tacoma and Seattle. Drill Work Made Easy. When a piece of work to be drilled is too small or of such shape that it cannot be bolted to the drill press table-it can be kept from turning- by putting under it a piece of stiff emery cloth. . ' ' V :.' sr - " i, 1 - i x I lit '-it-- in company. In an Overland coupe. Aa the It Is broken up. The method of han either to haul the chunks away by shovel the broken ice off the aides of j ft ftlf A fill I Pfl HfiWrP I I L I I F 1 1 V I" S UUUiV IA. UiLL UUi lilUILU TEMPORARY QUARTERS ARE PPEXED OX BROAD WAV. Work on New Paige Home at Cor ner Xinth and Burnside Will Start This Week. Cook & Gill company, Paige distrib utors, established its show room at the northeast corner of Broadway and Flanders last week, which quarters it will occupy until the new building being erected for the company at the northeast corner of Ninth and Burn side is ready. The new location is a well-known one so far as the automobile industry is concerned, having been used for auto display for 'several years past. For a considerable period it was the home of the Willamette Oakland com pany and more recently it was occu pied by the Roberts Motor Car com pany. Republic truck distributors, for display of passenger cars. The build ing gives adequate room tor display of half a doxen or more automobiles! and In addition provides office rooms for sales manager and salesmen. Work on tearing down the frame structures now occupying the prem ises at Ninth and Burnside, where the new Paige home will be erected, will begin next week, it has been an nounced, and actual construction on the new building will start soon thereafter. Plans have now all been completed and all is in readiness for going ahead with the building. The company expects to be located there by April 15. Until the new home is ready Cook A Gill will continue to use portions of the old building at Eleventh and 9urnside streets, which was recently secured by Braley. Graham & Childs, Dodge Brothers dealers, together with the new salesrooms 011 lower Brosd way. Retail sales will be handled en tirely from the new downtown loca tion, while the machine shop, welding shop, service department for ne-w Paige cars, warehouses and general offices will be maintained in the old Paige building until they can be moved Into the new structure. The first practical American eltc tric automobile was built by Fred Kimball of Boston in 1SSS. '' - J: , 4 .x.-tae'va?:--.-! BY H. A. TAREXTOUS. u.mbsr Society of Automotive -Engineers If the average car owner were asked whether he could identify his own car unrir uit set of circumstances, his Impulse would be to return an un qualified and indignant affirmative. The police of one of our larger cities would-disagree with him Just as un qualifiedly. As a matter of fact most car own ers depend for identification on some scratch on the body, some broken crew In t&e chassis or some . other equally uncertain factor. They do not sto.p to consider that our Jig manufac turers are turning out models In the 10.000 lota that differ from each other In not the lightest discernible de gree. By the time a successful thief las run a stolen car tnrougn ms service station" it would pussle the moat careful owner on earth to iden tify nds vehicle. An instance in poiilt ia found in the recent experience of a car owner In a middle western city wno tosi nis car, a touring model ot a popular make, and after some weeks or anxious waiting was summoned to police headquarters to see whether he could Identify a vehicle answering to his description of his lost oar. Arrived at the DOlice station ha found a small aroun of other owners who had assembled to try to identify the same car to see which he had been summoned. The hopeful owner had a number of marks by wnacn ne felt confident he could prove hia own ership of the restored vehicle. There was a bent screw in one pan or me chassis, a dent in one fender, a scratch of peculiar shape on the dash. The oar with which he was comrontea was undoubtedly of the same vintage as his lost boat, but unhappily it was painted a rich ultra-marine blue, in stead of the dark green that had graced his vehicle. Marks Not Dependable. Thi most earnest scrutiny failed to disclose any of the distinguishing marks on which, he had relied. A slight chipping of the new coat of emamel revealed the fact it had been put on qver a previous coat of dark green that our friend naa oescrioea. but two of the other assembled own ers had put in bids for 'dark green cars and eventually one of them man aged to identify the car by a chip in the gearset housing. The identification was not particularly convincing, but in the absence of anything better it served to give the car to the owner who had been able to describe tne imperfection. As a matter of fact no car owner ought to depend on such casual means of identification as slight imperfec tions that may have accrued during the opea-ation of the vehicle. When the professional automobile thief steals a car he takes it to what amounts practically to a rebuilding factory. In many cases the entire mechanism is taken down and the different parts redistributed with those from other cars of the same make and model to turn out what amount to new vehicles. The only safe method 01 placing identification marks on a car is to place them on all major parts of the mechanism. Perhaps the most satis factory method of doing so is to place nunch marks on the various units. All such marks should be put in places where they will not be readily dis cernible; for Instance on the inside of the axles, on the flywheel, on tne up per side of the gearset housing. After the marks have been made tneyenouta be rubbed over with grease until iney are as nearly indistinguishable as tjossible. The car owner can have a prick punch made with his initials on it in very fine type and with this it is possible to place identification marks on the various parts that will generally escape notice and yet re main permanently. Thieves Caa Be Foiled. The owner whom I know has had the upholstery of his front and rear seat lifted up and has tacked his card on the wooden framework of the seat. This is not at all bad because the thief would seldom think to look in this location for an. identification mark of any sort. Another clever idea is to bors a few small holes a mare fraction of an inch into the framework at a given place carefully measured from per manently located landmarks. Then fill these holes with lead and smear the spot well with grease. If there comes a time when it is necessary to iden tify the car it is a simple matter to measure off the proper distance, scrape a little lead off and prove own ership of the car. In some cases an owner has been able to identify his car by reason of some simple, but ingenious mark so placed that it is apparently part of car or equipment. Not very long ago the New York police recovered a stolen car and nabbed the thief at the same time. The car corresponded in every way to a description given by a certain bereaved owner except that it had recently been repainted in an entirely different color scheme. At anv rate the police summoned this owner to see if he could identify th reclaimed car as the one He naa lost. He came. to headquarters, looked the vehicle over, paying considerable attention to the- dash and turning to the detective in charge said: "This is my car all right, in suite of the fresh coat or paint. "Agist" Proves Owner. "Have you any marks to identify It by?" asked the officer. "Yes. sir." replied the owner. "My name Is J. K. Siwith, as you know, Just take a look at the face of that clock." , The officer looked. On the dial of the clock was the legend: "Brown Clock Company. Boston, Mass." In fine script beneath this maker's name was "Sold by J. W. Smith, Agent." The thief had accepted this as a bona fide agent's name instead of a really clever identification mark which It was. In a recent theft case in Boston the owner of a stolen car was able to prove his ownership of a recovered car by means of his initials, which were engraved in ach of the hub caps. The Individual owner can probably find a dozen distinctive wayB of mark ing his car for possible identification, but the point is that this should be done, because when a car has been stolen the police demand something more than say-eo on the part of the owner before they return it to him. Be sure that there are more ways than one by means of which you can prove that your car really is yours In case you are ever unfortunate enough to lose it. Good roads aid everybody. 50 to 500 Salem Marion Auto Co. . The Dalles Franklin MotorCar Co. Yakima Henry H. Schott. E IS NEXT TO QUANTITY PRODUCTIONS FOR 1920 TjARGE. No Changes Take Place In Position ot Two Leading Auto Manu facturers In ' Past Year, DETROIT, Feb. 11. Present reports indicate that no changes occurred last year in the positions of the two leading automobile manufacturers, considering the total production of cars. As was the case in 1920, Ford ranked first and Dodge Brothers second. The total number of passenger cars built during the year, according to an estimate published recently by the Wall Street Journal, was 1,635,000, as compared with 1,883,150 for 1920. Dodge Brothers in the third quarter ef this year ranked next to Ford among the world's automobile pro ducers, vith a monthly .shipment record of better than 11,000 cars. This average is nearly maintained within several hundred cars in October, an unusual achievement in this year of unsettlement and compe tition in the motor Industry. Considering that production the first quarter of the year was down are built in a modern plant, equipped with the latest machinery; that we have an unsurpassed tread and design, and that we use only the finest materials that can be put into a tire. The results, proved by COAST TIRE performances, justify our claim that "There are no better tires made anywhere." See that your next set of tires are "Coast" LEHNHERR-ROSE, INC. ' 111 TWELFTH STREET Phone Broadway 2511 fa JtJ m fa A mues or m The Franklin Standard of Demonstration FRANKLIN 1 We have made it just as easy to know what the Franklin will dof3t you as to guess about it. The fact that we have found this com plete demonstration pays us is about the best of evidence that motorists have found it pays them to know the Franklin Six. The demonstration is comparative with all cars in comfort, ease of handling, safety and competition as a road car. PARTS PRICES REDUCED Franklin cuts motoring upkeep costs still further. Price re ductions on parts range from 10 to40. Effective at once. Touring Car $2450 Touring Limousin $3800 Runabout $2400 Sedan $3450 Demi-Coupe $2750 Coup $3200 Brougham $3300 (All Price lab. Syracuse) BRALY AUTO CO. 501 Burnside St., Portland, Or. Pendleton Pendleton Ante Co. LGDde David I. Stoddnrd, Walla Walla Franklin Sales Co. to 3000 cars, less than one-eleventh of the same quarter in 1920, and less than any single month's subsequent productions, -the record' of Dodge Brothers was remarkable. It is understood that Dodge Brothers finished the year with a total pro duction of 92,476 cars, which is over 12,000 cars greater production than the next nearest competitor, not in cluding Ford. AUTO CAMPS TO BE UNIFORM Standardization to Be Complete in . Northwest This Year, SPOKAkE, Wash., Feb. 17. Tour ist camps throughout the northwest will be completely standardized when the 1922 tourist season starts, is the opinion of Major R. A. Laird, publicity secretary of the Spokane chamber of commerce. Since the recent Pacific Rocky Mountain northwest tourist camp conference more than 18 camp resort operators and managers have joined the organization, and are planning to standardize their camps. "I believe more than 30 camps throughout the northwest will be run on exactly the same basis," said Major Laird. "Already .18 have adopted the regulations outlined by the conference." Testing Gas Mixture. If the mixture is suspected of being too rich shut off the fuel In the tank and open the throttle. If the mixture VYE do not claim to be the v only people who know ow to make DO KNOW, oas c The Coast Tire & Rubber Co. Factors and Main Office Oakland - California passing into the cylinders is too rich me engine speed will increase as tne level of the gasoline in the float chamber is lowered, since this opera tion weakens the mixture consider ably. If the mixture is thought to be too- weak the float chamber can be flooded while the engine is running, and if this causes the motor to speed up it may be accepted as an indica tion that the mixture is not rich enough. . Locomobile Seeks Receiver. Upon the representation that the interests of banks and merchandise creditors, as well as stockholders, of the Locomobile company can be served best through a reorganization through receivership, attorneys for the company and for several creditors joined in application to the United States district court for the appoint ment of a receiver, says a report from New York. The application sets forth that the company is -doing a consider able volume - of business and has something over half a million dollars in cash on deposit. Officers of the company stated that several plana for reorganization "were considered, but that, in any event, the policy of tho company of a limited number of high priced cars would be continued. A metal production company' of Fairmont, W. Va., is now using empty shells, old guns and millions of rifle shells for the manufacture of auto- mile radiators, etc. The shells are rolled and made into strips of brass. tires, but we that t Tires