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WS OF ALL BR Ped avanine w ANCHES OF SPORT a 6atp, ‘BATURD Quentin In Class by Herself In Local Golf Circles South Shore Star Again Captures “Met” Title, Defeating Georgianna Bishop in Finals of Tourney at Greenwich. By William Abbott. HERD are just two classes of ‘ lady golfers in the New York district. Mrs. Quentin Feitner fs in one class; about two hundred tournament players are in the other. ®@ this ranking doesn’t satisfy we have only to point to the finals of the Metropolitan championship yes- ferday at Greenwich, which Mrs. Fettner won for the sixth time. The fall Long Isiand girl defeated Miss Georgianna Bishop 2 up and 1 to go end the result hardly measures the 4ifference in ability of the two stars. Mrp. Feitner outdrove her opponent @ometimes fifty yards. Her seeond shots were also better when distance had to be made, but close to the green Miss Bishop with her short, straight ame held the advantage, Frequently Feitner | mate result. Mrs. Feitner, leading to the green, lost the first hole when her putter misbehaved, Something hap- pened at the third, Miss Bishop being satisfied to trail her hard-hitting op- ponent to the green and then reverse affairs by superior putting. Mrs, Feitner won her first victory at the 415-yard fifth hole, where Miss Bishop played into trouble. Miss Bishop was very short on the seventh and needed 6 strokes to 6 for Mrs. Feltner. The lead passed to ‘Mrs. Feitner on the eighth when Miss Bishop, after a short drive, topped two iron shots. On the ninth it was Mrs, Feitner’s turn to hit into trouble and the count was all eyen with the round covered. Mrs. Feitner missed the green on the downhill tenth, Miss Bishop - ting nicely on and winning 3 to & A wee little putt cost Mrs, Feitner the twelfth, and the accompanying gal- lery began to scent an upset. A mon- ster drive, a flubbed second followed MRS. QUENTIN FEITNER WHO AGAIN CAPTURES Leslie McGrawites Show Their Gameness by Putting Over a Last Minute Punch, By Charles Somerville. HH Little Announcer Peewee, the mascot, Harty Stevens the caterer and his staff of servi- tors, 1,000 ice cream cones, as many more cheese sandwiches as well as | ham, and an army of pop and mineral water battles, a squad of baseball writers, including self, and some 1,500 of those deep-dyed fans who would defy a blizzard, to say noth- ing of gloomy, lowering @kies, assem- bled yesterday to witness the openin, of the series between the Giants ani the Pirates. Those Pirates swooped into Coogan Harbor, and jmmediately swarmed apoard’ the good lugger, MoGraw. ‘They fell with & shower of blows upon Gunner Jesse Barnes. Bighee stunned him with a three bagger to deep Pirates Looked Like Sure Winners, and Then Came Giants’ Big Rally Three to Nix! 8O8! At the Pirates’ merey! But—no! That began our half of the Pirate Cooper, the hand grenader, wabbled at his deadly work. Georgie Burns two-stepped to first on four pf Coop's sour ones, Beauty gave the bulb a hearty punch, Barbare at short dropped tt out of stung fingers, Beaut had made.a hit. Pep Young swarmed to the attack, Stingo! single over second, Barnes—yo No, ho, home! Doyle lifted a fy to Carey—too short for Georgie to attempt a score after the catch y King. Eddie Sicking’s crack to Cooper foreed King but next Eddie started for second and Sehmidt, catcher, threw short to second and took a re- turn trying to foil the double steal. But Pep ‘dune 19, 1690.7 |Grimm's pop was gobbled by Snyder, | third, | AY wit tone lancroft home. Young ’ Young sprinkled himself { MIM be en, ala % # | ated millions. | King of the Great Apes of the Jungle, a super- man in strength and power, Tarsan has fascin- The thrill of battle, the lure of the desert, jungle and mountains, all blend in this vivid story of uncanny mystery. | Tarzan the Untam 3 Edgar Rice Burroughs ’ A New, Thrilling and Sensational Story M of the Ape Man. ord ae win arny of wa r Aiioge anal! to Invade if eat “Africas, Th inbalatante thers do woe = existe beter Gorwauy and Bagiand sad, are vot pared. “At last tiny scone yon. the ho oko, ae gles poblaaan, Me ima Go" othe than Taran of et trip series what the fuss was about; but they seemed to be having a devil of a time in @ section trench on their left, At one time I could have sworn they were attacked in the rear—I reported it to you at the time, sir, you'll call—for the blighters were pepper’ away at the side of that bluff behind them. 1 could see the dirt fly. don't know what it could have been. There was @ slight rustling among the branches of the tree above them and simultaneously a lithe, body dropped in their midst. Hands moved quickly to the butts of pistol but otherwise there was no move ment among the officers, First they wn | the carcasses, ‘ Instantly the pigs knowing from when threatened. first and then ¢ a until six dead or dying about u a Nera ps rain aoe 0 stay ate wild rum, quickly rahe 3 i ‘Tarzan. tree, despatched t! already dead he. wad ly and with hummed nor Thistied ia re tne Average man of elvillza in nu rous ttle ways oot aah right, Carey scored Big with a wal- heen on looked wonderingly at the almost| that he differed from of Rye by a tremendous recover from the across the Grand Slab long ere himself teiow the wall, waiting for Terman fo sliP| naked white man standing there with| probably, to his earty ingle - the 1920 champion would come to the | 6, ‘clear to the green, won the Seed He torth: foeee res oUtNwOrN |Sehmidt got the ball back in bis) wa, from the wall into lus ric ogee | the firelight playing upon rounded| ing. The beasts of the Pett @reen leading by a stroke, but this advantage was usually nullified by poor putting. Ii a way it's rather fortunate for some aspiring opponents that Mrs. Feitner isn’t very deadly on the greens. She would simply be invincible if her putts were played with the same skill as her tee shots thirteenth for Mrs. Feitner. ‘The Long Island girl is practically unbentable on long holes and the 586- yard fourteenth went to her, Miss Bishop requiring five strokes to reach the green. Mrs. Feitner managed to run down a falr-sized putt and captured the fifteenth, a short uphill hole. By snapped it forth for a Texas Leaguer to left, sending Carey to second. Whitted sacrificed Snyder to Kelly. Valiant Beauty Bancroft tossed out Cutshaw but Carey guined the poop deck with a second tally, Grimm dodged four of the Gunner's efforts and went to first. But Barbare filed to Georgie Burns. Gosh! Looked as If we'd have to mitt, ‘There came a lull in the battle Then the fifth. Again the clash of arms. The Pirates were halted but not vanquished, Bigbee singled to centre. But Carey was cut down with three smacks at the air. Big stole secong. But Whitted crashed a singic past Barnes and Big tied the scored the Hon and rewumes his jodrey mn come won. U prepares puenee dis Runge | pecking | reve Fran’ feed Germans and heads of hia enemy muscles, took in the primitive attire and the equally primitive armament “S}and then all eyes turned toward the mel. Who the devil are you, air?” pped that officer, “Tarzan of the Apes,” feplied the newcomer, “Oh, Greystoke!” cried a majar, ful to maturity and seldo after. His fellow-apes, otal bulls, became fierce and they grew older. Life was a haa to" fieht to orcure ae coe 1 0 to s food then and the it once tor became lifelong. H fo Rumi the aoe ne tg " Orion Bist attive thé Got nay was raised against the snapping LR RESIS ONES jand = stapped forward with out-| was the life labor of the bonne edat dma tal a nana EAT De ete ge hb Eg Bad tot the Bk as and there | were raised against the snapping CHAPTER II, ‘strotched hand. and a life labor is a thing mat, ¢ Ye oubsotna of yeoterday’s saten | Mn aimee atten o bosicetal ance wave. A pitiful counter attack—-| nner of the good lugger MoGraw, (Contin) reeks eatin Tetaa nto" | cated Hebttye he au eck Sane was history repeating itself. On two| took a long chance and played boldly Burns flying to Carey, Bancroft the| , Beauty singled to left. Pep doubled ARZAN watched, toying tdiy|4#,he took the prot «| Tarsan setHious, thous’, be ei jor occasions Mra, Feitner defeated | for a silffiy-guarded guard, on hee same, Young striking out! tosight. He dashed past‘second and with the riff of the dend| arlociced the wei, TRO Nabe thna | tained What the of an ee Bishop for metropolitan honors, | second shot, Miss Bishop went poking Bam—the Pirates were upon us| wos well on his way to third when he bgre te oe ‘ Lenaie te jn 1914 a8 Miss Lillian Hyde and 1916 as Mrs. Feitner. Mrs. Feitner did not compete last year and the title went along the fairway, going hardly 100 yards in three shots, and then fin- ishing by tumbling into a sand trap The senior metropolitan outdoor track and field championships will be decided this afternoon at Pershing Field, J int Southworth beat out a grounder to ¥| Bancroft: Whitted’s sacrifice sent looked up. Pap had expected Beauty to keep on jazzing for the home plate. But Johnny Evers had stayed Ban- German. Presently he fel! to examining the mechanism of the piece. He glanced ‘ain I saw you you were tn London in evening dress, Quite a differehce— pon my word, man, you'll have, to t tron clder-ce Wenge of SeoRaEe he gave play to mood suited him. It was a grim mor ; . Pt ra ‘3 n ” id sometimes ghastly; to Miss Marion Hollins, who, absent in front of the green. Tho seven-|City. The results will have a strong|him to second. A passed ball sent|CTott. Pep doubled on his tracks and |toward the German trenches and | admit tt, . in in Pngiand, let her crown go by de-'| teenth was halved in fives, which|bearing as to the athletes who will be|him to third, Atshaw singled him stepped out wildly to get to|changed the adjustment of the sights,| Tarzan smiled and turned toward angered eee. Way: fault. again placed Mrs, Quentin on the|selected to represent this city in the| home. (Heaveifs! the deck was rune | Second. Meanwhile Southworth had|then he placed. tho rifle, to” h.s| the Colonel. “I overheard your con- we ing The start of the match at Green- wich was not Indicative of the ulti- pinnacle of metropolitan golf for an- Eas' other season. le tern Olympic tryouts at Franklin Field, Philadelphia, a week he nee. But Cutshaw was cut to second and ’ ACT. ONE. Our hero. WALKS IN his sleep. AND IDLY ‘strolling. PAST THe Mint. IN PHILADELPHIA. is ouch 1D by a stranger, AGT TWO.” Our hero. LEARNS FROM the stranger, A SPLENDID ‘way, 70 MAKE. money, AND HE makes tots of tt BIG BALES of tt, ON SCENES ot luxury, returned the wallop to Charile Grimm, the new first baseman of the Pirates, Grimm shot the ball to second to catch Young. Tt seooted abaft the Pinnacle so'so'west by Hell Gate in the fog. Beauty blew home in tho favoring gale. - Yo ho, ho, hot And the game was won! Hard they fougtt, fierce they fought thereafter, but inch by inch we drove them along and off the plank they fain, gadzooks and by my troth, have had made US walk! The Yanks keop coming! O, Ouija, tell us—rwhat chamte for the Clevelands to stub a toeR. + WHITHEY’S UNBEATEN PAIR WILL BE CIVEN SEVERE TEST TO-DAY Tryster and Prudery Will Face Stiff Opposition in the Youthful Stakes, By Vincent Treanor. | ‘Tryster and Prudery of the H. P. Whitney string, and both unbeaten this year, will face a severe test in |the Youthful Stakes of $6,000 at five jand ao halt furlongs at Jamacia to- day. The former must Pick up 130 pounds and the latter 127 pounds, and concede from fourteen’ to eighteen pounds to ten other two-year-olds. shoulder and took alm, Tarzan was an excellent shot. With his clvilised friends he had hunted bI¥ Kame with the weapons of civilization and though he nover had killed exeept for tooa or in self-defense he had amused him- seif firing at inanimate targets thrown into the air and perfected himself in the use of firearms without realising that he had done so, Now indeed would he hunt big game. A slow smile touched his lips as his finger closed gradually upon the trigger. The rifle spoke and a German ma- ching gunner collapsed behind his weapon. In threo, minutes Tarzan picked off the crew of that gun, Then he potted a German officer emérging from a dugout and the three men in the bay with him, Tarzan was care- ful to leave no one in the immediate vicinity, to question how Germans could be shot tn German trenches when they were entirely concealed from, enemy view. Again adjusting his sights he took a loug-range shot at a distant ma- chine gun crew to his right. With calm deliberation he wiped them out t6 a man. Two guns were silenced. He saw men mmning through the trenches and he picked off se.oral of them. By this time the Germans were aware that something was amiss that an uncanny sniper had discov- ered a point of vantage from which this sector of the trenches was plainly visible to him. At firat they sought to discover his location in No Man's Land;but when an officer looking over the parapet through a periscope was struck full in the back of the head with a rifle bullet which through his wiull and fell to t om of the trench they realized that t was beyond the parados, rathe than the parapet that they should search One of the soldiers picked up the Nullet that had killed his officer und hen it was that real excitement pre- railed in that particular bay, for the bullet was obviously of German make. versation,” he eaid. “I come from behind ‘the Possibly I can help yo: The Colonel looked questioningly toward Major Preswick who quickly rose to the occasion and presented the ape-man to his commanding of- ficer and others, Briefly Tarzan told them what it was that Brought him out alone in pursult of the Ger- mans. “And now you have come to join: us?” asked the Colonet. Tarzan shook his head. “Not reg- ularly,” he replied, "“L must fight in my own way; but I ean help you, Whenever © wish I can enter the German lines.” Capell smiled and shook his head. “It's not #o easy as you think,” he have just rman Iines. said; “I've lost two good officers in the last week trying It—-and they were experienced men; none better In the Inteiligence Department.” “Is it mere difficult than entering the British lines?" asked Tarzan. The Colonel Mend Nahe to rely when a new thougi appeared occur to him and he looked quizzi~ cally at the ape-man. “Who brougat You here?” he aake: ‘Who passed you through our out-uards?” “I have just come through the German lines and yours and passed through your camp,” he replied. ond word to ascertain if anyone saw me.” But who accompanied you?” in- sisted Capel, “IT came alone,” replied Tarzan and then drawing himself to his full height, “You men of civilization, when you ¢ome Into the jungle, are an dead among the quick. Manu, the monkey, {8 a sage by: comparison. [ marvel that you exist at all—only it numbers, your weapons, and your power reasoning wave you, | Had 1a few hundred great apes with your reasoning power T could drive the ¢ ns into the ocean as quickly s@ the remnant of them vould reach the coast, Fortunate it is for you that the dum brutes can- not combine, Could they, Africa whistle while working on the grown concentration would be impos Tarzan possessed the ability to centrate each of his five mn ite particular business. Now "Ti worked at skinning the six ples Nis eyes and his fingers i though there was naught else the world than these six t but his ears and his nose weré busily engaged he ranging the forest all about latter assaying each passin Tt was his nose that first di! roach of Sabor, the whea t — shifted for a mi clearly as though he Nati her with bis eyes. Tarzan knew the lioness had caught the the freshly killed pigs and im ately had moved down wind in thet direstion. He knew homes st of je scent spoor and t rate the wind about how far was and that she was app the last ole and he did not The five pelts lay close at had been careful to together and near him—an tree waved its low He did not even turn his head he knew she was not yet tn ‘si but he bent his cars just a sharply for the first sound Dearer approach. When the had been removed he rose. heard Sabor in the bushes to but yet not too close, gathered up the six pelts and the carcasses and as the li Peared between the boles of two he swung upward. into the bi above him, Here he bung the h over « limb, seated bimself co ebly upon another with his against the bole of the ph Rag heed ox the ca with and satisfy his hunger. Sidor growling, £ the brush, cast @ eye towar ¢ ape-man and upon the nearest carcass. 4 : Tarzan looked: down. ent eon Noting es Aarroy ihe § gee cee - ee upen, i AGT THREE. Our hero. mile cna Miicoa tented at one | Hugs! the pwrados, messengers would remain forever free of men.|Stinned, recalling an wreumeent { one of a Suburban of @ Biosys, Morthy | eatried the word in both directions Put come, can I help you? Would |bad once with MAKES MORE money. face, that wondertully consistent cam. [ard Pia #ntly periscopes were leveled) you like to know where several ma- me ' andte nw Ww Ing finish last Mon- | #earehing ou ne traitor. not) ‘he colonel assured him that they} arcan kne' ‘ AND THE plot thickens. day, is at top weight under tug pourus, | take them long to locate the ‘position | wegid, “Cade wreeat atet manne? |cesn Nuno anh Game stoop ( BORE . aa eh ee Among othePs, Nat: |of the hidden sniper and then Tarzan had traeed upon the map the loca- | Cafrion. ‘ } AND THE dark. aBiea? walsh key t? turn the saw a machine gun being trained upon | tion of three that had Been bothering}, Having Mled his belly, the os Hatter, which won tha 410,000 cylin’ | him. Bofore it had gotten into action | the Hnglieh. “There is m weak «pot |fell to work upon the hide i MYSTERIOUS STRANGE! Rionship Stakes at Latonia last fall nay its crew lay dead about It, but there) here,” he sald, placing a finger upon |@nd strong. First he cut st i Yexations, winner of the Realization, | Were other men to take their places, | the “Tt 1s held by blacks; but | them about half an inch wide. fl eee GOES OUT of his life, eee Again a race is promised of thu beating kind, eylabe °6 reluctantly perhaps; but driven on by their officer, they were forced to it map. the machine guns out In front are manned by whites. If—walt! I have he had @ gufficient number p rips h. ey 4 and ot the same time two other ma-|a plan, You can fill that trench with | ether, pterc) . FOREVER. | beam Sect Sanhe Aivided the Jockey |chine guns were swung around toward| your own men and enfilade the |¢very three or four inches former, waa first home with Nightarice |‘® @pe-inan and put into operation. | trenches to ite right with their own |¢dges. Running anothe rats ‘ AND ONE fine day. and Pastoral Swain, but. jost wii| ietlizing that the game was about| machine guns.” e these holes gave him @ ee Manoeuvre. Kummer ‘was first past the | Up with a farewell shot lald ‘apell smiled and shook his |@ draw string. In similar OUR HERO fs caught. ay ee ee, and Bupero, and in|aside the rifle and melted into the! . “It sounds very easy,” he said. | Produced four other like ate he came from behind. Dilly behind him. For many minutes t is easy—for me," replied the ape- | Smaller, from. the PASSING THIS money. act FOUR. Our hero wakes. AND TELLs the world. THROUGH THE bara, n was buky Introduc- one of hia’ sons, just been graduated from Prine? ne cm ne ery friends, Joe weighs 200 pounds and is good looking, ite L planning to join nbs brother fa Secu to learn the Oil business, John EB. Madd ing Joe Madden, has ton, he could hear the sputter of machine gun fire concentrated upan the spot |he had just quit and smiled as |contermplated the waste of German ammunit “They simbu, have pald heavtly fo: the Wazirl, whom the Wa he} “T can empty: that section of trenoh without a shot. I was raised In the jungle—I know the jungle folk —-the Gomangani as well as the others. Look for me again on the second night,” and he turned to leave, “Wait,” satd’the Colonel. “Twill hides and had several strips yest? All this done he threw @ lag Juley fruit at Sabor, cache Stage mainder of the pig tn a crotg} tree and swung off toward thes west through the middle t the forest, carrying his five bim. Straight be went to: ay ied, fA z | ala allo send an officer to pass you through ree Hog cal Tourney hating | musod; “but for Jane they can never| the nee ron EN | the gutch Where he. had OP HI® Atlanta curse at ielmont Pare Terminal |bay no, not it 1 killed them all." ‘arzan amited and moved away.| Numa, the lon. Very ares Cat Afternoon for the second day of the| After dik that night he cireled the|A* he wa: ving the little group | apprdached the edge and eal Tunis meeti flanks of both armies and pated “bout headquarters he passed a small) Nima was not in sight. THAT UNCLE Sam's money. . mpers in training the British out-guards and figure, wrapped in an officer's over-') sniffed and lstened. He co: ng. Gre ie, while the card HE, Turkish tobacco in Chesterfields is real Turkish, not counterfeit, The Pe entered for the tae stunts. sh lines. No man saw Coat. "The collar was turned up and| nothing, yet he knew thai ee 18 LIKE the blend, tO end, The entries fiiees ) man know that he was| the Vidor of the military cap pulled! must be within the cave, * Py RACK —1Urt aud fied | down over the eyes, but as the! that he slept—much depend! OF THOSE cigarettes. Domestic is the best leaf money can da ated waar abut ‘nie fysiigl® tree |ape-man passed the light from the | Numa not discovering him. i ca 8 buy, And the blend is a secret —it ¢ ‘Sian eee Headquarters of the Second} illuminated the features of the| Cautiously he lowered himsel? over THAT “SATISFY,"* can't be copied. Chesterfields are" good"’ kad Love ‘4 Wolgnt, Rhodesians occupied @ eheltered po-| newcomer for an instant, revealing to| the edge of the cliff, and worth batter sition fay enough back of the lines! Tarzan a vaguely famijiur face i) on 120 sad. some it GAN'T be sopied, 1 | observation. | Even lghts Were per-| doubtless, he surmised, and went his| stopped often and turned Aled . mitted field table ary map, ubove them, a lit ly upon the tat burned upo hand. The mel Capell sat befo! on which was spread a talking with several of uke tree spread fn sputtered dit- » While a small fi : Fi sh camp and | eye 4 The Hopatal Steypnc | for’ maidenm and winners of Mi Hy Stepmlechase rd ; | ohd and upward: aloue two aaties,“omiy iit gears couse, ? ing Horse in PCOND RACK |way through the Bri the British lines all u chful sentinels of t early all night he Kilimanjaro's foothills, tracking by | danger increased greatly. finstinct’ an unknown way, for he| reach the bottom and cov ‘arco sawed that what he sought would | distance to the tree that found on some wooded slope! contre of the gulch he. woul jhigher up than he had come upon his| comparatively safe for therty other recent journeys tn this, to h Numa appeared, ha ane ae ® little Known country. ‘Three huurs be- | beat him either to the elif fore dawn his keen nostrils apprised | tree, and to scale the firat him that somewhere in the vicinity | of the cliff rapidly enough he would find what he wanted, and so | the leaping beast vi climbed into a tall tree and settled si | he neared the foot of th ut for bamere: 10 shoot thre miley and Rematele’ had wlwaya been driven CHAPTER IY, footholds close to the botto FIFTH WACK —Ane overwhelming numbers, ’ UDU, the sun, was well up in| had to run up the first |r yg eae AE hidden machine guns, too, thut both- the heaveng when ‘Tarzan| lke a sauirrel running Wp . | Benen egacee 1 ti Lronnytrodk $4 reverted ty them during the conver his giant limbs, ran his flngers) to attempt it again unless VT RO SS Bure, 14s! sation, through his thick hair and swung] tions were equally favorable ( | ATH RAM The Hamotnee Stepieriase: |" "Something stlehced them for a lightly down to earth mediately} for be had escaped. Ni toliee, “over the bruh cous, PPO IMO! Watley this afternoon,” said one of the he Donnybrook... +. Vrse and Kany. Infidel I... ‘ search of, following it by scent down| the former into a deep ravine. Cautiously he} (Read 145 | younger officers. “DL was observing sig [Mt the Ume and I couldn't make out took up the trail he had come |e by only a matter : 4