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% CG Jakland Shadow’ s Great L Left Hand Tries Hard, but Superior Ring Craft of Duffy Is Too Much for Champion; ie Duffy Wins Four Out of Six Rounds; After He Awards Bert Forbes Decision Over Kid Johnston ~~ BY LEO H. LASSEN Davis. Duffy held the lead thruout the bout, winning every round but the sec ond and last, which were even. supreme. with his left hand, in the closing rounds, but to no avail. Duffy's footwork was the revelation that it always is. ———— times with swinging punches, Bi but none could topple the! Oaklander. | li g Wi : ee 1g The first round nt to Dutty by 1 ers In jm shade. It was a rather tame sew atches in ft co Vital Prep = his landing blows with bis left, Dufty coud ‘ennis Tournament — "*_'*"* "#4". EY ve the last round. scoring several times | ‘he first inning on De Ju ‘and C. Hofius, with wild awings. It was q deaper.|KAW2oe's sacrifice and Mager's Geen x er Melin Teh cane, D. | ate effort on Davis’ part to sewing the| Texas leaguer. ‘Las vs. John Backiand j decision. But Duffy played safe, and, Broadway took the lead in the a. Fletcher Johnson |the best that Davis could be given| third, Arai’s single, Meister's sac Pod yo gl poy * ans |was a 60-50 break on the last ses- grow H. Linder’s triple and ©. Haisure ve. Zac Kalbach and Me- | sion. Lon Tack Scully vs. M. Shaw. here were ny juawks over the! « poweg th ctierme = br dn alg Tose plan | Singles by Speidel and Peterson va. Frank Kosiowsk!; Jack | { Duffy won the third round easily | Brooklyn ‘« s13|managership of the Seattle club this spring. He plans to) ames scully vs. Harold Williams.| and is now leading the teane tn ? | | einetanets = enter the managerial game again after some scouting ex-| Fletcher Johnson vs, Frank Koz-| pitting with @ mark of 314, passing TAYLOR, Bruce Hesketh | Dufty wee ‘ay ait the lading tn FINAL STANDINGS | Chteago a} | perience. lowskt. |the Fremont Cyclones, who are hit- Fletcher Johnson won the| this session je landed a right Wen. tess ihe . Ralph Loe ys. Art Langlie, |ting 900 oven. the second day's | CTO*s at the bell that was the hard . 3 } ALS PLM. "supped Ath mancawaroonting dat btow ef the biin thie tar Hee P ape ¢ te) Cc lH P. 4 U Simonne Bourque vs Gertrude | The averages follow: : | 3 ’ « 4 Player, Club— an. nh ttle Tennis club yesterday. In the fourth round Duffy again 1 “oe onne! as reppe Pp | Pearl Di : took Leo Lagerstrom down | Plled up 4 big lead. Duffy landed . Bastey,. Per- PEAKING of O'Connell. reports, They may O'Connell ie showing a) Rita Meyer vs. Irene Stephens. st Bose a ; 4m a hard-fought match that four hard rights to the head without 4 Hingleton from San Franciaco have it that| World of pepper Iately, and he con- | AT? P.M. | pases wire ™. P. § H ; gets, Taylor winning, 62,/4 feturn. Davis tried working his mietaicr | , | nes to buat the little leather apple| C. Nau vs. Frank Moreland. He ' shift i thie session, and Duffy made . - ‘ " he may report to the New York | wound the .400 mark. He's pretty) Bill Fox ve. Wayne O’Brien. ete beat Armie Marion, 1.6,/ him miss several wild swings Davia) PRROADWAY high school's bane-) 7) ’ Giants any time now. fast, too, ranking with the best run. — a | : Marion having the second set | !snded two effective punches just be-| 7 ball team retains the cham #4 Covch and Morgraves: eal He was not suppored to report un-! ners in the league at circling the| ‘Tuesday's results follow: eae Match when Hesketh rallied | fore the bell pionship won in 1921 by beating! wag tit {923 under the announced terms of | bases. MEN'S SINGLES / eer the match out of the] The fifth round went to Duffy bY | Franklin yesterday at Denny field ‘ | the deal, but the Giants aren't mak-| O'Connel! is playing improved ball] Dick Vander Las beat W. B 3 4 \* shade. He worked a beautiful one-| -” 4 | ha ay 3 yp in the National, as ex- | since being shifted to the outfield, ax | Jacobson, 62, 6-3. ; defeated Art Batley atter | tro punch in this session that sent/>Y © 4 to 3 tally. The victory | cute S ie dal tis Giants way’ try to] bie feleing ahbrtckataae ot tit bane | JUNIOR SINGLES 5 ‘sets of hard tennis, 4.6, 6-4, 6-3,/ Davia to the ropes. Leading with a/ tied the Tigers with the Queen me dor, Hartnet 904) Bet him right away took a lot of edge off bis playing. George Clarke beat George Miller, : ; Masituive tekich today ~thi toh. Duffy crossed his right with! Anne team for thie season's play. /0'Parre!!: Gr nen, Mammaus, shrive ea’ ad : Pink. lightning speed to Duffy's chin for * " ainila a j MEN'S DOUBLES ° Van Dyke Johns and Pin ae hatte Guna of the “aan Hugh Griffiths and Leonard Pa ie a te oe 9 P | oe ae nd H. erche beat W.|?, Mitchell, W, P. ° in the men’s singles. vg! Dutty aise hat the better of the 1a. {iotilt beth pitched good ball with ||, we se . us Buckshot May romising j tobinwon a Brohe beat W. |Vinaberg. Wf : o> sgyapat sae tee mimra cli fighting in this session Griffiths finally triumpbing. 1A Reston o.19* 6 Barney Kearns, formerly of Oakiand,| 8. Faries and J, Quinn by defau Haines, W. & : y ’ ‘ 3 ° : ° ° e tied the score for Franklin in bd | ‘Paul Jackson; Bud Marion va. Abe Kubey pulled one of his cele. | Stead; Jor Livengood ve. Dick Lang | brated Santa Claus decisions in the| fourth, but Broadway came back | Don Waller ve. W. L. Warren: | semiwindup, when he gave Rert | With ‘two runs in the fifth that ore Waite and Kosiowsti vs. Forbes the decision over Kid John.) #8¥¢ them the game. Arai singted. ne and Taylor! ston, The fans yelled so loudly that Burnsed sacrificed, H. Linder walked) + Johnson 294! one of the biuecoats present had to| *"d Staley brought both across with irom +s. Willlams and Robinsoe. yeocsa! map tion: Maroid ¥. D. Johne vs. R. Miller; | CScOrt Abe from his seat at the ring-| it and Loe ve. Denton and W side in order to restore peace. } De Julio scored Franklin's last and Robineon Phe 4| Kubey must have been trying to|TU" in the seventh when he ¢ Marion dnd Livengood vs. War ine. imitate Ben Turpin while watching yan and —s home on Mager's RESULTS | the bout, because the worst Johnston | double to righ: 4: fs singlee--cari White defeated | should have had wasa draw. He did) The score RH. E. D, Vander Las! most of the leading and every bit aa; Broadway, settee eee 48.2 D. Vander | much punching. | Franklin ... 38 6 oy| Forbes hung on thruout the fourth{ Batteries: Griffiths and Burnaed; | } d Fred | round and didn’t deserve the verdict | Patricell! and Davis rawford Anderson de-| o+ a1) Kozlownkt } i naipn | The bout wasn't very attractive to watch, being an “agony” contest | Ge Turenne pooner pe then | with a jot of clinching Loa “wiitiam Taylor de-| For the boys who like a slugging Don | melee, Boy McCasslin and Bobby bas Bg its $= |Gray put on a tilt that satisfied the meth defecten Ariny Marion, ; Most exacting. They popped awny }at each other for four rounds of torrid milling. Sehacht calling it 50 66. Marion | in McCanal hed telling is tushas Merrer to |© cCasslin crashed some telling Mrs. Hendersun defeated Ruth | punches to the body that would have 8 Rita Meyer defeated | keeled over many, many battlers, but , G1. Gertrude Norris | ¢ Gefented Genevieve Betts by default jray fought right back and by good Junior singlee—-Howard Langlie defeat-| use of his left hand finally earned a 4 William Kendall, 6-3, 6-2. Fred Keims draw. McCasslin bad por aggre JERRY BUSTED HATS WITH ROCKS, BUT HE HIT WRONG PERSON “Busting straw “hennies’ and bouncing rocks off thinly thatched heads may be «port for awhile, but it has an awful come-back,” groaned Jerry How ard, as b reposed on his cot in the gray stone bastile on Yesler way Wednesday i Ken McPherson, 6-3, 6-0. Army| decision had to be given Howard, after the manner of a Singiee—Ken McPherson defeat-| Larry O'Brien, a big, husky fellow | monkey in a cocoanut tree, filled ik Levine, 4-6, 6-4, 6-6 dug up in the backwoods by Lonnie aecsoren Austin, took «a couple of rousing WHITMAN TEAMS. punches on the beak from Rube Finn, and after the first round had ARE EXPENSIVE to cat it un evening becaum tia Aiiietice were « financial ability menatier was badly bent at Whitman college the past Young Gower beat Patsey Cicacco Matias toe dispatch. Total ronda on in the second bout ‘all activities was $1,064, Football| I” the opener Chris Stillman was showed the greatest deficit jteo strong for Young Bercott, scor jing a couple of knockdowns in the POPE TO DEFEND TITLE |third round. Both are green per- Gus Pope ix in training to defend | formers, but they tried hard all the Nig A. A. U. discus throw title at the! Way Mational meet at Philadelphia this) Another big house sat in on the season. [smoker which was staged by Nate “4 pie |Druxinman, which goes to prove THOMAS CAPTAINS TIGERS =| ®cain that Seattle fans will support LOS ANGELES, June 14.—Harri-|@ good eard when they know they fon Thomas, of Los Angeles, will cap-| are going to get a run for their | fain the 1923 track team at Prince. | shekels. ton. besay his pockets with pebbles and climbed on the roof of the Postal Telegraph building Tuesday aft ernoon. He laughed and danced with glee as the rocks fell five stories, breaking roofs off helmets, glancing off bald hea and knocking parcels from the grasp of women shoppers. But when Jerry by accident dropped a pebble thru the news paper a biueconted minion of the law was reading, telling of the Legate murder, Jerry's goose was well browned. The cop jumped. And then Jerry was located on the roof and drngged off to jail. He was charged with being drunk and disorderly. T have never seen a removable bridge or BR So-called Alveolar Brid«e that hes etton tor ‘One irri tates the tissues and joonens the anchor teeth, while the other ts #0 fithy that it’ endangers heaith and life, ‘The modern sant- tary bridge is the perfection of bridge work, and is recom- mended by DE. EDWIN J. BROWN ool Cline 106 Columbia st, SEATILES LEADING ‘DERTINE WIEN your dealer shows you this shirt, ex- amine the cuff. It is mew. The fold is woven . : into it so that it can be reversed and worn on both sides. The turn is made in an instant, without takin off your coat; and because both sides of the fine sof fabric are alike, both sides are the right side. Made like the VAN HEUSEN Collar, of a single-ply fabric that will not wilt, it is easier to adjust, easier to wear, easier to keep clean and easier to launder. Tie PHILLIPS CUFF Shirt Seven Styles — Prices $2.50 to $7.50 and Infighting Wins Great Battle Fans Give Abe Kubey the Grand Razz IMMY DUFFY'S superior speed and great left hand crowned him the new) king of Coast welterweights at the Arena last night. Referee Ad Schacht | awarded him the decision after six fine rounds of milling with Travie| Davis, in desperation, tried a shift, extending his right hand and socking | vis made his best showing at long range work. He cracked Duffy on the chin several | Davis began to take the offensive in| Franklin opened the scoring in single sending over two j «The score xX H B. Vernon 4 w 6 ento ° 2 : re James and Murphy; Pittery | The Oakland Shadow used his left hand in great style, popping Davis | jalmost at will with his portside mitt. At infighting the visitor was A180 | xm Tork eae Yo CG M jonly two effective punches. ty Meet 2» Ball Game « ; » Johnson and Hes- | dancing tactics at the close of the | Broadway Defeats Frank-| } Triumph in City | round. scoring several points us lin and Ties Queen Anne Detroit & B-to-1 win over W New York Bt Lowe for Lead; Retains Title |f*)\"« CROWN FROM TRAVIE DAVIS RALPH MILLER IS STILL LEADING STICKERS IN JUNIOR CUP SERIES WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 1922 af PACIFIC COAST ramento | The score n OM Oakland sow } At Balt Lake * a8 | Batteries: Kremer and Koehler, Wil- | Hama, i nd Myle) AMERICAN t lout tert Whew, Murray Hottman: Ds Batte France. RATIONAL LEA Vesterday’s here—Irish Mouse! drove in four runs with » double and « single, and scored one himertf, help- ing the Giants beat the Keds, 7 to 5. © two doubles and a a of the league. 16 bite, and won, 14 to 0 nm, and didn’t allow a bit and Pertion played first base and bor tatop. led the Cube t beat the Robins, § to # A The White flox won, § to 9, from the thietics MAJOR LOOPS IN ARGUMENT |? sent tice tney aia 0 tow yours A leagues thre 4 Hamilion, Cooper, Morrison and Goseh; Fillingtm, Marquard, Me Quilian and Goway man Fournier pitched the ing behind the pitehing * signed by the Seals in 1920. ry Devine is now scouting the Coast, of 1919 when Seattle loop. He recommended O'Connell Northwest-Interna SEATTLE COULD HAVE syed HAD JIM O’CONNELL atchesin Average of |; So Says Joe Devine, V Who | Recommended Him to Bill | Clymer, Back in 1919; Other News and Gossip of Woodland Tennis Tour: | w, Griffiths Picked Up in Baseball Here and Elsewhere BY LEO H. LASSEN pie | EATTLE could have signed Jim O'Connell, the ON & few matches were played = ALPH MILLER, | great young ball player, recently sold by San | Francisco to the New York Giants for $75,000, Van der Lan moved nearer the final before the Seals grabbed him off of the Sac- rounds by deteating W. B. Jacobson, ramento sand lots, You'll have to take Joe Devine’s word for ,, it. Devine, who is now scouting for the New! scheduled with Simonne Bourque York Yanks, was in Sacramento in the spring | playing Gertrude Pearl and Rita Mey re-entered the Coast |*" playing Irene Stephens to Bill! in earnest tomorrow, and the mixed ‘Only Few Leader Has.| a” Star Meet .636 Now | ney Will Get Back in g | Stride Thursday | Second, With S71 in The Star-Woodland park ten Three Brothers Dye Worker catcher, ta still leading the hit- ters in the final series of The Star Junior cup series, Miller had just a fair day at the piate against West & nis tournament yesterday, Dick | 6-2, 6-3 Only a half dozen matches are on oday, the women's semi-finals being x ¥ Men's doubles will get under way nm Be} Clymer, the red-thatched pilot who fizzled douvies and women’s doubles will rycaget Be ie : 8 {)with the Indians back in those painful days. j start Friday. : Pe he . : QT ought bis ay past y and onaptins Robert: | But Clymer had no time to experiment with youngsters, |,,,7h* finals pa Snr Mg xe aioe tear ae , jhe said, and consequently Seattle lost one of the greatest trom saturday with the junior boy | to .686. E » minor league prospects the game has ever known, He was’ singles, women's singles, men’s sin-| Miller has collected seven hits in gles, junior boy doubles, men’s dou-|all trips to the plate, making six bles, women's doubles and mixed dou- | singles and a home run. ; bles being run off in order, The first ] Will Griffiths, Washington Park 6 {tional and Western leagues for the Yanks. He is in Seattle! event will start at 10 a. m. ® |shortstop, forged into second place | pw, but @: © leave for the latter circuit next week,| The junior boy events will be the | this week with a mark of 671. He bay Dovine Siar cube into baseball prominence here when he | >**t two-out ponte > ens Pompe rs. |picked up four bits last Sunday. a events three-out-of five wets and the} Ann Merz, third sacker of tile managed the championship Duthie shipyard club during the |Sincr events will be two-ont ot-three| same team, also bingied safely four | 2% |war. Then he piloted the Calgary club to two pennants a5 |times and moved into third place | ‘the Western Canada league. - with an average of 500. w x ‘ Today's schedule follows: | " | Devine was prominently mentioned as a candidate for the ATiP. Washington Park made 18 safe- cher ATTLE may have a good p in “Buckshot May, the big right-hander farmed out to the Van couver, B.C, N. 1. club after the j Spring training season A gang went over to Tacoma yew terday to watch May pitch, and he turned in a creditable afternoon's work. Vancouver won, 2 to 1. May allowed one run before being yanked | did the Barney in the seventh, driv ing over the winning tally May still looks « long ways from being a Coast League pitcher. He’ a big, awk looks like a busher. But the big fel- has « good fast one and has| W. Kennedy and L, Christian by de. | Hervis, 4. rd. gangling kéd and he plenty of stuff on his curve ball, ‘The experience he will obtain wn for a pinch hitter in the seventh. The | der Bob Brown at Vancouver will do ¥ © , Washingt Ps j shift worked, and the Beavers put) him a world of good, ax Brown is a| WOMEN’S SINGLES an yr smart baseball man, | over the winning runs in thin frame. Burger Gets Attention wole playe behind Oldham and |. Epry BURGER. Seattle's 4 nervy southpaw, is attracting ‘the attention of the scouts ra) Joe Devine speaks highly of him. and Boldt says several queries have come in from big league clubs | Burger has been going well lately yerterday Dave Dugd: made the trip over from Seattle with the local party and with Bob Brown and Tealey Ray mond the opposing managers, it like the old Northwestern peeme hin feat of stopping Portland twice| Howard Langlie vs, winner James lant week being one of the best pitch: | Scully-Harold Williams. ing features of the season Hurger and Vean Gregg are the| only pitchers on the club who are showing up to form right now. If it wasn't for this pair the tribe would be resting in the basement, ‘It Looked Like Old Times Philadetphia pounced on four Cara) TT seemed tke old times in Tacoma league all over again. Dug, Joe Devine, George Reaktor ele. Jimmy FR hardson and Jim Boldt were in the party Prexy Boldt was the chauffeur for the party and you will have to take Dug's word for it that James drives a nasty corner ‘They Don’t Fight Nowadays AS peso PLAYERS of today don't SW YORK, June 14.—Again the | #0 merican and Naticnal baseball! George Engle speaking. on to break, thiy time over the barnstorming question. The A merican league heads are in favor of striking out the rule prohibiting w lve te of or PHILLIPS-JONES CORPORATION, Malers + 1255 Broadeasy 1 New York pr orld’s series players from partict pating {n post-season tours, while the older ciroult is strong for the rule, cording to repbrts JACK DEMPSEY 0. QUITS ACTING NEW YORK, June 14.—Jack TEETH EXTRACTION FREE DAILY Our whalebone plate, which does |not cover the roof of the mouth if York have not stated officially that pu have two or more teeth. | Natural Rubber, set of heures, 90.00 Gum Lyke Rubber, a perfect re oduction of the human gum, set teeth. ssessseeeeess 10,00, GOLD CROWN BRIDGEWORK Most of our present patronage is recommended by our early custo. mers, whore work is still giving good tisfaction All work guaranteed for 15 years. Examinations free. OHIO. DENTISTS | 207 University St. Opposite Fraser-Paterson Co. The veteran tosser, now in his forties, knows whereof he speaks, be- Bot isn't thru with building up his bal chib yet | The Seattle president is lining up all the promising bushers fn the Northwest The latest addition to the team ts ® pitcher named Musket, of Belling Dempeey's vaudeville contract has|ham, He's a righthander and Engle been canceled, and the champion heavyweight in to immediately start cosine w'ateeonon wy iets ERDETE Thinks Dempsey Is Dodging Harry Wills: | } | N"™ YORK, June 15.—Jack Demp- | sey has two ways out of the jhole that Harry Wills has pushed | | hin Into—i¢ he wants out. He can put his price so high that! no promoter can reach {t or he can | fill his card full of setups and say | |he is too busy. | While the boxing solons of New they will approve a bout between | Dempsey and Wills for the heavy- weight title, they have taken action |that represents th same thing The commission has accepted the challenge of Wills, accompanied by | |® certified check for $2,500, and to |be consistent with recent actions, the | commission must. serve notice on Dempsey that he has a certain period of time in which to consid the chal jlenge of his dusky rival, Dempsey wirendy has staggered tive promo Ss with a tip that wants $500,000 for his next big ance ee Wills would be willing to accept jabout $50 for his share the fight [mnt be possible. From present indications Demp. | | ney is getting ready to fill his calen dar with some startling dates, in cluding another knockout of his part ner, Bill Brennan, who will take one cause he can still don a uniform and . ’ Hart vi woods something about pitching Dugdale sided in with him, Dug also being of the old school. Both say that the players lack the battle that featured the old games. Boldt Still Building Team he looks like a real find. He is ways the O. A [sald to have a darn good fast ball Hert Bab! C. collegian, will Join the team when it returns from California in a very the Oregon out with the Vancouver club in the eireuit N.1 | pay two weeks. He successful season with Aggies. = He ts working BY HENRY L. FARRELL jof Dempsey’s pokes in the mid-seo- yard freestyle, covering the distance \tion every day in the week for good | world’s tank swimming records here! The company is now putting forth | yesterday, Johnny Weismuller, mi.|the Wm. Penn by tens of thousands |tles in the Hillman Merchant game 1. C. Montag “and E. Reson beat H. | Mirk, Ww. Pp. Neer and M. Pollack, 6-3, 6-3, Poe Sr C. Duett and W. Swanson beat P. | mecutchin, F. r O'Donnell and B. Distey, 6-2, 64. JUNIOR DOUBLES . J. Kaufman and Fred Clarke beat | Jerome, 11 fault. bec sc sade J. Beck and D. Frizzell beat E. TRAM BATTING | | Bauer and R. Stixrude, 64, 46, 62]. Team— Fremont Cyciones . |. Gertrude Pearl beat Mrs. Foster, | west & Wheeler igs. 63. Thursday's schedule follows: AT 4 P.M. AT 5 P.M. Leo Lagerstrom vs. ©. T. Stephens. Bruce Hesketh vs. Peras Dix. AT6P. M. | AURORA, I, June 14—With a Abrams and Baxter vs. Creev - T., land Waugh : ® Creevey | AA iightning attack of short jaba and Wittisms ‘and D hooks, Jock Malone last night de- ind Dae Ot ES Metoen aikd Bryan Deane Ma 849, round bout here, Langlie and 1 r let By: owt vas amagile ve. Kista Or vuay enue: tele the Sonne Munson and Langlie vs. Loe and | rounds, flooring Malone with a hard Vincent right soon after the opening. s, Malone tn the third started a whirl- N , shone, Talsure ve. Pettyjohn and | ind ection of right and’lett jabs that closed both Downey's eyes after the fifth. Every round after the third be- longed to the St. Paul flash. O'Brien and Sehermer vs. Vander Las and Hesketh. | Robinson and Erche vs, Stephens and Burr. | | ATT P.M. | ae Marion vs, winner Moreland and ‘5 CENT CIGAR IS Wasson and Taylor vs. Disarm, and Henry vs. Lagerstrom snot THAN NORMAL George Clarke va. winner Fox O'Brien. | Stanley Holbrook vs. Melvin) Fond Meaihrian of Smoker D ile puta WE oe Sane | Awaken as He Lays Down N) W EISMULLER sca. Sante feos Ce SETS FOUR |taken as one of the most definite are really getting NEW RECORDS |" to normal {s found in an- j Houncement of the General Cigar AHULUI, T. H, June 14.—Fol-|Co. Inc, of a real 5-cent cigar— lowing the feat of breaking four | The Wm, Penn. kel nois Athletic club’s boy wonder, chal. | the country over, and it is hard for lenged Warren Kealoha of Honolulu | their workers to keep up with the to a 100-yard backstroke tank race,|demand. The price is 5 cents Weismuller's record-breaking straight each, for one or a thou- marks yesterday were: 440 yards, |sand, thus giving the utmost value 4:40 2.6; 400 meters, 5:81-5; 540 yards, |to the man who lays down a nickel 5:0, and swam 600 meters in 5:52. / for a cigar. Weismuller led Kealoha in the 100-| ‘The Wm. Penn ts a clgar design to fill the great need of the Amer- in 54 seconds, and won the 60-yard |ican Smoker for a S-cent cigar fit free style in 241-5 seconds, jto smoke. It is a genuine old-time [cigar of the type that made the |nickel a real piece of money. Long domestic filler, select bind- er, and imported wrapper, it is the kind of a cigar that looks like it is more than worth 5 cents when you see it, and smokes as ff it had cost twice the price “On strictly business principles," says the General Cigar Co, Inc, “we have no right to price the Wm, Penn at 5 cents. It is at least a year ahead of the times in quality for the price. Both manufacturer and dealer have cut down profit to give the Great American Smoker the biggest best-quality smoke he ever had for a nickel. “The General Cigar Co., Inc., reo ognizes that the emoker wil! never feel that the world is just right until he gets a cigar that he likes to smoke for 5 cents. We have given it to him. Through huge out put, and by anticipating the trend of things, we have been able to put out the Wm. Penn. The smoker gets the greatest value a nickel ever bought in a cigar.” NOTE—There is only one price |for a Wm. Penn—se straight—$5 pero hundred—$50 per thousand. Please do not ask the dealer to sell for less, He can not afford to do it.—Adver. tisement.