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' PAGE 16 x\ ! ; ¢ ; THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1919. Sn" wack) PpouLyYy sa Fleet Program FRIDAY .—Fleet arrives.. Aerial display. | m.—After anchoring reception committee on board New Mexico. Wild West parade in city. Automobile tour for men of fleet. —Baseball, Seattle ball park. Fleet team vs. Camp is. One hundred and fifty dollars cash prizes. Band from fleet to play. j 4 p. m.—Rodeo and Wild West show, Liberty park, 13th and East Jefferson sts. Band from fleet to play. j 5 p. m.—Secretary of navy arrives from Bremerton. | 8 .—Box lunches by war camp community service, Bon he park, Fourth ave. and Pine st. | 6:30 p. m.—Dinner to Secretary Daniels at Rainier club, 4th ave. and Marion st. 8:30 p. m.—Dinner by women for Mrs. Daniels and wives | | _ and women of officers’ families at Sunset club, Boren and University sts. | 7:30 p. m.—Floating barge concert, etc., to perform near at anchor. 1:30 p. m.—150 officers assemble at Army and Navy club, 609 Third ave. Hosts will meet them in automobiles “and take them to Seattle homes for dinner. Afterward, all dinner parties will be driven te Masonic hall, Howard) _ . ave. and Pine st., for a dance to end at 2 a. m. m.—Fireworks display on water front. All weights; six bouts. Cash prizes | m.—Boxing for Pacific fleet championship at Seattle park. i a; |p. m.—Dance for men of fleet at Armory, Virginia and r 20 Fifth ave.; Hippodrome, ave. and University st. m.—Ball for colored men of fleet, Leschi park. s p. m.—Warrant officers at Orpheum. 5 ke Ri ce dance for men of fleet, Fourth ave. and 'p- m.—Jazz band and clowns on street. | us SATURDAY | a. m.—Wild West parade in city. [dt a.+m—Rodeo and Wild West show. At Rodeo, riding : : Pacific coast. Prizes $3,000. | 330 p. m.—President arrives. | m.—President reviews fleet at anchor. | p. m.—Baseball at Seattle ball park. All-Fleet team ‘Shipyards Cash prize $150. Pp. m.—Box lunches at Bon Marche park. m.—Dinner for president at Hippodrome. m.—Floating barge concert, etc., to perform near ships anchor. m—Rodeo and Wild West show at Liberty park. All men invited. Band from fleet to play. m—President speaks at Arena. p- m—Dance for men at Hippodrome. | 8 p. m—Boxing championship bouts Pacific fleet, baseball park. Six bouts, $1,000 cash prizes. = p. m—Ball for colored men of fleet, Leschi park. 8 p. m—Officers at Orpheum. Sp. iy mee _— at Armory. yp. mM. treet ce, Fourth and Bell st. Jazz band and -dlowns. * at ; SUNDAY m to 2 p. m.—Box lunches at Bon Marche park. { |p. m—Baseball at Seattle baseball park, All-Fleet ys. | Eins Cash prizes $150. Band from fleet to play. | Pp, m—Officers’ picnic at Wildwood park. m.—Rodeo and Wild West show at Liberty park. All officers and men invited. Band from fleet to play. Three thousand dollar cash prizes, with $1,000 to champion. Armory. 2:50 p. m.—Boat race, standard navy racing cutter, 2 miles. _ Trophy cup to winner. Cash prizes as follows: First boat, $25 per man; second boat, $15 per man; third boat, ~$10 per man. 3p. m.—indian war canoe races. Cash prize $100. 7p. m—Dancing for meh at Hippodrome and Arena. een ting barge concert, etc., to perform near ships anchor. f Quick Reply Wins Texas Prize Pet From Admiral > vin, a big, laay, affectionate|or rolied along the deck Sponish bulidog, is the pet deposit it f the | between the feet of his playmate, Siperdreadnaught Texas, given to 1 bark loudly in token a poms tie ship by Admiral Sir David) ciation and to he de- Bestty. sires to repeat the perf ance, Jim was bound to be giv sme ship, and he went to the en Texas beenuse the Texas was the first to Some people are like antique eggs; open the door when opportunity |‘"® etter you « juainted, th ibboked. more you don’t like them, While the inter-allied grand t t+ WHS at Scapa Flow the British Pairal, without previous warn fet out @ mewsage that he had Gog to give away. “Who wants it Opi Was the question that came out of thin air ptical @mpany “The United - Texas wants it!" was the quick re 325 PIKE 8T. ply. Other ships replied, also, but the British admiral declared that Comfort Style the rule of “first come first served” Applied in this instance. | A Service States steamship Jim was taken to London by the Raisbow division. He was lort in the great city and became the pet ted te Ot on English family. The dog ietiah and pationed Presmnted to Adiniral eatty tory, und that without unnece, whet he was leaving the British sary cost to our patrons. . grand fleet at Scapa Flow the ad-| We put quality tnto the lense Miral went out his query, and mountings. We put sclence It the wardrobe of the Texas 1s and skill into the fitting. We an oil painting of Jim, the work of | Maud Baril, a famous Englishwom- | am, painter of dogs. The painting in inveribed: “A Tribute from an Bn- ment in selecting the and good looking. t. Ivan ©, Wettengel, who was | obedienc and that obedience is , ; | | obedience, and part ori oman to the American Our Eyeglass Service js all that| detailed to command the Oregon, ia |of the religion of the two Keots men: G you ean ask. |to be congratulated because of th While oppowed t the Jin, who \s a regular inhabitant Ex > ¢ Me Mace Paes axpert advice cheerfully given,| staff that surrounds him, and also ed, with other rel the wardroom and fond of cush- . | ; : has te | “Aah wour neighbor about us,”| the crew j!nations, that It w ane tenkets, han an estat Peveh Moe | brates corpplement,|the United state ‘ some little de been | ounce of b y on land and sea i tesa, inveterate Penny. chaser. | 325 PIKE STREET, |7.7".)0"". style|to help end the great struggle, and i por so run for pen- machinery, but there have been’ they swerved faithfully and intelli He will fetch @ penny tossed | Sailor Boat Crews Will © p. m.—Automobile toar for men, starting from number o: ations from offi-|™mander Ely, and Lieutenant Com |cers and me ) wanted to share| Mander Baker of the Arkansas the Oregon ory by being on her| Operated on him in the aick bay she was again put into com-| Westbury refused to take anything exercise good taste and judy.| altho behind proper | makes up in officers and crew what|They say that the first requisition styles to make them comfortable | ‘A FEW OF THE THINGS GOBS ARE GOING TO DO IN fran paar] gone CHICKEN _ bad SEATTLE SA, ———vaw DAE - hy Race for Big Trophy Cup | | This is the trophy cup to be awarded the winner of Sunday's mavy) oni ic in New York to a woman for W. Rooks, commander of Co, L of cutter race in Elliott bay, It is donated by the Odd Fellows. Crews from all battleships of the)veritable threeringed show on & Picific fleet mre to be entered in a|barge for the benefit of the men 2:90/0% the feet / - Those ashore may witness a base ball game between an albfieet nine and the Elke and gaze on the todeo show performers. ‘The committee on boat races ts compored of Victor Zednick, ehair| man; Andrew J. Balliett, Dean Jotm/ Avy cutter race scheduled for The race will over a two-mile course yet to be mapped. Following the cutter race for the championship of the fleet, Ir crews clad only in pocket handker- Sunday afternoon be rowed hiefs and war paint will race in|T, Condon, Elmer Leader, Maj. Al war canoes over the same course.|v¥in Hankins, G. BE. Sherwood, H. B.| Representatives of the Swinomish Cunningham, H. W. Sterrett, Miller and Lummi tribes will compete . Pete Forrest, George Rus A beautiful trophy cup of sterling 4 Dr. W. H. Corson. silver and mounted on black wal. following committee of Odd ut, will be presented the fleet | F ix co-operating: F. W. hampions by the Seattle Odd Fel Smith, P. W. Tweedy, A. C. Creque, lows | 4. C. Creque, H. Witake, W. H. Bayer With the regatta will be a and H. J. Carter. Picked Honor Crew Mans Old Battleship Oregon 5 Every man aboard the fw still a crack ship, and that she hip Oregon, from wh has an all-star crew, Even the| and battle-scarred brid; nt| chaplain, “Radre” Poul Le Duc, tn Wilson will review the Pacific t| known as a two fisted devil fighter in El i ad - a na lye * * The grim old éraft which during Injury Nothing if the Spanish-American war waa the Boys Got Bread known familiarly as "the bulldog of the deer” has te They were running out of bread Sheard, inctndthe -<¢ the other day on the superdread so dig gy, Sony ,| naught Wyoming and LeRoy West: | bury, gunner’a mate, sleeves and went into the bakeshop to help out navy department early last month to put the grim old craft in commis sion and get her ready for sea, there | were hund 4 hundreds of ap-|_ 1% mixing the bread he ran his plications from and men of| {St too far into the machine. The | left ha was inextricably . the fleet to be Every one knew ty of work Westbury whir from + round to keep drawn into thei hard w p mt wetk before the r mixer. It the m Oregon would be fit for wea, let] When th him oy alone be ured as a reviewing vessel | W#* ¢ d and #0 were three ribs, by the secretary the navy »| one eye was nearly put out and he did not in the least deter the appli- | Was internally injured ainer | Chaplain Albert M " Wyoming held Westbury’ right hand while the ship's surgeon, Com he Navy department may or may t have plexed by the vast team from | but a local anesthetic. While the seo to Join; doctora were at work Westbury looked up at Chaplain Park wist » fully and muttered jee, and we were short of bread, ' Scientists and «| Mormons Prove valler crafts are r on the UL 8. &. ¢ |gon, Hvery one of the line officera| Without seeming to spread any | is distingu ed for © bran opaganda or desiring to stir dis work, And high marks are or arouse the wrath of other nat the names of every warrant denominations, it may be ficer, chief 5 fficer and mem-|remarked that there are no better {ber of the enlisted personnel on| sailors in the fleet than the Chris «| board, too. Uan Sclentists and the Mormons. In her day the U. 8. . Oregon| ‘This is not a pronouncement of was the best of her kind afloat, a | the Christian Scientists and the Mor. | the times now, she|mona, but of the fleet's officers. she cks in moderniam lof the sailor, as of the soldier, is none, proving again that the Oregon gently, rolled up hin} | Park of the al Crack Sailors| BATTLESHIP IS (Quick wi of Gon UP-TO-DATE ARK| :.-c.- ce Old Noah Had Nothing on Gobs Aboard Arkansas transferred his fag to the Wyo When old man while the New York went navy yard for an o «. Immediately the Wyo nt on convoy duty. Upon turning and after the Wyoming ad hored the electrician in charge of the electrical fixtures in the admiral’s quarters entered the admiral’s cabin and began to replace burned out lights “What are you doing? Rodman demanded. in his bunk Fixing your lights plied the electrician n't you see I'm trying to Haven't bad any sleep for wt 72 hours!’ Neither have I electrician replied The miral turned over and the dan continued his work. built his | re seagoing ark he had a craft that answered his needs and took him. together with his happy family, to Mount Ararat in perfect mafety, but your Uncle Bam has a euperark, a seagoma wonder of today. And it is the home of a happy family The Ark in gob for Arkaneas, one of the superdreadnau of the fleet The Arkansas mere ani- mals, individual pets * mae cota than any of the other ships: And, just to carry out the ark allusion, the officers and gobs of the Arkansas assert and asseverate that) theira is the smoothest running shir of the fleet Goats Butts Anywhere ‘The Arkansas was in Trinidad last and the goto picked up seores « that are not now with the Noah an Admiral rolling over sir.” re sleep? the Admiral,” the . Wyoming Officer Declared Champion ship, some having died, others sold +4 or given to best girls, When “Beach Hitter” ship mailed from Trinidad she b Lieutenant Linton Herndon of on board (0 parrots, 2 monkeys ® lot of other “animal junk.’ j Balboa, on the cruise to California, a| low o brilliant colored macaw was added) is hin to the ship's pets. In the south a| 4... goat had been taken on board, and/ coming up the coast another was M4 | the Wyoming ts envied by his fel- ors for what they decla: et by with less time nt on shipboard than any of the He is what the navy y to | rest of them born. calle a “beach hitter* When the One of the goats on the Arkanms | Wyoming port, they aay, Hern. was presented to the eecond barge! a... , to spend mest of his crew of the ship by Admiral Mayo. | i. < This goat wears o coat of tan butte tn where and n left the Wyo. on An + on leave and Efforts on the pert of the gobs ty time to rejoin his ship teach the macaw strong language of had sailed and the shave 0 far met with little) | Swell on nt days A more fluent conversa-| ister je joined the Wyoming in t i9 a wicked little parrot, | quite vermatile in the use and proper | Pronunciation of expletives. Marmoset Monterey Hay He had been away from the ship so long, fellow officers say, that regaled |they didn't know him and some f Caen on se eaten body offered to show him about, the cutest of the ship's pete—al winking he was a visitor. canary colored marmonet. He lkes to mnurgie in a gob’s blouse pocket. A musician on the ship bought « CAPT. ROOKS ARRIVES sacred ibis in Trinidad for $4 and| With “Pershing’s Own,” Capt. 1. $100. lthe composite regiment which All the ships took on parrakeets at/ paraded in Paris and Lendon, ar Central American porte, but scores|rived in New York on the Levia of these have been electrocuted. The|than Tuerday, aecording to a tele parrakest ix @ rentiean prowler, and|gram received by his father, Deputy many ‘have explored out-of-the-way | Marshal William Rooks, Tuesday th parte of the ship, only to meet 4 morn ~ FLEET COULD BLAST US TO SMITHEREENS Should the r f t bay or 1 Beattie the 14 reduce the olty to a ff twieted ruins within an n the other hand, the rame fleet is capable of holding the entrance of Puget Sound securely cloned tar against any other navel force afloat today The crew of one of the Itinch t guns in the turrets of the Magehiy Mexico could plant a single faching and Vickst would buret in the cer - — ter the 42etory L. C. Smith This Drea naught bullding and blow the great stru jture to Is Daddy, Mamma emithereens. The New Mexico, Mississippl, Ida and Tennessee could stand off to French Orphans 14 miles and shoot up the town) The dreadnaught W %, home with no less than 104 guns of of Rear Admiral F ntz, is [mighty caliber, some throwing 14- t y ship in the her gobs inch and some S-Inch shells. you, that never had a | Go %1 Knits Hour breakdown has been in com- | ‘These four auperdreadnaughts are [624 feet long. Across the beam = |they measure $7 feet 4% inche oe petié iat ae with the exception of the Tennesse 4 23 French or. lwhich is one inch narrower. They phane an ntaining them to each displace 32,000 tons of water) go. in private French homes. The jwhen afloat. ‘Their speed i@ 21) oniaren a both boys and girls, kneta an hour 5 | and range from & to 14 years of age. Carry 125 Officers |The orphans were adopted by di visions Inch pleces and 4 three-inch guns, |tb¢ S0bs receive letters from their | Prey each carr otticers, charges letters are ad- The New Mex because whe ta @ © the ship and begin “Cher motors) with 1,360 Dear parent The gobs have photographs of all pres ¥ 3,400) of their little foster children Th ¥ “Dp Fe , i! The New en ontne Poll. Parrot Pot ui) | of {he mame, the Mussiesipy) Pie Good, Says Gob Nearly every member of the crew of the U. 8. 8. Tacoma is owner of & green parrot. The Tacoma traveled 7,000 mi The smallest warship in the fleet is the Vicksburg. She is 204 feet {5 inches in length and carries only =. s from Boston, stopping only at the Salem Is Fastest Panama Canal, Amapala, Honduras. The fastest veesel is the Salem.| 4 stop of six days was made at [he travels 26 knots an hour with} Amapala, 20,000 horsepower turbines, She| This gave everybody on board carries on seven guns, but four! time enough to get a green parrot, of these are 51 feet long and the! which appears to be the chief ex fother three 60 fe port of this place, There's a warehip named Seartte,| With the fresh meat supply run but, oddly enough, it wasn't bullt/ ning low, the crew suddenly discov- here. The ship Nebraska was/ered that green parrot pot pie was built by Bros. here. Her| good. The number of poll parrots July 4, 1962, but it on the Tacoma is rapidly decreasing. Kefreshing flavor and fragrance and un- usual mellow-mildness make Camel Ciga- rettes instantly and permanently likable! AMELS are a cigarette revelation! They are a Camels are sold everywhere in acientifioally lad packages of 20 cigarettes; or ten pack- ages (200 cigarettes) in a (lassine-peper-covered carton We strongly recommend thie carton for the home or office eupply or when you travel smoke delight! They answer the cigarette ques- tion as it has never before been answered Camels are an expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos which you will greatly pre- fer to either kind of tobacco smoked straight. 18 cents a package This expert blend brings out Camels’ wonderful cigarette qualities. It’eliminates any unpleasant ciga- retty aftertaste or any unpleasant cigaretty odor! It also makes possible Camels’ enticing mildness while retaining the full “body’’ of the tobacgps. No matter how much you like Camels and how liberally you smoke them, they will not tire your taste! The blend takes care of that! For your own satisfaction compare Camels with any cigarette in the world at any price!