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FFF HERE'S MORE ABOUT ALASKA STARTS ON PAGE ONE Joox at the mammoth bones, but In: | finitely more no when we came to re: | gat that naturalists have established | the fact that the mastodon was tropical Deast—that he could not have withstood the present citmate within many thousands of miles of Alaska! “phere ts no doubt about the bones belonged to mastodons, be: cause on & neighboring property, only 4 mile and « half away, ome mastodon hide, covered with eight inch long: i hair, had Deen discovered the courte of a d@milar operation The hide-—Itke ever, thing else —wae hy preserved; age cannot af. ‘anything that is stored away tn| fee or in perpetually frosen around} “| don't know which we were| more interested inthe mining or our prehistoric finds—ea we con-| tisved ovr work “The next things we discovered were the stumps of three spruce} treer—not petrified, but, aside from their usual dryness, much the same fas the spruce trees of today. } “This gave us a pause for a moment-—for spruce trees are growing within a few miles of the mine today, How could it be, we asked ourselves, that we found the spruce trees, charac teristic of modern conditions, BENEATH the bones of the tropical mastodons? “But the answer was simple! after all. It was plainly that the bones we had found must have Deen washed into the ocean tn pre- historic times and, after being tons. e@ about beneath the waves for! an aon of so, Mad been washed back. | FIND MORE BONES j BENEATH THE TREES La * el the thousands of miles that separate the present tropic zone from Alaska, we figured. Just the Big Surprise Party Swoops Down From Hills BELFAST, Oct, 3.—Ten were kilied early today when a party of Irish rebels swooped down from the Louth mountains and attacked a Free State garrison in County Meath, Later the Insurgents were repulsed and retreated, carrying away their wounded. Thirteen rebel taken prisoners were of their burial marked the exact time of the change! That they were frozen to death, and drop- ped in thelr tracks to become & perpetual memorial to the strangest phenomenon the world ever witnessed.” * * * Think what a this would make, if Mathews’ theory holds. ~ A tropten peopled with strange reptiles and monsters euch as man has never laid eyes upon. Suddenly there ts a rumble, the earth shakes, The bright, desert sun ts obscured as by an eclipse, and a strange, gnawing cold creeps] over the land. The giant novel dewert, monsters and reptiles gallop and glide and craw! about in amazement—just like frightened chickens fn a thunder storm, for all their huge proportions, | WHAT A SCENE AS | BASEBALL LOTTERY IS ON Se a’ fA PHIL if met Baseball pool tickets sold in Indianapolis. The large one retails for $5 cents, with prizes ranging up to $100 for high, The small ones sell for 10 cents each, and $50 for low. HERE’S MORE ABOUT JL CREEPS NEAR This strange condition continues | for days —possibly weeks and monthe ‘The rumbling, the ance—and always gnawing cold, | The animals begin to get used to| unearthly appear: | the growing, | darkness—but not to the eoki—the cruel, biting cold i They are uned to 120 degrees tn |Cleveland and Detroit BASEBALL STARTS ON PAGE ONE “They coukin’t have been washed the strange reverberations and the |!ng to conservative estimates. Sales tn Boston weekly are placed at $16. 900, in Pittsburg at $10,000, are in the same, we weren't entirely satisfied the shade—and here the temperature /S4me class, survey shows, | until, going deeper still, we found more mastodon bones, BENEATH the trees and of a decidedly dif ferent nature from thave that had is tumbling by degrees. ‘The weaker of the beasts soon die off—and the stronger huddle togeth er beneath their carcasses. Operations are small in Washing: | ton, Ch neinnati and St race betting has the Thue |!ngton and Cincinnati, Deen uncovered above. ‘The nature garmented, they can withstand the |“l*anup in St. Louis of the bones showed: that had never been exposed to sea-| water—that here, indeed, was their) By ones and twos and dorens and |i Fitsmo original resting place “This last was the most tm-| Pertant discovery of al}—because, | we believe, it gives science a chance | to fix a definite date as to when! the world went topsy-turvey and. Arctic and tropics changed places. As the apruce trees that we found at an approximate depth of 50 feet Were @imilar to those growing in the same locality today, the fact fa established that they were buried after the change in citmates had come. “Now, all science has to ¢o ls establish the length of time it! took for the 50 fest of earth above! the trees to be.“bullt’ That should} be comparatively simple talk for) men versed in such matters—a t the strata should gtre! them some hint—and that’s «alb/ there ts to it. SUDDEN CLIMATE CHANGE INDICATED \ “Let us say, just for example, thet they determine the trees were ‘Duried 190,000 well! The second set hs bones was found approximately 10, feet below the trees, and, if it took! years to build the ing else matters With a good appetite and a generous help- ing of Heinz Spaghetti before you-——nothing else matters. For there’s the tang and flavor the appetite craves—and the body building nutriment the system demands. Ready cooked in a de- licious tomato sauce. | HEINZ _ Spaghetti Ready cooked, ready to serve |tiona regarding a 1923 wage scale.) ‘Isadora and Her Husband Admitted | ntenty at The Arena and will con-| sympathetic like, It grows colder—so much colder! these | cold « little better—but not for long. |"till effective, In Chicago, rris says 200 arrests have| the barber down in the Aaron Pink Poltee Louis, Horse call in Wash while a police ® year ago is Chief Charles scores the hardiest drop off into the |Det? made during the past season TWENTY PER CENT CUT long, painless Nirvana of an Arctic death. » j And stilt the cruel cold grows and | grows! | | FOR AGENTS IN NEW YORK Pool agents in New York work on 20 per nt comminsion. They say Finally, only one is left—Nardu,|they usually sell about $500 worth HERE’S MORE ABOUT HICOPHAT STARTS ON PAGE ONE Including the very dentzens of the fo all T had to do was here underworld to go out and maintain this latson, | Only trouble waa I didn't know | just what it wa: not gettin’ any money been doin’ any an yet, gamblin’ in the great} | city and, therefore, didn't know no | eamblera. } | ‘Then I had a bright idea. Adolph, building, where I get my Satday night shave, most alwaye seeme: ke ® pretty underworld guy. And, | bein’ as I'd tipped him a nickel ree ular, once a week, | knew he'd give me the lowdown. the giant bull mastodon that had of tickets a week each. They have} So I goes to see Adolph and ex been king of an endless waste of regular routes thru office buildings | plains how I want to find out all and retail districts about the great baseball pools in tropic territory. | He trembles as he rises to his once | mighty legs, But he knows no fear In a survey of one 20-story office | Seattle. building, 10 eoparate pools were roo PooL? He has fought and conquered ene.| found in operation, in addition to) WHAT POOL? mies before, This cold—this wun-| dreamed-of cold—is a greater, a more pitiless enemy than he ever met be fore. But he ts not afraid. He shakes his giant shoulders wrathfully as a cloud of biting snow. flakes descends upon them and the lifts uy his mammoth head for a wild trumpet of rage. Hila breath freezes as tt comee from his trunk—but he ts not afraid? He sets himself—and then plunces | into @ madly rocking gallop. He is charging Into his enemy—a wild, a futile, bat a glorious charge! . . . COLD STILLS HIS MIGHTY HEART It ends as it inevitably must. cold that he cannot reach with his saber tuske gradually works its way | thru hair and hide—and still the mighty heart that not even King} those larger ones represented by | agents, Most of the 25,000 poole—the small | nearin’ fry-—bave tickets selling for 25 cents [a week, with from 16 to 32 members, who buy @ chance on one or two ma jor league clubs, Thig investment, Some poe lit im entimated, totals $250,000. diatribute dally awards, the capital price as high as $500. Philadelphia's largest pool, known combinat: tm the the National, ternational leagues. Nobi A® any agreement between the two fac- Suggestions were before the oper ators’ caucus today that a national) 4 sry association of bituminous perators | be formed. | Phil H. Penna, secretary of the Indiana Coal Operators’ association and chairman of the operators’ cau cus, said {t was unlikely that such! a body would be organized, how- ever. | The operators were to meet with miners late today | NEW YORK, Oct. .—-Miss Isa- dora Duncan, classic dancer, and her new Russian husband, Serge Henenine, demonstrated to the sat- istaction of immigration authorities that they hadn't turned “red” while} mingling with the bolahevike and were admitted to the country. | MAYOR LOOKS UP NEW NAME TO RECOMMEND “Doe” Edwin J, Brown, mayor of Seattle, was pouring over the city directory Tuesday, “Got to find another man to recommend to the elty council for superin- tendent of streets and sewers by Thursday,” he explained the shrine cireus at the Arena, waa, | by error, printed in The Star Mon: | man told me he’ GOES TO JAIL: ity In court! lender young | Sportamen's } blind” tickets for 25 cents bearing ne of six teams out of 24 American and In club, sells ™|SIR EDWARD. man, roughly day as Shirley Gene Young. The child is the daughter of Mr court, and, according to her friends, | Al Smith, of Carolina “Down't the ¥. M. C. A.* aye | Adolph, bein’ maybe a little hard of “They got a fine pool.” “No, no,” mays I ot swimmin’ pools— baseball poo! “Ob” says he, surprised-tiien. |"Why, I didn’t know you gambled, Hiram!" “I don't.” says I. “I want « story for the paper.” "Ob." says he; “that's different tel you what. All these ; Well, t [here cigar shops ts really gambitn’ jdens. You just ge around to ‘em and t m who ye tei you alt Rbout it First cigar store I hit T made « jlittio mistake. I just walked in and jaaked if they had any pool tickets to #ell on the faye the clerk. “Just Then I remembered I hadn't told The next pla I went into the | hooligan with me—and I c'd pre: tend that was all, And so it was all Gown the line. is forging ahead with sufficient new | No gamblin’ in a single piace. votes alrendy to take advantage of | the offer of 1,000 free votes to any a jcandidate who, she had at counting. Voting in the popularity content| That's just a little Chinese lottery the general policy committee of the) roe young women is aaid to be grow- | ing heavier. tests consist rings, Prt before Wednerday | counter to somebody else, adda 100 votes to the num: | thought maybe it wa Saturday night's |—but he explained, in The Shrine circus ts being held tinue circus. until October 14. There in |dancing each evening following the Funds | Gone; Sports May Be Cut at “U” ‘Uniess able for more funds become avail. the support of athletion, |baneball and basketball will be aban jdoned at the University of Washing |ton, according to university’ officials. |The shortage of funds in due to the | devotion of a considerable portion of the Associated Students’ funds to the | payment of the stadium debt. nk Waterhouse, president the Chamber of Commerce, of pressed a desire to investigate the mi ficlala, ter further with university of both con-| of valuable diamond | back In one store I saw a man passin’ little elip of paper across the an’ I pool ticket No, that ain't that's illegal y'know. | no pool ticket chance.” Bo finally I give up and went to Adolph and told him 1 | hadn't had no luck “Well, now, Hiram,” he says, real “Ain't that too | bad? But, y’see, this has become a awful moral city--awful moral's right—since Doc Brown was mayor and there really ain't no vice. “But, tell y'what, If vou hoppen to want to take a little flyer y'self and maybe win a hundred-case note for 35 cents-—-why, You just meet me in the alley after work and I'll | fix you up.” Dr. Royal Copeland | Senate Candidate NEW YORK, Oct. 3.—Dr. Royal 8. Copeland, New York city’s noted health officer, today Ineued a state. ment accepting the nomination as democratic candidate for the United States senate, +] man G it was @ pool—but that) — mr SEATTLE STAR TWO FLEE WHEN | AUTO CRASHES Pair Thrown 20 Feet as Car Overturns Traveling at terrific speed, » huge touring car carrying two mon, believed to be bandits, struck the curbing at 15th ave. and E. Ur it, at La. m. Tues. day, overturning and throwin the occupants 20 feet Into a diteh. Follee rushed to the scenn, | When they arrived the two men had fied, leaving the wrecked car hind them. ) Under the wreckage the officers loaded, two black hats and two dark overcoats, Witnesses to the crash eld the auto was traveling at a rate of about 50 «miles an hour turned. The car hore a license taaued to ‘ ™ y, 1487 20th ave, which was jortainally us@™ on a 1916 Ford, No report han been received showing the wrecked car had been stolen, STRIKERS CITED BY THE COURT Eleven striking raflway shopme: have been cited by Federal Judge Jeremiah Neterer to appear in court within the next fortnight to show cause why they should not be pun ished for contempt of court. Non- | violating the preliminary injunction jand “abuse and threats.” If convicted by a jury, the men |are able to not more than six | months’ imprisonment, or not more than a $1,000 fine, or both. Charles P, North, Charles Strode and Bteve Ber cited to appear October 16 George Kemme, Frank Sponek, Ruel ©. Welch, Mike Grant, Law rence Hunter, Percy B. Tyler, Her- emme and Charles Stone, must appear October 18 of Everett LIONS FLEE OHIO POSSE KENTON, Ohio, Ot, 3,—In- dians, airplanes and dogs today pursued two mysterious lions whieh have terrorized this see tion of the state for the past |] three days. Hundreds of children were kept home from school as nddi- tional reports of the Hons’ ne tivities were received. Several domestic animals were found dead. Lion tracks were discov ered in ws score of places. Citirens of Kenton were rats ing $1,000 reward to be offered for the enpture of the beasts, cut Bailey, Ohio National beasts in the woods near Mount Victory. Balley and hie party had tracked the animals to a water ing hele on the Nave farm, near where they Were first seen. A tremendous roar answered his shot as the Hons streaked into the woods, Pomes closing in on the beasts discovered blood-stained tracks. Yakima to Be Host to Kiwanis Club linetuding a Hvestock exhibit, wheel liar attractions Great Breakfast Dish Stewed raisins — delicious energizing, ironizing food. Practically predigested. Also a fine natural laxative. Make it regular and get the best results. Stewed Raisins Cover Sun-Maid Seediewe Ratsine with ter and add a slice of lemon or Place on fire, bring to « boil iow to simmer for one howr, Sugar tay be added but is not necesary, ¢ Sun-Meid Seedien Raisins contain’ 75 per cent natural fruit sugar, Son-Maid Raisins should cost you so more than the following prices: Seeded (in 15 01. bine pher.)—200 Seediess (in 15 on. red phge.)—1 80 Seeded and Seediess (11 64.)—i80 Atk dealers for Sun-Maid Raisins but | ltound @ .88 caliber revolver, fully | when it over: | in, of Tacoma, are) striking workers charge them with | | Against picketing and “disturbance” | | | { | | shake a game of/of fortune and countiess other stel. | are promined. the {which savings bankers may engage. \ehildren while in other places the work is en- Wednesday on a First Floor Aisle Square Sports Scarfs Of Imported Angora Yarn $7.95 URPRISINGLY J warm, considering their light weight, are these beautiful new Scarfs, with the fluffy, downy finish character- istic of angora. Unusual- ly generous in_ size, measuring 24x72 inches. Featured in: Turquotes Fawn Army-dlue Beige Brown Periwinkle j Orange Amertcan- | Orenia Beauty Pink Emerald | —special, each, $7.95. —First Floor To Wear With Street or Afternoon Clothes New Jersey Silk Knickers with Plaited Fullness in Rack Section, in HORIZON (Blue), ZINNIA, NAVY and BLACK —priced at $6.00 pair. —First Ficer A With _ FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET IMPORTED STATIONERY To Sell at 10c, 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00 ‘THIS new creation in sents a pattern of formal simplicity set beveled panels—a pattern distinctive, yet in quiet, good taste. The Anniversary Pattern Is eix, $9.75. of six, $6.00. Butter Spreaders, Soup Spoons, set Dinner Knive of six, $7.50. of six, $10.50. Tablespoons, set Hollow - handle of nix, $7.50. Dessert Knives, sot sali of ix, $10.40. ert of wix, § Model - handle Knives, eet of six, fugar Spoons, $4.50. each, $1.25 Dessert Forks, set Gravy ‘Ladies, nives, of #ix, $7.26. each, $2.50. on ard * Salad Forks, set Col4 Meat Fork ait / of six, $7.00. each, $2.00, i each. 2.08. i: Silverware Section tomorrow, where she may be con- sulted upon any problem relative to the arrangement and use of table silver. The Warner “Wrap-Around” Jew Idea in Corseting | Distinctive Good Qualities | GPctions of firm elastic alter- nate with coutil in forming | this new Corset—elastic enough 847° ROGERS Teaspoons, set of NOTE.—A special representative from the makers ‘| of 1847 Rogers Brothers’ Silverplate will be in the — A Special Purchase of 4 BROS. BLLVEKRALATE, “1847” Silverplate pre- in plain Stocked as Follows: Oyster Forks, set Model - handie ‘orks, eet Forks, set of nix, Jelly Knives, each, 0. $4.50, $1.60. Age —Firet Fleer The Advantages of Ordering GREETING | CARDS NOW are obvious to all who have recollections of “last-minute” orders placed in past holiday seasons, and of the accom. panying uncertainties and dis- appointments. Our new specimen booke of distinctive Engraved Greeting Tho figures on which these state- ments were based, Frazier explained, covered only savings banks proper; that is, banks which do not accept checking deposits. ‘This is fallacious, he declared, bei cause it is a known fact that more than half of all the savings deposits are in banks which do accept check- ing deposits, and which, therefore, are not listed as savings banks. | He then turned to methods of en-| couraging thrift, first taking up school savings banking. “This,” he said, “is easily one of most important activities in We find In some cities practically the entire enrollment of public school have savings accounts, tirely neglected. “If those responsible for the edu- cation of the children—the school boards and teachers — could them- selves be educated to a realization of the tremendous advantage to the na- tion of dirooting the minds of the young along the lines of property ownership, no excuse about crowd: | ed curricula would ever be advanced against school savings banking, “During the past three years the savings bank division has been espe- cially aggressive in promoting school savings banking and as a result the total number of pupils participating during the Inst school year was 1,305,000, as against 666,000 the year before and 463,000 the year before that." The second big item in encourag- In this connection he urged laws result of burns suffered never become a deferred ¢ the bank. The third way of sti! thrift, Frasier concluded, is thru et couraging the acquisition of and he cited figures to show puccessful efforts along this already been. EUGENE, Ore—Mre. Ann Huntley, 83, Oregon pioneer, dies from | Machines are now in use make cigarets at the rate of an hour. With one last feeble roar, Nardn | clad, and apparently steeped tn bore. pj: wi ot it . s “ lone & period, or 20,000 years. to) iis never to rise again-posaibly |4om. appeared Monday afternoon | so,” Bry gy tang Star no} done} Yakima Kiwanians have eet Tuer} to permit the wearer to “wrap it Construct the 10-foot layer dividing’ ox the very apot where the Keewalik | before Justice of the Peace C. C.| away eed NEM | Gay, Oct. 21, as Seattle Kiwanis day|I) and snap it”—with no need of seed bones from the — { gota mine is to bé located hundreds | Dalton to answer to a charge of| “Why aidn't you tell me right and are preparing a wonderful pre lacings. ‘And there you are! In other of centuries later. vagrancy jaway?” he asks, sorta annoyed like. gram for the event, according to re. words, the switch In zones must) As to the scientific phenomenon! “What is your name? asked Dep. are. 1° be vei po mance the |Ports from that city, The noon) have occurred somewhere between which brought about this strange|“t¥ Prosecutor Chester A. Batcht| iowaown ‘There ain't no gambling | Unerten, will be m great get-to- Ideal for dancing, negiigee and 100,000 and 120,000 years ago—ox« drama of prehistoric times, savanta| !°. | as sks ah-0 Chet gambling lgether affair in which civic clubs sports wear, the pliant boning giving @bviously, the country wasn't tropi- have long been of the opinion that| “Sir Edward Lamb4en,”| vcee, he aaid that gamblers romsi{i2t Prominent Yakima busines with every motion of the body cal when the trees were buried. the earth once shifted its axie—|the bored one replied. |go-and they been oa csi tony will cooperate. The fruit in-| Featherweight, too, yet providing Ant, Just as obviously, the country|that is, that the North pole sud-| “What's that?” aid Batchelor.|*°jto0, "ap gen Sum ever since.” iqustry and various points about the wuffielent support. Price $5.00. fas tropical when the mastodoa|@enly jumped into the spot where| “Dit I hear you aright? jand passed on to another po ent "Jeity and valley will be viewed in Jas Glan bones were buried. the equator had been. SIR Edward Giynan Lambda | “Poot” says. the clerk. at this] 2%, afternoon on a/ big auto trip} Se strike an even more gota | nearer @ definite solution te tue| Judge Dalton became interested — meee t ap Racgeg these | fair. 4 Big ge ARR > “ than thet. Possibly bvaffiing problem of nature. “Where did you get your title? |; te meet «: SAGES. Seka eer weer th established that these | iiasto One interesting polnt which | h* wanted to know pg rien 225,000 A f 14 Billions in Savings dens were the last of their has not been mentioned till now “An uncle died in London, Eng-|AT LAST! CHANCE ’ cres 0! proud race—and that the date Is that one of the trees found | 1nd, and left {t to me, That's what) 7@ WAGER 35 CENTS | Timber Burned O Hy 1 In the mine was burned—it bore | the British consul in Ban Francisco; But out back there wasn’t nothin’ * ver epost (4 un e ° an SSS | unmistakable signs of having | told me.” Lambden explained. } but some pool tables like what you) During the five months from/ | been badly charre | A physician's report. showed that | *ot on—so 1 know this piace must) April to August, Inclusive, thin year,| NEW YORK, Oct. 3.—Approxi- ing thrift, Frazier continued, is the i tree undoubtedly was| Lambden been using dope rej >* innocent. more than 225,000 acres of timber| mately one-quarter of the 100-0dd/promotion of mws to guarantee the wries before the human | cently. Lambden admitted the use Howdy do,” says I in the next) were burned over by 744 forest fire#! miijion people in the United States savings bank depositor against every }race came into existence, it is hard|f narcotics for five years, but de.|*ore. “I'm Hicophat of The Star,/in the state of Washington, accord. nave savings accounts today, thelr | possible risk. }to mecount for the presence of fire.| Clared it was a year since he naa | O08 re pear: Ae weree..6 apr story}ing to a report compiied by C. J./qeposite reaching a total of more Possibly it was lightntin had a “shot.” pout the gamblin’ in your place on| Joy of the Washington Forest Fire} 000,000,000. it ae the aantbwork yo ees aoe Hin Lordship was escorted to the| ‘8¢ world’s series.” amaociation, The heaviest loss sel on Cia eat cone main caller So requiring segregation of savings | stove. fization that antedates even the) County jail to await the result of “Gambling?” says be. shocked |in July, when 342 fires were re |. 10" 8% Seen venident of the |frO™ demand deposits, and the re- vent « | like, “Gambling, Mr. Hicophat? Raymond R. Frasier, prestéee |stricted investment of savings 4 prehistoric age—a beast civilization | * estigation into his ctreum | es op ported, Washington Mutual Savings bank of eavings de that harnessed the elements just as|Stances, and a reply from relatives; God bless my soul, sir, you've _ Seattle and president of the savings |Dosts in only high grade eecuritie man doea today jin Vancouver, B. ¢ come to the wrong place, you Hale to Address ook Road of the American Bank. |? ‘hat the savings depositor ma: Who knows? ees eater raion pence Regs Sag Rage at = z jern’ ansociation, in an address made Steers '§ ith B b oe ae ck te te Bae the Kiwanis Club |petore tne convention of the Bank- DISCUSSING ) Smt avy gamblin’, maybe, In some of the | Nathan Male, former congress. /°f% Aerociation here. | + | cigar stores, But since ladies |man, will address the Kiwanis club | ene tag tab gg hemnagp esr gi MINE WAGES! F Ah | has taken to smokin’ so much |membera at the Wednesday noon |'™? “nga gregh eine | orging CAG | we've tad to do away with It, luncheon on farm loan work. wil |Speeches made by former Promllent) CLEVELAND, ©, Oct. &—~| my, re | No, sir, we couldn’t afford to | Creasy, headliner at the Orpheum Fane ig-e cae = <6 coe aaa of | | Marked differences among coal op-|,,7h® Dame of Shirley Gene Smith.) have w lot of gamblers hangin’ |thie week, and Carl Reiter, manager | (0%. 0". nthe country, had #av- ! No jerators meeting with union mine| D> contestant in the popularity! around with ladies comin’ in all jot the Orpheum, will be among the |) Peon s lt |\eaders here thus far have prevented |78* fer bables in connection with) the time to buy their cheroots.” |gueste. A county fair and cireus, | ‘ME *cooun e LOOK! In order to stimulate activity in our rebuilt car sales we are making a real slash in the prices at which we have been holding these cars. : Here is a sample list: MITCHELLS JORDANS - Mitchell .... Jordan .... e+ $1,000 Mitchell Jordan . ++ 1,100 Mitehell Jordan Play Boy.... 1,500 Mitchell Mitchell ARDNERS Mitchell ig Mitchelt Gardner roadster. Mitchell Gardner .....++ i} — TRUCK BARGAINS Jumbo . Ford sedan . Ford touring Ford touring Oldsmobile ... Maxwell .. Paige touring. Davis .... Overland . Btiscoe ... seeeeee Visit Our Qpen-Alr Display at Ninth and Pine St. MITCHELL-LEWIS & STAVER CO. 1024 East Pike East 1069 OPEN EVENINGS