THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON ' f SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 19, 1924 OHOBILE MEN PADDLES 1,350 MILES FROM NOVA SCOTIA TO NEW YORK IN 43 DAYS, HAS ENGLAND-TO-ROME TRIP AHEAD I front, rather than a command to, the people. The courts hare held that a retailer, impliedly warrants the' wholesomeness of the' goods he sella. The first step toward protecting the food supply is . to Insist that foods, such as milk, hutter, etc., which are used raw, be labeled in regard to their bac terial parity. The .cap on the milk bottle should state whether the milk is pasteurized or raw and' whether all the milk handlers have been examined for carrier conditions. I WHO HANDLES T1ST YDUHFDDD SUPPLY 8 "T -shsoJv Reports Show That I General I Business Conditions are t Favorable for Winter Steady Improvement in general business conditions throughout the country la shown ih a com pilation of reports received from zone and territory representatives of ! the Olds Motor Works;: Lansing, !Mich,.,TJiiy H. reasley, sales man ager for Oldsmobile reports. The Idata collected covers the impor tant industries of the various sec tions and the summary, together with the growing sales of, Oldsmo hiljes. indicates; an excellent out look for the automobile: business. "Reports from our men show," said Mr. Peasley, "that timely rains in the northwest have aided in inaking a big harvest: of wheat 4nd corn, both of which kre bring . igj good prices. It is (character istic of the northwest to respond , quickly to a wave of. prosperity and there are now many buyers fori new cars. From the southeast reports are optimistic. The great increase of industrial plants in thef Carolina has made that district about 50 per! cent agricultural compared to j72 per cent a few years ago, and the mills are fairly active. While the cotton arid tobacco crop outlook is not the best, both are bringing fair, prices. General con ditions are much better than for some time and indications point to steady motor car demand dur ing the fall and winter. The good price of cotton is helpful in Mis sissippi, Alabama and Georgia. The cotton mills of Georgia are giving steady employment. From Florida favorable reports are re ceived. While winter tourist busi ness is a big source of revenue the fruit and", early , vegetable shipments are Increasing, and Florida is becoming more evenly distributed throughout Lthe year. "Jn the big eastern Cities, the refined Oldsmobile "Six" has been well . received. The demand In these centers this fall has been almost entirely for closed cars and the! attractive appearance of the Oldsmobile!, combined v with the complete line if Fisher-built clos ed bodies; has made Oldsmobile a popular car.' Business will improve in the eastern cities after election. There Is always more uneasiness and a slacking up of business be fore election in the big cities of the east, especially New York, than in any other section of the country. - -: : "New England conditions are rather quiet, with only & few mills running on full time but a grad ual improvement is noticeable. 1 "In the middle eastern states there Is a healthy business but no boom. ) The outlook promises a moderate improvement .: in sales. Factories are operating with , a fair number of employes. Farm products are selling well at prices that . are more in ; accord with good a the 'farmer buys than they havejeen for the past four years. This will give the farmer some cash this fall and after paying his obligations to the bank he will have some ready money as "well as jextended bank credit and will buy implements, house furnish ings and motor ars. , f 'In the southwest f territory TexaaJlas had agood cotton crop, eelUngat good prices, gheep and wool ..are also bringing good re turns and there has been a slight risel In cattle jrfces. "In the central west farming IT.. j uWWmmi :--ttjMMgiimii i inch beam; and draws four inches of water, j Smyth was In danger only once jwhen he was dumped overboard Joft the mouth of the Kennebec Iliver in Maine. Smyth, a former Lieutenant in the Royal George H. A Smyth, a: mining engineer, thirty-three years old. ar rived at New Tork recently from Sydney, Cape Breton. N. 8., in a fifteen-foot canoe, j His tiny craft weighs fifty-five pounds, is of 32 gT.TJ' PIW : : .T .-v. -. f' x.- 5.v ... . ( CIS i jilVtf Ifrtinflliii t'Wto;aJA4-Mi -M -.-...wc,rw"f.ji I There Is today a growing dis trust of uncooked foods and it must be admitted that the more the subject of raw food Is Investi gated, the more j cause j there ap pears for uneasiness. Ninety per cent of all infections are taken in to the body through the mouth At least five epidemics of typhoid fever occurring ; in Oregon , have been due to carriers of this disease infecting raw milk. Inasmuch as milk is one of the most universal-. Canadian Flying Corps, says he is jy use(j 'raw foods, it has naturally making the trip oft a wager. To win, however, he must paddle to Home from Liverpool or South hampton. : U I i states conditions are better than they have been for some time, with wheat, corn and hogs all finding a ready market at good prices. There Is a great improve ment in alii business as well as banking and credit conditions. While farmers still owe consider able nioney bankers are more in clined than j in the j past few years to assist farm clients in the pur chase of new cars. Business is in a healthy condition and a reason ably good motor car business can be expected! to extend later into the fall than in previous years. All folks in central west "and southern states are more optim istic than for some time. The Eu- H CAR IS HI H Manufacturers are Making Every Effort to Meet De mands of Needs "While the basic reason for the early growth of the motor car in dustry was j the need for personal transnnrtJifnYi foot hot fha ropean settlement will help in theinduStry has!rched such g,ganj sale of meat products, petroleum, cotton and other staple commodi ties. : ' ; ' -"The far; west continues to Im prove and California looks for its usual good i winter trade." USED CAB LOSSES AIM S ! 4 Average Dealer Profit Less Than Three and One-Half - Per Cent,! Report ; Losses of automobile dealers In selling used; cars were cut from $123,000,000 in ,1922, to $60,- 000,000 in 1923 and for the first nine months of . the current year to $18,000,000, according to re ports rendered In Atlantic City this week at the convention of the National Automobile .Dealers' Assn. It was declared that dealer profit for the years 1922 and 1923 was less than three and one-half per cent and 65,000 dealers were forced out of business. Silver Jubilee Shows The New York and Chicago shows of early 1925 will be Silver Jubilee expositions of the auto motive industry. In celebration of the twentyfifth anniversary of the motor vehicle, the Industry in concentrating on what promise to be the best shows in history. The New; York, shows i will be held January 2 to 10; Chicago, January 23 to 31; Here's An Easy One Owner: "What will it cost me to have my car fixed?" j Garageman: "What's the matter with it?" f : I ; ' ' don't I know." "Forty-eight dollars and fifty cents." Don't Envy Your Friend His Car Buy One for Yourself ;: V : - ' '' I - -i ' You can drive a big car, too. We have cars every bit as good as the one he drives. Some are even better cars. Some show less mileage on the speedometer. And they're all priced for a lot less than he would be willing to take forjiis. ' ! ; " ' Come in and see some real used cars. Here are a few exceptional bargains: I. 1920 STUDEBAKER SPECIAL 'Rebuilt from rear axle to radiator, r guaranteed to be just as good as a new .car. We are pricing it so cheap we fought to be ashamed of ourselves. 1922 JEWETT A wonderful car to drive and you can buy it for the price of a new cheap car. j ' 1923 WILLYS KNIGHT "Nuf said." ' ' - . - : .i , ' ... . i'-: - - t : -: i - ' ' ' i S H l'- - . '"-,:: . i . : '. : j . i . : - Certified Public . Car Market tic proportions is due to its ca pacity fori constant improvement of Its product to meet the ever changing needs of transportation. New ideas of design or manu factureare quickly taken up. The industry is not static. It is eagerly open to new suggestions. That Is why any motor oar five years old looks so antiquated. It 13 a swift-moving industry. Thus it lis that each year, on some make) of motor car, appears a new feature or a series of new features that are soon taken up by the whole industry. .During the last year and a half the Oakland Motor. Car company, one of! the General Motors group, has Introduced some of the most important new features of advanc ed design.; Oakland was the first motor car manufacturer to introduce Duco finish as standard on all its mod els. hiS jtype of finish is un doubtedlyjone of the most impor tant developments since the be ginning of the i industry, and scarcely a ; month passes but an other motor car cotnpau'y is adopt ing it as standard on certain or all models, i 1 ! Though automobile tops are scarcely ever putfdown the ma jority of motor car tops' are still of the collapsible- type.! Oakland was the first to introduce a per manent top. ' The real value of the perma nent top lies in It$ rigid iconstruc tion and the snugness with which the curtains; fit against the per manent metal strip on each side. ' This construction also enabled Oakland to j Introduce glass en closures, an invention which has made closed car comfort avail able to thousands of open car buy ers. r f ! ; The centralizing of all controls on the steering Wheel was like wise first introduced by Oakland. This feature adds comfort and safety to driving; as the hands need never leave the wheel, save when shifting gears. Oakland was the first light six to offer as standard equipment the following features: i Four wheel brakes; indirectly lighted unit instrument panel; interchangeable bronze backed main bearings; perfected automat ic spark control, honed cylinders; adjustable full pressure' oil sys tem and oil-tight universal joints. XOW AT lMtlDGE "Stub" Thompson, I formerly with Smith & Watkins, ; local tire and accessory dealers, is now op erating an auto supply' house at Bridge, Oregon. The! place Is known as the Stub's Auto Supply. i Human nature is what makes a man mad when someone steals announcement is made that some the same overcoat he did. fallen frequently ; under suspicion as a vehicle for contagious dis eases. This demonstrates the fact that it is. not only necessary to issist on cleanliness, . but steps must be taken to provide for the examination of every food hand ler. , . There is no question that a number of communicable diseases owe their origin to infected food handlers. There is no possible way in which the absolute purity of the food can be proved or estab lished. Although water and milk are perhaps the commonest ve hicles of infection, it must be re membered that other uncooked food products may carry infection Investigations of epidemics demonstrate the fact that i there are three common ways in which raw food Is infected by handlers by individuals having mild ; cases of contagious f disease, by acute carriers or those just recovering from a contagious disease, and by chronic carriers who may be eith er "recovered cases or merely the harborers of the germ. A carrier Is a peson who harbors the germ of a contagious disease, and does not have the disease himself. The human disease carrier ex plains to a certain extent the mys terious .spread of septic sore throat, diphtheria, typhoid, j pneu monia, influenza, and probably a number of other infections. Rou tine methods for recognizing the carriers are needed which make the1 problem a more difficult one to solve. Even though it is not possible to detect all carriers, the importance of examining all food handlers needs careful considera tion. ' . -. : , It is obvious that either food must be prepared so as to elim inate the danger of contagion or provision must be made to vouch safe the health of every, food handler. The dealer who handles food assumes a , certain responsi bility. Needed reforms in the dis tribution and marketing of foods must come through a demand T HIS IS A S T U D E B A K E R Y E A R The New StudcbaLcr Big Six LhipUx-Phaeton Two s imu One oAn open and closed car combined STUDEBAKER Duplex a closed and open car combined. An en tirely new-type car developed by Studebaker and available from no other maker. . V ' y It is the most sensational most -talked-of car in America. One minute you are enjoying the comfort and protection of a closed car next the unhindered freedom that made the open car so popular. And the change can be made in 30 seconds by simply lowering the roller side enclosures.. Yet -with all this two-fold con venience, the Duplex-Phaeton sells for . no more than an open car. The new Studebaker Big, Six is strik ingly beautiful with long, low sweep- 1 ing lines. It is especially designed and powered for seven-passenger service. t The Big Six Duplex-Phaeton is de livered to you with , complete equip ment. This even includes two highest grade .bumpers, extra balloon tire, tube and tire cover there is nothing else to buy. But to appreciate this car you must inspect it drive it Test its delightful ease of operation steering mechanism especially designed for its full-sued balloon tires. M j Notice the new location of : the light ing switch on the steering wheel and many other new and unusual features. See. this car that has definitely solved the open-closed car problem. J STANDARD SIX 113 in. W.B. 50 H.I. SPECIAL SIX 120 in. W.B. 65 ira BIG SIX 127 in. W.B. 75 H.P. 5- Pus. Dnplez-Phaetoa 81385 ' 9-Pwi. Duplex-Roadster 1360 3-Pasa. Conpe-Eoadster 1645 6- Pasa. Coupe j . 1760 S-Pasa. Sedan 1868 5-Paaa. Berlins 1925 5-Paas. Dnplex-Fbaeton m $1785 3- Pass. Dnplex-Eoaditer 1745 4- Pas. Victor! I j. 2375 B Pass. Sedan i ; 2495 5- Paaa. - Berlin i . 2565 7-Pms. Dnplex-Phaetoa - .1 i 5-P?ts Coape , 7-Paaa. Sedan 7-Paaa. Berlin 4- -;2i85 3025 3175 3250 ft-wbeel bzakes, 4 disc trbeels. I ' $60 extra 4-wheel trakei, 5 disc wheels. $75 extra 4-wheel hrakea, 5i diae wheels, $75 extra; ' (All prices f .o.b Salem, and subject to change without notice.) , MARION AUTOMOBILE COMPANY 1 235 South Commercial Street; Telephone 362. HJf SjliODEBAKER DUPLEX i ! The New-type Open-closed Car ' ! 1 1. I; Tme product of a high purpose fleet, worthy, beiautiful it is not surprising that) the Oakland Six is ! winning and holding the good will of all who buy it. Q Standard equipment include four-wheel brakes, disc steel wheels, balloon tires, permanent top. Fisher Bodies, one-piece ventilating windshield on closed types Duco finish, centralized controls, indirectly-lighted unit instrument panel, auto ynatic spark control. Q Qlass enclosures for dpen cart at small added cost. Itoadster $1005; Touring $1005; Special Roadster $1103; Special Touring $1105; Landau Coupe $1203; Coupe for Four $1405; Sedan $1343; Inndau Sedan $1645. Prices at Factory VICKBROS. ! High Street at Trade ! . i .ST.;--- , o A.k lIIa:::b PRODUCT O F ' GENERAL ji M O T O R S v! Il l I - fit There Are You Cannot Thing Nor Describe The Silent Swiftness: the Soft Smoothness: the Fleetness: the Flexibility the Luscious Luxuri6usness-oi this "Vertical'8' Superfine' are indescribable. You must see and feel, to understand SINCE IT WAS DISCOVERED, the great writers of theworld have tried to describe, and famous artists essayed in vain to portray, the : magnificence of the Grand Canyon cf the Colorado. YET YOU WHO! HAVE SEEN IT and who had read extensively about it were speechless with emotion when your eyes first gazed upon this American Wonderland J , AND TRY AS YOU WILL, you can not now describe it to your friends. When they ask you, you exhaust your : vocabulary and finally in despair exclaim "You must see, to understand and appreciate.' YOU CAN APPRECIATE, then, his feeling of impotence, Iwhen this writer is set the task of describing . the various phases of perform ance of this latest product of the Rickenbacker shops. laboratory and it WHENTOR THE FIRST time, with your own hand on the responsive steering wheel, your own foot on the sensitive accelerator, you tool her down a straightaway and round a turn, you will admit that never before, have you handled a ' real automobile. I HOW SHE "ROADS!" hands off at a mile a minute or more, and still she holds straight as an arrow the crown of the road. Yet the slight-. est urge on the wheel and she responds like the thoroughbred she is.; ;'... NOW FEEL the accelerator you must press it gently at first for the response is instantaneous. CLOSE YOUR EYES , and try to estimate how rapidly she acceler - ates. . ; - f ' . ' NOW GLANCE at the road but not at the speedometer and t tell if you can, by the feel, how fast you are going. j , NOW LOOK! and you are going twice as fast as you thought. WHAT IS THAT AHEAD? looks, from herej like a steep hill. BUT IT IS NO HILL unless your senses deceive. For you are almost unconscious of your extra pres sure on the accelerator, and she takes it as easily as if it were level stretch. '.. YOU WONDER how much steeper it would have to be to offer any per ceptible resistance to this powerful '. Icarv-'-' j v ::-i -.1." ' THAT GIVES you some idea for comparison with the best cars you have previously driven. FORTY MILES feels like twenty, sixty like thirty seventy like i thirty, too! . NOW TRY THE BRAKES those wonderful Rickenbacker 4-Wheel Brakes which set the standard ! for present safety codes and revo- ' lutionized an industry. i TRY THOSE BRAKES! First at 20 miles per hour if you are not ! used to first class 4-wheel brakes. TRY THEM AT 40 50 0 or as 3 fast as you dare to drive. You will :be amazed to find that at any speed they are just as smooth, just as certain and just as silent. NOTE THAT THEY DO NOT affect ' i your steering in the slightest. ( BUT WHILE we are talking you are i "feeling something you cannot ; describe. , NOW YOU UNDERSTAND why it is futile to attempt to describe that which we have felt and know you : will feel when first you drive this " 1 car. . '" j,: " r SO WE INVITlt YOU to come in and i seer study in detail the many 5 points of excellence. , ; DON'T DELAY. Come right now or phone. L and a demonstrator will be at your ' door. .' F. W. PETTYJOHN COMPANY 219 N. COMMERCIAL STREET i. Famous "Six" Pric ( Sport Phaeton - - SIS$S Coupe - - - - 2095 Sedan - , - : 2I9S r Vertical "Eiht" PH . . Dmtrit Spo fhaeton , - plm wmr tma Coups) t . ' : . ? .. Sedan - 12195 2695 2795 M, IL LS -iill IMJ U IS JL : CAR WORTHY ! OF ; ITS NAMC n i. . 235 N. CUUECIL PHONE 883