the or."Go:i r7ATzrMAi;, ealem, op.ego:; A:3 ; Pioneers in tlie Aiitcmobile Business ' " ' " v-: - '-1 ' " i J - - j- :- ' - - Vick Brothers, Distributors of QualityiCars Home of Overland, -Wil-ly3 ICnighfand Oakland Cars Moreland and -Federal Knighft Trucks More replacements of present automobiles- and fewer Introduc tions ..of. new cars Is predicted by Charles II. Vick, eldest of the four Vick" ftrothers,-pioneer automobile firm la Salem., Mr.' Vick bas.sais prediction' upon "his years of ex perience In the business. " ; Im provetnents along various lines, particularly r toward ' permanen t tops; ! glass i&closures . and perma nent finishes will also be features of automobile designers and producers-' la the next-lew years. The present ' day trend is toward the closed- type of vehicle, whether this -be sedan, limousine, coach, or coupe are the special class-Inclosed type, he declares. The other three members of the firm are George E. Vick, B. W. YIck and Alfred J. Vick. n f " ; . ' , f Vick Brothers are located In commodious quarters at the corner of High, and Trade, a building they built a few years ago and design ed far efficiency and display pur poss. The buildinr has three floors, the first, or basement, housing the machine shops, wash racks, battery and lire 'repair de partments and the heating plant. The second floor is devoted, to large, decorated and spacious dis play rooms, where the latest type of models are on exhibition. The main offices, a private office for the', president and rest rooms are also j located on this floor. The third floor, or storage room pro vides ample space for stock cars and the paint department.. Ighe building, occupies a ground space of 83 feet by ISO feet, la fireproof and of re-Info reed t concrete con struction. . j tVwas in 19 11 that Vick Brothers- located in Salem, at the Capi tal' Garage on Liberty street, be tween State and Ferry, having the agerijey for the Ford automobile. In -1913 the firm was located on High between Court and Chemek eta; In the present bnlldlng oc cupied by the Valley Motor com parfy, which purchased the agency nndbulldlng from Vick Brothers a f:-v years later. Vick Brothers r .fried the state distribution for t j i Fordson tractor for a : few y e ars and later took the agency for the. Sampson- tractor. Relieving in the future of the automobile Industry. careful survey of the field was made, with the result that they obtained' the Salem agency for ; the Willys Knight, Oakland and Overland automobiles and later added the Federal-Knight and Moreland track line. Business has steadily Increased until today there are 25 employes on, the payroll.' I j Open and closed models df all the automobiles handled by "the firm are on display, at all I times. with a reserve stock of 15 ma chines on the average. This num ber is sometimes depleted by a few rush sales ' and again the re serve stock. Immediately follow ing a shipment of new cars, is somewhat increased. - f One of the'1 greatest improve ments made by the firm Is the ad dition of an - up-to-date and mod ern equipped j paint department, where paint I jobs of all kinds are turned out. j A' feature of this de partment is the Duco finish,1, a permanent surface that defies the weather, grease and polishes that easily mSr and dim the luster of other kinds of finish. The paint Is applied " -by means : of an air brush and from, four to five coats are given before the vehicle is re turned to the .owner. . Whenj a ' . 1 ; ' I .1 f ' ' . machine. Is placed. in the depart ment -for painting all, paint and rust . . Is carefully removed and when . the machine is claimed by the- owner. It Is almost Impossible to tell the car from a new one unless the model is carefully look ed over. - The finished product can hardly be told from-the fac tory finish. . j In addition to high priced paint jobs, Vick Brothers-are prepared Interior View of Vick Bros. Automobile Sales for cheaper and less durable paint work which is offered- at a lower cost. Paint; jobs are turned out from $20 to $150, depending up on the type : of -finish desired and the size of the automobile. Nat nrally, -: a large sedan , requires more', work and care because of the .upholstery than does a small and ancient roadster; whose owner is desirous only of having a coat of paint applied in order to pre vent further : rusting j of exposed metal parts. ' The owner, of the vehicle may claim it (after a few days in the paint shop. A large drying room enables the paint tq dry rapidly and smoothly, and the vehicle' is available for use after two or three -days, though if takes a little longer for a machine that has received five coats of paint. as each coat must dry. before the next is applied! ; Many improvements in the 1925 models are announced by Vick Brothers, chief of which U the ar rival of a ic-cylinder Willys Knight automobile, a. departure from the i-cy tinder type that has proved popular in the Salem dis trict, f This model will be more luxurious than the present type and Is designed particularly for the man whose financial condition enables him to spend more money for his automobile. This model will fill the present gap between the Wyllis-Knlght and automo biles, several j thousands of dollars more expensive. The 4-cylinder model will not be discontinued and several minor f -improvements are to be made this season. Room The 1925 Bluebird, a model fea tured by the Overland, company, will be equipped with a permanent top and glass inclosure at no in crease in price. - The gas. tank has been moved j to the rear . and. a vacuum tank installed beneath the hood. - The sedan will come equipped with; an all-steel body and a baked enamel finish, which will stand up 'under, the most se vere weather conditions, "a good polish' removing all traces of rain and exposure!. Mother types will be continued.' The Oakland, which has proven its! dependability with Salem owners', will be equipped with permanent tops and glass in- closures in addition to other mi nor improvements. ; ! Both the Federal-Knight and ! the Moreland trucks are making a reputation for themselves. , When ' f .; . ' - rV ! Sallm is the Center of a Growir4 Number of Basic Industriea That Chal lenge Universal Attention, an3 Brins Money from Markets of World. - K ... . .' . ... ...... r trees in California have sold for $3000. ; From the above, the readers may get an idea of the intrinsic value of a, large' walnut orchard; or even of a few trees, la the con ing years. It. will commence beam ing the sixth year here.' and in crease rapidly thereafter, .' . It has been stated that if all the shade trees in Salem were bearing English walnut trees of the right varieties the sale of ; the nuts would pay all the taxes of the owners of city property. Walnuts can be produced here cheaper than in California (a good deal cheaper); and they are worth more aell -at rt cents ' a pound higher for the best grades In the discriminating" markets. ( And land prices are a good deal lower here The Strawberry Industry This -is a great strawberry dis trict.. For some growers, straw berries have been a bonanza crop. There have been yields here reach ing as high, as 24.000 pounde to the acre, but the average - under the old methods has perhaps been a ton and a half to the acre. It la expected, with new methods and varieties, and perhaps some Irriga tion, to bring" this -up to "two to four tons to the acre. ( , , ; The Marion county j canneries packed 117,939 cases of, strawber ries in 1923;a big increase over 1922, ; when the Salem 1 canneries packed 60,000 cases. ; Besides great quantities were sold fresh, cold . packed and "disposed of in other ways, j The totals' for last year have not been made up. i The, Salem district is going fast towardu a 10.000,000 pounds an nual crop' of strawberries, and our manufacturing and marketing in terests must prepare to j take care of such a crop. Oregon' produced hef.Southern Pacific, "which owns the Salem street railway system, decided to replace the North Sum mer and , Seventeenth j streetcar lines with motor busses, they se lected the Moreland truck for the chassis as the. truck best "adapted to their needs. The busses, three in number, were designed, for. the traffic in Salem, and . are 16 passengec each. ; i . .... (CoQtlnaM rr pt 1 " 5 . per cent of the strawberries grown in the United States In 1919. Marion county is the lead ing strawberry county in Oregon, and Polk.; adjoining, is a close second. Salem surely has the true strawberry mark;, and her pre miership as the strawberry center of the world will depend only' up on the facilities for properly hand ling them keeping up with the growing, of them in this district. The Salem district also produces annually great quantities' of straw berry plants for sale at home and for shipment to outside market. We ship them in carloads. The Apple Indastry Apple growing has been succes- fully carried on in the Salem dis trict since thei .settlement of. the country. There have been many apple booms. There is an apple tree on the Egan farm below. Sa lem, of the Delicious variety, that la 7S years old; center stem 60 feet high; SO feet limb eptead: bears 50 bushels of apples a year. Nearly all varieties of apples do well in the family orchards here. But, for commercial purposes, nothing should be grown in which we do not excel. We can excel in the Ortley, the Rome Beauty, the Winter1 Banana, the Grimes, the Delicious and others, and we raise as fine Gravensteins a the world can show. j f-- -m Speaking from the commercial standpoint. It would - be well, for the Salem district If nearly every apple tree in all this section were of one of the above varieties. We can top the market with these and that Is where the big money is in any. Industry.; ;-- r':"';iV--Al " j The Raspberry Industry .: The ' Salenv districts is a good raspberry country. : It produces as good red raspberries as any grown. But it has a franchise on the black' raspberry; or what amounts to a franchise; for the black rasp berry persist here.-" We have bearing Tines over- 20 years old. This is hot true of any other dis trict in this part of the world. - It is not true of western Washing ton, the great ftd raspberry coun try. , The jam and jelly trade de mands a lot ot black raspberries; and there Is no bush fruit line that la more certain of continued success here in the Salem district than is the raising of black rasp berries; the blackcaps of com merce. Our cannery pack of black raspberries climbed from 1200 cases, each of reds and blacks in 1922 to 25.133 cases of red and 14.431 cases of blacks In 1923. The pack of last year will show an other increase. The Booming Mint Industry The mint Industry Is on a. boom and Salem is going to be head quarters tot growing andmarket' ing the crop of peppermint oil Dan J. Fry. the Salem druggist. the largest buyer of crude drugs In the state, U in touch with one firm that Vlll want 50,000 pounds annually-r-fand the Salem district, from present indications, will soon be ready to furnish that much; and a great deal more; The Oregon Mint Growers Co operative association is active, and it proposes to build a refinery; to secure a larger benefit and a bet ter standardization of the Oregon product, which now stands very high, and which eells to what amounts to a premium of $1 or more a pouna over me eio product, lowing to Its superior quality. " ' - So Salem is bound to be the center of the leading peppermint oil district of the world--because the finest and richest mint oil In is produced here; an oil the world with 51 per cent' ofv menthol con tent, against 36 per cent oil pro duced in : Michigan, Indiana, and New-York; and an oil that ranks at the top In flavor. . Besides, our growers get more pounds of oil to the acre. It has gone to 85 pounds to the acre, and 50- pounds to the acfe is common. The present price is around $8.50 a.; pound. The price -at vhich most of our crop was sold last fall wa $4.10 and that was very remunerative. V Mint is as good as clover for the soil some say better; and the mint .bay (makes good feed, 'and; it is a safe crop. . . The White Mechem variety does well here; and no where else ex cepting in England, Saxony and Syria. aid la dra's. - ' Industry fcrward. ..Tl. trlct la headed toward . a i dollar a year peppermint c!I t ; and It will not be Ion- fa try ing; and it will go UU as : farther as there la a Czz::. f the oil at remunerative f.:l: -v: because we have the ipe-pemlra oil soil and climate and know low, and organization. The acrrnra will be largely lncrease4 Ja triLa district this year. TBe Country of Grcst Cc The noses of Dionysius ar 3 chus are out of Joint; e-tf bovine goddess, wet nurs? t human racA. and in this tie -i l - , era the Salem district will fcave -.'the premier place of all the 'earth. Near' Salem, at MaTlca. i.'arloa county, Ore., was produced Vive La France, the greatest cairy caw of ur aee . anr breed. Uvln or dead. The Salem district tea t ro duced two-thirds of the world rec ord Jersey cows, and all bat ens in recent years, . Western Oregon Is the test cow country on earth; because we have the feed and the climate and t natural conditions that conserv ? the highest qualities, and i 3 for the highest production in f a domain of dairyingand wa ta?e the dairy brains and t-9 C-'.ry will to excel. 1 The 1200 (annual butterfat pro duction) Jersey cow is on the way; and.ehe will be produced in the Salem district, and future competition" for world's records 111 be between Salem district Jer sey cows. The 160 to 200 pound common brlndle cow is going; the 1000 to 1200 pound purebred cow I eomiha: and the Ealera district is leading and will lead the way. The Evergreea Blackberry . ' Industry Salem Is the center cf the" great and evergrowing Evergreen blackberry industry. Marion coa3-v ty has over half the acreage of the state, with Polk, YanhUI asd Linn, second, third and fourth so the Salem district has nearly all the Evergreen blackberries In Oregon, and nearly all the market for these great pie, berries of commerce. The Importance of the Industry' lies in the great American appe tite for. pie -and the Evergreen blackberry is the commercial pie berry par excellence; also In the' great production to the . acre. There have been yields of 2 2, COO pounds to the acre -and tow;. (Coatlau b pa: 4)