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eo) “fg © the fans hollered for him to get up, E he tried to stand pn his head | Stomach built like Virgil Garvey’s © the commanding officer at Camp] F eluding “himself, by boxing a draw at nt, IT’S NOT GENE TUNNEY, BUT | NNEYFISH’; JONES-GORMAN DRAW © The big mystery that has en) —————— rouded Northwest ringdom: has solved Camp Lewis Gene Tunney de not Pie champion of the A. BE. F. Nght weight forces. He isn't champion Of anything, and never wilt be ‘The mystery was solved at Tacoma r Maat night when Tunney entered the! tangle at the local hall park at Pring with Clom Zukownky, the Ta-| E Goma licht-heavyweight. Buke hit Tunney on the lobe of his mm left car in the first round, and Tunney sat on the Moor, and wheo If Tunney is a fighter, then Jopp Wopp is a millionaire. Tunney entered the ring with a Tunney said after the fight that Lewis wouldn't lot him train for the “fight.” | The young fellow seems to be OK] han in Seattle? ) tm all respects, but he ought to forget | bout the ring, unless he wants to @arry a harp. Well, we're glad that's over, prosecutor, Now to the main event, ( JONES DRAWS GORMAN Little Morgan Jones, the Tacoma ) featherweight, fooled everybody, in| | with Joe Gorman, the little Portland Miller, in the six-round windup, { 4 ny seemed stale, but he did "®ome terrific hitting, Jones’ clever _fites saving him from a fot of pun Go n was a bit wild, swinging punches. b Jones took the lead in the first] v season Friday afternoon when they | pfisn, and we are still waiting) st: “I wouldn't care to give an opin jon on a sub) know our leading citizens very well, but I presume Will Rogers is as great as any of them.” ne ny “ and nominated Howard D, of F. 8. Harmon & Co, as ot man in Seattle, because QUEEN ANNE VS. BALLARD Queen Anne and Ballard pry the plished in thrée weeks what Na off of the local high school grid] most men a year to accom ‘The engagement will be an nounced in a month. 2:90, The teams are pretty evenly . ra ae a DEAF? ‘The Little Gem Bar Phone has |} helped hundreds to hear well ul Nttle mechanien wil over the U. 8 TODAY'S QUESTION » sole agenta, Who do you think is the greatest [Cail in or write for literature. 7] 4. P. CHASE, Chemist Second at James ANSWERS *WALLACE MOUNT, — deputy County-City building: Mount said he'd call in two minutes | | J, H. WINN, locksmith, §2 Pike Uke that.” J, H. SCHEPP, meat market pro- prietor, 8326 Rainier aves “I've only | een here a couple of years and don’t! a We have an expert tn charge of our truss department who can fit trusses that will relieve you HERBERT GRAPFFE, retired of rupture troubie. banker, 1616 H. 47th st.: “It's a toms ‘Trusses $2.50 to $10.50 up between Jimmy Duncan, Mayor © Peund, and piled up points by good | Caldwell and Ole Hanson.” se of his left. J @utslugging the Tacoman. @lected to stand toetotoe with the| + > Rose City miller, and came out see best. ‘Thruout the third round Gorman away at Jones’ midsection, and Jones resorted almost entirely to © Jones tired rapidly In the fifth, and i won the round without "Much trouble. He pounded Jones’ : ion, and had the Tacoman ey on. In the last round Jones outhoxed Spanish miller, and had Gorman wildly. Jones had a shade this session. BEATS | In. the semi-windup Frank Pete. Wilkeson miner, who has had his head pig-shaved again, won the over Al Lupo, the Tacoma news . Lupo gave Pete several terrible q and then proceeded to take y on theghin. | The third bout was the bout be- | tween “Tunneyfish” and Clem Zu Kowsky. Young Zuru, the Filipino welter, & beating from “Red” Gage, €arrot-topped Seattle battler, Ac- cording to his manager, Joe Water. Man, it was Zuru’s 98th reverse out of 100 starts, and he's going strong. Jones DRAW | Eddie Moore, the Seattle bantam- ‘weight, came within an ace of knock ing out Ludwig Jones, the youngest | ber of the f\ehting Jones family, the third thea. tite bell ‘Betts | ‘Tacoman. 1 ‘With Jones reeling badly In the a Moore tried to box Jones, and a recuperated and really shaded Eddie in the last canto. F Jones floored Moore in the second 4, Bound. The first round was even. | Referee Schock called it a draw, nd nobody squawked. —_—— | Private Fitting Room lL, SIDELSKY, tailor, 801 Third Gorman won the second session by / ave: “I don't know, They are all Jones | bull-con, When I got a dollar, I'm all right.. When I ain’, got a dollar, I'm a bum. You call up Morris; he knows about such things, Goodbye.” *Mount fust called up—aix hours Men When we undertake to replace your decayed and missing teeth the ones we make for you are ae good as tho original at their best. In many Instances / the new teeth are better than the originals, for nature is not always kind In the distribution of teeth, and they are often anything but well fitting or handsome, Resides improving your appearance with new teeth, which fill out hollows and round out facial contours, your health is the one great thing which you must think about and guard. Work of this kind requires the skill of specialiste who have made thie branch of dentistry their life work. Each mem. ber of this firm is a specialixt in one particular line of dentistry—no bired operatora, CUDNDQUUUQUOUOUUUONUOCENOOUOUANROUAGOUAOAHUAy LADY ATTENDANT OPEN EVENINGS We've Cut the Price| | On Every Suit or Over- i coat Pattern in This Store Beginning Satarday, Oct. 9 FOR EXAMPLE —— wong i —_ the past two $ 37.90 Now ..... eee eee ee Special Gray Serge (Bankers’ Gray), sold the past two years for $45.00. Now Special Blue Cheviot, sold the past two years for $45.00. OW werecnrcscesere at ecreree Our $97.50 Best Blue Serge, sold the past two years for $75.00. Many Patterns in Various Colors and Weaves, sold the past two years from $35.00 to $40.00. Your $3 9.00 choice now ...... 9 Owomcinciceie High-Class Tailoring That Is Different —in Price ip RUPTURED] cL LB STAR. akland Sensible Six $1,625 ‘At this time, when the public mind is disturbed by sen- sationally announced price reduttions of automobiles and other merchandise and commodities, we desire to give assurance to those who require Personal Passenger Transportation, such as provided by the Oakland Sensi- eble Six, that we do not anticipate reducing the price of our cars, Starting with the production of the raw material re- quired, and continuing through to the finished product, over 80 per cent of the cost of an Oakland Sensible Six is labor, pre Over 80 per cent of the cost of all other automobiles produced in large quantities is labor. When wages paid to labor are reduced, or when labor produces more per man, then may manufacturers of honestly priced automobiles legitimately consider the re- duction of their selling prices, * We have not heard of any instance where automobile workers are receiving lower wages. If wages may be lowered eventually, we see no imme- diate trend in that direction. ¢ In the production of so essential a factor in our eco- DELIVERED IN SEATTLE nomic life as the passengér dutomobile—increasing as it does the personal efficiency of owners by nearly 57 per cent—we believe the workers whose toil produces the vehicle should be large beneficiaries of the constructive character of their work, id If abnormal demand has been responsible for over-en- thusiastic expansion and inflated profits in certain in- stances, the wage earner should not be made to suffer, as he must, if powerful forces effect lower automobile prices, whether or no. ” True enough, there have been many instances of in- flated prices. There has been profiteering. And, true enough, abnormal profits must be eliminated. _gugsuce ‘And that is what has been going on all around you re- cently—the price reductions you have witnessed in auto- mobiles and other merchandise are the belated shaking out of the abnormal profits. The normal pfofits are still there. . Manufacturers whose goods have been priced on actual cost to produc¢, plus normal profit, have no inflated fig- ures with which to appeal to the uninformed public in sensational announcements of “Price Reductions.” Pru- dent, studious buyers will not. be misguided by erroneous principles, 4°, ‘ Oakland Price Advance in Five Years, Due to Increased Cost of Labor and Material, Only 27.4 Per Cent ee In 1915, Model 32, Oakland Sensible Six, was put on the market at $795 f. 0. b. factory. Since 1915 the wheelbase of the Sensible Six has been lengthened five inches, its weight increased about four hundred pounds, its horsepower materially increased, its frame made deeper, and in many other ways the car has been enlarged, strengthened, improved and refined, If the present Model 34-C had been built irf 1915, it is more than conservative to say that, based on labor and material costs at that time, we would have been com- pelled to list it to sell at $1,095, or more, f. o.b. factory, We are therefore able to say, also with great conserva- tism, that the present price of Model 34-C represents an increase, due solely to increased costs of labor and mate» rial, of 27.4 per cent, Larger production each year has kept this increase at a low figure. Compare this increase with the increase of other autos mobiles and with commodities—with the things you buy every day. Nowhere have we been able to find a standard article of merchandise that has increased as little in selling price as the price of the Oakland Sensible Six, _.» In the event of unexpected reductions in the cost of the labor and material that enter into the construction of the Oakland Sensible Six to a point-.where we may prop< érly and legitimately reduce the list price of our cars between October 1, 1920, and May 1, 1921, we will refund to every Oakland purchaser who buys within the above mentioned period of time the amount of such reduction. (This guaranty does not apply to second-hand cars or former models.) .OAKLAND MOTOR CAR CO, Austin-Moseley Company Dealers Oakland Automobiles Pike St. at 12th Ave. - Seattle |