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PINKMAN SIGNS FOR BATTLE IN EVERETT JUL. 4 BY EDWARD HIL L the movie where he went Wed: on July 4 According to the dope, he is to take on Eddie Pinkman, Everett, himself returned actor from match for yesterday esday arrange a Travie Davis the last day of the carnival in Everett. The affair will be Staged by Charlie Manning and Freddie Be gan Pinkman pays it will be pulled off in the ball park, where accomm ions will be made for seating 5,000. \ big preparedness parade ther stunts will form pa part of the Kla-How-Yah carniva : Pinkman has again taken up claim as four-round lightweight champion of the Nort and is ready to de fend t against all comers The t at Everett will be billed as for the Northwest lightwe title BOY, PAGE FREDDIE | is impossible. BOGAN We haven't heard from Freddie | FRANK GUIGNI DOING Bogan for so long that we NICELY ginning to feel uneasy. | Frank Guigni ts getting away to ter we used to print a lette 4 good start with Salt Lake. A Dreddie about every day or eo recent box score showed Frank Tt ts reported that Fre hitting {n three chances out of Charley Egan have had a one bingle being for two ference and that as a resw sacks, He has also to make his ley has retired from the game for | first fielding boot an yet @ short time and Bogan’s manage-| It 18 strange sometimes what ment for good eof scenery will do for a| Ts that right, Freddie? | diamond athlete. RLOYD MADDEN HARD AT WORK About the only member of Chet | WILLIAMS TO TRY | BUSHER Manager Nick of the Indians has (Meintyre’s stable doing any work to give Earl Gatewood, “mowaday Lloyd Madden, the ne semi-pro with a good rep Piightweight. Lioyd ts going thru fon, a chance tn the lineup Bis paces daily as tho he was pre- Gatewood is an outfielder and cer. Paring for a hard battle tainly will have to step some to Boxing fans would like to see|break into the Reds out breast an den tn action against Pink-| works. Russ Hall of Tacoma was m, but as Lioyd wishes to re-jafter him at the be: tain his amateur rating the bdout/ season until be sinning of the| Skeet” Big A Handsome Raincoat Or an Extra Pair of Trousers Given Saturday and Monday With Each Suit Made to Your Measure £ from up-to-date woolens, in tweeds, cheviots, serges, blacks and blues, browns and grays—made up to your individual measure with best of lin- ings, and guaranteed to fit you or your money back, at only “4 q % No More No Less From Mill to Man The ordinary tailor would charge you from $25 to $35 for any of these suitings that we are offering at this sale. Our mills are overstocked with woolens and we must reduce the stock. Remember, for two days we give you, absolutely free, a handsome Raincoat or an extra pair of Trousers, with each Sut order. Everybody knows, from New York to Seattle, that the English Woolens Mills do just what they say. Come in Saturday or Monday and save from $10 to $15. A few very fine patterns go at $18. English Woolen mas Near Seneca St. 1120 First Ave. im \riot in the Montana 1 town | | (Moneyed youths, prominent In world of sports. Top row, left to right—R, Norrie Williams, tennis; Rodney Wanamaker, polo; Max Mareton, golf; Ca raci Vincent Marshall Field Itt. Gould, tennis.) bee from Portland GREAT FALLS HEADED FOR CELLAR Bil Hurley's Great Falls squad roo will soon be battling the jants tooth and nal! for the cellar position if they don’t pull them- | selves toget and win a geme. | Harley's lineup was crippled con-| BY HAROLD JOHNSON 1 |stderably by the absence of Third- How do the young Goulds, | jaacker Chick, who got back into Harrimans. Wanamakere, the fra yesterday at Spokane. Fields, Astors, Fielechmanse Miles Netzel, an old favorite, filled and eclons of other wealthy in while Chick was injured. | THIRD BEST ATHLETE | 18 HOME | Chet Pee, heralded as the third; families utilize their Spare mo- ments? Adding to the millions in the parental strong-boxes? No, Judging from the figures | they are cutting In the sport best athlete in the United States! world nowadays. after the showing be made at the! Heading the list ef young San Francisco fair last year as &| millionaire sport champions member of the University of Ore! comes Jay Gould, son of gon group, intends attending Co- Gould, the rallroad umbla this fall Jay possesses a het is now at his home tn Pen- dhensiowbis on the tennis dleton, Ore, where he is regarded! courts, With all the expensive as one of the great men of the| gports open to him, he some country. years ago decided on court ten- nis, and for two years prac ae BRATERD AROUND ticed with @ private tutor at Lakewood. Gould then went out and cleaned up in America, after which he challenged and de ed. George F. Covey, of England, the worft's grea’ pro star, Seven sete out of eight. R. Norris Williams comes of a wealthy Philadelphia family. Sent | to England to prepare for Harvard | Williams learned tennis from an/| expert and soon after his return} rose to the Davis cup squad. He} met and defeated all, including Me | |Loughliin, but Inst season was| beaten by William Johnston. He is now getting ready to regain his | Rudy Kalito, the youthful Great Falls twirler whom Bill Hurley se cured from Oakland, ts being her- alded around the cireuit as one of the beat young mound artists that ever served to this circ | When he is right he pitches| some mighty nifty ball, but at oth-| er times he is inclined to be @ bit wild HARTMAN SECURED BY INDIANS Albert Hartman, the southpaw artist tried out by Portland, been, or in about to be, turned Jover to Spokane. honors. George Church ix another | McCredie thinks a good deal of |/national tennis notable who'll | | Hartman, but with a bunch of vet-|\ever need to worry about the visit | erans ¢ from the major! oe the wolf. | leagues to be ip his heaving lcorps, he was unable to keep the young fellow hanging around until he was tuned up to Coast league | tone. | M'GINNITY AND BUSH er | Golf can' supply {ts share of mil-| |Hionaire competitors. Maxwell R.| Marston heads the list. He came n a twofoot putt of leading national championship at De. last summer. Then there's | the troit Henry Topping, who was recently | FINED $25 ; ‘ |_ Following an all-day pow-wow feteerragge acorn Raggy ym y at the Seattle hotel, the |®venve m , o | Fee ene sea vortheeoters {ther in the 1914 English champion Hieague were on thelr way home to-|hip than either Travers or | day after nicking $26 from the sal. |Oulmet. bad ng A ed a aries of Joe McGinnity and Garnet to boetio Or tae Freee we ei | Bush sue | The meeting was called by Pres- ROROROn (Piee i a ae o |ident Blewett to let the directors} Ca9o je an entnussaiic palo decide whether or not he did right] [st and le cutting wide circles in nicking McGinnity for $100, fol.| in the game down south. lowing a report from Bush that the Hap po gned eet Butte pflot had incited the fans t Moca’ niivine ae Piehaent i has already stamped the Phil- ] adelphia youth as a candidate | THERE ARE 1,269 Austrians and| for the international four. The | Hungarians, 1,027 Germans and 592] same is true of Thomas Hitch: Turks in the French army cock, whose father is a cele- | | MARKET REPORT |o——_—__—_— ~@ White river 2800 Prices Paid Whelesale Deniers for Yakima Burbanks 90.00 aed Fruit Yakima Gems 30.00 | ——— @ | Eariy Nose sved potatoes. 16.00 (Corrected daily by J. W. Godwin & Co.) Prices Paid Prod Poultry, Veal Apricots, Cal 16 dos. . be | Rprings a tat 11 is, GO0d size, Gon. Turkeys, live Turkeys, dressed Veu!, 75 to 120-Ib Veal, larce Hens, 3 Ib Old roosters, Pork, good bi } under live k ho: felling Prices to Batter, Ke — eee Butter Native Washington creamery, brick oT Native Washington rT) | creamery, solid pack | Cheese Domestic wheel Limburg Country Hay and Grain (Prices paid producer) ° | | ° No, 1 21.00 32.00 Itaifa, ern Washingt et sound oats Straw, toa Timothy ... Mixed timothy Bastern Wannington dou- ble compressed timothy 02% Wheat White, new, Cal ....... STAR—FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1916. PAGF 13. MILLIONAIRES PREFER. TROPHIES TO MILLIONS GIANTS ! TENNIS Beattie ABR MPO A | hoo of ‘ : ' i ° ° Sheehan, rf-it 2 66 6 ito wit 3 $ 38 | | Widred, of Oe eon aoe on, i Be Bee | a ef ; 2 4.6.3 ee, 2b bisa oe Aymond, a0 cat se ae oe es TEE Es fae fram, a se o - » 1 ¢ o 8 Totals 41 1 18 a7 te 3 peih | Teeome ann KM PO 4 BF) The finals in all but one event 1 Higbee, of cet 6 6/e ! TACOMA, June 16—By taking! ! adee, of eee eB acheduled t6 be ran Ga yesterday's fracas from the locals,| Bonne, v= s 2 1 # & 4)\day in the city tennis tournament 11 to 7, Seattle has now annexed) (Arman. rf § i 4 3 fb {\mow being staged on the courts at three straight wins from the| Tr it Se 4a ate stone field ‘ oe eae The was no checking the fa Tigers | . 2) 5 2 vorites yesterday, Crawford Am- Had any one been called away yt § 8 4 bl derson continued victorious by beste from the ball park before the sev ing young Brown, and ts being ac enth frame had been put on, you T #9 7 10 97 48 Slcorded a good chance in the site 60101070 211! pty, Vesterd: t § would have had a hard time con-| 004eseeee? ” s finals, Yesterday's results fol vincing him that Seattle won, for! Anderson beat Brown, 6-8, $6; at this stage of the melee the score Mansel-Smith beat Van Kuren, 64, jwas 7 to 2, in favor of the Ben-|; &-7, 64; Mra, Bragdon and Laizure | gale beat Allen and Miss McDonald, 4-6, 7-5, 68; Shannon and Mrs. Stafford Charley Schmuta was on the rub ber for the visitors, and he mayed until along tn the fifth canto, when the locals fell on him for a fustl |lade of base hits that sounded like the rattling of hail on a tin roof. Schmutz disappeared in favor of Wolfram, the new twirler. Before ‘ Charley left, however, he nicked the local! flinger for a homer. beat Mrs. Morris and Le Blond, 64, Laizure and Langdon beat Ren- % nie and Lamping Le Blond "land Le Blond bea ‘set and Spel- 6-2; Miss Lambuth and t Miss Yandell and Van |Kuren, 6-2, 7-5; Anderson and Miss at Shaw and Miss | Livingstone b Thompson, 6-0, 6-3; McBurney and Ww Ths be by piteher 166) Um ia Russel] beat Pomeroy and Worth, | MW ERAGUMm eT Anan. Pet.|6-3, 7-5; Brown and Allen beat Ted Lewis has abandoned the | Spokane se 11638 /Shannon and Stafford, 61, 7-6, idea of training on Coney Island | Vancouver 2 ett wien for his next ring engagement. | Bat cd 23 ane Coney Island io only © place to(7 i» a1|Rube Evans Allows | train for a dog fight,” said Ted's | Great Fale 19 25 AB But Single Bingle mabager. Reatlle oa} = ae E g i Pinkman’s an’s Own Story | Story ica and Shea; We touched gloves and went at my feet, as ay right wan useless, Hendrix Weakens i in { aught}“nd a one-handed man against it, and again ee ane | Heope is practically helpless. Ninth and Is Loser chin. The bell} The crowd was frantic. It was | rang with an edge /@xpecting to see me drop apy mo-| The score: — | in my favor, Af-|ment, but I weathered the storm | Butte 3 ae | ter a minute's | Without taking @ back step or coy-| Vancouver .. "3 ae rest the gong | $rins UP care | Hendrix and Altman; Hood and started the sec (Continued) Cheek ond round. I start ed the battle in| Hoppe's corner. as 1 hurried over at the tap of the Fon. A well-timed brated horseman, | right cross sent reeling crowd Hoppe and the Grover Bergdo not only races, b automod; lob regs, of Call-| went wild, as a knockout was in fornia ingest the alr, and from then on it was most fearless pilots now appearing |yure some battle, as Hoppe was eget umes jgetting tired of being on the re The serial sport cetving end. A right cross went sna verted Vincent Astor and nigh and opened a large cut over the young heir to the Astor [itpppe's left eye, and the blood be- ne now owns two of the | can to flow. The last right cross of Philadelphia, t builds his own recently lights to pilot at hie Rhine. |crashed something happened that cliff estate on the Hudson. jno one but myself knew of, and Max Fleischman already te a| that was I had broken my right licensed aviator and one of the eo-| hand, which was winning the fight clety pilots of the country. He) The bell rang, and I went to my has his own hangars and aero-| Corner for the minute's rest. SUCCEss comes in “cans” and failure in ‘“‘can’ts”, There’s success in ev can of VELVET. an 3 Planes on the out path. rts of Cincin-| At the clang of the bell I jumped clear across the ring and caught Hoppe with a left hand, and then Willie cut loose with right and left swings that were very nicely timed, NATIONAL RESULTS At Philadelphia 2, Cincinnati 1. At New York 5, St. Louts 2 as they caught me flush on the chin At Brooklyn 2, Chicago 1 at various apots; in fact, on every At Boston 1, Pittsburg 2 part of my face, and soon one hit jmy nose that made it bleed like a |faucet had been turned on. I |placed my feet plgeon-toed so as to brace myself and take the shower AMERICAN RESULTS At Chicago 1, Boston 2 At Cleveland 3, New York 9 At Detroit Philadelphia 1 of blows that were coming my way. At St. Lo 0, Washington 1 '¢ had to do this eo I could stay on It’s Enough to M Any Man Smile when you can step in and take your choice of a thousand Suits, in all sizes, colors, styles and patterns, that are regular $15.00, $20.00, $25.00 Suits ‘549.50. Your unrestricted selection. I only carry the best-known makes. It’s no laughing matter with us, though—we just started this new store about two months ago, and now " WE MUST MOVE Coming right in season with hundreds of snappy summer grays and stripes, all new, clean stock to choose from, it means a golden chance for the Men and Young Men of Seattle. Sale continued tomorrow morning, 9 a. m. See Our Windows Craton Clothes Sho 1406 FOURTH AVENUE All Free Alterations in Our Open Saturday r Night Custom Tailor Shop Until 10