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STAR—FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1915. PAGE 13 Price of New Man Too High JOE CHOYNSKI, HARD LUCK CHAMP,’ WILL TRY COMEBACK AT AGE OF 47 Sw , by YACHTS WILL START ON LONG | PACIFIC RACE | §8AN FRANCISCO, June 1L.—A fleet of the fastest American yachts See Speed Kings Are Ready for Starter Eddie Pullen’s Flag Balloon Is First Dugdale has turned down an op on the Pacific is due to,sall out of 8AN FRANCISCO, June 11.—Ed- 3 Dortunity to get a man who fs tout Sen Wransian " a‘ ward Unger’s balloon “California” od as a real first baseman and man- | San Francisco harbor tomorrow and | today was officially declarod win- ager in the person of Hester, for race to Honolulu, A return race will |ner of the Panama-Pacific expost- marly manager of the Salt Lake |be run from Honolulu to San Fran- | tion balloon race. %n the face of eam in the Union association, be ai adverse conditions, the bi bag, cause he will not pay the price cisco, starting one week after the whith aecended at the thir Eoau Dugdale is quoted as saying that last vessel reaches Hawall yesterday noon traveled 110 miles he was negotiating with Hester, | For several days the waters out and landed last night near San who has a batting record of .280 |side the Golden Gate have been Joaquin. and a fielding record of .972 In 74 | allve with craft of-all sizes and rigs, | Simuieneously came word that games, and wired for his terms, | | making trial spins in preparation for | the balloon “Jewel City,” George B, which were so high that the wire! , | Harrison pilot, had descended near | }the big event. The larger yachts % . 4 Perth wath ae mike lg gd | |are to be handicapped according to bs steep hnmage$ psa He ey PR egg BN col i ow aha | the universal rules, so that the little |sleom Ghd ‘hie. nite tora Bae spect too at “hg ie: | Sellows may have Ga: éyee eanee halt a mile in the beaket ovanm 4q WGIr the team toca cent Ss eee | ‘The first boat into Honolulu har- | plowed fiuld before they could aim 4 |bor will recelve a trophy valued at lout. Neither was hurt. Vail j » now, the fans wonder what tt would | \ have to be to look rotten to. Dug. | ‘The team is broken up since the so-! called “exchange” of Beatty, and te | deing patched up with men playing outside their regular positions, The | Men are not hitting and the man-| agement is awful, so what there {s| tn sight to give the fleshy owner of the Seattle team a ray of hope ts Mnvisible to the naked eyes of the} fans. TACOMA, June 11.—Uniess more stock In the Tacom: ball club is sold at once, the T: | coma team will be without af) yer to play In within the next days, and will consequently 4 have to withdraw from thr q Northwestern league. A pay: ment on the present ball park le due, without sufficient money ve mane ecgiry diego Are beat him consistently committee of fans together Di y a raise y aed aie) the pay: | The story of the struggle with the! ment, it will be curtains for the || Jinx etarts out in San reaseinte,| Tacoma team. }long ago. It was in his second bat- tle with Jim Corbett Fight With Corbett | It was a viclous battle thruout. In) the 24th Choyns! eyes were near! ly closed, his ips were puffed, and) Corbett came to finish him, only to! L1.—Wryan | recetve a right on the jaw that sent) Scattered | him back grogsy. In the 27th Choynski went down. | Rv Hugh S. Fullerton After 25 furfous years of battling} with @ jinx, Joe Choynaski, hard luck) | champion of the world, {s ready to don the gloves again. The fluffy,) red-hatred game cock of the ring re-) fuses to quit until he lands the old 1K. O. on the jaw of the jinx, the only foe that ever has been able to LEAFS ARE SHUT OUT’ SPOKANE, — Jun allowed but five ‘Thursday and received such | ironclad support from his team- He was not out, but was too weak June mates that the Indians shut out the Maple Leafs, $ to 0. and dazed to get up and was counted 0000000000” O110de con at. His toughest luck, perhaps, was in —3 | his terrific battle with Bob Pitesim _ [mona tn Boston. He floored Fite CHAMPS TAKE TWO The police stopped the fight. It was! | resumed and again stopped and Fitz! VANCOUVER, June 11.—The i iver Champs took two close given the verdict. A frame-up was! from the Aberdeen Cats | charged, | But tf that was hard luck, Choyn- ’ Thursday afternoon, winning games by a score of 2 to 1. | @ki’s affair with Kid McCoy in New York was worse. In the third round Choynski slipped over his famous! | short right—and down went McCoy. With McCoy still on the floor, one of | the promoters yelled to the referee, | “Call time,” and time was calied./ vived and ready to go on—and the! decision went to him. iv. E. A. King, assistant pastor | her cut to pleces and the police were Plymouth church, has quit his} ready to stop it. Just as a captain ‘9 | But MeCoy was lifted to his corner, and before the next round was re) REY. KING RESIGNS His next hard Inck was in his bat- tle with Peter Maher. He had Ma- . his resignation to take effect! was about to craw! into the ring, ly 1. He has no future plans, Theodore Roosevelt, then commis. | We can’t tell you just how NEBO plain end are “Utterly Different.” There are lots of words to describe ordinary cigarettes—but they don’t fit NEBO plain end. All we can say is—NEBO plain end ‘ are “ Utterly erent.” a And that after you’ve smoked a NEBO plain end you won’t smoke any other cigarette. Not if you could get the old kind for nothing. Not if they hired you to smoke them. You'll want a NEBO plain end or nothing —just because they are ‘‘ Utterly Different.” Big claims—but try the ‘‘Utterly Differ- ent” cigarette. i => GUARANTEE —If after smoking half the package of NEBO elain end you are not delighted, return balance of package to P. Lorillard Co., New York (Estab- lished 1760) and receive your money back. 10 CENTS © sioner of police, called T. R. interferes “Don't stop It—Maher Isn't whip- ped yet.” Tn the next round Maher cut loose with a plledriver blow and Choynsk! shot the mat--knocked cold by a How They Stand In the Leagues At Spokane 3, Victoria Seattle-Tacoma game postponed: rain LEAGUE RESULTS 13, New York % Brooklyn 2 NATIONAL Atm Oe te 2, Moston 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE RESULTS At Philadelphia 11, Cleveland 1 Tork 4, Chicago & Detroit 6 At Haltimore At Brooklyn At Oak Atl NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE Wen. Lost. Pet Spokane s 2 (88 Nietorta a om (88 Tecoma a Vancouver es 5M Aberdera 2 (4 heattle a ee | Phitadeiphia .....4.. Chicago * Brooklyn... .4....4s Pittevure Bt Lous Boston * Cinetanett .... New York . AMERICAN Chicago . Detrott Boston Washington New L Philadelphia 2... 0.0.4. 18 FRDERAL LEAGUE Won. Lost Kanaas City .. Pittebure i Portiand ee Ventes 2 An excursion will be run to Ana- cortes Sunday, June 13, by the Bal- Yard baseball club. The rteamers Potlatch wnd the Nainbridgs have been chartered for the trip and will leave the Colman dock at 9 a, m. and Holland, pitchers, with Stokke behind the bat, will form the Ballard battery, while Pike an4 Stokke will work for Anacortes. King Kelly is billed to bandie the indicator. Immediately after the Rallerd-Aaqacortes game, the Seat- tie Hardware and Order of (olden West, both of Seattle, will play. ““s Prices Fald Wholesale Dealers ter Vegetables and Fruit (Corrected daily by 2. W. Godwin & Ca.) rT Artichokes, dos, Apricots Cherries, Bing Cherries, 1b new, case . Money, strained . Le hothouse Arkansas Blacks 16 @ 1.15 Winesape ‘ 200 @ 2.60 Rome Benutigs 130 @ 176 @ 6 @ 1.00 04% @ 1.50 Yakima Geme pene 49.00 idaho and Montana spudets.00 @27.00 New apude, red, Ib. o8 02 @ 01% New spuds, white, 1 we TWENTY CIGARETTES “Tterly Different!" ° Belgian i] next Tuesday afternoon on Denny | Joe Choynski as He le Today and as Artist Views His Plight wild punch, | Joe Wolcott beat him because he took the steam out of Choynak! with! & heavy punch at the start, but the latter took it out on the black race by knocking out Jack Johnson He} now shares that honor with Jess Willard. It is from such a trall of disaster that Choynsk! now feels he is freed. The other day he stopped a husky | ie so he's coming back at [BOATS TO RACE FOR TROPHIES Members of the Seattle Yacht club will contend for the Bunde @ |Erland trophy for sail boats Sat jurday at 2:30 p. m., when the first jheat of that local classic will be | started. It will be sailed over a 14 mile course from the club house in West Seattle thence to Eagle Har- bor and return to the starting |point, All classes are eligible. This |race will be the first in which the schooner Wanderer, recently pur |chased by a syndicate of Seattle lyachtemen, has been entered, | Another feature will be the sec jond heat for power boats for the Pacific Net and Twine Co's cup The race will be followed by ao dance at the club house in the evening. Ol, YOI! THIS LOOKS LIKE A REAL GAME Baseball history will be made fleld, when teams made tp of mem- bers of the U. of W. faculty and of in a five-tn- Patrick Tammany will captain the alumnl team and Dr. D, C. Hall will be the playing manager of the faculty outfit. The idea of the game is to provide fun for the annual alumni reunion, and the matter of making runs ts pure- ly #econd Each player will be in masquerade, and the victory will «0 to the team that ‘urnishes the most laughs to the ctators. SOOTT AND O'LEARY IN G-ROUND DRAW. Pat Scott and Johnny O'Leary, both Seattie light weights, who met in the main event at the boxing show with which the Anacortes Elks open- ed thelr new $20,000 clubhouse at Anacortes Thursday night, boxed six fast rounds to a draw. Scott had a shade in the earii- er rounds, but O'Leary evened up the margin in the fifth and sixth, Chet MeIntyre, boxing instructor at the Seattle Athletic club, has postponed the boxing show which was to have been staged at the club gym Friday night until the night of June 17. The reason for the change of date was to give Tommy Mason. who will meet Henry Geason in the main event, a longer time in which to train. Melntyre is arranging a splendid card for the 17th. Hons, § ibs. and unde Spring ducklings, over 8% Country Hay and Grate (Prices paid produeer) Alfalfa, No. 1 14.00 23.00 27.00 14.00 Pr Straw, Timothy Wheat $500, and the second a cup worth $260. There are $2,000 worth of prizes One of the fastest entrants Is the Hawall, flying the pennant of the Royal Hawallan Yacht club, C, B Miller's sloop Athens, one of the first to pass thru the Panama canal, also is entered, Other yachts are entered representing the San Fran-| elseo Yacht club, the South Coast} acht club, and yachting associa tions on Puget sound WOLVERTON HURT IN AUTO ACCIDENT. SAN FRANCISCO, June 11.— Seriously Injured and with a possible puncture of the lungs, Harry 8 Wolverton, manager of th an Francisco baseball club, Is confined to a hospital today, where he was taken, fol- lowing an automobile accident in which he received three broken ribe and a number of Rae Lentz, driver of the Romano car, believed to be world’s fastest bairt track racing machine, who will try for a new world’s record. There off. lealled promptly at 2:30 p. m., with Eddie Pullen, the American speed king, handling the starter’s flag for all of the best auto race drivers of the Pacific Northwest—Jim Parsons, Joe Thomas, Rae Lentz, Charles oe attempted to | lata, Fred Barsby, Frank Elliott, Harry D. Stratton, Ray Paulsen, Jack crank hie automobile when it | Haswell, James Crawford and E.R. Smith. ated ddan Pate. lacing Almost every driver who will face Starter Pullen Saturday has bad catching his clothing and drag. | ¢xperience on half-mile tracks, and it takes some nerve to go at one of the turns wide open. No cutoff for these drivers, Every man takes | his own life in his hands while driving on a half-mile track, Yet these drivers like it. The meet which opens Saturday {s, in the opinion of drivers and thelr mechanicians, the most promising one of the year, from a racing standpoint, and Manager Robert A. Hiller has brought together the best | drivers and the fastest machines that have been assembled at elther of the Portland, m, Spokane, North Yakima or Walla Walia meets. The Seattle drivers are anxious to see the coming two days’ meet a great success, and spectators at the track will see some racing that will be full of thrills and sensations. lt ts intercity racing, with entries from Seattle, Tacoma, North Yakima and Spokane, and is the first intercity auto meet ever held here ging him until it crashed into a telephone pole a block away. BAGSHAW FOR Q. A.? The report ts current | at Enoch Bagshaw, for the past six years coach of the Everett high schoo! teams, has been offered the position as coach at Queen Anne high. Bag shaw turned out a team jagt fall that won the high school state foot- ball championship. Principal La- Several of the cars are rated as being among the world’s fastest ther of Queen Anne will netther| dirt track racing machines. Jean Romano and his friends believe that confirm nor deny it. Coach Hamfl-| the Romano will eet a new world’s record for a half-mile track Sunday. ton of Queen Anne says he has| ‘The rain has improved the track, and, with clear weather, it will be heard nothing of a reported change.| very fast. ‘Tomorrow, at Madison park, the auto race meet will be| trouble forced them to land. SEATTLE NOW HAS BEST 10-PIN ALLEYS IN THE COUNTRY In addition to having the two finest billiard parlors in the Went, Seattle now has unquestionably the finest bowling establishment in America. The Ideal bowling alleys opened formally Thursday at 1418 Third There are 12 splendidly con- structed alley Emil Koch is the ' proprietor. | Two excellent matches were bowled on the opening night, the Silver Tops defeating the Blue Dia- monds by 2,584 to 2,523, and the Bismarks taking the South Seattle bowlers into camp, 2,726 to 2,377. In the former match Malcolm of the Blue Diamonds made the high score, 299, while Stephens of the Silver Tops scored the highest aver- age, 197. In the latter contest Lowe of the Bismarcks had the high score honor with 226, and Reicherl lof the same team the highest aver- age, 192. Substitute Ball Game LION BALL CLUB va. SOUTH PARK (City Champions.) ‘es Park, Sunday, Jone 1; me called at 2:30 sharp. All Seats 26e |Said Westerman to Schermer, “Get Rid of Everything and Close Up Store No. 2° And So It’s Up to You to Get Some of These Bargains | Why not wear a Real Hat? Latest shapes of Stetsons here for You can’t afford to miss this— Overcoats Worth up to $15.00, for $5.85 “JUMBO” Slip into one of these “Slipons” Values up to $10.00, now $3.85 Values up to $12.00, now Broken Lines of Suits i. taal Worth up to Knit Sweater Coats | 00° vase mrt values up to $8.50, now Keep cool by wearing B. V. D. All $20 Suits Now.... $13.35 All $25 Suits Now UNDERWEAR | °°: walk on Single garments t dh a dott selling an Ail- e &§ Get a pair of Sttk Shirt for 40c Union Suits 80c You won't need to worry about having an accident if you wear Sweet-Orr Stag or Keystone Pants $2.50 kind now... ..$1.85 $3.00 kind now..... $3.50 and $4.00 kind $2.85, Douglas SHOES $3.50 kind now $2.85; $4.00 kind now $3.35. And It's worth $2.50. It don't happen very often— this season’s Straw Hats| Tickets for “Alaska” Latest Shapes Mackinaw Coats, Oil Worth $2.00 and $2.50, now} Ciothing, Rubber Clothing, 1 3 5 Wool Blankets, High-Top a Shoes, Wool Underwear, Rubber Boots and Pacs. Westerman & Schermer 103-5-7 First Ave. South, Near Yesler Way Cool as under an awning— PANAMA HATS Worth up to $7.50, now 94.35 We break all rules by selling Double-Breasted BLUE SERGE SUITS | | | values up to $25.00, for | | $11.35 It lets the body breathe— Chalmers “Porosknit” Underwear Single garments 35c Each Union Suits 70c Keep it dark—A Shoe . Sensation. 250 pairs of fine Vici, Calf and Patent Leather Shoes Worth up to $4.00, now $2.39 4