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| Prompect 160) THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, NEW REAR LIGHT A CLOSED CARS GAIN |MAXWELL-CHALMERS AR PEERLESS FEATURE} POPULARITY DAILY| SHOW LATEST MODELS Very Im-|Merely q Matter of Educa-|Include Closed Cars for All tion, Says Rickenbacker Purposes. ‘STAGE DOOR INN’ Dealer. ‘The Colt-Stewart Company strongest re _jot the Grand Central Pals :{Prove Success in Sales-Roles— * Many Others in Crowd of Onlookers. 1922. ENORMOUS JUMP IN THE PRODUCTION OF CLOSED CARS): Figures Show Steady In-] ‘ crease in Popularity as an jo « All-Year Proposition, _ b to the Cunningham, Theda t in an appearance, but did ny nerely aitting in a town car nfodel. Minnie Dupree was given the Paige car to sell, Kitty Fynn a Standard, Je Serves Four portant Requirements. With Massachusetts atready having enacted special legistation with rofor- ence to the type and dertea of auto- monte at laeibe ae ing that and other States nilur laws ray to the end thar decrensed {1 , Rickenbue great portion of quires to be edue: ard the special Peeriess rear le y kusaemn sldsedioar. ‘tt the new models. ‘The Peerless taillight, of motorists who, during to bo entirely of Peerless design, sorves | the pas cars have purchased open several important requirements, ac-|typos of automobiles, largely becaus cording to the officials of tha seein provides ample \ The Maxwell coupe attracts atten- m on account of {ts roominess, the ch part being practically as large that on cars with wheel bases twen- en A happy om . or] losed rosting With a ie Closed car Is the car of tho ture without question,’ re, manager show at t? “Productio ingly xt every price in 1917 and 1918 ing trom §2,000 to a“Apparently, the losed cars varies jee. That fs, a of tha Grand : CLOSED CAR GIVES |. HIRST SHOWS THE UNIVERSAL SERVICE NEW GRAY COACH.| “on ot uw » pwth of the T the Show you will be impressed by the sen- sational value offered in the new Durant closed cars. markable features 0! tomot! ye n the development of the clo: ~ ;|TWO NEW REO MODELS ce Just note the amount of interest dieplayed in these P New Yor a for the new ¢ 8 n = Bc eats 8s ound IN CLOSED CAR SHOW. }oar. arc very, good-looking ater in four and remarkable automobiles. classes. In 192 + 40 per cont. of flve-passenger » This car ts Ganveiy “Just a Real Good Car” Fours and Sixes. POERTNER MOTOR CAR CO. 1500 Broadway at bith Ste Brooklyn A Special Wagon I« ie] that it. ts ¢ capable of the total nu h priced cars Also Deine} nounted on tho 10 Lxhibited. Manhattan, hich {3 of thew d the standard ‘T- 3 J pes ent.. WILLYS-OVERLAND SHOW CLOSED LINE}: LARSON EXHIBITS 1923 OLDS CLOSED MODELS. MITCHELL SHOWS COUPE AND SEDAN MODELS. | *« . ex, [MARMON EXHIBITS sat SPECIAL BODY JOBS. TOURS ROADSTER SEDAN COUPE Was Wes Now Wes Now Wes Now $550 : $525 $550 : $525 $895 : $875 $850 : $795 hah Lele 2 ——- LEXINGTON EXHIBITS NEW MODEL BROUGHAM ss ake .|DODGE DEALERS SHOW { SPECIAL 4-PASS. COUPE. Ing example of ‘ard that hav Now! Beyond any shadow of doubt Overland is the | GREATEST automobile © value in America - Yet one receiv surprise upon stepping into th Imside the car looks and ts xoomy and co! the coach build *A General Motors Product ANNOUNCES | NEW PRICES / $955—up EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY STARTLING REDUCTIONS | ON ALL MODELS Full information at Closed Car Show, Grand Central Palace, This W. at Our Showrooms, or from All Olds Dealers, All-Steel Body. Baked Enamel Finish. Smooth-Riding Triplex Springs. Greatly Strengthened Rear Axle. 25 Miles w a gallon. 8 WILLYS-OVERLAND, Inc. BROADWAY AT 501H STREET. Rrook!yu: Cor. Wolten ht, and Bedford Ave. *Oldsmobile—The best thing on wheels’’ : TEL, CIRCLE sie Bronx, 2496 Grand Concourse (Nr. 188th St.) OLDSMOBILE CO. OF N. Y. rma: 026 Biiad Bee eoierry gen, 0000 Dienings i ( (CUTTING LARSON CO,, Inc.) Our latest modelo of the Closed Care are bring slowe at Grand Central Falace September 30-30. Av’ 108 West 64th Street. SPACE B.23 OLDS CO., BKOORLYN 1906 Bedford Ave, Telephone 9680 Columbus BROADWAY 1804 Broadway At Columbus Cirete ; SRO MAS SEARS GE ERA Great Mystery Story by J. §. fletcher Author of “The Middle Temple Murder;” “Ravensdene Court;” “The Chestermarke Instinet;” “ The Be th Treasurer;” : The Ewe Maxim;” “The Orange Yellow Diamond,” Pe te,, Lule, “The Rayner-Slade Amalgamation” a) is the strange\title of, this detective vi story—one of the most mysterious at and absorbing detective stories ever written. From the very first page the reader’s interest is secured and that interest is never permitted for a moment to flag; on the contrary it ws mounts constantly through climax after climax with increasing intensity a as the mystery becomes ever more baffling and more far-reaching. mean acensenen aanancencaenenencescanrencerd |, James Allerdyke was conveying jew- els worth more than a million dollars from Russia to England. His cousin, Marshall Allerdyke, a wealthy York- shire manufacturer, finds him dead in his hotel room a few hours after he landed. The jewels have disappeared; there is absolutely noclue. Marshall Allerdyke was devoted to his cousin, and furthermore he is the sort of man who refuses to recognize defeat. So he spares no effort and no expense to unearth the murderer and to recover the valuables. He collaborates with the greatest detectives in Engiand. When they discover that the pearls of a famous prima donna have vanished at the same time as the Russian jewels, and when three people are murdered exactly as James Allerdyke was mur- dered, these detectives enter into the solving of the mystery with indefatig- able energy and uncanny ingenuity. ’ o ees mance, | Utilizing every scrap of information, skilfully co-ordinating all fragments of evidence and merest suspicions of clues, applying the logic and the im- agination of finely tempered minds to the problem, they gradually weave the various strands into a piece—and trap the criminals in its meshes. ht tt eee aren ee ae ae renee This thrilling story inits entirety, and illustrated by Irma Deremeaux, one of America’s foremost women illustra- tors, will be published complete in five instalments beginning next Sun- day, October fst. EEE AE EPO —caernoqmmay The author of “The Rayner- Slade Amalgamation” is the same J. S. Fletcher whose mystery story, ‘‘Scar- haven Keep,” so delighted the read- ers of The Sunday World a few months ago. Ex-President Wilson, when he was in the White House, was an eager and appreciative reader of Fletcher's detective rovels. At that time the current one was ‘“‘The Middle Temple Murder.” But com- Be petent critics agree that in intensity, . 7 in skill, in suspense and ingenuity this latest of Fletcher's works sur- passes all the others. It is a thriller —but it is more than a thriller; it is a fascinating tale as well, told with unusual charm and extraordinary perception. Cp ee ee ee ree eee BEGINS OCT. 1st IN THE SUNDAY WORLD Order The Sunday World f:om Newsdealer in Advance a WN Ciaew vee i | i j | i ;