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Broadway DopedtoWin Are Favored in Track Meet at University “Broadway are the va ‘annual Freshman oe Oe meet scheduled ; . before ‘gaturday morning at the Uni * Pe of ington campus. Al! carried achool teams wil! Cato. fa the meet, but the ‘week, ‘ym and North End schools eteree, favorites to cop the Lonors y 5 moe to ee high schoo! Coach a ‘a hard time round ae ate condition as he yen ecaching the ball team Arendiand park in the afternoon ueck equad at the unl- aot Wyman and Johnson. i gS { 5 x have been showing well Specds, Frankland in the heuld win the high jump Seine hurdles without — much if bis training form counts He tx a brother of { who copred the amp record io the ey ee @ s +5 aed Eek ot year. Wek in Weights it very strong fn “on han or In the ¢lis- = “nd wins the meet there lan't much chance anywhere in track year, accerding to Coach @ the Pine st. team. We be Mrength of the Trood- fmt team track squad lies fie freshman-sophoinore classes. ut C in the sprints, is fastest man in the city time. He is also holding down the . on the ball “sg sede in ‘ef Sandberg in the mile be point winners Saturday. fe the quarter and Exvei- jampa and weights are also oot on Ags agere- the haltithe Tniversity of Washington in| track meet is set for Satur. nthe University feid. meet is conceded to be between and the freshmen. The x4 fe fli I ARO! Yentertay’s . z i A Ay [" Seattle fans, Gus Gleichmann, local first sacker, has showed ‘em how it’s done around the first pillow. Gus is weak with the willow and it is the only thing that keeps him out of the big circuit, because there are very few in the game who can spear the ball better than our Gus. 4 < YUYLUUIYYIUYSIENY Aro Indi "986th ha Vic "ROUND COAST BASES San Fran ciseo, Oakland, Sacramento. winner: z The Reds the field, winning — ee Sacramento, “the team to beat,” has slipped it over Los Angeles twice in a row, If memory serves un right, it is the first time this season that the Angels have lost two straight. But unless the Senttle team starta/night in Yakima. The fight went winning, Los Angeles’ losing streak isn’t going to benefit the Rainiers|Gorman of Portland in Tacoma, | Cottage}—Water medium high and THE tex Poss FORMER OPEN CHAMPION ~ HIT THE BALL OFF HIS MASHIE. AT RIGHT ANGLES INTo THE Woods, © FIRST BASE GUS LASS BY HIMSELF || : | Must Decide Gus Gleichmann Flashing a brand of fielding that has brought joy to) INMANHATTAN fg Hi i t EE ell EI e? 2 § i 3 MISS VARDON MISSED THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1919. "Tex Rickard | Battle Site Ohio Is Favored for Demp- sey-Willard Championship Battle on July 4 NEW YORK, May It Tex Rickard stages his Willard-Dempeey | fight on July 4, he must name the site for it tomorrow, or elee give it to the public on Bunday, which ts | not likely | Articles of agreemnt aslened by Rickard and the two boxers, #tip ulated that the battleground must be named 60 days before the date | of the mill. Therefore, the date! will have to be advanced fron de. | pendence day, if a site te not ob-| tained by May 4 8 of the best informed pugt listic followers have clung to the belief thruout the period of waiting, | that Akron, Obio, or some other Ohio | city, would be selected for the en: | counter. Ohio has permitted boxing | for some time, and has meen two! championship bouts of importance | within ent yeare-to say nothing us scraps in the state by | Jack on and Ted Lewis, when either held the welterweight title The game has been conducted here on such a high plane that litte opporition would be found. However, it may be stated with certainty that Ohio will pot be named for the battleground unless som> absolute assurance is given Rickard that no interference will come from state authorities. He has declared he will not again take chances of hi to move his a on short ne an was the when he ma Jack Johnson Jim Jeffries tor a California battle. | SUNDAY BALL TO BE PLAYED NEW YORK,*May 2.—The first legalized Sunday ball eume in the largest city of the United States will be played here Sunday, cording to schedules arranged yea terday Lawa early in the history of New York stateh ave successfully weathered attempts of baseball en- Uhustasts to let down Sabbath bare for years and years, but Mayor Hylan yesterday signed the oril+ nance which takes the lid off. Games postponed because of yea- terday's rain in Brooklyn and New LIL, PZ, 4 i NUAt Ney AVA dnllaphyyiy WintelXe7 My AA) | anapd Brewster Pinkman, Se [pono games on the holiday dates altle’s oratorical fighter, will mix will be adhered to tn the future | | im his first California emgage [by both the American and Na-| York wilt be player, it was stated, | select. amount to. values wherever you turn. The fact that this is a Liquidation Sale— | which simply means that it is a forced disposal of high grade property to close an Estate—brings the sale price of the lots down to an exceptionally low basis. Here’s an honest opportunity to get on your feet—to cut off the landlord’s shackles of rent receipts—to become a property owner yourself. Our terms are startlingly generous— inviting enough to interest the man of small means and large ambitions. Many 40-FOOT ment tonight, at Oakland, when | tional leagues in order to avoid | he meets Joe Miller, former | 2ubie-headers STREAM | welterweight, Eddie Skyhomish River (near Skyhemiah) have to be in good condition to ee make a showing with Miller. who Rot good. ig ts @ good, tough customer. Lake Wilderness (ria Maple valley) —Water clear, medium high. Fish- George Ingle will step in fast com-| ine good, big catches of the perch pany in Butte, Mont. when he takes |@nd s@me trout are being made, (A. on “Pinkie” Mitchell, the Milwaukee | D. McPhee) ring star, over the 12round route.| South Fork Snoqualmie River The Basterner will have it over|(near North Rend)—Water high and “Smiling George in reach and ex-iclear. Fishing i# fair, the few days perience in the longer game. It has|of warm weather having improved been a long time since George fought | fishing. more than four or six rounds. Carbon River (near Fairfax)— Water clear. Fishing ts good for Jack Hartford, the Tacoma young: | Dolly Varden. Can be reached by ster who took the count so gamely in| tail to Fairfax, thence by log train his fight with Licyd Madden here |to E. B. Camp, (R. J. O'Farrell) last Tuesday, is planning a trip to| Sauk River (near Darrington) California. Water medium condition. Fishing is poor. Lake Kitsap (near Charteston)— Water medium low and clear, Bass There is strong possibility that) “Soldier” Bartfield may be signed to meet the winner of the Morrie Lux-|and perch fishing is good, Bass are | Billy Wright battle, in Tacoma, next | taking a white tango. (HM. H. McDon- Thursday. If King should happen to | ald.) slip Bartfield the short end of the| Dungeness River (near Sequim)— decision here Tuesday, however, the | Water is high and muddy. Fishing match would be automatically off. | ix poor. King is too heavy for either Lux or| Beaver Lake (near Forks)—Water Wright, but Bartfield tackles all of |i# clear. Fishing in good, Best bait the big ones. is salmon eggs. Streams are all very high. Roads in good condition. (E. Loule Leonard, local lightweight, | Krogh.) lost a hair-line decision to Lee] Cascade.and Other Lakes In San Morrissey, of Salt take City, last/ Juan County—Water high. Fishing fair. Lake Sammamish (near Shamrock 10 rounds. Leonard fighta Joe clear. Fishing is fair, (Wm. Moffett.) 2D SHIOY Wire AnoERsON Took Four PUTTS IN CHAMPIONSHIP, May 8. = fsx. Smita missed A TWO Foot PUTT FOR, A WIN AT MYOPIA ONLY ONE To Fan THE AIR on ogre THIS ICK IN A Tour NAMENT~ CAN You beo'r? HOME LOTS Streets graded, cement walks, trecs in parking strips, city water, elec- tric lights—all in and paid for. Take one of our Shovels, and try the soil on these big Home and Garden Tracts yourself. You'll find rich, loamy earth, ready to give of its goodness to the seeds you plant, eager to help make your summer garden pay for the lots you It is a small garden that isn’t worth 33c a day—and that is all your monthly payments Get under the surface on this big Liquid- \| wage earners and salaried workers will ation Sacrifice Sale, and you will find || easily find it possible to buy one of these advantageously situated Home and Garden Tracts, and at the same time make regular payments on their Victory Bond subscrip- tions. These are the factors that make this a division of real home opportunities: Its nearness of the great University of Wash- ington; proximity to Seattle schools and churches; just a short walk from Roosevelt (Ravenna) Park and Lake Washington; your own city car line close at han fare; the size of the lots, and the richness of the soil. $279 to $579 TERMS: $50 DOWN; $10 A MONTH Home and Garden Tracts +t sce to appreciate. 75- to 85-foot frontage, healthy, luxuriantly rich soil; a bargain you $349 to $699 An Invitation Without an Obligation— We want YOU to see this wonderful property. It is to your advantage to view it without delay; then if you consider pgrchasing a lot, you will have a far better choice than if you wait a few days. We realize that our time is limited, so we are willing to do this: If you will call either of our offices EARLY IN THE MORNING, and make a definite appointment, we will take you direct to University Home Tracts in one of our machines, show A it the entire property, and bring you back home, without waste of time. There will be no obligation to purchase. Ravenna cars run within four blocks of the subdivision; get ™'s off at Thirtieth Northeast, or you can drive out over beautiful Montlake Boulevard direct to University Home Tracts. We will be looking for you out there tomorrow! GOODWIN REAL ESTATE CO. VICTOR J. GREEN, Sales Manager 312-214 LEARY BUILDING, Main 4357 Two Offices et ery tte bt. Renwood seas 10 Phones Subdivision Office Open Until 8 Every Evening FE. 8. GOODWIN, President Athletes Busy as Bees as They Prepare for Olympic PARIS, May 2.—Six months or #0, Gen. Pershing to the French gov- ago it looked as if that Important /ernment as another souvenir of the cog in the machinery of every news-| American army's visit to France, paper, the sporting editor, had lost} Not only are American soldiers preparing for the games, but a his job, The sposting editor’s day has| series of qualifying tests is being ar- come back. A million and a half| ranged among French and British soldiers in France, Other allied armies also will send representa meets | tives to the meet. Italian Yanks still over here refuse to let him pass into oblivion. Baseball games, athletic and boxing tournaments are being held daily somewhere in France. | The accent is on the athletic meets, for the doughboys are getting ready for the big Inter-Aliied Olympiad to be held in Pershing Stadium, just outside Paris, June 1. Preliminary trials are being held wherever there is a camp of soldiers. | The premier athletes of track and) field—the men who emerge vic torious in the finals of these trials --will represent America in the in- ternational games arranged by Gen. Pershing. | Y. M. C. A. athletic directors and} old college athletes among officers) and men are directing the training and trials, | Meanwhile Pershing Stadium ts| being built. A crew of men have) been working on the field and track | since late in February. The stadium is at Saint-Maur, near Joinville-le-Pont, within easy | is being built on an old French mili- tary training ground. Seats are being arranged in a huge amphitheatre. There will be accom modations for 22,000, of which 3,500 | will be seated under cover, Forty | thousand more persons will be able) to stand within the enclosure to| watch the meet. The structure is being built of re- enforced concrete surrounding a 1,500-yard circular track, There will also be a 900-yard straightaway | track and inside the track there will be an English Rugby football field. ‘This will be 140 yards long, making plenty of room for an American foot- ball playing field. After the army, Olympiad Is held, the stadium will be presentad hb “Sent on Request” The Kind of a Pipe a Man Wants— A pipe that gives excel lent service, and one that is pleasing to the eye, in shape, style and finish is one that a man is proud of. Such a pipe is the Italian Briar— 75c to $5.00 ’ Spring Cigar Co., Inc. 107 First Ave, 910 Second Ave. 418 Pike Street Butler Hotel Leary Bldg. covrox WILL BRING MORE INFORMATION Goodwin Rea! Estate Co., Leamy Bidg.. Beatle. Please send me your new illus- trated literature (free) on why I should be interested in this re- markable sale and how I will Profit .by buying in University ome Tracts. It is distinctly un- derstood that this places me un- der no obligation whatever. MONEY —how it is made —how saved Money is liquid capital—gold, silver or other metal stamped by legal authorities as currency, as our old friend Webster says. Observe that this liquid capital is the prod- ust of the world’s labor—not the produce of the labor of any particular class. a Mr. Edison may be said to be one of the greatest money-makers or wealth-producers the world has ever known. The same thing might be said about Andrew Carnegie and the late James J. Hill. Active brains and intelligent labor have given us the wealth of the world. Any prudent man can save money in a dem- ocratic country. Opportunity becomes his slave. He accumulates wealth because he can't help doing so. Begin to save today and tomorrow. Savings Department open from 6 to 8 every Saturday evening The Seattle National Bank Resources $30,000,000 ‘STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS PAGE 25