4-- - PACBTSLEVEN Two Eront Views Greater Hudsoiis Win Speed Honors v. - Shoots Rrolectilel 1 (Continued from page 9) :zzr,Tht OHEGON STATESMAN? SalcaC OreaBunday llornlngj Seplember'a.: 1929 HOBIH medio car tS5 at ... s. 7 Miles After being etafcd all by; tnons- ': ands ot amazed cltisea d-arhtg 1U trans-continental V JmrHey "f rom Aberdeen proving i.srtroaoVMary- land, a monster 14 Jnca railway coast gun arriTCditx the United States Army arsenai on the Pacif ic coast recently. This leviathan, one of the lar gest and most powerful piece of artillery in the nation, will shoot a 1,400 pound projectile 25 miles. The exploding force ojt tfce projec tile is so great, army officers say. tbat one shot would destroy . -an entire village 25 miles away. . For Instance, a 25 mile radius ' around Portland; Seattle Lot An- , geles, Denver ot BuUeveould 'be laid bare- by - tne ; big guo aow , with the installation of this most recent 14 inch coast "weapon. The gun is said to-be strategic - ally mobile, but not tactically mo bile: that is It cannot be .moved about at short notice on a battle field, but it can be. moved any where along a railway and when time permits a special track can be laid to take the guru .o, any de sired point. ;.. p,,; Here are some facts about this giant rifle: . It cost $185,000 of which $60.- 000 was fro the gun and $125,000 for the mount. It s weight with carriage ia 720,000 pounds, far greater than any locomotive. Length, 25 feet. 4 t inches; height of unit, 14 feet, 1 1-inch; breadth, 10 feet. - - A crew of 60 men is, necessary to man the monster with a total of 200 'men necessary to fill every place in range. ind run, sections nicai'be pu0ia'iMn.S-io6uitn in leBs than two hours 'under4 field conditions. If in permanent em- placement and if the fire control equipment is in place it can begin firing within a half hour. : u um m. REPORT FDR DESOTO A marked increase in sales ac tivity throughout the country 'was reported by De Soto six dealers since this car entered its .second year ot existence during. the -first week in August. The De Soto achievement of having broken all record In the history of, the Industry for, a first year car by producing and selling 81.065 of these models was made an occasion, for cerebration by dealer organizations all - over the United States. As a result enthus - lasnrf or the car following the an - nouocemenf of the new. recotewi reflected 4n the large nUmfeer. ol cales reported during the first half of the month. . - "The officials of the De. Soto corporation and its dealer, organ ization are equaBy proed"bf this record." said L. G. Peed, general sales manager of the company.'It is not surprising that a cax'.with the performance qualities, or the De Soto six should be popoUr. It is responsive, easy to drive and safe and comfortable. It is signif icant, however, that even a car Trwhlch rtands out so prominently , in the field of the low priced six" should have broken all existing i records so decisively; ' U 13 ejident the pubife-has' ap preciated these distinctive quaH- '-tias. No greater tribute could be paid than, by the fact that its Oret 'year ended with a .new record for any class of car in the history of the Industry during a similar per iod of time." i . NEARLY ALL STOLEN AUTOS . Ninety-three per cent ot all cars stolen in 1928 were recottfetaod It is evident that the autf mobile thief ia turning his attention to come more profitable means of crime, says the American Auto mobile Association. The national motoring-body be lieves that the high percentage ot stolen cars recovered is directly attributed to the Dyer.. act,' fchlfh makes it a - federal to move .a stolen automobile acrosartireatate line, as well as to the improved lockinz devices. - The A. A. A. sponsored the Dyer ectMd also maintains a Car Recovery Depart ment to aid in the flnlHar -stolen cars. "i vte fi- vr3" "nve years ago, sa;rs,:the state ment, "only! 82 per cent! of the n flHnr into the ...hands, of thieves were recovered and a. ten perecent gain in fire years is ex cellent progress. Figure from'2 cities reported to the A.AA-A. In 1928 revealed that 74,S4lvarj RECOVERED were stolen and .69,1 'were re covered ' : " 0 ' 4 iie improved locking-. de,v-- pfesed on automobiles r has. Ifo j hee na larre factor In rdeuclog the number of cara stolen. Motorists, therefore, can greatly aid'the sit uation by being sure their cars are locked before leaving-then park d. Heavily traveled atreets are J jst as dangerous in this respect as some oat-of-the-wag; place and the thief has a better opportunity to drive off a car ia heavy traf fic" V - . Tbewater level ot Crater Lake lias dropped 10 feet 4 inches from the bench mark set in the rock in tens bv the United States Geolog- r?Icai survey. This fact vraa ascer tained on "August, ,28th, ; when Hangers Prench and ' Croghan checked -the measurements. It i ueileved that this variation Is doe i to evaporation, from succession if dry seasons. , , .? - v -1 v"" j , ' ' I ; 7"' " sS"" $ t J,..... ' A 1 1 . mpillHini lull ilHrT iMWHntnuil aln f " JrJ The giant mobile coast defense goa plctared above was recently in stalled in a Pacific coast fort. I The ran Em a. r&nro ot milea. Miss Natalie Blake recently visited Deer Hunting Opens Deer Reported Morel, With the opening of deer hunt ing season on September 15 sports men will be called upon to ob serve a change in the limit laws. Each hunter will be allowed but one" mule" deer. 'He may kill one mule deer and one black tail or two. black tails. Reports indicate that deer will be more plentiful in all sections of the state than they have been for years. Heavy Inroads made npon cougar have In no small degree been responsible for this Increase of deer. ff&rold Clifford, state game warden, was In San Francisco last week attending a conference of game authorities from western states; - M During the past two weeks the state game commission has plant I ed trout In various streams and lakes of Oregon as follows: Can I yon ;ree urani voumy. zza,uwv I rainbow Big Boulder Creek, 1 Grant county, R.000 rainbow: 1 Clear Creek. Grant county, 2,500 rainbow; Granite Boulder Creek. Grant county .ooo rainbow: North Fork Malheur river. 10.000 rainbow; . Blltsen river. Harney county, 10,000 rainbow; Anthony Creek, Baker county. 10,009 eastern brook: -North Powder Creek, Baker county, 5,000 rain bow; Antelope Creek. Baker coun ty. 5,000 rainbow; Wallowa Lake. 20,000 eastern brook. In Klam ath county plantings were made of eastern brook trout as follows: Crystal Creek. 24.000; Seven Mile Creek, 24.000; McCredie Springs. : r- - V qop pi CAR OF ------ DODEE- jwirwimnv VA to 474 :S. COlERCIAla vp&wm mrwai the fort la her Pontiac sedan. Season on Sept. 15th Plentiful Since iffT. 24.000; Larkin Creek, 24,000; Willlamsom river. 18,000; Wood river, 18.000. In Union county 4,- 000 rainbows were placed in the Grande Ronde river and 6,000 were planted in Lost. Lake. More than 400,000 cutthroats were planted In the north fork of the Necancium river in Clatsop county. The fish Pullman of the state game department is now engaged in delivering bass that have been salvaged from the sloughs of the Columbia river to various parts of the state. A large number of calls for bass have been made from var ious counties. No plantings will be made in bodies ot water that contain trout. Large catches of trout are be ing taken from the Pudding river which flows into the Willamette lust north of Aurora. They are eastern brook for the most part and are the result ot plantings that have been made by the game commission. A large number of eastern brook have been planted in the Molalla river and its tribu taries but few have been caught Anglers contend that the trout af ter being planted in the Molalla, a cold .swift moving stream, have migrated to the Pudding, a much warmer and a more - sluggish stream. Eastern brook thrive best in a slow moving stream or one that has many deep holes.. Read the Classified Ads- THE SEASON jh, TwNrwTwoOooaSmAM A NEW SEDAN MODEL AT A NEW LOW PRICE Dodge Brothers dt!crs now exhibiting a new full size two-Joor 5 -passenger sedan. It is a surprise in what it offers. A surprise in what it docs: A surprise in what it sells fbr.vWe will not even attempt to describe it .here. We could not do it justice.'' The car will speak for itself. 4 Sec Hi - Drive ttl You will , be surprised. . ' rv . j 1 , ' f - . i - - i -jsflBBsa 'Mssn Msnsaesrvs - a a - Bbnesteele Motor Go. fellow air transport executives. The development of air lines has been so rapid and in to widely sej anted sections of the country that the personnel of few of the com panies have been able to meet or exchange Ideas. . William P. McCraeken, Jr., As sistant secretary of commerce for aeronautics; Charles L. Lawrence, first vice-president of the Aero nautical chamber of commerce and the Curtiss-Wrignt corpora tion; T. B. Clement, general traf fic manager of Transcontinental Air Transport, Inc.: Mayor Albert Beach ot Kansas City; Col. Dun woody and Mr. Woolley will be the principal speakers at the open-1 Ing session, Monday afternoon, September IS th. Colonel Brittin will preside, at the first, session 'The' Tuesday morning session. September 17th, will be turned over to a discussion of methods used by - the principal operating lines In selling air traffic mail, passenger and express. Traffic executives from each of the com panies represented will deliver short talks on their methods and open discussion will follow. "The place of the municipal chambers of commerce in air transport development" will be made the subject of the afternoon session, with addresses to repre sentatives of chambers of com merce on the air transport routes by Col. Henderson W. G. Herron, of Air Investors, Inc.; and Colonel Brittin. While representatives of cham bers of commerce are in session. executives of the transport lines will be holding nine concurrent committee meetings on .important peases .at air trarac, development., t . ' . , . a - - i f . ' I including airports, accounting communications, publicity and ad vertising, facilities for handling passengers, ticket sales and solici tation, standard baggage weights, insurance for air travellers and development of air mail and ex press. The studies and reports made by each of the committees will be delivered in the general session scheduled for the third day. C. W. H. Smith, Gen. Traffic Manager of Western Air Express, will pre side at the morning session of the last day and Stanley Knauss of Stout Air Lines will conduct the closing session. There is one car to every 2.87 persons in California and one car to every 11.52 persons in Geor gia, with the average for other states running between these fig ures, according to the Oregon State Motor association. Oregon has a car for every 3.96 persons ranking in sixth place, with Cali fornia. Nevada, Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska leading her. The state of Washington is In 14th place wlth a car for every 4.6 persona. t a At 10:12 a. m. August 28th, the 100,000th visitor to Crater Lake National Park for the sea son of 1929, checked in at Anna Spring entrance. This number of park visitors was reached last year on September 4th, when at the endt the day 100.320 visit ors were recorded for the season. A travel iomparison over last -year to date, snows an increase ot 3, 172 cars and 10,455 people. sit Jsnsst jnsseh Msnsb '' CHKYSLta MOTOIf MODUCT TELEPHONE 423 pp-j-P mm... I .1 -... . 1 ...in . Mi ITTT I ii.ii .1 i.M'im .. i . , , .-mmmmmmmmimmmtt r Vv i' J : v -: v ' tj . n s v v - . - - V v i (q s. ; . . ..::.:::. ::;-V.. .-v,::; ' '- . v "Ti--"' t rT-in " ii i ii ii ;,'Vr-;-y " t V-"--Vi .Vr.-.-,....x-.t-i; " j " O " - - ; 1 j . - , . L ; T-r- Till HI Tlin The race started at 8:00 a. m. IFiTn nUIinITnTn - lira ran tiflbt! The above picture was taken Just after tbis Hudson Standard stock readier finished in first place, driven by Matt Ward in the 100-lap ra.3 at the Tulsa, Oklaho ma fairgrov : ds. In ithe first race Ward flnisl d first and Jimmie Davis finish ed second, both driv ing stock Hudson roadsters. The field was the largest and most rep resentative ever entered. Another stock Hudson roadster, j owned by Eddie Meyers, won the 12 hour endurance run on July 14, at the Roby speedway, Ham mond, Indiana. Mr. Meyers pur chased his Hudson roadster on Thursday July lfth, and. decde4 - io enier t in inas stoca car enaur - u ' writ ' J ' rt t . -. anee run. Time was so limited that the car went to the post with only 108 miles on the speedometer and without a test run. The rules ot the entry blank required that the top, windshield, spare tire, head lights, bumper, and muffler T The Schneider race this year, over a nuadrilateral course oft Cowes on the Isle of Wight, is ex pected to develop speeds of more than 300 miles an hour, compared with the 281 miles an hour with which Flight Lieutenant Webster won thf trophy for Great Britain in 1927- The contestants will race approximately 220 miles over the 31. 05-mile course. After the trophy race, the pilots will attempt to break the mark of 318 milts an hour for straight- .WBT BDeed. set by MaJ. Mario de 1 ' Bernard I, the Italia nflier. Speeds of 34f and 350 miles an hour are expected, The seaplane trophy, donated by Jacques Schneider, French sportsman, will go to the1 nation wlnnjng it three times in succes sion. Both Italy and the United State have two legs on the cup, SMOKES MM HISWEEK ompare its with cos -1 "s .a. I WHit Eiia V V fouhs Aim; srsiis niXYS-OVERLANp, , 1 be removed. The tar. was late .Saturday! evening and was at the track Sunday morning .at 7; 30 a. m. The race started at 8:00 a. m. and the Hudson took the lead im mediately. Nine stops were made during the 12 hours, all but two being only for change of drivers and gas, oil and water. Of the oth er two, one was for a tire change and the other to regulate the vac uum tank, no mechanical adjust ments besides this were made dur ing the race. The total mileage covered was 686 and gave the Hudson car first place by a wide margin. This is another record to be added to the long list hung up by the great er. Hudson Motor Car company to break all production records month by month for the first sev en months of the year. There were 250,032 Hudson and Essex motor cars produced in the first, seven months ot 1929. This was an in crease of 41,799 units tower: the same period in 192.8, which. .Ws the largest previous seven months period. 1 During the last six years auto mobile registrations in the United States have increased 62. Dur ing the same period in Oregon, car registrations have increased only 49. Following is a table showing the registration and per centage of gain ot the three coast states for the past years: 1923 1928 P. C All S. 15,092.177 24.493.124 62 Cal. 1.100,283 1,799,890 63 Ore. 165,982 248.118 49 Wash 258,264 402.875 66 Now that school is opening and the tourist is treklng homeward northwestern resorts are announ cing their closing dates. Rainier National Park announ ces the closing of Paradise Inn Tuesday. September 3rd, but ser vices will continue at the National Park Inn at Longmires and at the annex In Paradise Valley. Mount Baker Lodge will close September 7, while Crater Lake will continue until September 20 H AUTO 61 mm SMART, GRACEFUL INC, TdLEbo, OHIO:? CAPITAL WjpTORSCO.:;; 350 N. HfoiiV C-.',!r.; .':.-Teleplionis-2i25: pranaredr iiiiirn Tinr iiinr "Is there anything new in tires?" asks the average man, weary from reading competitive claims of various makes. "Yes, there is something new answers L. C. Rockill. sales mana ger of the Miller Rubber Co., re presented here by Russ Smith 'Here's a company that believes in building for future business, We held back dividends for two years and put that .money into de velopment and experiments. We aimed to make the best tire that could be made. "Our Miller Deluxe tire made its debut more than a year ago and Immediately established Itself as the car-owner'B friend. But we wanted 10;ake a Super Type of tire that could be sold in the stan dard tire' price range. "With that ideal in mind, we encouraged our engineers to pro duce what is actually a super-tire. We tested it ourselves, drove it under-inflated and over-loaded. We sent a test fleet down to Flor ida last winter with lnsrtuction to run the new Miller Geared-to-the-Road tires against the leading competitive makes of tires in the same standard class until one or both wore out. "They did it. Our Florida fleet ran 784,74 car miles or a grand total ot 3.129.000 tire miles. We wore out every competitive lire. and our Miller actually held up longer and 1 nsome cases twice as long as any of the 13 leading makes purchased from competi tors stocks for this; test. After making sure tbat every Miller tire would do as well Mr. Rockhill gave orders that a brand new guarantee should prevail. "We guarantee our new Miller Geared-to-the-Road tire to out wear any tire ot equal price." he says. The message has been broadsided to readers of newspa pers and magazines throughout the country. To enforce the rules of the air. Paris is organizing a flying squad of policemen, and will have smoke bomb Instead of a whistle or stick. Pere Lachaise, famous cemetery of Paris, now Is used as a park, beauty cairs LINES MAKE THIS LOW-PRICED CAR A STYLE LEADER ON LY among cars of much higher price can you find -any adequate comparison with the modish and beautiful de sign of the new Superior Whippet, MechanScalJy, too, the new Superior Whippet offers many features found on cars costing - two or three rimes as much. Whippetistheoiilylow-priced car with all these important advantages: Full force-feed-, compression engine for v more speed, power and pick- up; invar-strut pistons; extra long wheelbase; oversize bV ; loon tires; Finget-Tip Coin "'; tror; and, in the Six, a seyeti bearing crankshaft. i. "" ' WHlFFIT-i COACH v ; DOWN fATMBTCT. Oft Y O 0DD(B the Pay too little for a battery and you're on the road to trouble. A single tow-in charge or -a couple rechargings might cost you more than you saved on the price. Make the safety point your goal and youll be money ahead in the end. In a Willard Bat tery 6f the correct elec trical size dependable quality is never sacri ficed for low price. Mil lions of motorists, and 76 makers of cars, trucks and busses pro nounce it the best sound value you can buy. WILLARD BATTERIES For All Cars " Joe WiUiaas Center & High Phone 198 AsMciatd Deslen: Je WiUUaa, Cwttt an Hie -i WUUum, 275 a. Coal Orant rsrrls, 370 CtnUr ,- Bans Oarsc. M V. Cspttel Tsa Xmt Shop. 7 . Chaxch carry city oww, no a. i2ta tm Ouue. SS0 a. Cms'1 X. 1 E&irls Ast ferric. SSSS Fslrg. K4. act HMafoarttra. is sw mas Al's vr aarrica, St4 V. Ctareh Eeff Eltctite, S37 Otut Xstmb Gsrsn. 13S B. Ooml CkBm Motel Sam. ISIS V. Ceal gtll f StOTM 8SS . UbZty F Mile Paaak. SXS W. mgk Tdtam bwj atsoM, a. wtater Bnkbard Osng Ce. Hnsssia ' -'" SteMT Cuift, Aiwr CfeVh. metric. IkhMMiMl Xm B. Gwrff. rorti XA. ' atsale Tmtk .Otrst. ' Wesara roksid Garac. Broaka Catkrsar4 Same stattoa, .Oarvai Gaarfa Banchteeh. a. S. B. St Bickraan Oarsra, Btekxesn W.- Hswart Kaavx Braaks ; T. . aCanataav rarrrAal ' - Elfkwsv 4Hraae,.Jafliraaa Bapewall Oanga. BvaU Yaariat Oaxsga,. Oaxvals - Xaaal4 waca, ZaalA . . : Oaivsis Oarste, OarvaU T. 9. Wsttra, DaOas , - Pnacaa Tire Sarvle. Waatamia -Xaam'a Sarrtea etattaaa. Dattaa - O. X. CVaa, USIX City BaQrwaaa Oarafa, Its . 7 tricar Tire C 364 V. B3 ,Tla Cedar Sarvtee ataUaa, ' J u UCSL n A) V 'A' 1. V I . 4. I - t r f 4 4 . . . mi'. 'y - L X