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EXPERT FIGURES JOHNSON’S FAMOUS UPPER. CUT WILL FALL SHORT OF WILLARD'S CHIN \ IE ICTURES OF JOHNSON AND WILLARD IN TRAINING How champion and challenger look, training for the ercises. Second picture—Manager Tom Jones putting the gloves on Willard f Rering bis training quarters for hte afternoon workout. Fourth—Johnson box * Coast JAST LEAGUE. Resucts © Bar i a ‘ | ‘ 7 0 | poly ge 10 «3 | At Salt Lake | Venice Pay See > NM Salt Lake “Se ek | r, 0 — Bealls of yesterday's games tn| || Sake Sat 110] | Under the auspices of the senior league training camps fol-| | cu, Francisco ® | council of the U. of W., more than BY BARRY FARIS _jhoad off,” waid Jack, today, “but | San fd rancisco s : le - 2 1,000 students gathered in the Var od Press Staff rrespondeat ) don't have to. Juat look me over © Boston Nationals shut ont! gal nth mow rind sign it up HAVANA, April 2.—The tight aie nt Banta You won't find « e i . ovation fo! mem soft spot anywhere. ; cae Saatackes aa. 8 aa ‘SCHEDULE | ts READ bers of the Varsity and freshman, Detween Jese Willard and Jack “! am ready for the gong right \ doa crews, which left last night for Oak, @ehneon here Monday will be jnow. I have trained for weeks S fie Adtante epitathern Amsocia| land to take part In the crew races; “on the level.” oasily, but steadily, gradually work n on neing deer agedierggr etd for the cha: nship of the Pacific This is certainly true, at le ing myself up to my present cond! . fean Association team, 4 to 2, at At-| CHICAGO, April 2—Fifty Com coast on April 10. as far as Johnson is concerned. ¢ ior ' tanta. flicting dates with games {n oF Several speakers boosted both! | make thie assertion following “Willard ts a novice, anyway. 1 The Columbia South Atlantic) fanized ba 7 Le ig wibed | crews, and made the students wax| #!ong talk with the black cham- (wii admit he is big. Yes, he ts team beat the Philadelphia Ameri-| ut by the bay bmg Me smae Coe tie by thelr remarks, Ev-| PlOn. Johnson is also suprem: young and strong, but there is noth. vans at Columbia, 8. ¢ 0 5. ule makers here. “ ederal | ary member of both crews was prea | ly confident he cannot los ing to that, He is not the first bi schedule, which is now practically of 7. h "4 '~ ne e The Philadelphia at wit he eatecaom Auer 7 (oe and Capt. Russell Callow re} And he won't “lay down.” He /teliow I have put away. He has not the Norfolk, Va, league team, 15) ;0™P Nt, Ni, eason of 154 | *POnded for them. | hae tee muon at stake, ja chance, Just put your money on| go 1, at at Norfolk It provides for « » Contbear «: he has never had it ie simply going to be @ [pir Arthur.” * The Detroit Tigers beat the Mem gating Ot better crews, and left for Portland, |~ stand-up - knock-down-and-d - a Southern Association club, lwhence the men will go to San! out affair, in which the man Calls it “Pure Bunk g Be at Memphis. ENTER | Francisco by boat, with a feeling Who gete a real knockout punch Tom Jones, Willard’s manager ” A MA Y to the mark first ie going to j|characterizes what he terms John ‘The Cincinnati Reds defeated the * Phattancoga Southern Association 1a at Chattanooga, 7 to 2 Chicago Nationals shut out amen York Americans at Savan- Ga., by a score of 7 to 0. ton Cleveland Americans defeat: $19.50 “Brilliant” Electric Vacuum Suction Cleaner, Special .. $14.75 The “Brilliant” is the first efficient, durable and reliable electric cleaner ever sold at so low a price as $19.50. Tomorrow, Saturday, we are quoting an even lower price, just to introduce this wonderful machine. Weight, 8 pounds, 25-foot electric cord, snap switch on handle, motor and all other parts guaranteed for one year. Extra special Saturday 14.75 BOYS’ BASEBALL AND § 2 b> | win in PHILADELPHIA, April 2 More | "im so than 100 high hools have en-| tered teams {n the various events of the University of Pennsylvania | relay races and the managers ere) having trouble making room for all the entries. PR GLOVE COMBINATION 59c In ¢ billiard A SOc Fielder’s Glove—4 good “, |H. R. Lewe, 25 to 13, in 65 Innings DUGDALE MIRLD models to select from—all sizes; This victory makes no difference in Tomorrew, Saturday and Sunday Sand a 25c American league, Jr., the relative standing of the play At %:00 o'Clock so in this class. Mac Bissation CHICAGO AMERICAN GIANTS 4 baseball, rubber center, horsehide cover. The best two- ier ly three-cushion and vs. Jeweler and Silversmith bit ball made. The two, 75c in value, special Saturday ik-line champion, refereed the SEATTLE LEAGUE CLUB 1“ hae reehpangeons Marc cccccccs cocccencersecceoves ‘ +» BBE P]) match. Admission %he and 306 New Store Clint Gunnold will meet John | Coon in class B, tonight. Bostwick 010 Second Ave, Near Madison Napatan Boys’ School Shoes $3.15 The strongest, best wearing shoe that is made The same quality as dad’s shoes. Made to withstand hard service. Our standard $3.50 value, special Satur- All Shoes Waterproofed Free of Charge Ball Bearing Skates $1.50 th Yak | sylvan | daily ¢ | prepar jurday. ern po We'll tell you where to go, and how to use it Bass Fishing .., PIPER ry TAFT ) use MA sin the United States, Iam a lege had 20 years’ experi battle for the world’s heavyweight championship. of confidence that they will (Deeg; Teg RUNNING HIGH cUMP ‘LEWIS BEATS LEWE : Hulen's last night T. P. Lewis beat will tangle with will play Scholtz. CREWS WORKING OUT PHILAL American Hanley course next Sat POLO SEASON OPEN NEW YORK, ‘April 2 {at Lakewood |A tournament will begin the regu Union Hardware make; full ball- bearing, steel whee adjustable lar season frame, three styles to select from SMALL CALIBER 3 THINKS HE IS A times last, THE SPORTING GOODS STORE lai sGUN: wi Hard Times Optical Prices 1117 SECOND AVE. | ORDED '” Call at My Op- LOADED © Weune tf Iment. Have your E . aa = | Oy nee. eyes examined ntertainment LIKE or you w " ante 2 i) SRNR aieds ‘nctere _occempuing és -otteee 9 ||. THIS « ted for, Tron foe to sb00n any pale of Highest Tam @ graduate of one of the hi ~. of « you may require. Lenses (-1SH~ ‘om 0: IN ZA Be Sure « ncome, o 700" and 713 Entrance 104 Pine e FELLA (IC) WORLD STAR—FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1915. PAGE 15. I—IN THE WORLD OF SPORTS— EDITED BY HKAYBEE SMITH From left to right—Jack Johnson going through limbering ex ‘or a bout with a sparring partner, Jim Savage, who is seen at the right. Third—Johnson en- ing Dave Mills, a sparring partner, Fifth—Jess Willard #k pping the rope. SENDOFF FIGHT WILL BE “ON LEVEL”, RUBE FOSTER AND HIS BLACK GIANTS HERE— | STUDENTS GIVE TWO U. OF W. CREWS SENDOFF _ JACK’S UPPERCUT 5 INCHES SHORT FOR WILLARD'S JAW BY JOHN R. ROBINSON Famous Sport Critic and Manager of Battling Nelson HAVANA, Cuba, April 2.—Here is a fight in which a man's favorite blow will be about as useful as ff it was left home on the plano or out in the kitchen! Christy Mathewson had a favorite—the fadeaway; Joe McGinnity had his slow, creeping, underhané Old Sal"; Bat Nelsou nearly killed opponents with his left hook to the liver; Kid McCoy had the famous But none of them ever beat Jack Johnson's uppercut. knocked out opponents when he got ready, after giving th almost tore Burns’ head off with it; jarred Jeffries to s corkser It was his stock In trade. With it he public a run for its money first. He p; ripped and tore Frank Moran; pelted Jim Flynn, and injured the anatomies of numerous other opponents, But always has Johnson schooled that uppercut to be used on a man of bis own weight. His judg- ment of distance with it has been perfect—when the man was no taller than Johnson himself, and its e& ct has been deadly Now, however, comes Johnson, with the uppercut of years, trained to land on men of six feet in height, and finds himself up against a man five inches taller. The uppercut must travel five inches more than it ever did before. It must carry the same force to the chin of the gigantic Wil- lard that it did to the squatty Jones or Jim Flynn. Ring critics here eay that the uppercut will be practically useless when the pair meet in Havana, April They believe it wili jowe its sting tn its journey upward, and that Willard will have no trouble in keep ing away from it Following are some of the opinions of well-known American sporting men now in Havana. opinions are taken after the men in question have looked over both fighters in their training work Battling Nelson—I believe Johnson will win, but there is so much about Willard to recom- mend him that] am not going to take @ chance of betting against him Jack Curley—Nothing to this fight but Willard. He will knock out Capt. Cushman A. Rice—I saw Johnson fight in Paris, and, while ditioned. 1 look for Johnson to win. B. A. Rosenthal—At first 1 could nee nobody but Johnson. Now, after looking Willard over, and realizing his trefnendous pow l can see nobody but Willard. He'll knock out Johnson eure. George Munro, former fighter—Johnson will win. He knows too much for the white hope, Leo P. Flynn—Johnson easily. Willard never will have a chance. A. G. Vanderbilt—I looked at both men, then made a small bet of £1,400 against $600 on John- That speaks for itself Dan Dougherty—The swaying of sentiment from day to day seems to have affected me, too. 1 believe i will et on Willard, inasmuch as I gem not certain the negro can reduce to his proper wYouNaneliin? [RED'S BUMPS BLACK GIANTS THERE TO STAY HERE TO PLAY These Johnson sure. Willard is wonderfully con- son : Can You Name Him? | This third baseman has been spiked more times than any man in the major leagues. In i} both | thelr events, and possibly| op the winner's share of the |won’s chatter ax “pure bunk.” me Coast records | money. | Neither Jones nor Willard ex-| | Johnson {fs out to win, and win | pects a quick finish. They have kly. He made no attempt tolthe groatest respect for the cham the real b reason for Misipion’s ring eneralship and] anxiety to whip Willard. strength, and realize that in the/ OFE S SIONAL | A Matter of Coin jearly rounds J *hnson may be able : _ to hol Jens of jut Johnson is} |with Jack. “He realisest that if he | S016 to tire easier in this fight ia successful, and disposes of Wi! | after his long layoff, during which lard ta imposing fashion it. wit) | B® lived high and took on weight mean another fortune. If he loses| ("ey arsue. When Jack he will be a “dead coon, finan tire, then is when Willard wi cially . Ito fight. The Willard camp is con fident Jess will drop the negro, Johnson is not kidding himeelt| oe into the belief that he could make |, ig opr = Aor yd gst money en nearing as vexcham: |of tact, he will not have any plans, | Saw: Seton Geen ‘ont think he (#8 he is w dead one unless he lifts | | would ever want for money ewe championship in |except in case his enforced absence | |from the United States should| cause further inconvenience, Back to That France After the fight Johnson plans tour of South America, and w then urn to that dear France | Jack insists he is ready to enter the! ring right now. He has not trained | for this fight as he has for others | but he declares that the system he % adopted was just as effective as the old plan of hard work he once followed. “T'll admit I have not worked my “BASEBALL Customers bring shoes here from every part of the city, be cause our work le different. it’s a bit bette REGAL SHOE REPAIR SHOP First and Senece. Main 4136 ELECT DANCING PARTIES HIPPODROME lass B of the three-cushion tournament at Brown & Foss and Shatia Pacific Salmon Company Will continue to ship Satmon, aver- aging © pounds, dressed, tn individual boxes, to any point in the U. & All Charges Prepaid, $1.25 aranteed to arrive in perfect con Also Crabs, Smelt, Trout, 4 Bailmon and all other see produ See the fist before shipped if you wish 601 Northern Bank Bidg. Main 6874 Errors and Ex Chromic Weak: who, throug? suffer from P HIA, “April ~Roth University of Penn ja crews are working out on the Schuylkill river in ation for their race over the| le and bles—quickly cured by using Dr. Pierce’s Tablets roular free. 6 boxes $5 a. —The East lo season will open Saturday N. J,, with practice, DENTAL and OPTICAL PRICES CUT Co Suit the Hard Times r April ond 16. Address all letters to Raymond Remedy Co. 217% © St, Sentile, Wi No such low prices riotly high- and Opt work were ever offered) Seattle or elsewhere. ed not bh prices will con tinue while the hard NY A FELLER OF Hotel Baden Grill juplicated # specialty. |Edwin J. Brown, D. D. S. attle’n Loading Dentist, Department, 713 First Ave, Union Block, Merit al Department, 705 First Ave.| BESTIS aS Open evenings 8 and gun- days until 4 for people who work, = | B, insult to B, injury to the credit of | his first season in the big cir- cuit he was threatened with re- Frederick ©. Reed, of Reed | Rube Foster and his brunette bal B: lease on the grounds that he |Brothers, the comedy acrobats at players have landed in town, ready the Pantages this week, may be a |strong person, but his physical prowess is not sufficient to lower two unique bumps, the size of hens’ eges, he bas on either shoulder. These beauty marks are the result of one of the stunts Reed does in bis act. This is the business of re | volving on a ring trapeze and dis- locating bis shoulders at every | turn. for the series of three games with the Seattle team, but there is little likelihood that the teams will able to get together this afternoon, as the almost continuous rains have loosened the new earth on the dia } mond to the extent that it will be | | impossible to play unless Old Sol The only thing remarkable about |*t# 0 the Job soon and strong. these bumps {s that they are the| Weather conditions have retarded | only two of the kind fn the world.|training work all over the circuit, | Reed has been trying to rid him | but the disappointment is keen in self of them for years. | Seattle, as the game with Foster's | Several days ago Reed paid a vis-| men would give the fans the oppor- jit to Frank Vance, the physical di-|tunity they seek to get a real line rector at the 8. A. C., but the Iat-/up on the Seattle team, The Seattle ||ter told him the only thing to do|boys have never beaten the Black was to stop dislocating his shoul-| Giants, and with Mails on the hill |ders. As this is one of the features |Raymond hoped to get away witk of the act, Vance’s advice will not/the first victory this afternoon, But | be tollowed. it looks bad, Mawruss. | | | | | " | | THIRD’ BASE could not hit, although later he became a leading batter, He made one hit that was worth tens of thousands of doliars. His method of covering third bi is used by no other third man, and is much criticis- ed by some. CAN YOU NAME HIM? Inthe Editor’s Mail USE OF NEUTRAL FLAGS Editor The Star: Maxims too nu | merous to mention demonstrate A, & belligerent, using the token| | of B, a mreutral, in order to injure C,| another belligerent, or causing fail | ure to C of injuring A, and express-| “ly the continued use of such token by A after a protest from B, is a de liberate disrespect of the token of| The world keeps moving! of our fathers e electric light The oil — gave way tot of today. The old“all-alike” cigarettes are giving place to the new and “Utterly Different’ NEBO plain end. New idea, new process, new satis- faction — “Utterly y Different” from any other cigarette. The process is our own. We dis- covered it. We control it. But the ‘‘Utterly Different” ciga- rettes are yours—yours to smoke — > lca to tell your friends about. Don’t deprive yourself. B, indifference to the welfare of B,| | defiance to the ability of B to pro-| |tect himself and his rights, and an| act of war against B, making such| or submission the alternative of B,| | forcing B to become, even if only} lacquiescing, an accessory to decep-| \tion, and making B responsible to C} for full damages from A to ©, for all failures of damages from C to A | resulting from such deception, and| | for all damages growing out of such} damages and failures resulting from| uch deception to C, leaving B the alternative of becoming such an ac-| Jcessory or a disinterested and dis. linclined belligerent, either against! | A or against C. |" fy failing to prevent the use of his {token for deceptive purposes by }A against ©, demanding the con |tinued respect of C toward the token /of B, and insisting on the fulfillment Jof such demand, thus requesting C to subject himself to renewed dam | and failures by deception, and| | th B, denying C the right of de ise against deception, fastens} {such responsibility toward C on B,| nd may make ft extremely diffteult| | for C to consider B an innocent and | disinterested party The apparent bias in the forego Jing is the result of the failure of B | to protect his rights against A, thus | having none which A is bound to re. spect, while the responsibility of B toward © is the consequence of the Insistence of B that © respect the |rights of B The maxims above referred to} may be collected by any one having | the ability and time, and observing} trict impartiality | H. DISSIE => GUARANTEE —If after smoking half the package of NEBO plain end yoware not delighted, return balance of package to P. Lorillard Co., New York (Estab- lished 1760) and receive your money back, wonders of the new! world are c@msidered to be: Wire- less, telephone, aeroplane, radium, antiseptics and antitoxins, spectrum analyais and X-rays, The seven TtterlyDifferen “CtterlyDiferent!"