Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 August 1919 — Page 15
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12.-H Cy de here * one of the eagles ». r,agk* there are profeaeional, t on the 3W-yard |. •>• ■ ..if •cord an eagle 3
hole.
an eagle 3
hole.
came within an f. vif Ai*fK§ji I £4:vl ** ___ a at ayi* eighteenth hole. Hla th iftfi nf ih6 cud and content with an ea* U>" ir;T - i- ; ■ H
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Tigg Peru.
August 12 —By defeat-
Club's team. 40
__.ed on the links Into a tie with Peru the Northern Indiana mutch8C8 iched-
IN PRIpE;
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heworms
be as
*t year.” r. but as invariably some of
has a
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a hundred, they were to he won t have
days or until it Of fact, the wise £ th^thoSSds
t them in a grounds? n they
•uppiy of worms
lahing worms - a nice profit he runs as a
blue gills don’t
JOIE RAY.
For Want of a Bullseye
CAUJWELL. N. J.. August I2.-A bullseye needed on the last shot to win the match, but registered on the wrong target, put the Great Lakes naval training station team third in the enlisted men's rifle team matches here. E. A- gsymanski, who made the shot, accidentally drew a bead on the target next in line. , First place went to the United States me rlne corps team No. 2. which scored 270 at <M yards, and 2« at 1,000 yards, for a total of U9. Marine corps team No. 1 also had a score of 6M, but finished second, having a low score at the longer range. scores: Great Lakes naval station, U. 8. infantry team. ITS—263— Amartcan expeditionary forces, 2S3— A. P. Lane. Norwalk (Conn.) Rifle Club,
s National
vidua!
Texas Ragan.
Rlfls Association tndi
match at 23 yards, with a
score of 2S2: H. Bayles, Connecticut, civilian team, was second with 286; Le BoutilHer, unattached, third. *»; J. A.
Wyoming civilian team: J. J. Bailey, civilian team; and Captain Paul Philippine Scout*, tied for fourth.
283. Herman Thotnas, 'Philadelphia Rifle Aeeociatkm; K. T. Frederick, Manhattan Rifle Club, and H. A. Frlse, .Wyoming
civilian team, tied for.gfth. JC.
Scoring 99 out of a poasible 100. J. n. Miller, of Bucyrua. O., took first place in the small bore match, 1,000-yard sweeps takes W. H. Richards, winner of the Leech cup.
with 98; Gunner J. L. Renew,
v-s-ssL:
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Heseion urth, 94.
and ^John
corps, third. K; an<T W. G. York Associated Rifle Club, New Haven, Conn., tied
REMARKABLE SHOOTING IS FEATURE AT SOUTH SHORE
CHICAGO, August 12.—The twentieth Grand American handicap trap shooting tournament opened at the South Shore Country Club yesterday, with three shooters making perfect scores In the South Shore Country Club special event. F. J. Cairne, Tampa, Kas.; William 8. Hoon, Jewell, la., and E. W, Thingan. Louisville, Neb., each broke
100 targets. w
Five contestants, including L. M. Weedon, Cleveland, O., broke ninetynine targets, and there were twenty-six scores of ninety-eight. Officials said scores were as good as ever recorded on the opening day of the event. James S. Day, New Orleans, with a
score of 198. won the
won the South Shore regis.
tered shoot concluded yesterday. Th« American Amateur trap shooting chamonship was shot today, with 318 i
ur* entered.
who scored ninety-eight inJ. Jennings, Toronto; S. G. Vance. Tillsonsbupg, Canada; F. S. Wright, Buffalo. N. Y.; W. W. Vander-1-oefT Watkins, N. Y., E. E. Reed, Manchester. N. H.; W. Henderson, Lexington. Ky.; Ed Cain, Dayton, O.; J. E. Penrod, Pitcairn, Pa., and J. J. Day,
—
race be twee* the
have jut the .vraer. Harrl* m. in
far the
G. is ^
1 hy W. a. Barefoot, af
SMteh, the pacers a pane af gt^Mh. to
to the ioaer, Slagle nadled hy Harry »heea driviag the
A Ilea, the
m < ■hart time pgo. Will Ftemtug will pilot the Terre Haute mare.
L. N
AMUSEMENTS.
Scalpers in Trouble
CINCINNATI. August 1?.—Announcement was made by federal revenue authorities here today that agents of the internal revenue office in this city had succeeded in rounding up a number of baseball ticket scalpers. It developed that there were several scores of profiteers who sold Redland field admission tickets at two or three times the regular price. When called to account by revenue agents they paid 173 on their resales. They will be held to the federal grand Jury for evasion of the war revenue tax.
mg ^
ining^Meet Dates
'BNph'-jgjr'
13 to September 86 <mutueis>.
de Grace. Md.nutueist, HiM
r Club, Lexington.
Queens County Jockey Club. Aqueduct. ! L. L. X. Y.—September IS to September 27 •— j <or*l) t twelve day*. Mt. Kentucky Jockey Club. Latonia. Ky —Sept IS 11ember 24 to October 18 tmutuelen twenty-
two days.
Metropolitan Jockey Club, Jamaica, 1- I , 23' X. Y.—September 28 to October it torait. twelve day*. Maryland State Fair. Laurel, Md.—October 1 to October a tmutuela), twenty-seven days. Empire City Racing Association. Yonkers. N. Y —October 13 to October 2S (orali. j 1 Saratoga 5 Association. Saratoga Spring*. N. o- j Y.-Ends August » tormli, twenty-six daya 111 Kentucky Jockey Chib. Churchill Downs, days I Louisv ille. Ky.—October 23 to November 1 Ky — 1 (mutuels), nine daj-s.
AM IJ8BM K STS.
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Gaumont Weekly.
Fletcher Monologue.
ISIS
Enid Bennett The Virtuous Thief
-■
Grand Opening Thursday, August 14 YE AUTO STOP
Music at All Times. Night, Indianapolis
Special Opening Military Band.
FRED JUNEMANN, Prop. ; Speedway Are. and Pershing. NEWLY PAVED SPEEDWAY AVENUE OPEN TO TRAFFIC.
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3
TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY
PAULINE FREDERICK —IN— “The Peace of Roaring River” Flagg Comedy, I The Circlette “The ‘Con’ in Economy” | Rosemarie Blain, Soloist CIRCLE ORCHESTRA
WANT ADS IN THE NEWS GET RESULTS
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'JO 'It 'as 73 'Or 15 '16 TV YEARLY INCREASE
Chart No. I
U. S. Internal Revenue figurea ehow cigarettes to be gaining in popularity much fmatar than any other form of smoking.
TURKISH BLENDS
STRAIGHT DOMESTIC
Chart No. 2 Turkish blende are so popular that their aalee ahnoat equal the combined aalee of the other two kinds of cigarettes, it
Are you a normal Smoker? This Fatima advertisement may help you find the type of ciga-, rette you will like, whether it happens to be Fatima or not
"TTTHICHone of the several forms of VV smoking will give me the most pleasure and solid comfort?” That is your real question. And you can answer it best if you classify your smoking likes and dislikes—if you know whether your smoke taste is, or is not, nom-al, or like that of most men. So the first thing to find is the normal smoke-taste. Which smoke, or type of smoke, do men most prefer?
All cidns
point
one way
Aa between cigars and cigarettes. Chart No. 1 tells the story—the cigarettes
have a “walk away.* This is not merely because
the cigarette is, as medical men have proved, the mildest form of smoking. Nor is it wholly because of the cigarette’s cleanness, convenience and moderate cost. Beyond question, it is due very largely to improvements in the types of cigarettes. Until about 30 years ago most cigarettes were of straight American (or Domestic) tobacca Then cigarettes of Tuikish tobacco were introduced and the business took quite a Jump. But these dean, mild short smokes did not really strike their gait until “Turkish blend” cigarettes came on the market. These are cigarettes containing both Domestic and Turkish tobaccos in
Then along came the “Turkish
blend”
blends of various proportions; and Fatima was the first one of this type. “Turkish blends” seemed to be the smoke that this country had
been waiting for.
Look at the increase during recent years shown on Chart No. l,and notice the tremendous difference in favor of blends
on Chart No. 2.
There is no doubt about it—the “normal” smoke-taste goes straight for cigarettes—and for those of the Tuikish blend type.
It may ^ or may not be Fatima
Bat your
taste is
your own
Perhaps you are a Turkish blend smoker yourself. If not, your first step towards checking up on your own smoke-taste will be to discontinue yoyr straight Turkish or straight Domestic
, cigarette long enough to give the blended ciga-
rettes a fair triaL
If—as is quite natural —your taste is unlike that of the majority, you will, of coarse, go back
to your present cigarette. But do not do this simply ' because your first two or three blended cigarettes do not ring the belL There are some pretty bad, as well as some wonderfully good, Turk-
ish blend cigarettes.
FATIMA
What the
Army Doctors
smoke:
At Pt. Riley, Kansas, where the thousands of doctor* from alt over Mb V. S A. were trained for overeeaa service, Turkish blend cigarettes warm ahnoat the only kind smoked. Incidentally, Fatima waa far in the lead from Bret to lamt.
Every man's taste is his own and it is, of course, rather ridiculous to find some cigarettes actually
claiming to si.it the taste of every smoker. Fatima makes no such claim. But jrou owe it to yourself to try Fatima, the founder of the whole Turkish blend family, before you decide on your final steady smoke.
This is the only cigarette above the cheaper brands that has ever won a tremendous, nation-
wide popularity.
Fatima's sales nearly double those of all tho straight Turkish cigarettes combined; and no other cigarette costing as much as Fatima ha* even one-half of Fatima’s arim^ai sales. Even at leading dubs and hotels and at tho fashionable resorts such as Palm Beach and Atlantic City, Fatima is today outselling the fancy, expensive, straight Turkish cigarettes which for* merly enjoyed leadership among smokers with,
plenty of money.
♦ * ♦
No, Fatima does not claim to suit every one. But its big sales and high standing indicate that mis
cigarette does come nearer than any other to meeting the "normal” taste. The reason may be that Fatima contains more Turkish than any other Turkish Wend. This would mean, in other words, that instead of containing too much Turkish as straight Turkish cigarettes do, or too little as in the poorer Turkish blends, Fatima’s famous Wend contains Just enough Turkish—just enough to tapte right and just enough to leave a man feeling right evert
after umpiring more ?h*n
NOTE: Fatuna cmntajns
cA Sensible Cigarette
20 for 23c
re Turkish than any other Turkish Mend cigarqtfm.
al?*
