DAILY EAST OEEGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON, v TUESDAY EVENING, MAECH 8, 1921. PAGE TWESTY-ON3 OLDSiiOIULE-'IS REPRESENTED ', HERE BV MONTE KELLY; MANY TRANSPORTATION ONE OF FIVE GREAT NECESSITIES ..-.; m CARS ARE Iff USE IN COUNTY TWENTY FOUR PAGES n Thii Car Has Been on Market' tot 23 ears; Carl is Made up in 4, 6 and 8 Cylinders, The "baby agency" In Pendleton' Automobile row 1 the Oldsmoblln asreiwy on Mivln street, operated by Mout Kelly. The OlUlsmnblle Ih sold through teiiera! suite dlHtrllm tlon and Mr. Kelly Is In chars of the local njoncy "'iwhtch was opened hole Just AuftMCi AUhoiiKh the agenry Ik new In th city, the machine has been handled her for' the v"t several year. Th OKtamnfoT)'Js a p1""" 'n the motorlnr world, huviuir been In th market tor th psst ZS yenr. The tar 1 mad In four, six and eight iyi- Indet styles, , f 'n. ,, .. . V Mr. Kelly,' In Mieokliig'o ih grow ing popularity of motor travel said tortny: "While railroad train will continue tc com and contlnu to go for many jrisrs, the 'Writing on th wall' Indi cate, that their ooe of actlvltle will boome mora and mora limited to con tinuous and long haul a time passes nrtil civilization become more com pletely motorized." , "Sign of the time are very easy to read; they all "indicate 'that motor transportation U Jum beginning and thAt the time will com when It will doiTilnntc the Ktiort haul field." A few week(igo, whea the railroad made ft big mlse in passenger and frelgiil rate, ait KuHtern paper made u vary pertinent comment on thl sub- Joct under th heudlng. "Are the Choo-plioo Car to Pass A Short Ham Currlem,' , "Another big boost In Railway, freight and passenger rate, and an other Hr boom for th ship-hy-tru'-lc-for-Mhort-haul movement and the tra vel -ly-iiuto Cushion" wrote tho editor. 'Ami why not'' To ship by frelgh' ,ui JoN iiK'i. ... in addition to tint ha.' by'tn'ii', two haul by truck in.j to i-e C'jr. In ;vl(h the freight .d ed tiiirt op-i irom It to the pluco vl vtv the gocif ar varied. ,'""icu f-eycro on the trxxtU- '..ii- ! the dlst-iiic i great the r'-j l.m airipoHltion i- !o rosn them to t'.eir ultimate t'crtliii-lion without further troti..s inie 1 1 a evpenstve na:i'ill"K (li.d :lt)uy. - "Naturally the Increase In rail and rMp rait will alee travel bv a itor.io bile more pcpuKi than ever. 'eii l. are ever, going all the way from It. tm to California by auto became the train rule are o I icn. Score of finli,ea are (-limning to go to Florida by ai:n tin winter In ;uer that they may rti out th big rost of getting there by steamer rnd train." FRENCH PAtROL'OTEM f we need an object lesson In the Importance of road maintenance, we have only to turn our eye toward France, which Kan livo'lved- -the finest ystem o keeiitug MP -roiW In exist ence!, The French rttnlnteimnce ya tem wa Installed by the first Napol eon, whoe unerring mind realized to Ih full the importance of good road, always In good comL'Hon. The French aystem embod.1 a-Corp of patrolmen, working constantly on Hie .national road. These men have earn- given length of road ohder .their care, about four mile to the man. Know one I reponible for the condition of hi dls- trlct at all time. They cover their dlttrlct every tlsv. . The patrolman drive over th road .'n a wa-wheeled cart, carrying a vupply" of mending materials, sufficient for any ordinary break. Bvery altghtest hole In the'Kiir. face la patched a noon a It appear. It serious trouble arises from any oaue the patrolman' riot I fie hi In spector and. the repair gang conn- to the rescue. . In France the olg of highway pa trolrrian are usually given to veterans who have retired, from army service. The pay 1 not large.' but the patrol man gel a house with a plot of ground, th whole constituting an honorable livelihood, y '' Wight it" nor"bT"pTiwn(Vo"Tor" us to follow a ilmllar lino of operation. We have sotie million of veteran of our armies. Many thoUHanda OT them will be glad to secure a permanent! mean of livelihood, especially 'la the open Hr. It mnf not be without profit to ex amine briefly the coat of such a na tional highway maintenance eyntern. Suppose our hard surfaced highway system eventually comprlws 300,000 mile. A patrolman with a small mo tor car to carry hi tool and materi al could handle ten mile of road, go ing over hi dlxtrlt, every ' day and making any needed repairs. A force of 10,000 patrolmen would cover the entire road system. If we placed the wages of these men at 11000 per an num, our total expenditure would be 130,000,000. If we double thl sum to Include the cost of running a car, sup plying materials, etc., we have a to tal of l0, 000.000, not at all a dispro port'nate expenditure when we con S'der the return. W spent more than thl every year in making extensive re pairs and doing rebuilding that th pa trol' system, would obviate. It might even be possible to furnish the high way patrolnati with .1 cottage and garden plot, after the French custom, and make th Job attractive to men with famlllt . The weakest link In our American system of Improved highways 1 It method of maintenance. We shall never achieve real progress In good road development until we remedy this condition, say Alexander John son In Motor. ' , It is th present habit among road milder In thl country to lay down a hard aurfaced road and then leave It trustingly in the hand of Providence. This bespeak a bland and childlike habit of thought which 1 Inspiring, hut unhappily it I costing the coun try a good many hundred of million of doUar In premature repair expense and needles rebuilding cost. No oth er product of man's constructional genius la subject to quite aa many viclsltudes of wear asid exposure a the highway surface. Millions of ve nicies of varying weight are passing over the road surface every year. Inj Mtdition it la subject to conntant attack by the- elements, rain, snow, sun, cold and heat. All sre free to do their worst. And they Hike full advantage cf their license. The total cost of re pair and rebuilding operations thereby made necessary would stagger not hu inanity, but the taxpaylng section thereof. If a patrolman Is constantly watching any given strip of highwsy and on the first sign of a break gives first aid or summon the repair gang to -"o a somewhat more ambitious Job, there will lie no pot-holes to develop Into great gashes that necessitate re building. It is tho old saying of the "stitch in time." Any one of our really effective road surface will last for year enough to make an adequate re turn on the money Invested In It, If it I given proper attention. If the "If" could be eliminated there would tie no more stories of highway built from the proceed of bond Issues and re built long before the amortisation of the original bonds. .And that Is pre cisely the sort of financial wlld-cattlng that makes good roads progress difficult. Is one of the five necessities of life," said a prominent business men of Pendleton recently and one who is In terested In the automobile as a fac tor In the development of the country. ''We require food, fuel, clothing, shelter and transportation. Without transportation, the other necessities could not be distributed. - "Transportation moves the seed to the farms and the crops away. It move food and clothing to merchanla' stores and distributes them among the people who need them. It moves nm-tcrl-i'e tor. building purposes. . "Wkhouf transportation our cities would wither and die; people would starve. Without transportation, the farmer would have to learn how to make his own clothing. ' '"Without transportation there would be no progress." "And foremost 'of the transportation mediums of the present and future stands the automobile. "It stands foremost because It gives every man the advantage of directing to tho best market the commodity he sells, whether it be a product of the soil or factory, or man's own labor. ''It stands foremost because It Is closer 'to .the needs of the Individual than any other means of', efficient transportation ever has been. "With these Indisputable facts be fore us. .'t Is difficult to understand how any man can sea anything but great success for the automobile business."' 75 Years Ao- NICO J. BLYDENSTEIN AGENT 222 E. Court Street OIIj VtKtdm DKVrtOI'KI) ADMONTON. Alta, March 8. tA. P.) Preparatory to their extensive development of the Fort Norman oli fields thl spring, a large oil concern has purchased twenty-four homing nieons to be used In dispatch com munication work between the far north and Peace River town. The company plana to establish two relay stations between Peace River town and Fort Norman, the distance to be covered oy each relay of piegon carriers amounting to 250 miles. If You Use GATES TRES You Have No Tire Trouble Gertson & Marty 639 Cottonwood Street Phone 595 Automobile Show. Lets Go! March 10-11-12. Quality PRINTING at Reasonable Prices East Oregonian Printing Department First nbdlliudonmrnt. It was Maude's first day at school. also the first day of the term. The teacher, of course, was busy seating the children and getting things started properly, "Here, Maudle." she sntd, "you may alt here for the present." "I sat there all day,"' Maude tear fully told her mother that evening, "but she never brought me the pres ent." : Overlooked. "I was a private," mourned BUI Jones, "I never had no luck. "For when promotions came along "They always passed the buck." ' American Legion Weekly. Dalton Captor Gets Reward 1 ft JL J J J fiK-' ri Paul B. Draper (left) of Heyworth. III. received Itf.OO" re s wart for tho eanturo of William Daltoo (right I the boy clerk, who walked eat of tho Northern Trust Company Chicago with "!. . la Liberty bond and fled to HeyworU. Below oaclal la ' ' liioatfli over Xb9 moTgjSlfeofljgt.. 2L Wh at's Between .Battery. Plates Your Are the plates of your battery INSULATED from each other it your battery insured agatr.it separator troubles for the full life of the plates? , . Or are the plates merely SEPARATED with the con stant liability of short circuits and wastage of current, with a bill for putting in new separators always hanging over you? ' ; Is it a Wtllard Threaded Rubber Battery? Or just an ordinary battery with -ordinary separators that carbonize, puncture, warp and crack, that sooner or later have to be replaced at your expense? Willard Threaded Rubber Battery insulation that outlasts the plates more miles of uninterrupted service per dollar. The list of cars and trucks below,. is arranged alpha betically for your convenience. Cars Equipped With Willard Threaded Rubber Batteries Aesae Ahrra-Fx All Asieriraa Alll- ChalMer Asaerleaa American LaKraar-. Asserleaa 1. Prance f Canada A sea AraaleaVr Attrrkary A barn Anatla Avery Bans Tele Collier Harris ' llaynes I.averne Bash ' Peerlea ' Seisrrnve .Transport 8,11 Colonial Klrar Henner M M C kelson Penaeot Shelby Trnjor ,,e, Comet KIKln Highway Madison , Kelaon rhlannn T Twin CMy Bessemer , Commrrrr F. W. D. Holmes Marmon LeMooa I'leree-Arrow Signal U ltimate ,Bethlehea Commodore ..Frg Holt Master Noble l"remler Sonthern Irana Conaolldatrd Frrgu . Hnpmobile JtcFarian Kama H V Knight. Slanjard Voile Bolalro- Ferrl. M-ribor, McL-Bhll- Northwa, " " SnSut SSSeV VuTcan , Hrorkwar .Crawford Franklin .. H C Menaea A'orwalk -Heo Stewart -Hard Buffalo Cnnnlnaham Follon ..Independent Menominee Ojcren ..Hrpublle sanwood lFranee Canadian Manlela .M C i.hi... Mereede ld lllrkory KeVere Stewart r V Ware . Briaeor Karl Harford snniann Meree Oldsmobile ' ..Kiddle Hendebker -Werner . . . ,. Cannonball ' Havla Ulant Jordan Merrury Onrida , Kubinaon ..Stuls , WeateoM Capllol Day Elder tllidfl ' Kissel Merit Oshkosh Roek Falls Sunbeam White Carroll llrnby Oreat Western Korbler Meteor tPlqaa) Packard Howe l .rlDlon .Wllla ' Case Dependable H C S l.ancla Met I'alKC Samaoa ' -Thomart Wllaon Chetrolet -Diamond T Hahn Laada ..Vtillcr ..Tarker .. (Canada) ..Ttffla Wiatbrr Citroen Dlsle Flye Hattlrld I.ewis-Hall Mitchell I 'a recti Sandow Tiffin Wlalon Clydoadale Dodge HlwUeje Lexington Napoleon -I'alteraon Sayera rowioto Wolverine ' 1 ' r h - S . - . k 'il!tl 'h !:: HA H The? manafftettirera of ( the ran tinted above have acleeted Threaded Rubber Iaaulatloa for their earn beeaaaes 1. Rubber U the beat ! latfitK material know a. 2. Threaded Rubber Iu Intloa la the Most aatla- 1 faetorr form of orouB rubber aad battery la-" aulatlou wuiit be oroua to allow free pAinaKe of the aolutlou. 3. Kxnerleuee ha proved that Threaded Rubber In-ulatto outlaiit-i the battery iliei---and eou aequently meann areater value and pt renter aatlM faetlon to the owner of their ram. PENDLETON STORAGE BATTERY CO. Corner W. Court and Garden Sts. At the Pendleton Automobile Show ' March 10, 11, 12 Sub-Dealer HIGHWAY SnnVICE STATIOX Coart and Webb STEF.I.K'S SERVICE STATIOV Matlock and Italer NEIL dt BARKER llrrwlaton, Ore. KF.Rl.EV'S G An.tt.E Helix. Ore. WKSTI.AWS AVTO CO. Eclio, Ore. STAM-lt:i.l Al'TO CO. Stanflrld, Ore ...si . e "J l THREADED RUBBER BATTERY ) : 1 vS 'f' ' I ( s. I, ,, ,,. V.itea-o, J