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sce = RS \ Y TW) ov » \ \S “1 ( il [ip mm KAISER KEEPS ¢ uP TREES, HOLLAND OR FIRE Woq) FoR NN acs L SPor! Q , \ ~ OSS \a wae Soetineianl \AR Payers \\Y \N Jedhadbatain R\ ST 27, 1919. THE SEATTLE STAR—-WEDNESDAY, AUG Whe wet ¥ ON CHOPPING |/ HEY Ik reersl | EA BO AND | (3 SHE A \ / mo- TD CALL WILL BE fxep] | YOUR WIF GET A | SOME Matp FAST HER A ROUGH TH’ NEXT Giel? ) | seevant sue lobe worKer!/ TEN YEARS! $e ar n vai i re LASSEN Coast hockey fans will bie see “Cy- clone” Taylor, the veteran ice hockey star, in action this year, according to Lester Patrick, pilot the Victoria crew, who was a Seattle visitor yesterday. “Taylor says he will quit if the Vancouver team can find some one to replace him, but that is next to the impossible,” says Patrick. “The call of the game is strong, and it's a safe bet that the *Cyclone’ will be on the job again this year.” Prospects for one of the big seasons in history of the ice game are looming on this year’s horizon, in the opinion of Patrick, who says that all sorts of sports are booming in Victoria and Vancouver. “Lacrosse is the big sport in Vancouver since the mainland city has no baseball this year,” de- clares Lester, “and the city is already lining up for the hockey season. “As for Victoria, we expect one of the biggest seasons since the entry of this city in the circuit.” Since Ole Anderson, the Tacoma heavyweight, has risen to pugilistic heights thru his showing with Willie Meehan, Clay Hite, of the Northwest Athletic club, is trying to land Billy Miske, the St. Paul heavyweight, Tommy Gibbons, or “Bat- Levinsky, of New York, for the big fellow, fight to be staged here. This will be quite a ip in the pugilistic game for the Tacoma lad, is nothing but a big green kid who can take wallop. Under the careful tutorship of Chet Mc- hnive of Tacoma, Ole should develop into a good . providing Chet doesn’t try to push him fast. Overmatchin has ruined more one likely looking prospect and Chet heed former experiences. City public school kids are staging a swimming meet at Green Lake today. The meet is limited to bers of the classes which have been conducted the summer at the local bathing beaches. Ww coigerhs the classes have been will be ited today when the classes perform at northern lake. Swimming is becoming a bigger im Seattle every day and it should be, be- it is evident that we have enough facilities the sport. in’t seem like the wisest thing in the world Ole Anderson with a smart ring man like a wines nese, jpson, the negro heavyweight, as pro- in the South. If Thompson is as good as re- from California say he is, Anderson's wouldn’t be very huge with the big black . It Age Jack Dempsey two years of milling sagebrush before he reached real fame, has reached recognition over night. 's no use in walloping the goose that laid the egg between the eyes until she’s laid at a couple of eggs. Frankie Farren, the southern lightweight, has _ the northern bee in his lid. Frankie wants to come North to meet some of the local lightweights again, _ eccording to word received here from his manager, John Flammer. All Frankie wants for coming is railroad fare for his retinue and part of the Smith building with the Washington hotel thrown in. If » he comes North it will be at his own expense. Who does he think he is, Benny Leonard’s double? Local ring fans who have followed the work of Jimmy Storey, Seattle welterweight, will watch his work in his bout with Travie Davis, of Everett, on the Arena card Friday night with more than ordi- nary interest. Davis is one of the best men of his weight in this section, and Storey has his work cut out for him. Jimmy hasn’t had a setback since his entry in the ring game here last season. If Jimmy can get past Davis, who has a good reputation, he stands to enter the main event class in this sector Greatest Long Distance | Race * * % * Horses to Compete October 14 . to Be Staged in East From Vermont to Massa- ‘chusetts; Kingfisher Star Horse Is Entered in Event; | ? Riders to Follow Same Course; Race for Five Days {NEW YORK, Aug. 27. — The fore becoming the property of his | greatest long distance contest in|present owner. His rider {* to be the history of horse racing is being jwelected from among the jockeys Planned by the Arabian Horse Club| who saw service with the A. B, F @f America. It will be held during |some of whom are Teddy Koerner, the month of October, starting at|Dave Nicol and Julius Burton. Bel.| Mort Ethan Allen, Vt, and fintesh-|gian and French-bred horses ) ie at Camp Devens, Ayer, Mass.,|brought back from the western bat ; 200 miles distant |tle fronts by army officers—as well Ps Detaile regarding this novel event|as standard-breds have just b de ke hoe tshenekhed te and a couple of} for second pince by beating the Tigers, ‘ é Bens HP. MeCain race have. already been entered nn | FLIES IN OWN WAY | XPERTLY blended choice Turkish request of Preside WwW. KR. ccord 5) thie ; “0 | \ made a clean sweep o e peculiar of Rabbit M . a» % Bowe the ‘srai i, chats aay Suro Wh ahi th marae prepa Bag heebeggertgedi hared : 1 Octobe n| en, tot and 8 tod, ty ball, by He te : ear ihe Thre | tnd wt continue tor five dave. | ee ma pocket| Camel cigarettes eliminate bite and feted, the winner receiving @ cash|interest in the breeding of cavalre| Tho Glant ; mall to drop | : ig ee eee, soning 5 zit interest in the breeding of caval mnie, pennant, hover faded atl! into, has attracted a great. deal of | free them from any unpleasant ciga- a Nr a taal f x J a HO} 5 oe Pirates, 0 te 4,| attention since h ntrance into ‘ i ry Bs Norns ca rs swine "ae |2,tutrmine, the performances t| ne es to “barat Many, venoms thin the pees Ghorianyy OF Unplegeent cige- Prize will be $600 and third gs at voter erProuktyn went Into fourth place by * who is beginning ‘0 pty again retty odor. Phe American running turf will|the rate o ase ee) 9 [a8 Of Old, Geclaree he’ cannot catch | gies ; He represented. in’ thie unique con-| consccuts Son as {the other way. “Why, in| Cones win instant and permanent by Col. Frank ‘Thompkins’| horse « SV ‘nouns, iachis ihe ne other day,” he ous brackets on the turf be | soseeanes il follow th 6 aaa GE Wclen e e slg: "sea dhe : turk be lcontestants wit “tow 1 "a Cusine tabapien ie ee cause the blend beings out pace " LEAGUE approximately the same place every moter Joe Mulvahill to atte « Your Patronage Appreciated to the limit th i is ry Ay eee S| ote 2 iatit. championship. bout Pay Checks Cashed fl e refreshing ine-paper-covered carton. BASEBALL besten for solely by iits_tider,|here the afternoon of September 1 TORREY & SEARS’ avor and delightful mel- Ss ° netween te inege : BATTLE vs. SALT LAKE OFTY || wil be in attendance tor those who|Limnch. The latter recently’ boxed || BILLIARD ae. low-mildness of the tobac- re their services, The rider| Jimmy Wilde, in London, and made #unday Game at 2:20 P, M. Take Fe hah Co: will continue in the the horse lw in motion, saddle while Bees Open Series on | Pittsburg to Lead On Grid, | HERE’S PILOT OF | BEE BALL OUTFIT NO WONDER GOOD PORTSIDERS ARE HARD TO LOCATE Says Morrow : a roo of infinite pa 1, following year Twe Corfrpee PoT! ay 6 ay 0. B. Williams’ Team Defeats ( Co. B Outfit; ap Drop Game to Andadels; Mikados and Rainier Valley Teams Want Places in League Star’s amateur baseball series, of the city Sunday. Wy aw << niki SD) \ p——“TC7EWE HAD HER THREE DAY oa ‘ \ \\\\ Wn) JALL OUR CHINA IS STASHED, THE] or \\ ste lS BUSTED, OND * \ ws os HED THE HANDLE OFF OF AY \\ ) rw ‘ N \ > | ae 1 AAPL PPP PPP PPP Two More Squads Join © Amateur Ball Pursuit; “Woodworkers Win Tilt — Mercers filed application for entry in The which gets under way on Eighteen teams are now local Japanese squad, and the Rainier Val- want to join in the scramble for the city As the rest of the teams have drawn their places on the the disposition of the applications will be decided tonight at a meeting of the executive committee of the series, which has been called for 5:3 oca ot Panthers Will Have Power ° : e me win Seattle Be Able to Shut in Backfield; Stars Return | Out Lakers? Ask Fans WASHINGTON, Pa, Aug Gas cant bs & punis University of Pitteb iil be tb || How Coast ert et onthe riven uti c =o 1 1919 campaign. wo more ciubs ave Clubs Stand |e —--- 8 the playfields be ; after the title. ; H ee Oe ae ley aggregation, . i a po Paprarraymihtann preg have ‘amateur diamond title. nd jing with Tom . in the New Engiand states. schedule, enutout. ay? This. athe opin base for Bridgepor « iessue. at Spaldings’ store, | question asking an ified te | they are p sit in on the This ts Eddie Herr, the rotund be, + coached the quartet o and | first game » with the Salt leader of the Salt Lake Bees, whose |ine their prep school days at ere} squad is still Nghtung for the Coast Kirk! | NOON to keep the record clear - ae Sait Lake ix very much tn the pen nant hunt yet, and Seattle fans can } expect « battle today. Brenton ix in line to pitch for Seattle, altho Thom: as May open the series against the Ira Viagstend graduate he played Tacoma @ COAST HURLER Is i] PHIL ADELPHIA. F mi REAL VET OF WAR } tem» Daniels, who played with Portland, im the Northwestern league another Vortland | Last week the local club hung up| league pennant. Herr was honing A a rela vosresbeayveen & record of 43 Innings without being |seeut for the St, Louls Browns, and TCH scored on by the Oakland club, and knows ball players, He bas one of POLO MA | Manager Mullen and bis hired help|the strongest hitting minor league | EAL fallivan are trying thelr darndest this after: |teams in the country, | TO BE R pag GALA EVENT) Aug. 27 played with last year, is playing shortstop for ‘ne the Detroit Orleans are staging nthe eading the 91, while by Thursday. Entry blanks are to be turned in to The Star or Spaldings’ Final details of the series will be worked out at the meet- jing to be held by the executive committee tonight. | _ Two more reports of Sunday games have been turned in, |fantry team, 8 to |0. B. Williams defeating the Co. B, Third Washington in- 2, at Walla Walla field, and the Anadel |club beat the Mercer A. C. aggregation at Wildwood in an exhibition game, 16 to 9. Lund, hurling for the sash and door boys, let the Co. B star, ie 8 league, where after playing with the soldiers. outfit down with two bingles. Dahle was on the mound for | Manager Trucke took the hill in the game with the Mer- visitors SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 27 eos | Just who will pitch for the invad-|{ Pat Harkins, form cher for ; ever before at} ,,fert Werth, Dallas and woaston | cers. He algo banged out two home runs. = eta is guesswork, ax Herr has been Angeles, } both in point of at-| fengua “They are benched areund The Anadels and Mercers will open the elimination series juggting his hurlers around lately in the Cali- { ance and in entries, Meadow | 390 percentage. — Shrevepor at Mercer playfield Sunday. The Anadels have cancelled It will be one tough job keeping with San (| Brook. Cooperstown, Pipl: Frock, | fourth place, is five games behind = : 3 Brook eown, | Faas “| Moustow, their proposed excursion to Port Townsend. the Bees from the plate today, be ne of the || Rockaway, Coronado, California, Mi md Ni he final vill be lish : cause the Mormons have the strong: |( > has not Slams Valley, Point Judith, Myople,| sin Leard, former feattie second ews of the final arrangements wi published in The est offensive team in the cireult. In|} in t ) Br yn Mawr the Philadelphia : Star Thursday. Rumler, Krug, Sheely, Spencer and} rica ent YN ex 4 ponaninasi salle Johnson, the vinitors have a power ie | tul attack ; |LEON AMES IS ON |CYCLE STARS TO i | Pg Care adron. His rec- | TRAIL OF RECORD RACE AT MARION controt of any left-hander T have and even observation balloons, } nd the junior 7] When Denton Tecumseh “Cy"| MARION, Ind., Aug, 21.—Bwvery ever seen perform,” says Elmer Hut ied up another record {/ for teama whore nbers have les | Yo ung retired to his Ohio farm| Reiger, another member of the |) when he wae shot eight timen tiger ratingy The tournament. will latter pitching 22 successive sea-|*°t of the five-mile course tires { * ating lee Strait, whe held down an eut~ Seattle hurling corps, “and ft) aod 4 to tentify to the fact. {]be followed by the Bryn Mawr horse| field dob with Mentile several years |sons in the major it was| Milles southwest of this city, ae: have seen a lot of ‘em work. |) Harkins recuperating at a |! show, and immediately after that a| sae, ls hitting over the 220 mark te’ | suid his record would stand for- d for the international motor- Controt is about two-thirds of the |) California resort }} big season of fox hunting, complet-| #* Isternationst league. ever. Would there be another arm ¢ championship on Labor day pitehing game, beeause It saves} a Jiing the greatest season of horse Kelty, who wana fireteacker for|that would stand the grind of 22|will be gone over to make it Nght. the arm. Lots of times I have sports society has ever had | sab “ar bene years on t adie Plank|ning fast. The turns will be cut pon a, but — nd : - | made the « years and re »wa from a right angle to a curve ix OF seven each ° TTON | tired ob y thewson was With a hundred-foot radius. The batter, which takes all the re. Major League yom Aer tteoem |e checked after 17 vaigns. Walter |cream of the motorcycle racing of serve strength out of the old Britton, the welterweight champion, Johnson te rounding out his 18th |America will be entered im the biz ae : Scoreboard is in receipt of a cabled offer from year. But to Leon K. Ames, of the | events. “ ee Hi { George McDonald, the English pro- St. Louis Cardinals, comes the op- | a Claude Cooper and Sammy Bohne, | en | ter, for a match with Johnny portunity of upsetting Young's Ty both of Oakland, are two of the beat NATIONAL LRAGUE | Bashman, the English welterweight | mark Red now in his 17th GOING IN STYLE (baserunners in the league, declares | w leet. Pet.lchampion, the bout to be held in| | ecutive nm and seems des-| To the shoot by acroplane. That's Peter Lapan, Seattle's laboring atl s ‘ 6} London in the fall. Britton ts con-| ® forever. the way they go at Portsmouth, N. catcher Xew York 48 638 | bering the offer ig —~——______——|H. Daily trips are made by two “Both have speed and have the 4 > : borers a few buy Boldt, French pas |acroplanes from the Wentworth knack of getting a lead, Thin bird ‘ rr Pade” Ret NOT get another !48°. Will attempt to do a ¢ ~ | try. ptown, 1414 3d Ave; down: |house to Annie Oakley's shooting Cooper is the best runner in the 4263 tse he is didn't play back in a local ring shortly town, 913 2d Ave. school league, barring none.” Seattle players don't think much of Billy Lane, Oak center fielder, as « baserunner, in spite of the fact that Lane is | right among the leaders ail of the time, “Lane has speed,” says Clyde | Wares, local second sacker, “and | that is about all. He slides into the bag at second, and is one of the poorest sliders tn the league, | and he doesn't use the hook slide at all.” “This is my season in base ball,” firmly ar&® Lapan; “I have been in the game now for four years, and I am thru at the end of the sea son.” But when the bells ring for the be-| BROOKLYN, 4 |ginning of next season, it's a cer-|. " ame tain as the rising sun that Pete will p, be on th again, unless he le or arma durin, ikes to play ba yy la couple winter | too well to @ Yt WK wey al ING | PWT | iY | Hendrix and Daly; Rudolp AMERICAN LBAGUP Won. 1 eiphia—Cear. joston at Rrooklyn—Clear St. Louls at Pittsburg—Clear American League York—Clear CLEVELAND, | Detroit + mand . 1 i Batteries: Holand, Ayers smith; Bagby and Aug, 27 n Salt Lake City at Seattle " Sacramento at Vernon fan Franc Inco at Oakland ro—Kaddie louted a hame run in the ic and the White Sox got 18 cents a package The Ch tana tnaians went into a tie} MARANVILLE SNARES quite an impression with the Bng- lish nobility | What you pay out your good money for is cigarette satisfaction—and, my, how you do get it in every puff of Camels! cos yet retaining the desirable “body.” You may smoke them without tiring your taste, too! revelation any way you consider them! Camels are simply a For your own satisfaction you must compare Camels with any cigarette in the world at Camels are sold everywhere in scientific ally sealed packages of 20 cigarettes; or ten packages (200 cigarettes) in a glass- We strongly recommend this carton for the home or office supply or when you travel. any price. Then, you'll realize their superior quality and the rare en- joyment they provide. Camels certainly are all any smoker ever asked. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N. C.