Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| FRUTIESS SEARCH " FOR HIDEN EOLD Explorers Learn That $1,- 500,000 Lost With Steamer Was Found Years Ago. SAN PEDRO, Calif., June 25.—A Jong tale of woe was unfolded by seven members of a treasure-hunting expe- dition that arrived here recently in the purse-seiner Balboa after an un- syccessful search for $1,500,000 in gold bullion that was aboard the old Pacific Mail side-wheeler Golden Gate, which burned and sank off Manzanillo, Mexico, in 1862 The Ealboa returned May ., battered from severe buffetings by wind and tide. i Charts Purchased. Several months ago C. G. Curry, a railway conductor of Leavenworth, Kans.. had on his train a passenger who was said to be the only living person who knew the exact location of the sunken treasure. Curry pur-i chased from the man charts of the treasure ship's location and formed a syndicate to find the golden hoard which, it was said, had lain more than 60 vears on the floor of the Pacific Ocean A crew to man the Balboa was ob. tained here. It included Capt. Clif ford Casey. owner of the vessel; Rob- ert Turner, a caretaker of a yacht club: Hans Pohlman, who was skipper of the racing yawl Poinsettia; an en gineer, a second mate and two sea. men Find Wrecked Ship. The remains of the Golden Gate they found off Manzanillo without difficulty. ure, which lay in eight fz S rough water, proved unsuccessful, as 2 high surf and a heavy ground swell repeatedly upset their small skiff. Dis- couraged. the expedition put into Manzanillo, where they learned from the American consul that other treas. urehunters had recovered the bullion years ago. The expedition then headed for San Pedro. Their return voyage was one of hardships. They encountered a gale that continued for day Their food and fuel supplies ran short. Seven hungry. weary and disappoint- {BRITAIN PROTESTS chich left here May 2, | Measures are being taken to protect ed men stepped off the Balboa when 1t docked here. MANY THOUGHT DEAD IN BLAST AND FIRE IN OLD PLAYHOUSE (Continued from First Page) the south wall of the theater fell, crushing several small stores Henry Schraeder. who was in the theater, he roof and floor seemed to give a’ about the same time. “All T could see was wreckage and evervbody swarming, screaming and shouting.” he said. “I don't know how 1 got ou Firemen Handicapped. Firemen were handicapped in fight- ing the flames when the north wall of the building collapsed into Fifth street, bringing_down several high- tension wires. It was an hour and a half before the electrical current was turned off and firemen could approach with safety. Two companies of firemen who were fighting the flames from the top of a building narrowly escaped death when the walls collapsed. They succeeded in leaping to the roof of an adjoining building. C. A. Buckley, a policeman, said he was sure most of the people in the theater escaped. although he declared that some undoubtedly had been trapped. Melvin MeNut, negro porter in a restaurant on the ground fleor of the building, sald that half an hour before the explosion he went into the basement with the cook and they found gas fumes. He discussed with the cook the advisability of notifying the gas company, he said, and had gone outside to get fresh air when the blast occurred. McNut said he felt sure several per- sons in the regtaurant did not escape. A second blast was reported to have followed the first by 10 minutes. Propepty damage was placed at $150,000 by Fire Chief Henderson. Once Pride of City. The story of the Gillla Theatér— “the old Giilis.” as it has been known 4n recent years—is one of retrogression. From the pride of the city and show- ing the best attractions of the day, the Gillis declined, until midnight bur- lesque has been its principal feature in the last few years. The openinz night, 42 years ago, al event long remembered Mlle. Rhea. the Bel-| “Adrienne Lecouvrer, was the first night attraction. Cost $140,000. The theater was built at a cost of $140,000, & huge sum for a_playhouse in those days. From that day in 1883 the Gillis has had a varied career. It drew the best stars and attractions for a while; then, as the city moved eouth it had to depend on plays that appealed to the market disirict in which it was located. Then there came a tims when the Gillls ran melodrama, and recently it has alternated between motion pie tures and low-priced midnight bur lesque. The theater was given to Kansas| City through the philanthropy of Mrs Mary Troost, her will directing that the opera house be bullt and iz4 nat roceeds go to the maintenance of the illis Home for Orphans ERVICE. A special service will be held at the Natfonal Cathedral at 11 o'clock Sun. | day to observe the 536th anniversary | of the Battle of Kossovo. Dr. William L. De Vries, canon and chancellor of the cathedral, will talk on the significance of Kossovo da The Serbian and American flags be carried side by side and the ca thedral choir will sing the Serbian national anthem. Dr. Ante Tresich Pavichich, Minister of the Kingdom of the Serbs Croats and Slovenes, will be present. The battle of Kossovo was fought June 28. 1389, between the Serbs and Turks. Kossovo day has for centuries celebrated the historic battle, at which Czar Lazare fell while leading his troops. Why Cats Drop on Feet. Yrom the Kansas City Star. How does a cat knew how to land right side up when she is dropped? ‘The answer is, according to Prof. R. Magnus of the University of Utrecht, Holland, that she doesnt need to “know” at all, at least consciously, In the course of experiments to de- termine the nature of the “sense of right-side-upness” possessed by all animals, Prof. Magnus put the fore- brain of a cat, where consciousness resldes, out of commission by an op- eration, and then dropped the animal upsidedown. Every time he did it pussy righted herself just as quickly and as easily as though she had full possession of her faculties. Prof. Mangus therefore concludes that keep- ing right side up is simply a mechan- i Dr. Henry and m. jcal or reflex action, quite beneath the dm of bigher centerie ~N ntion from the ‘ " CANTON SHOOTING; RIOTS IN SHANGHAI (Continued from First Page.) ment, based on it statement that disturbed internal conditions would militats against the suceess of the project, the assembling of the com- mission was postponed for & year by elght of the powers and indefinitely by France. Some time ago the Chinese govern ment intimated that the proposal could be revived. Owing to the fail- ure of ratification of the nine power treaties by France and to the increase of internal unrest in China, no step was then taken, and it is not regarded as probable that the juridical study can be initiated at this time while China {s in a ferment of anti-forelgn feeling and unrest. HELP IS PROMISED. Chinese in Manila Willing to Ald Strikers. MANILA, June 26 (#.—Chinese leaders today declared they are sym- pathetic to the strike movement in China and willing to contribute money, but are not willing to declare a gen- oral strike here. Virtually all the Chinese in the Philippine Islands are engaged in business as merchants or small-shop keepers. There are only a few domes- tics and dock workers. The strike in China has already af- fected the trade of the Philippines, as reflected In the customs receipts for June. TROUBLE IN AMOY. Minor Auti-Foreign Demonstration Is! Staged. AMOY, China, June 26 (#).—Some minor antiforeign demonstrations took place here yesterday, and the student element, agitating for a gen- eral strike and boyeott of forelgners, is becoming more excited. Chinees au- thorities and foreign business men are exerting every effort to prevent the movement from becoming effective. foreign A Japanese gunboat has arrived and American and British marines are ex- pected. BLAMED ON CHINESE. Shooting in Canton Declared Started by Natives. HONGKONG, June 26 (®).—Dr. Al- exander Baxter, vice president of Can- ton Christian College, today corrected tatements issued by a faculty and student committee of the college in which it was reported that investiga- tion showed foreigners at Shemeen opened fire upon Chinese in procession on June 23. “I have personally gath. ered information which entirely satis- fied me firing started from the Chinese side,” said Dr. Baxter. The Hongkong Telegraph today re- printed from the Canton Gazette a se- ries of depositions attributed to Ameri- can members of the Canton Christian College faculty relating to the firing upon Chinese in a procession opposite the foreign settlement on June 3. In a statement furnished to Reu- ter's News Agency and signed in the presence of the British colonial secre- tary, the assistant colonial secretary and the vice chancellor of the college, it said, Alexander Baxter, vice presi- dent, said: “I am the vice president of Canton Christian College. On Tuesday eve- ning students and members of the staff returned from the neighborhood of Shameen (the foreign settlement), carrying * with them blood-stained clothes. They represented to me that a procession in which they took part, while halted near Shameen, was fired upon from Shameen, without any fir- ing from the Chinese side. This state- ment was corroborated by some of our most responsible Chinese teachers, who had been present. “Dr. J. M. Henry, who is president of the college, and I attempted to reach Shameen to find out how mat. ters stood, but we were unable to ob- tain a launch or a boat. ““The council then sent some five se- nior teachers, who had not been in the procession, to make further Investiga- | tion and report on the number of | killed and injured “When the investigators returned, the president and I called a meeting | ot the council, consisting of five Chi { nese. four Americans and myself. | Messengers who returned corroborat- | ed every detail of the previous report. | “As a result of further discussion | in the council, a committee of Chinese, with the president of the college and myself, were pressed to issue a state- ment. This statement was printed i Chinese and signed by Dr. Ty, my. self and the Chinese, as representing the Canton Christian Collége. This matter was arranged at midnight on June 23 and I have not seen the docu- ment since. Therefore, I am unable to say whether the translation ap- pearing in the Hongkong Telegraph on June 26 is a cor 3 Drafting of the n Chinese by Chinese, who informed 1f of the contents. | Other Americans present left in the meantime and no member of the for- eign staff other than Dr. Henry and myself knew what was in the docu- ment, “I left the college at 9 o'clock in the morning and was unaware wheth- er or not the document was signed by others later. I was not aware that the document was addressed to the American Government or the American people, nor that it purported to have been adopted by 17 American staff members of the Canton Christian Col. lege. ““When I signed the document I had no information whatever as to its correctness, other than statements of Chinese members of the colls who had been in the procession the reports sent out by messengers: ‘““Since the time when I signed the document I have personally gathered infermation from eyewitnesses which entirely satisfied me that firing was started from the Chinese side. “At the same time I am of the Every Day —office positiona are being satis- factorily filled by The Star Help ‘Wanted advertisements. Remember when placing an advertisement your object {s not to receive a lot of replies, but to secure just one competent bookkeeper, stenographer or elerk, To accomplish this, write an advertisement containing de- tajls of requirements for the position and other information likely to attract the right party. In today's Star are 23 ad- vertisements . for Office Help, including SALESMEN NOTARY PUBLIC OFFICE MANAGER SALES MANAGERS STENOGRAFHBRS BOOKKEEPERS TYPISTS SALESLADIES and 12 advertisements for Office Situations, including BOOKKEEPER 3 GENERAL OFFICE WORKERS SALESMEN SECRETARY STENOGRAPHERS CASHIER THE EVENING -STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, JUNE 26, '1925. |Senorita Tosses Herself From Roof " To Win Suitor, But Loses Him Instead Plays Hide and Seek With Firemen Called in by Father, and Finally Leaps From House Top Into Net—Lover Sees Jump and Retires. Correapondance of the Assoctated Press. MEXICO CITY, June 5.—Ines. Var- sn‘-, a 16:year-old senorita as deter- mined as she fs romantic, recentl, served an ultimatum on her parents tz the effect that, unless they gave their consent to her marrlage with Isidro Covarubias within 10 minutes she would throw herself from the roof of the four-story spertment building in which the Var, family lived. Where- upon she fled upstairs, locked the door leading to the roof and poised herself on a cornice overlooking Nuevo Mexico street. Cirlaco Vargas, the father, tore his hair in desperation for a few seconds as he reflected that his daughter had inherited the firm character of her mother, and the latter, he felt s from past experience, would never re- cede from her stand that Isidro, as a son-in-law, 'was impossible. Then he dashed to the nearest police only a block away, to seek disinter ed counsel. A few hurried sentences explained the situation to comisario. That of- ficlal had an inspiration. Next to the police station were the firemen. called out a hook ring originally came from. As far as they were con- cerned. their statements represented their honest conviction. I should like to state frankly that an error of judgment was made on my part in signing the document without making a fuller investigation of the statements which it contained and without waliting for information from Shameen." Fear for Missionaries. All the foreign missionaries have e caped from Canton, but there are grave fears concerning the fate of some of those in the country districts from whom nothing has been heard since the outbreak of the anti-foreign movement. This is the report of O. W. McMillen and W. W. Creighton, American Presbyterian missionaries, who arrived here today from Canton. They added that during the anti. foreign parade in that city Tuesday the foreign concession w strongly attacked, reliable witnesses saying Chinese military ecadets opened fire on Shameen The missionaries were assured that the lives and property of foreigners would be safe, but they fear for their property if the agitation continuas. A British gunboat has gome to Wuchow. A food control system has been established at Macao, the Portu- guese colony at the mouth of the Can- ton River. (The Indoe-China Navigation Co., a British concern, has a large fieet of steamers engaged in the coasting trade of China and nearby countries.) RADIO AS TEACHER. Swedish Fans Will Learn English Through Program. Correspondence of the Asgociated Press. STOCKHOLM, June 7.—In order to enable* Swedish radio fans to enjoy better the programs sent out from American stations a course In Eng- lish will next Fall be started by the official radio service. Later on other foreign languages will be taught, but the start will be made with English, Capt. George Reutersward, managing director of the Swedish radio organi- zation, has announced. The course will take the entire Win- ter season. It includes lectures by professors and travelers and readings by authors of their own works.. o Locomotives recently ordered by the government of Czechoslovakia for its lines will travel 65 miles an hour on evel stretches and 35 miles an hour in the mountains. and the fire laddies, all dressed up in huge helmets and light blue uniforms, clanged to the scene of the impending tragedy, unturling a life net as they went. They arrived just about 9 min, utes and 65 seconds after Ines had s sued her ultimatum and was about to launch herself into space. Thers en. sued a lively game of tag between Ines on the roof and the firemen, with their net, down in the street, while a gath- ering crowd cheered and Oirlaco at- tacked the locked door with an ax. Just as the door gave way Ines thought she had outwitted the net holders and jumped. By & supreme effort, and overturning a couple of urchii the firemen managed to in- terpose enough of the net between Ines and the pavement to break her fall. But she achiaved her purpose, for the sight of her dsughter whirling through the air destroyed the last of Mamima Vargas' o) tion. i not, however, win laidro. That youth faded from the scene after witnessing his sweetheart's leap. The papers quoted him the next day as ptatin, that he did not think he uuufl enough of the caveman stuff to live happlly with such a woman as Ines promised to become. FAMOUS MANSION WILL BE RESTORED 0ld Gamble Place in Florida, Hid- ing Place of Judah P. Benja- min, Given to State. By the Associated Press. TALLAHASSEE. FIt., June 26.— Restoration work on the old Gamble mansion, hiding place of Judah P. Benjamin, secretary of state of the Southern Confederacy, is expected to begin as soon as the $10,000 appro- priated for the purpose by the Florida Legislature becomes avallable. The appropriation was made at the request of the Judah P. Benjamin Chapter, Daughters of the Confed- eracy, which offered to purchase the property and donate-it to the State, on condition that the latter would re- store and maintain it. The old man- sion, located at Ellenton, in Manatee County, will be preserved as a mem- orial to the Southern cabinet mem- ber, and as a fitting example of South- ern’ architecture of the ante-bellum period The house was built in 1847, accord- ing to the annals of Manatee County It was constructed almost entirely of native materials, and is of the dignified style of architecture char- acteristic of it day. Situated on the three-acre plot of ground, half a mile back .from the Manatee River,.the mansion oyerlooks a mile-wide expanse of water. Had Bad Fortune. The Gambles came to Manatee County from Louisiana, it s said, bringing with them 300 slaves, with a view to cultivating huge sugar planta- tions. But {ll fortune appears to have befallen them at every turn. and the place finally was sold. It passed through the hands of successive own- ers until the Civil War, when the house was occupied by Capt. Archie McNeil. It was while he was in pos- session of the place, in 1865, that the events transpired which made the Gamble mansion one of the historic spots of the South. Judah P. Benjamin frequently was reterred to as the “braina of the Con- federacy,” and at the closs of the Civil War the Federal authorities of- || fered a reward of $50.000 for the cap- ture of the ‘SBouthern cabinet officer. The refugge of a “lost cause,” Benja- min begawy. a fiight to England. En route, he ble mansion for som Stop a Second! Don’t lose a second—be the first at 14th and G on this second day of Sidney West’s Semi-Annual Clearance of '3 and 4-Piece Spring and Summer SUITS Now 26.25 33.75 41.75 48.75 56.25 Formerly 35 45, 55 65 75 Formerl 'y Now 40" 30.00 50 37.50 60 45,00 70 52.50 8 63.75 Tropicals and linens NOT in- cluded. An early selection gives vou a full range of patterns, styles, sizes choose from. and fabrics to See them today! d | stated that the ught safety in the Gam i:;. he remained n hiding COOLIDGE MAY BUY WHITE COURT SOON FOR ABOUT $125,000 (Continued from First Page.) along Puritan read for about a mile and a half. The wind had shifted during the night, and the air, while still brisk and chilly, was not so cold as it was vesterday, and the skies !md cleared, giving every promise of dn ideal day —the kind the North Shore people br;{ about. is appearance was greatly invigo- rated. 'here was a good color in his face, and his gait was livelier than ordinary There {s no doubting the fact that Mr. Coolidge already has been benefit- ed by his coming h Some of the residents in Swampscatt who had seen him during his previous visits thought, after seeing him on the day of his ar- rival, that while he had taken on a little weight, he looked pale and worn. They thought at first that he was not a well man. Maj. James F. Coupal, the President’s physiclan, who fis staying near White Court for the Summer, soon dispelled any such idea. He sald this morning after seeing the Pregident that he is in perfect phys ical condition. Maj. Coupal, smiling, President and Mrs. Coolidge are 3o well that he is the one man in the presidential retinue here who will probably have abso. lutely nothing to do all Summer. Gossip Rife on Dawes. Vice President Dawes, who has been visiting in Kennebunk, Me., will be within_ striking distance of the Sum- mer White House today, when he goes to Boston to see Owen D. Young, his assoclate on the Reparations Com- mission. The general's présence in Boston has already started tongues wagging, and there will be all sorts of wild speculation about breaks and coolness and the like, if he is not in- vited to White Court or unless the general drops in on the presidential household in his customary informal fashion before leaving Boston. At the executive office in Lynn to- day it was said that there was noth- ing to indicate that the President had invited the Vice President to coms to Swampscott, or that the Viee Presi- dent had signified his intention .of coming. The executive office is functioning Just as though it was back in Wash- ington. The President, however, has not yet put in an appearance. Secretary Sanders said today that no communication has been received asking the President to review the Ku Klux Klan parade to be held in Wash- ington in August. . Army Officers Transferred. Maj. Townsend Whelen, Ordnance Department. has been transferred from Fort Benning, Ga.. to this city; First Lieut. Albert J. Lubbe, Signal Corps, from Camp Alfred Vail, N. J to this city, and First Lieut H. Lastayo, 16th Field Artiller: Fort Myer, Va. to the West Military Academy Canadian-Australian Treaty Read. OTTAWA, Ontario, June 26 (#).— The bill giving effect to the Canadian. Australian trade treaty was given sec. ond reading in the Senate last night Point i Japanese Earthquake Reduces - Wealthy Man to Extreme Poverty Resident of Honjo, Losing Home, Family and Riches, Now Earns Living by Fishing in the Mud of Tokio Canals. Correspondence of tar and the Chicago aliy” feve TOKIO, June 2.—Before the earth- quake of 1923 he was a wealthy man with a home in Honjo, & motor car and friends. Now he {s making a liv- ing by fishing in the mud at Tokio's canals for junk which he sells to get himself food. N Inquisitive people who go across the Sumida River to that part of Toklo | which has least recovered from the earthquake, may see the unfortunate wading through one of Honjo's or Fukagawa’'s numerous canals, with a basket slung on one hip and a short staff with a sharp hook at one end in his hand, Valuables Swept to Streams. Undoubtedly millions of yen worth of various articles were lost in the canals during the days of the earth- quake holocaust in 1 As most of the canals were tide-water channels, when the tide is low it is possible to see some of the larger objects. Also innumerable smaller articles GREENLAND MUSK OXEN SPEND SUMMER IN SOUTH Ability to Stand Climate of Nor- way Being Tested by ‘Experimenters. Correspondence of the Associated Pross OSLO, Norway, June 1. —Ten musk oxen, brought from Greenland re- cently on a sailing vessel, are spend- ing the Summer on Kjiholmen Island, off the west coast of Norway It is hoped they will become used to the climate of northern Europe. The flesh of these animals makes excel lent eating, as Arctic explorers can testify, and there is always a demand for them in zoological gardens. The animals wander at will about the island, finding an abundance of food in the grasses and rough herb- age. They still resent the approach of human beings, however, and when danger or disturbance is sensed the | bulls form a protective ring about the cows and snort viclently. The most anxious time for those Interested in the experiment will be during the Summer. The natural habitat of the musk ox is among the bleak regions of Arctic America, and it is possible that they will not su vive a more southern Summer. There is also danger that they will bring about their own deaths through eat- ing too greedily of the richer grass of Kjiholmen. .- Cat Mothers Twin I2aby Foxes. SEATTLE., June 23 (@) ball, a cat owned by H. Snow- G ensen of the Silver Fox Farm near Tacoma, | is playing the role of mother to two baby foxes. When the mother of the foxes showed a lack of maternal in. terest and left them, Snowball adopted the twins with good ccess. are now buried deep in the mud, some being of considerable value. Much money {s also said to have been lost in the canals by persons who were making their frantic way through the water to get away from fires, or who sought safety in the waters of the canals from the scorching heat. This man lost wife and children, father and mother. home and all in the disaster. People think that his mind is unbalanced. Occasionally Makes s Find. Anyhow, he spends the daylight hours slowly walking through the canals at low tide digging up this and that. Every now d‘lhen he strikes on something which can be sold for a few sen. Occasionally he has found a 1mn'.le or a pocketbook with money n it. He recognizes no one. He lives in a miserable hut.on the bank of ene of the canals. A handful of rice and a plece or two of “daikon” (pickeled radish) constitute a meal. pyright 1925 by Chicago Daily News Co.) Attempts Daylight Flight. SALT LAKE CITY, June 26 (®).— Capt. A. S. Herold, U. §. A., hopped off from here in an airplane at 3:35 a.m. (mountain time) today in an endeavor to fly to San Francisco and | Felt hats 18 inches in diameter, of | rass green and coral, and which may {be carried in & handbag, are being ! worn by English women. Lee cash, balance in 1, 2 electric roads. | ! Conrad Realty Co. Auction, return within the period of daylight. | COUNTESS CRONSAC DIES AT AGE OF 77 Had Been Well Known in So- ciety Here and in Virginia . for 20 Years. Countess Marguerite d'Adhermar d'Cronsac, well known in Washing- ton and Virginia society for the past 20 years, died at 10 o'clock today in her apartments in the Connecticut 1150 Connecticut avenue, after a long {llness. The countess had reached her 77th birthday Tuesday. Although ill for several months her condition did not take a turn for the worse until a week ago today, when she was confined to bed. Death was due to complication of diseases. Her son, Count Raoul d’Adhemar, and a cousin, Mrs. L. Robertson Childs, were at the bedside when death came Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the coun tess, whose maiden name was Mar. guerite Cromwell Labrot, went to France when a young woman and there maried Count Gaston d'Adhe. mar of Toulouse, member of an old and distinquished French family, in 1873. The count and countess came to America about 20 years ago, pu chasing Mossenck Manor, on the Rap- pahannock River near Fredericks burg, where they lived for about a year. The family returned to France where a short time later the count died. Since his death the countess has divided her time between Mossneck Manor and her apartments here in the Connecticut. In addition to her son and Mrs. Childs, the countess is survived by another cousin, Mrs Wallace Shillito of the Plaza Hote! New York City. AUCTION | Sale of 37 of the most desirable BUILDING LOTS in | Arlington Co., Va., on Highway In the Resirtcted Subdivision of “Lee Ridge” 413 Miles from Key Bridge and 3§ Mile from Falls Church Near Schools and Churches Saturday, June 27th 1925—Beginning at 1:30 P.M. Drive out Lee Highway or take Bus at 35th and M Streets N.W. Lots 75 to 80 feet by 130 deep at your own price. and 3 years. No mosquitoes or malaria. Terms one-fourth Electricity. Two bus lines. Two M. E. CHURCH Realtor Falls Church, Va. | Phone Falls Church 39 | | Meet the FRE Pennsylvania Ave. and Railroad Ave. S.E. Newest Minute Service Station! Four Quarts of POLARINE OIL Saturday, June 27th, 1925 With each purchase of five gallons or more Triple-Filtered Standard Motor Gasoline. South End of Pa. Ave. Bridge 377 Pennsylvania Avenue and Railroad Avenue Southeast Triple-Filtered Gas Dependable Accessories _ Four coupons calling for a quart of oil each will be giveh to any one not in a pasition to use all his Polarine Tires 8 A new Minute Service Station, equipped with every - device to give the motorist real Minute Service. Three+ wide drive-ways to eliminate congestion. Three gaso- line pumps with radiator service at every one. Numer- ous air towers to inflate your tires quickly. The home of Triple Filtered Gasoline—Gasoline Filtered twice through screens and once through chamois—eliminat- ing water, grit, grime, dust and sediment. Draining pits ‘o give you the best in crank case service. For Satisfaction and Quick Action inulc&rl?icecgallbtts No. 8 Tubes Oil Qil on Saturday.