r I ,"-" 4 THE OREGON STAtESMAK. SAtEM. OREGON SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 2, l926 1ITIS1I MS fi nrprnni TLDiuTI iitii iii nn j Willi iiurr Calls Its Abilities an Edpca tion to Him; Engine. Body work Praised , Edgar N. Duf field, British au tomobile authority. Is enthusiastic over the Hupmobile Eight, which he recently put through Ha paces - 6ver British ' roads. Writing in The Auto, leading English motor magazine, he says, in part: V MI am nothing if not candid. I hare "nerer sat -behind a more wonderful motor than this of the Hupp. Until its air-intake was really fierce I, could not hear the engine, aiM :ren when the car; was ' running at a pace - which I hare not the hardihood to mention in cold printer' ; ink.; there was only the faintest sibilance of the carburetor to be heard. "Ot course the engine will run very slowly. It should. One ex pects good slow-running from such an engine.? But the surprise, to me, was the. remarkable stream Of power; available. That there should be plenty of ..- power from ; an engine ef such volume was in telligible; but the joke was that even when the yield was at its most sensational, this .engine- was still a pattern of refinement. . ; "There are very few' faster cars ! on the road than a Hupp straight eight. - I wondered If , the speedometer-reading was - dependable, because when. this car Is, progress ing at quite an Immoral pace she rides so sweetly as to feel not at All fast.. I therefore checked the meter by Portsmouth road mile stones, to find it as near right as makes no odds. -. Io: do not doubt It now; but: that, makes only safer my statement that there are rery few cars o& our Toads potentially faster than a Hupp straight eight. Her acceleration from, 25 to 60 miles per hour is electrical, and as free from fuss or noise as can be wished. ; ."She bad wooden wheels. One 'can hare steel disc wheels at slight extra charge. I should hare them, because the price of this completely - equipped saloon, in txndon today, is 625 pounds (with wooden -wheels), that of the chassis being 200 pounds less. "Whether -the body Is a Hupp or a Fisher product I did not in quire. I should call It a Peach. Cellulose-finished, of course, ex ternally; beautifully velour-uphol-stered tlnslde,: 'With "-every 'last thing in the way of dill-dolls and nick-nacks; thoroughly restful, alike to driver and passengers, who ' all sit in and not on the ear. ' "But all the finish is not on the bodywork. The power plant is most refreshingly-clean -for any thing hailing from America. Not merely in design, but as to the metal Itself, in fact, the motor, when we lifted the bonnet to pho tograph It, was a heal .Bight -cleaner than those of the majority of motors (of a nationality which I will not particularize) which I - bave Inspected for quite a long while. y; - - "It may be highly unpatriotic and helpful to the hated foreigner to say so, but this is the sort of American up to which, I want to lead anybody who has a "down" on American cars. All who really -TJalcers -Famous Slogan Is Exemplified in -Latest Model If"", 'X -I ' - v I f . NttoMito tail mmmmti" : ? . t ,1 PAIGE INTRODUCES CABRIOLET -WITH -MAN 1 DISTINCTIVE FEATURES Can von recall, off hand, the sloean of the Paize? The Illustration should refresh your memory. for no one will denv that this latest Palze la a car of suDerlatlre' beauty. The cabriolet Is built on the new 125-Inch chassis. It is quickly convertable from a completely enclosed car to a roadster type. The deck opens to provide a roomy rumble seat fer two passengers. The interior lutings ana upnoisierwg are strikingly handsome. know cars understand that a good American car is a good car. "The Hupp, straight eight is an education to me. I know at least one ear of four times its price which functions no more pleasing ly. She has a phenomenally nice motor, a clutch and gear-box which could not be bettered, her steering Is excellent, her suspen sion Is very good indeed, her brakes are the brakes that appar ently 90 per cent of buyers of to day like .to have, - and although her bodywork is frankly and cla mantly trans-Atlantic as to line, it' la very nicely, turned out, and Mr. Turner Smith would Just as soon sell : one the chassis at 4 25 pounds as the complete car at 625 pounds, I gather. "Now that I have tried the saloon I want to try the open tourer, or the roadster, which is a two-seater with a doable dickey, equipped -as standard " with disc pattern steel wheels. But I want to get outside Britain,, or at least outside the Home counties to try that open Hupp Eight, because al though I try always to drive any car 'well within itself, I should love, just for a few hours, to see how it feels to be handling a few hundreds of pounds' worth of some other fellow's money at 8fo to 85 miles per hour, other than at Brooklands. " emphatically, unmixedly good motor car, the Hupp Eight, and (to the hyper-patriot, . et c'est moi) " most disconcertingly low-priced!" ECONOMY SERVED IN NEW TYPE LIGHT CAR (Ooti tinned 'from page If we follow the European trend where maximum economy is es sential. Already we have seen tires shrink from 42 inches in dia meter to 30 inches and the gener al acceptance of the balloon tire has made the larger sixes "adrng on the market. We can still lower tire "sizes and at the same time add to the efficiency and economy of our small cars. Engineers have already indicated that sizes down to 27 inches in diameter are not far away. The next important step, follow ing the adoption of smaller motors and smaller tires would be the de signing of bodies to meet the re quirements o fthe motors and the tire sizes. The European type motor, with its greatest power and speed pos sibilities, would require a .balance in body weight which is , not ne cessary with our present power plants. "Bits balance could be ob tained .only by lowering the bodies a thing which has already been done with signal success on our larger cars. So if the European trend is to mean anything, one of the most significant notes will be the designing of a type of body to which we are not at present ac customed. This body would be consider ably lower yet on-the market but this reduction in height could- be accomplished without sacrifice in the - Interior dimensions of the body. The advantage to the farmer, of such car as is forecast by our sudden Interest In a European type of construction would come from Increased speed over the road, marked saving in operating expense, greater convenience due to increased motor flexibility, and the satisfaction o having an at tractive looking car. Body designer8 have said that a motor car with standard road clearance could be built in a sedan model with the total height of the car not to exced 5 feet 7 inches and yet affor even greater inter ior dimensions than those now common on our small cars. HOW THE ROADS ARE (Continued from page X-) vllle, Corvallls, Junction City, Eu gene : paved. Old Oregon Trail East of The Dalles Ontario, Huntington, Baker, Un ion, La Grande, Pendleton, Uma tilla, Arlington, The Dalles: mac adamized entire distance and In good condition. Old Oregon Trail West of The Dalles- Columbia River . v Highway ' The Dalles, Hood River, Port land, Rainier, Astoria, Seaside: paved. Svensen, -Astoria section under construction; one way traf fic and subject te short delays. Roosevelt Coast ighway Clat sop and Tillamook Counties Astoria-Seaside: paved. Seaside-Cannon Beach Junction: macadam. Cannon Beach Junction-Hamlet Junction : Under construction. Newly graded with temporary sin gle track gravel surfacing. Rough but passable in all weather. Hamlet Junction-Mohler: macad am. Mohler-Miami: ' Highway route via Brighton now open but on ac count of danger on planked road aBetteir Btaicfc GaoKne-fabrication, water and fair treatment are all the Better Buick needs to. deliver its mileage at aatonJthinchr low coat, i : The Valve-tniHead engloe, as Buick . 1 bnildj it, develop more powir from given quantity of g Vt. Boick Automatic Heat Con troLan inteeral oart of ' mmmemtm tho -Bnick carfmretoc. till farther aids fuel economy, by wywiiincnc carpurenon, In no other car, regardless of price, S21JZ ' - completeness of ST- K ,1 formaSe attordU : ?VATE-i-h 7J1 ed by the Buick ( h '"oeaiea uuiar' ena-"jiripie Sealed Engine." Dirt cannot get in anywhere, to auae wear, looseness and vibration. To know what motor ear economy reaDy is, for finer transportation at lower coat, own a Better Boick, ; ; : M 'J 1 BUICK MOTOR . CO FLINT MICH. XMuUim ml Cwiwl Mmn Creraaii , i ' 1 - 388 North Commercial fvrrn i wn qhm Telephone 220 AllTO ill M Your car will be painted under the supervis ion of W. J. Anibal, whose services I have recently secured. , , -We-garante 'your satisfaction in our work 1 See Us for Good Painting . - fi Woods Aiito Top Co. Telephone 296 Salem, Oregon H.UPMOBILE " E I G H T'r Quality WitAout lAmxt' At a Limited Price The Hupmobile Eight has completely revised the public's conception of the price it must pay for finest motoring luxury. There is, literally, no finer performance in any car at any price. There is no finer comfort, ease of riding; surety and safety of control; dependability, and long life Yet this great Eight the largest-selling straight eight in America sells for hundreds of dollars, less than the fine cars which presume to give as much. Hupmobile Eight UUa. Sn nwicir, CMt Safes, BciOm, SJ44J. Cmh ,nir. with raabl wot. S2MS. Tomrimf, ttm n w S194J. Towiagk urn -faawaccr. S2041. All ydoa i. . k. Dwtt. ttm mmm m. , . Hupmobile Six tttmn. In mir. fr. 4omr.tl yt . Taariac. ! innmii. SI 111. Ewripaort tahta ) by S.tl fcaUm tm. inrkcol bnta. ctaca f tw oatora. Alt fnsw U b. Vtumu -Mm I KIRICWOOD MOTOR COt 4677 1511 -North -Ccrasiercial Telephone 311- between Wheeler and Brighton, traffic ; for , Garibaldi and points, south is urgently ttdrised to take road Tia' Poley I creek which . is graveled throughout. Miami. Tilramook, Hebo. Nesko win. Derila Lake, SUetz Hirer: part paved, balance macadam. . f Hfewport, north to Otter Rock in Lincoln county; open for tra vel. Willamette Valley Florence " Highway Junction City, Cheshire, Gold son. Blachly, Rainrock, Mapletdn: macadam. , Mapleton-Florence : dirt road. Impassable after heavy rains. CorvaMa-Newport Highway Corrallis, Philomath, Eddyvllle. Toledo, Newport: macadam. Roosevelt Coast highway open north to Otter, Rock. McMinnrille-Tillamook Highway McMinnTille-Sberidan: paved. Sheridan, Willamina, Grand Ronde, Hebo, Tillamook: part paved; balance good macadam. Mt. Hood Loop Highway Portland - Government Camp: paved to Gresham; balance good macadam. Government Camp, Summit, Thief Meadows, Forest'Boundary; closed .on account - of snow. Forest, Boundary-Hood - River: macadam. : r .Central Oregon Highway Bend-Burns: First 12 miles ma cadam. Balance fair dirt road open to travel. . Burns-Crane: macadamized. Crane-Vale: rough but passa ble. ' McKenzie Highway t Eugene. Belknap Springs, Sis ters, Redmond, Bend: macadam. Closed between Belknap Springs and Sisters on account of snow. 1 Alsea Highway Corvallls, Philomath, Alsea, Lin coln county line: macadam. Lincoln county line-Tidewater: Dirt road. Rough but passable when dry. Impassable after reins. Tidewater-Waldport : macadam. Baker-Unity Highway Baker-Foot of Mill Gulch: Im proved earth road. Mill Gulch-Hereford: Under construction but passable. Hereford-Unity: Fair county road. S;!lE0F BESTSFOHP Record Year Firs Figures for .Last Exceeded During : Quarter 1926 .: records ' Sales ter of Overland plishments year placed among all stepped popularity months, of have been same period this fair of for the first quar- year show that the Six, the sales aecom- of which in its first it second In volume light sixes, has already ahead of its-initial and for the first three 1926. retail deliveries f7,906 over those of the for 1926. Measured against aN sales total for 1925 during the! the first stitutes total business the rate Of three nekrly 65.000 of" these cars year, the Increase for months alone con 12 per cent of the for last year or at approximately 50 per cent increase for. the totaTperioc of 1926 already la view. ' ' With this increase being main tained, and with the consensus of opinion-of the major, dealers and lUSinuuiuiB - creased as - the summer months come on, this Overland Six is in a fair way to exceed in volume "all other light sixes built. t "While no attempt has been made to crowd the market and while production ha .been kept at a, point measuredJ the actual orders on band tit I Ihisar, the production figure f ' i '-Cactdry are considerably ahekwrthe peak production months for last year even at this early period of the buying -season,; .r. . . . : riAa.lr -stocks 'in 'the Overland- Six ,have been practically depleted all over the country na an acute shortage Is looked for within the next thirty to -forty-five days de spite: the efforts at the -factory to keep , production up .to sales de mand. ' ' . . Much interest 'in 'being maIfest in the -current trend io he Tig, sixes in . motor cars. '. - DM Yon A in- em toe racie In last Sunday's Oregonian and Oregon Journal written by Sir William Letts, president of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Trades of London. If you want to wise up on the ultimate automo bile of the future better get the automobile sec- tion of last Sunday and read it carefully ! Sir William in describing the car of ithe future . paid the finest tribute to the STAR SIX that hag ever "been accorded to an automobile 1 ; 4 1 certainthatthe high Here is what he says: "I am speed motor, small in bore, long in stroke will be the motor of the future." also stetesf Brak ing safety will require a high development of four wheel brakes on light cars to meet the de mands of increased traffic.' V The STAR SIX measures up to every require ment of the future and is truly 'morrwsar Today." The car of tomorrow must be light in weiffht - strongly built -torque that will enable it to get away likeatlash m high gear capable of throt tling down to one mile an hour, or less on high gear short turning radiusu T 28 to 30 miles per gallon of gas, roomy fin- ished, quiet and easy to handle, and "with no vi bration, and this is a correct STARSIX. description! of the this you to ride in the car of the; futurearid you t111 not be disappointed. SAUSM AUTOMC F.TLTDeldnd. ' r 1 t . J. '- ... -- ... . ..... . - , . r . . - . .- ' . . , - ; 1 - . . .. . ....... . . . ...... .r '.jc. . . . .... i- .. I -. ... tl: -r '1L5). . f r; V" I FX 1 ., t'IiltrrrT 4Vr9MP?llP? A?YTyiV yi?K wrt ?V!W THEM 4 I ft. A III ;-.r--