i
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND) SUNDAY MORNING MARCH ' 18,' 19t7.
. 5
TALE OF HATS
AND
HOW
WORN
REPORTERS
BY, THE
OF U: S.
TEN MINUTES FROM BROADWAY
Had to Wear Top Head ean
to Get lnto Parliament and
'Were Embarrassed.
S;Wir"T'"WW - l,,.),lfaL,,,u,,,
I -'',' ' ''Si" 'ft":' S' . S s' ' V"i."i 1
pitoeig iSTnGE l BATTERES
Sno peg to hang'them on
Seats Were All Blfht, Bnt Zdds a
Bother; Colonials Bald Them Close
TJp to Their Btomacbs.
By Ixnvell Mellett.
London. Feb. 27. (By Mail.) (U.
r.) Much was cabled to America
.about precedents broken When the king
opened parliament a f6rtnlght ago, vbut
the) most' thrlfjingr departure is yet
- to be told. .. J .', '
The cables, related how the king's
six-horse team was black instead of
r the customary cream, how the proces
slon was limited to half a dozen car
riages of the country's' truly great,
how mounted Canadians, Australians
and Indians formed the royal escort, j
now me King wore oniy nis unaress
naval uniform and the queen a simple
black gown Instead of their royal
.' robes,, how the peers were either in
khaki or plain frock coats instead of
scarlet and ermine and how the peer
sBes wore morning costumes and hats
instead of evenmg gowns and jewels.
I Reporters Held Back Story.
But the American reporters held
"one thing back. It was a story that
only -could be told by mail; It requires
explanations and cable rates are high.
The American reporters themselves
the two grateful recipients of thin
first time privilege for the American
press wore high silk ha5i and morn
ing coats!- Nothing the king did to
7 British royal custom today equalled
what the two reporters did to Ameri
can newspaper custom, ' when the:'
-" paraded into the house of lords in
their high hats at 11 o'clock in th
"- morning.
Quick, thd' explanation: They had'
to do it.
S A16ng with the pink ticket and the
white ticket that opened the house of
lords doors to the foreign press for
th first time came the instructions.
" They made it clear that a reporter
might have tickets in all the colors of
the rainbow, 'but without the high hat
the lords wouldn't be at home with
him. The reporters were consider-
-, ably puzzled. They could see what use
on American rabdriver or an English,
floorwalker or a lord would have for
a high hat in the morning; it was part
of their. unifomi. But how it could
- be utilized in chasing the f Jeetlng item
was a myptery.
. Only "Distinguished Journalists."
Of course the Invitation, according
to the . London presx. was limited to
"distinguished foreign journalists,
.but tiie American reporters hadn't
. 'taken that seriously up to this point
Now, (hey agrevd, their days as re
' porters were over. Tl&y were jour
nalists. Just as described on their po
lice cards.
U'-"y
fry.'-
-A '
-'-9
is ?
1 it . tsI& Afiv-' r-K r?) A 1
St. Louis. Mo, March 17. (I.- N. B.I
I Lee Fuentes was transformed fro.jj
i a Mexican to an ATnerlcan through the
naturalixaiton office. Thrilled w-h
; patriotism and filled wfth spirits ol
-. r o uncertain strength, Lee half en
' veloped himself with the Stars and
, stripes and sallied forth.
( Lee's self -conducted patriotic demoa
tstration led him into Union Waiters'
I headquarters at No. 705 Pine street,
I A man from Holland spied him.
"What are you doing wltu that rag
onT' he Jeered..
"Caramba," Lee snarled, and leaped.
"My Uncle Sam "
The Hollander went down hard.
Lee worked both arms - and feet to
' his heart's content, dragged his victim
'o the open door and commanded him
i to run.
The Hollander .made record time.
English Girls Chew
Cordite for Thrill
. j
London, March 17. Officials of the
ministry of munitions have discovered
that much "drunkenness" attributed
to- women and comparatively young
girls Is due to the chewing of cordite,
a smokeless powder explosive. The
explosive la used as a sort of "pick-me-up"
.by the tired munition workers.
Its effect on the health Is injurious.
and remedial
tax en.
REQUIRE DISTILLED
WATER AT INTERVALS
of Its being ruined from overheating,
because tho charga which It receives
Im designed to affect the whole bat
tery; that It, all of each plate. If the
plates are not covered with electrolyte
the whole plate la not affected by the
charge. -For instance. If the plates are
i nair covered with water and tho bat-
Average Motorist Knows, But fo7ae
HOW and When IS Told by. eUctrolyUU getting thenire charge!
From all thU It will be seen that
the car owner has to keep his battery
filled with water to get the beat service
out of it, and have the battery In
spected e mi-monthly.
ara completely covered with the elec- j forts to substitute nettlaa for cotton
trolyte. The battery Is not able to ( have met with splendid success. Last
rive out the amount of power that It Is "year over 4000 . tons of nettles wars
desljnsd to. j harvested In Austria and Hungary,
"On the other hand when the battery rslnst 160 tons In 145. Tns fabrics
a WClUg VUeUtJU, lUCrV 13 grl QKngir
W. C. Allen.
KEEP ACID FROM BATTERY
Charring' "Will Always Bsstor It, and
Distilled or Xala Water at xntar.
Tals Will xsep It vormaL
mad from the nettles are much finer
and. mors durable than cotton goods
and-surpaas , even linen, .
Sets Fife to Tree ' .
That Tails on Him
-
Lee. Mas a, March it. Newton
Frost set firs to the base of a tree
he wished to fell . and then- sat down
beside the tree to keep warm. The,
old tree burned through and toppled
over on him, pinning him. He was
found some time later and taken to a
hospital in Plttsfield. He has nine:
broken ribs and probable Internal Injuries.
Nettles Sabetltnted for Cotton.
ofurt7'";?''0 V t. Ames's. .4vTfHe.
official report Just published, the ef-I pv, menttoe The Joamei. IA4.
i - ft
HiiiiiiiiniiiiiiHininiiiiiiiniiiiiiiHiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiinniiiMiiPj
However little the average motor
ist mav know about his storage bat
tery he knows as least that it must be
Riven distilled water at regular inter
vals. Most motorists do It without
having any idea why it is necessary.
W a. Allen, of the local Wtllard i '
Storage Battery Service station, has ! r.llllinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllir'- -
undertaken to explain for the reaaer s
JOURNAL'S AUTO DIRECTORY I
benefit why it Is necessary to keep
the battery filled with water.
'.'The water." says Mr. Allen, "that
th r owner DUts into his storage
measures are being j battery replaces that which has evap
orated. 'In summer tne banery snouia
Cordite has all the exhilarating ef- ' k m1 ,,n at lajit onco a week be-
fects of a highly stimulating drug .- ,-. WMther evaDOratton is
quicker. In winter it 1 generally nec
essary only once every two weeks,
"The charging of the battery gener
ates heat In it. This naturally makes
evaporation quicker, so that if a car is
being run over long distances with in
frequent stops and sparing use or ine
On the Cornell road with a Hudson Super-Six. One of the pretty drives over the hills back of Portland
is out the Cornell road. Starting from the head of Lovejoy street, this picturesque road runs
through Westover Terrace and winds in and out along the upper edge of the canyon above Macleajr
park. From here one can look over the lower Willamette and regions along the Columbia river,
as well as viewing the snow-capped Coast range. Further on the Cornell road joins the Sky Line
boulevard.
MOR
E POWER-DRIVEN
VEHICLES ARE SOLD
ON COAST THAN EVER
California, Though Second in
Country for Per Capita
Cars, Still Is Buying.
How It Feels to Have Your Husband
Summoned and Sent' Away to the War
An English Soldier's Wife Relates Her Experience That Is the
Common Lot of Many an Englishwoman These Days.
and cannot be tampered with except
at 'great risk. Its effect on the ner
vous system Is immediate and ulti
mately deadly. It has to. be taken
in increasing quantities if the exhila
ration is to be maintained.
British soldiers found during the
South African war that
v-" j l w,3 v i terv to
A J7. 7 . narcotic. t facV overheated. The owner of a car
. 71 --"-- run under such conditions win naiur-
58 parts of nitroglycerine 37 parts " l t necesary to fill his battery
8rUrVfU1id 5 ??rtS ,rolneral ellT' with distilled wateV more frequently
0".0f.th:.S1"i8trSr,.0f mil; thaS the man who 1- uaing hi, machine
sweet, pleasant and pungent. But It
PREST-O-LITE STORAGE BATTERIES
ARCHER AMD WIGGINS
DISTRIBUTORS OF HIGH-GRADE MOTOR CAR ACCESSORIES
Rai'lxr'c TiV Shnn TIRE tOCTORS
In the Triangle
TAJIK AT 12TS
KetaU XHstributore rtrertoae and
Ooodyear Tires, Tabes and
sorles -
b,y eat,tnK ' lights there is a tendency for the bat
11 tn "cite- t t becomo heated, sometimes in
CLEAN, HONEST, SERVICE
Ztrst-Claas Oarage and atepalr Bhop. Hewly and lully Equipped.
Skilled Mechanics.
CRAWFORD-HOUGHTONNODGRASS
65 S3S 8T. H. af sm1f sT.Ti 1188
"Although It Is now the second state
m the country for automobiles per
capita, the sale of power-driven ve
r.icles in California continues at a
record pace." according to Alfred
lteeves, general manager of tho Na
tional Automobile Chamber of Corc-
By a Soldier's wife. ;
London, March 17. (U. P.) How
does it feel to have your husband tak
en from you and sent to war? Espe
cially when you have had an uphill
fight for several years to get started,
and are Just getting out of debt and
able to live in something like com
fort? 111 tell you, for I know!
My husband was a aollcitor. Four
years before he had invested his little
capital in the purchase of a.practice,
and had wprked very hard to build it
up. It had not been easy, for compe
tition is keen In that profession, but
by the summer of 1914 he was earn
ing something like J2000 a year.
It had not been too easy at home
during those years. There were two
children to keep and care for, but now
They found they were rijjiit about
tlie hats. They didn't help at all, onr
the reporters were safely in the little
. pness gallery that overhangs the seats
f the Lords. ..
Therei waa no place to put the hats,
no peg 'to hang them on, - nowheri
under the seat to slide them.
Only the king is allowed to wear hi
hat in the chamber. A eilk hat doesn t
make a had seat, hut the--, reporters'
ejfit would have lacked the awesume
J. ess, of their entrance had they sue-
ombed to this temptation.
Couldn't Discover "Cold Stick."
The prexs seats were good seats,
close noush to permit one to count
He big piv.rls tluii form -d the only
contrast to the queen's black gown,
though not close enough to -discover
the gold stick Of the-tlold Stirk-ir..
Waiting, who attended the king, nor
;. rt the silver stick of the Silver fcUkk-ji-WnltiiiH.
Tliey. ei0 rlne enoncli ? linos t to
-. fhare Jn tlje 'warmth of l,oni Hryce's
- Keiiial'sniile .r to permit one to over
hear what Lord lierby w;.s trllins Lord
. Curr.on -if they luidn't been talking "n
whispers, :iw whs likewise ihe crso
with l-iord Ueressford and Lord Nort.i-
llffe.
i The seats were all righ! but the
liats were a bother. A good fice liande I
' l'nited states reporter ean'l write in
Ms best style with a high hat in his
-ap.'
, The Canadian reporters and the Aus
tralians suffered also. You could pick
.- them out by the way they slipped into
: ino press ..ox with their hands behind
their backs, hiding the suh.ieet of this
.present dirge their unaccustomed
headgear.
It was "different with the Russian,
Irench and Italian journalists. They
tarried the offending impediments in
both hands squarely across their stom
achs, which, it seems, is reallv the
correct journalistic way of dolncr jt.
But what would Ben Tillman or Joe
Cannon say. if one did it in Wast
Jngton, V. H. A.?
ir.erco. who has lust completed a six
lueeks visit to the Pacific coast where the years of struggle were over, 1
lie investigated trade conditions, ap
peared before meetings of the dealer
associations and city commercial or
ganizations, and formally opened tho
San Francisco show on behalf of the
motor car manufacturers.
"In going over the figures of the
motor vehicle department of Cali
fornia," said Mr lteeves, "1 was. shown
that there were more than 200,000
automobiles registered in California,
which is one for every 15 persons in
the state. Of course, it must be un
derstood that many registered cars
are owned by the visitors, but they
would not change the figures to any
marked degree. The figures are only
fcxeeeded by the state of Iowa, 'where,
because of the great number of farm
ers who must have motor cars, the
figures are one car for every 11 per
sons.
"In I..OS Angeles county, there are
more cars than In any other county in
the country and Judging by the traffic
condition in Los Angeles, it has more
cars per mile of street than New York
or any other city. At least that's the
impression one gets when riding
through the business district. '
seemed curious, so I asked her why
she got more than I did. "Well, you
see, ma'am, my mans a sergeant, so I
get more'n you, 'cos Mr. ' is only
a private," she replied.
Every Monday since then I have been
to the post of fice and drawn my money.
It is a regular meeting place for many
of us.
The apparently rich and the obvi
ously poor all meet there to draw their
various allowances, we all snare a
common tie now, for our husbands are
soldiers, some in France, some In Eng
land, some far away In Africa or India.
There are no barriers of caste or
rank or .social distinction. My char
woman does not put on airs because
her husband Is a sergeant. Mrs. Hy-
gave him a racking, splitting head
ache that lasted for 38 hours.
Valuable News for
Miss Emily McCoy
for city running with frequent stops
and low speed, hence, low raie or
charring.
"Under no conditions whatever
should the car owner himself put acid
in the battery to bring the electrolyte
uo to the proper specific gravity.
"Normally, no matter how run down
the battery may be. charging will re-
storn it and restore the specific grav
ity of the electrolyte. The amount of.
acid in the electrolyte remains com
stant. It la the water only that evap-
Addlng acia men. aoes noi re-
HANDLER
See the Chandler Four-Pas sen ger Roadster
GERLINGER MOTOR CAR CO.,
BROADWAY AT OAK ST.
Chalmers
H. L. KEATS AUTO CO.;
Broadway at Burnside. Broadway S36S
Now Demonstrating the New 3400 R. M. P. 11090
F. O. B. Factory ... ; ,
New York, March 17. (Xf. P.) For
the first time since its colonization in 1
1789 bv mutineers and Tahltian worn- ! orates.
en. Pitcalrn Island, that geographical store the battery but ruins it. for it
noriod in the Pacific .ocean between ! makes the solution too strongly acid.
Panama and New Zealand, where I thus Causing rapid disintegration of
steamers stop sometimes as often as the plates and general breaking down
Trucks , 1 Va, 2, 3a and 5 Ton
The Standard of Vortlaad Business arouses.
Columbia Carriage & Auto Works
809 rBOBT 8T8EET.
Edwards' Tire Shop
r Vulcanizing Tire Repairing .'
331 ANKENY Broadway 1034, A-1133
Goodyear Barrios Station, Ajas Distributors
once a year, wfil receive mail service
from the United States via the steam
ship Australplaln, sailing from this
port today.
Probably the only person in the
United States to whom this news is
valuable is Miss Emily McCoy, who
left Pitcairn"16 years ago to come to
the United States to .study nursing.
There are about 150 inhabitants on
the- Island. Miss McCoy says divorce
and unequal suffrage are unknown
among' the Islanders.
phen Jones talks unaffectedly to the
wife of a man who used tp cut her
lawn. Our men are fighting for their
courltry, and so for us.
- Francis Motor Car Exchange
Phone E. 1199 E. 13th aHawthorn
Garford
Grant Six
of the battery.
"It is imperative to use distilled
water or pure rain water that has not
come in contact with any metal. Any
mineral substances or foreign chem
icals in the electrolyte will ifot only
upset the chemical action that goes
on inside the battery but will rapidly
ruin the plates.
"Keeping the battery filled with
water means keeping the plates covered
one-half Inch with electrolyte. .This
is absolutely necessary not only for
the preservation of the plates them
selves but to enable these plates to
do their work. If only half of them
trolyte, naturally only half as much HawrVinmR Vlll- Auto Tire Repairing of everr description. AU work'--.
rnwr wtn h. derated us when thev naWinome V Ul- guaranteed. We sell new and second-hand tires and
Motor Truck Sales Company .
saa aloeb stxxzt, PomTiaHTJ. oizaos
A complete line of motor trucks made from the best
material obtainable and backed by reputation, resources
snd Taetmiea.
Overhead valve motor. Ho finer meter from
the standpoint of all-around efficleacy has
svsr bees: built. ' . . -'
i kUsXZT AUTO CO '
11th and Oak at Burnside. Croad. tlT.
A Growth In British Labor Party.
- London. March .17. The membership
of the British Iabor party has in
creased from 376,000 in 1&00 to 2,221,
OflO at the present prjee.
" '. '
Money Is Pawned at
Kansas City Bureau
Kansas City. March 17. Ever hear
of pawning money? The City Welfare
T.oan Aeency has two customers who
are paying interest on money, the
security for which is more money,
strange as it may seem.
One young man seems to have a pas
sion for gold and every time he gets
a gold piece he pawns It and pays
interest on the money secured thereby.
According to the rules, he cannot bor-.
row more than about 80 per cent or
the value of the coins. He has quite
an accumulation of ordinary Ameri
can gold coins piled up in the office
of the agency and is constantly add
ing to it. .
Another customer has a collection
of supposedly rare silver coins which
he has pawned. He believes they are
of great value, but, of course, the
loan agency recogniies them only as
so many ounces of sliver.
Columbia River Interstate Bridge'
NOTICE TO AUTOISTS!
Delays may be avoided by purchasing you tickets
(good cither direction) before proceeding to the bridge.
Tickets on Sale in Portland
At Vancouver Ticket 'Office, Second and Washington, and
Piedmont Pharmacy, Union aiid Killings worth aves.
In Vancouver
At Wilson's Confectionery, Fifth and Main, and
Allcmists Drug Store, Tenth and Main.
Ticket holders only may proceed across the bridge, de
livering tickets to collector at draw.
Those not having tickets must stop and. obtain same at.
ticket office at the bridge.
HAVE EXACT TOLL READY
j5f ; Each person ....... 5c
One seated runabouts. .... . . . . . ,"10c -
Autos for not more than 8 persons 15c
By'Order of , - ,
Columbia River Interstate Bridge Comm'n.
thought, and the future looked bright
and cheerful.
The War Comes.
Then came the war. My husband's
practice fell off a little, but not much.
and it soon , recovered, until he had to
work harder than ever. His clerk was
in a London territorial regiment, and
went off at once with it. I never con
sidered the possibility of my husband
Joining the army. I always thought
of soldiers as big, strong', boisterous
young men, like my two brothers. I
see things differently now but. then
well, one somehow had not thought
that the army could ever want quiet,
stay-at-home men of 33, whose most
violent form of exercise was gar
dening. Christmas came, and then the spring.
All the young men seemed to have
gone, but Ixrd Kitchener was asking
for more men, and yet more men. We
went away for our summer holiday as
usual, and, life did not seem very dif
ferent on those days. Then we came
home, and I could see that Fred was
changed. He would sit by the fire
those autumn evenings in his chair
and look at the red coals glowing in
the grate for an hour at a time, until
"his pipe would go out.
I would creep very quietly out of the
room, fearing to let him know that, I
knew. I could not bear to lose him.
and, besides, there were so many who
could go so much more easily than he
For him it meant the sacrifice of years
of work, the breaking up of hie home.
For me and the babies well, I thought
it meant poverty.
Could they really, truly, need the
married men, when they still made no
demand, but only requests, for the
hundreds of thousands of single young
reuows still available?
Hext the Call.
Then came tho Derby scheme.
whereby, when the country was in
need of him. my husband would be
called, and not before. And who would
hesitate to sacrifice everything if
Kn gland really needed it? The fol
lowing June the call came.
And so Fred went away to be a sol
dier and lived on 6d a day. while I re
malned behind to look after the chil
dren and keep the home going, even
if on restricted lines. My principal
means of doing so is the separation
allowance which every soldier's wife
gets.
I received a paper some weeks later
telling me to go to the postofflce near
here on the following Monday, where
I would receive my money.
, I was very nervous. Then I did not
know what to wear. I decided to wear
mv nrfl narv tninn. uin T vorv
j glad I did. There were quite a lot of
other women in the postofflce when
got there, end I am sure I felt very
red and uncomfortable when the first
person I noticed was Mrs. Hgphen
Jones just coming away from the
counter. ' Her husband is a barrister,
who had often been briefed by my hus
band, and I heard that he had joined
the army a month or two before.
"How do you dor she said, smiling.
"I have Just drawn my separation al
lowance. Are you doing the same?"
Separation Allowance Xeceived.
I was so taken aback that I could
not reply for a few seconds, .and then
' I told her that I was going to draw
my money, and that it was the first
time I had done so,
I went up to the counter and handed
In my paper. The girl handed me
slip with 21s marked on it in large
figures. I signed this and received
pound note and a shilling and I had
drawn my first separation allowance.
The : woman after roe was my char
woman. Her husband has been a sol
dier for a long time. She had two chil
dren, the same as. I had, but I noticed
that . he was given 23s 6d. This
tubes. Double Tread Tires. Phone K. 180,- 40S Haw.
CaniZing WOrKS thorn Ave. All work called for and delivered,
- i
YT America's Create? Light Six -1
Havnes h. l. mann motor car co.
eJ 59 NORTH 23D MAIN 299
BUDSON-Super-Six
"Super means superior where others srs Inferior -
BOSS & PEAKE AUTOMOBILE COMPANY ! ,
615-617 Washington Street
HtTpmobile 4
wosDEKm cAm xv mrosUCAvos.
MAzrurr atto co
uth and Oak at Born aid. Broad. 817. '
Capacities, 1, li, 2, 3',, 5, 6,.7f4
Tons. Comrlete Stock Repair Parts.
F. C. ATWELL, Sales Agent
Tel. Mar. 440
Mack&Saurer
MOTOR TRUCKS Washington at 21st
MAXWELL
"I got the facta well then took the Maxwell"
BOSS & PEAKE AUTOMOBILE COMPANY
dl5-bl7 Washington Mreet
More Power at Less Cost
National
Oldsmobile
Nioiial curs ir today represent unquestionably the
hi&hcbt. htai.duid in motor cars. -.
MAHLET AUTO CO.,
11th and Oak at Buraslds. Broad. 317.
Distinctive High Grade. Light Weight.
OLDSMOBILE CO. OF OREGON -Broadway
and Couch
Phone Broadway 1640
Both Series "18" Studebaker
FOUR and Series "18" Studebaker
SIX are noted for their great power,
and especially their great power in
ratio to their very low consumption
of gasoline.
It has taken Studebaker four
years to improve, refine and perfect
the wonderful Studebaker motor.
It has been solved through the ex
perience of 250,000 cars in the hands
of owners. It is only, through an
evolution like 4his, ' that perfection
of power in ratio. to fuel consump
tion can possibly be developed.
There are no secret processes; no
basis patents; no features of design
that are unknown or prohibited by
patents. Thev Engineer can use
what he wished, but he can only
know how tb use the best features
by continually improving, refining
and perfecting through the exper
ience of a motor in actual service.
This is why Studebaker can
truthfully claim that the design of
its motor is unsurpassed in simplic
ity, accessibility and power. By the
refinement of reciprocating parts,
vibration has been reduced to' an al
most unobservable minimum.
The bearing areas of the motor
have been enlarged and increased,'
giving .. greater durability, more
.strength, still further insuring
smooth, vibrationless operation.
But you cannot appreciate the
splendid POWER of the Stude
baker car until you TRY it.
Oakland
Owen Magnetic
OREGON OAKLAND MOTOR COMPANY, Whelesals
OAKLAND AUTO SALES COMPANY, Retsil -522
Alder St. at Sixteenth Main 414
Gibson Electric Garage 6V
, Storage Battery Co.
144 Twelfth Street -
CAPACTTT IB TOBB
'i 1 1H 2
ROilO S1325 S1525 S1U35
M-ncmm seiiveiea at rortlaaa
HCBEKTS MOTOB CAB CQV Para and Flan dors Bts.
Smith Form-a-Truck BA2K
Boms unoccupied territory I ones: writs for proposition - "
Moreland Distillate, ft ton to S too. Vim Delivery
ton capacity.
M:CRAKEN MOTOR COMPANY - ?
Main 9019 ; , A 445 Stark Street
Trucks
I 1 CXSAH, KOBEST EmTXCZ t
. 5. Le ana. Vaiif Matre Storage j
Diamond lirid Battery Co. i
Poltpripe 32 North Broadway Sales and Service I
Zxpext Advice Afeont Ton Battery rreely Olvsa
Velie
The BUtwell Series represents the latest and best in
- cars. New value at medium price.
I. C WARREN MOIOR CAR CO.
58-60 N. 23d Street. . Phone Main 780
oter
.-it!
yotrA-CTXJJi iiiiu icosxnus
rbrrs chassis .........9 885
70TJB Boadster 985
rOTm TonrlasT Car.... .. 985
TOUBk xem&au Stoadster, 1150
TOTTBrery .Weather Car 1185
' ATI Moss T. O. B. Detroit.
Oregon Motor Car Co.
Local Distributors
Park and Davis Streets
., , Phone Broadway 616
EXX-CTOBDZB SCO'S:
SIX Chassis ....S1150
SIX Boadster 1260
BZX Touts Car........ 1360
BZX ZAadan Koedste.... 1350
SIX Every Weather Car. 1430
. BIX lonrlajf Sedan...... ITOO
BIX Conpo ............. 17SO
TJmonslno 8600
AU Prices T. O. B. Detroit.
VULCANIZING
Let us do your tire repairing;. All our work la abso
lutely guaranteed. Our prices are always right. W
sell all leading brands ot tires and tubes, sasolinc
oil, and tire sundries. ... - -v ;
VACxrxo vnxcAXTznra co,
Those Broadway 47. .- . t -.. 34 Third 8t
White
-II
Pleasure Cars and Motor, Tnicks - The
White Company, Park and Couch Streets ;
Wl Stock Them, We Bepslr Tfcssn, '
f -- - . . We Charge Them, -i- --'.
y rres Advice and Inspection. .
"AUTO ZZJBCTBIO XQtnPaCEirT : col.
Sixth sad Born side Streets.,