p&CflblV THREE fc-xltoti ' Automotive i C:L E A tsl AN D VIGOROUS VENTYIXTH YEAR ; SALEM, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 111926 ?PRICE FIVE CENTS MM lllEllEII Motorists Are Given Chance :to Buy at Low Prices, Mr. Rydeil Says When the Western Auto Sup ily Co.. has a )kale,ms f occasion ally does, ; Motorist are given an opportunity to -troy "imality sap-' pUes and accessories tor their au tomobiles, at exceptionally low prices. 'Durlngr the past few years, an ' annual erent with the company , has been their AnnlTersary Sale. This sale marks 'the'lOth -year of apply company jpa the Pacific coast. These yearly sales hare proren popular with motorists, re port the Western Auto managers, as the articles 'placed on sale at that time sreatly enhance the pur chasing power , of the "car owner's dollar. "The items placed on sale dur ing oar Tenth Annlrersary sale, are taken from our regular stocks of merchandise, which is the cus tomer's assurance of receiving first class l merchandise of high duality." states Walter Rydell, lo cal manager of the Western Auto Supply Co. "The ! goods on sale iare not confined' lb any one cer tain line of goods or any definite r '" . . : : irr : n . r -' - v,as jfc v mm jv ui wt sv av w : -mmm. & mm t - ' r - -1 mm t - t m w i n t - .- i w JJ -Jir3 -jZSBmtttlSVUWeur:-.-. 4 1.41 TT - Spray -rr XflKwge v ; irrsX V77 h - : , lit iissL fetM xw- i . .. ui,: , , ;u . uiu,fe.-AWfrTvMCg-. -Re I : t ui i- vs- i - ' i ; A . A-E 91 A -( fjj r - n b : . v. U." -jfry D 1 - 1: ' - k . j :j.iiun)ii-pM a-ir 1 n- -,-- -ii i i wirwrrr " 1 " "u"""-r 1 " - j .. ...j-;,. - . -i..,.i.. i ji, , li m, i ii mir mm Jimmmmmmymimmr- wwh. . . r"' . . ' '. - . - Beaiitiful Colors Seen In Motor Car Finishes , Color has attained a new importance in motor car building and this year the "color personality" of the aristocrats ojf motordom will be as authentic an index to character as design, according to automobile designers and builders. Develop ment of color mediums which combine both a high resistance to the elements with depth of lustre and the appearance of Warmth and life make possible the suggestion pf speed and power, dignity or formality in color as Well as body lines. The loading dock of a builder of automobiles might sera a far cry from the fine car salons. Yet daily over the loading dock passes a revue probably even more interesting than those een with the velvet land marble background ofhe season's motor shows. In these .unpretentious surroundings, may be seen a constant parade of the designs and colorings which will be most popular this year. At the Lincoln Motor Company's Detroit plant, where color tone and Individuality tin treatment have been encouraged and developed to a degree proba bly without parallel in the realm of fine cars, this revue Is partic ularly impressive. Even geogra phy is a consideration In the se lection of a Lincoln's finish and It is interesting to note how the car destined to be used in eternal sunshine differ from that which must be correct in either summer or winter. A four-passenger sedan to be shipped into the great Northwest is finished in the rich, yet sub dued tones, duplicated from the plumage of the Chinese Jay. The body is in two tones of warm brown with a bright blue stripe for the required touch of brilliance. Contrasting sharply with that family type of car is a sport phae ton consigned to Mexico City. The body below the moulding line Is Royal Chariot red with jet upper works, fenders and running gear and red wire wheels. A folding tonneau cowl and windshield sug gest that the top will be folded most of the time. All metal is brightly nickeled. Florida also demands striking shades in sport models. A sport phaeton for delivery in Jackson ville js finished, in buckskin brown with Scotch gray'stripe and uphol stery Jn dualtpne leather. Six wire wheels with the two spares carried -forward in fender wells,' tonneau cowl and windshield, ma- On the Road I J 1' 1 I . ! i V7' vy "sic Ed Knox, Portland representative of the Buick Motor company, and Kenneth Wilson of the . Otto J. Wilson company here, Salem ' Buick distributors, are shown here in a new 1926 standard JJuick Coupe. This picture was taken about half way between Niagara and Detroit on the new road. It is about 52 miles east of Salem. There is now a good road to Detroit and the road to Brietenbush Hot Springs, about 12 miles beyond, is being worked on and may probably be completed by summer. HOW THE ROADS ARE Oregon State highway commis sion weekly report on condition of Oregon state highways, April 7, 1926. Pacific Highway Portland-Osweko-Oregoh City-Albany-Harrisburg-Junctlon City-Eugene-Cottage Grove-Roseburg-Grants Pass - Medford - Ashland California State Line; Paved. West Side Pacific Hifchway Portland-Newberg- McMInnvllle- to Detroit hi i 1 If - ti - i --s Corvallis-Junction City - Eugene: Paved. Old Oregon Tral -East of The Dalles Ontario - Huntington - Baker Union - LaGrande-Pendleton-Uma-tilla-Arlington-The Dalles: Maca damized entire distance and in good condition. Old Oregon TrailWest of The Dalles -Columbia River' ' Highway The Dales-Hood River-Portland-Rainier-Astoria-Seaside: Paved. Roosevelt Coast Highway I 1 Remedies Given to Gurjb The problem of solving our national traffic pU2Jzles-par-ticularly with reference to the accidents involved, jhias -three phases. These are (1) engineering revision xf .oW; streets; (2) education of the driving and walking public; C3)nforcei ment of the traffic law. ; I Vehicles traveling along our highways at high rates of speed imperil the lives of pedestrians who cross these streets. Investigations by city planning experts have demonstrated that high speed of traverdoes riot promote maximum, effi ciency in the use of city streets. In a ' chart' prepared' by Harold M. Lewis and Ernest P. Gbodrich it is nownthat the maximum number of vehicles can pass a g'ven point in" a street at about 15 miles per hour for uninterrupted -traffic and that the maximum number will pass at a .running; velocity of 14 miles per hour where there is traffic fjbntrol. "Between speeds of ten an! twenty miles per hour there is less than five per cent variation' in street capaci ty. In addition, -investigations by the Society of Automotive Engi neers and others have shown that the most efficient conditions of ve hicle operation occur at speeds not exceeding fifteen miles per hours and tn many cases, even lower than this. Expediting; traffic is recognized as an urgent, problem confronting most of our metropolitan commu nities. The object is to move the greatest number of vehicles past a given point in a given time, no as , to prevent congestion. This : is to be accomplished not by exces sive speed of individual vehicles but by such means as the follow ing: 1. Usfng the entire street Traffic Accident Toll width removing traffic and espe cially (a) Prohibiting parking in or near safety zones and "Intersec tions. ' 2. Maintaining a high average speefl of all vehicles including ' (a' Keeping slow moving vehi cles off of the thoroughfares. f 1(b) Prohibiting cutting In. (c) Keeping pavement in good condition. j3. Minimizing delays at inter sections including (a) Traffic officers or signals atiall principal.' intersections. ':(b) Prohibiting left turn's where necessary. jRegmrdJss of the complex ve hicular traffic now existing in -the larger cities, pedestrians must be IW-Tl on? inr-n'M JlU llllLulillLI.Ll.J EQIHETClFGi - - ' - ' " . ; : . . - -.- - - v All Cars Assembled -in: Port land Branch to Run on Coast Product Ford cars produced tn the Port-, land Ford Motor company factory , are now equipped "with CfC tires hjteHna of a contract just signed between the CTG factory nd the Ford Jotor company. V ' For the first , time In; history an exclusively western built tire has been adopted as standard fac tory equipment on any automobile, and CTC executives and ; dealers are properly enthusiastic -that their Ures have received the rec ognition due. them t or quality, The Ford Motor company. owes their" success . Inj' a 'large measure to the fact that, they have always used afaoslutely the finest materi als obtainable and ,the' first con sideration with. Ford engineers la quality. CTC Urea' were pnly se lected afterinuny tires had keen, shipped to the Detroit Ford plant for exhaustive testing and had proven 'themselves to be thorough ly, satisfactory from a quality standpoint., ; -'It should he : clearly under stood." stated4 Mr. Hull -ofthe Ford Motor company, "that the'de- I