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| ~. Saves Hide |~ +eittw tee RR EES z ie riskaeaeee Travie Davis Is Held to a| RAVIE welterweight king in this secto @f the country, had a bit of toug luck in the fourth round « round clash with J my Mare @f Los Angeles, at the Are night, Marcus wor © ro | yet in that fell se he dropped Travie to the canvas for short Gount, aod bdelabored the blonde Northerner so heavily that Referee Ad Schacht saw the packed the enci seemed to figure the California slug-| ger as the winner, and be without merc at all, it was in failing to awatd the} call to Davis and sixth rounds slow, with such little damage rec ed by olther Beither boy the first champion has moons. Ple, but he does nc agented. to trade wallops. the first two nr foreed to do the chances th brief time betw: and the bell in the fourth stanza. arniss Jead on aggressiveness and points f, Marcus to overcome by a knockdown and the winning of one round. overshadowed lent draw of Johnny Young was of unusual class. ‘edge, but the milling was 80 close that Referee Ted Whitman had alternative but to raise both hands at the sixth periods, Mack a second, third and fourth rounds | Fitagerald won a fourround verdi Over the tough Joe Nestman special event ted to a split verdict in the second tilt. Tounds, with Moore evening thfnex rison in the third round of the cur lishing a game Lord state legislature last session. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 192 Ae he. ee of Marcus| Draw When Los An-| gles Boy Drops Him | DAVIS, who refens as! affair as a draw which | rafters, The assembied = throng ure to the 4 Schacht | But, if Schacht erred the second, third, ert The first was so ord. Davis won man, that it went Marcus took the fourth, as related, ¥ cracking Davis on the chin for} knockdown the Northw t recelved in ea | Marcus ts a slugger, pure and sim. . as he Was press. ree the going or He led but twice in ds, and Davis was lea and take jout except in the n the knockdown care to ¢ the The draw verdict but Davis had didn't too wo far great a Altho the thrill of the main event the rest of an excel card, the pretty semi-windup stre One Punch [Wicele r Johnston, D. B. The best firstsacker the Seattle Indians have ever had playing the bag this year. Wheeler Johnston, “doctor of |'® baseball,” is holding down the bag in good style and has} gthened the whole infield. is Mack and Billy Mack had perhaps a very stight no boys’ close, the first, Young had fifth and de in the Carrying the heavier wallop, Bud S in the | dia Eddie Moore and Babe Foote bat-! gan Foote baying an edge in t preserve in Maine. as a member of the Maine ns ie & fourth-round knockdown, Boda Larry Young kayoed Logger Har. RR ark | the v Seals Win | First Mix of Series AN FRANCISCO drew first blood} in the series with the Seattle In-| on some lucky hits « st ary pi | Ramage, #9 seccee Tobin, o the local lot Wednesda winning, 6 to 1 Harry ¢ ot ball for rdner pitched the Redskins, b and had the game well | hand thruout. Elmer Jacobs was due to pitch for tHatted for Gardner in ninth, Score by innings. San Francisco . Runs responsible for Struck out on balle—Ott Geary 2, Janvrin 2, Two-base hit- | Kilduff, Runs batted in Agnew, Kildutft. Double play: | Janvrin, | vei Fountain Lunches Pay Checks Cashed Pacific Coast League TODAY — 245 P. M. SAN FRANCISCO VS. SEATTLE LADIES’ DAY THURSDAYS CHILDREN’S DAY FRIDAYS Reserved Seats for Saturday and Sunday Games Now on Sale 3102 Arcade Building | PHONE ELLIOTT 2866 He « 2. Time of game—2:00, Vinney and Reardon, jand Thomua, Read Murphy, Gardner 5, Geary 3. Bases Rtolen by Three-base hit— Johnaton, m4 Jobnaton, Wi Umpir Just back of L. C. Smith Bldg. At Onkiand— rR Card Tables, Pool, Cigars, [gait Bake see tO Candies, Soft Drinks, MHatterlen: Goumbe and Peters; Kremer FRESNO RACE ON THURSDAY FRESNO, a nifty d some goofy sup- him the battle, ched « swell game for in Sacrifice hit— ught stealing—Keraper, Ramage to Jan Young Flashkamper hit three sin- gles over second base during the louked pretty good at © pinte, Pete Kilduff (s playing the » , of baseball around he did iat year tulee plays yesterday. Hie dished | | | | tain-raiser, | ng the catch ic TT vi | The Indians scored thelr lone| — counter in the sixth frame (nTiMy Lane made one of hie pretty a ~ rows from the outfield when he A Lane reached first on a force Said Mieunblonpacras Gar ieee han erican AQUE |} sole, counting on Johnston's doub) Ing to score from second oa Geary’s Frisco came back with two in their| single in the seventh. half of that frame. Singles by Comp. AMERICAN LEAGU | Valla and Walsh and Janvrin’s|. Both Crane and Janvein haa a hard Won. L *. y’ rs bs a jtime throwing the bell ye day, each Cleveland ‘ st throw to first to complete al making m pair of errors om Wild heaves New York a | <|double, let in a pair, — nosstoine : 4 67| ‘The Beals put the game on fce in Janvrin made @ pretty catch of Ki ¥ Tr ¢ ¢ dutta Texas ini Washington 2 s9|the first of the ninth w they | far into right f 25) St. Lou 2 a2 | bunched two hits with a pair of er oh lee 4 -14T | rors by Crane in throwing away the Pg Valle picked up » triple in “ , ira * first inning, poling the ball oa ball. They brought over a total of| [0 fetwuen Kitens aad tokewes At New York— gw | three runs. omnes soe pdogl 1 A large week-day crowd was on “Doe” Johnston's double im the sixth ew York .. : ° ra hit the right fleld fence. De eictes: * Weaxi Sas f | hand for the festivities. . ath Crew Will | | Be Given | | Week Rest | Then Coach Callow Will | Start Men on Long} Grind for Hudson Race BY SEABURN BROWN WEEK of well-earned reat, then & plunge into the long grind of training that will endure, until the ha tain: @unnid aAdeeas ludteds Washingte 1923 ‘varsity crew is!] to Austin & Salt, Ni land Then there was the Crawford pi ned up starting gun with |] Olive at phone ¥ 4589, Cobb-Jones troupe which performed Cham n Lead the rowing prides of the East atl The following men entered for the Detroit Tigers back in the pio Poughkeepsie on June 28th }] (9 date: Ernie Rogers, Dick Baw- || pengal pennant-winning days, Afle ¥ YORK, April 26,—Start JE and Franklin re- | That's the program to be followed || yer, Ned Dunlap, Roy Fulton, Kid || this triumvirate didn't hardly com unwind some of the tang he only undefeated clubs by Couch “Rusty” Callow, who, altho|] Kerber, Milton ! Harry || pare with the Red Sox entry. But ft that e” » slipped around |in t ‘ 1 school ball loop elated over the decisive t-back || Murphy ny D. H. Kru was far stronger at the plate. Hit fe boxing r York, the a re wday's games, in handed the n Bear last week, is || ser, Bwon Rogan, “Patches,” John || ting was Crawford's and Cobb's ape 6 Neense oc has rein ¢, Lincoln, Frank- far from over-confident and still has || Hudwick, Jimmy Dugan and Jack clalty, while Jones to a great extent |stated Mickey Walk welterweight t were returned win | many faults to find with the work of | | McDonnell made up for his weaker stick work|champion, ‘and granted @ Itcense to| fers. The jers are tied for first | his charges: lby his ability to draw passes. He|Johnny Kilbane, featherweight king.|P!ace with two wins and no defeats | “The Washington crew hasn't ae was one of the best “waiters” in t Walker was set down on the | each: Browdway, Garfield, Lincoin | veloped Its full power, by any means jeague, Cobb and Jones were also|charge tha he went thru “one of |424 Roosevelt have each « win and men haven't been together long Sport Salad far above the average on the t »|those things’ in Buffalo some time|* ‘¢feat in the books, while Queen Anne and Ballard have lost a brace to work perfectly hough this year unit, and machinelike secret of crew power, inion iow are orthwesterners who inter ented in seeing Washington make a] Jereditable showing in the East this year can be assured of one thing—| that the Washington machine will be | at Poughkeepsie than it at Oakland.” faster was Callow scouts the somewhat preva belief that the change from working in lake water to the ecur-| rents of the Hudson river may ham por the Western representatives. There is no handicap worth men- | |tloning In such @ change,” “The currents were t Oakland, due to tides, than they will be on the Hudson and the the South was quite rough. }lent While eights of Eastern | have In the past held some advantage Jin training over Coast invaders thru |the amnistance of freshman crews In pacing trial workouts, it Is far from essential that the Washington frosh |be on hand with the ‘varsity in Cal-| |1ow's opinion. | The main training grind js over be-| colleges | CLI STAR PAGE 17 Attention, You Detroit Tigers Have Great Gang Heavyweights! for Outfield Duty in American Aber their fame thru fielding ability; ers have been loudly A, CALL for every man of the 14 ‘ + heav wolghts who have er BY BILLY EVANS “es Ml ag il Sen {E have been many great outfield combinations in baseball. Some have earned some from a purely batting standpoint, while oth- laimed because of their all-round value to a team, tar and the athletic tin & Balt t Aw get | to Immediately h with Dan Salt by letter, was tan aahey % “fates Not so long ago the Boston Red Sox in Hooper, Speaker and Lewis had what they was Dan” this morning generally conceded as one of the best outfield trios in the game. These pasture men ye're going to start the first ||could perhaps cover more ground than any other outpost defense got together. All pos- bouts of the elimination series at || sessed rifle-like arms, and - Bue ee he ee pega op 7 ie rete e woe be unto ambitious base- . | night; and all entrants must get || runners who endeavored to R t t fi CT b in touch with me in orde oa take undue liberties with en a e wo u 5 ow time for lining up the ch matehes,” Salt annour vie goutie | Fwohnyg | Ted fam both being exceptionally fast men. ago These two outfields, all thing con-| |of games apiece and failed to nick sidered, have often been mentioned | His suspension did not take as ex-|the win column an the outstanding pair in baseball.|Peted, however, and he found And in a way they were directly op: with @ sparring partner. Since 1905 and 1906, when James Hirid woe the British open | ERROR COSTS champlenship, no golfer plenty of business in the no-decision BROADWAY GAME has eue- erritory of ther wt ceeded in winsing the coveted title |ponite to each other, One made its|‘** tory of ather states Hull's error in the fourth inning years tm succession, but Walter | mark principally on its fielding abil Kilbane never had applied for a| gave West Seattle four tallies and a “ahah 6 mak a ity; the other mainly thru its batting |!!cense to box In New York and the|hard.fought victory over Broadwa: jo that stunt this year by re- |Prowess and fleetness on the sacks. (license committer figured that his| The score— R. H. E, peating his victory of 192%. Hagen But how about the 1922 Detroit |#uspension was illegal because the| Broadway . -$ Ee At the present time seems to be in |OUter defense, composed of Hell.|comminsion had no right to try to| West Seattle . cavcoe 6) rm avinclble form and he has been |mann, Cobb and Veach? A pfetty|make him fight Rees, Reynolds and playing © game that brands him as nifty triangle to say the least. In With a license Kilbane no doubt|Burnsed; Butler and Sypher. Um- the greatest player of thea all, | telding Cobb and Veach ranked next| Would be allowed to meet Eugene | pire—Mills Barasen, of course, has inst fall's |to Bpeaker, the legitimate leader,|Criaul, European champion, in a| LINCOLN TAKES victory ever him, but golf critica are | While in batting the trio had a com-|bout alreac heduled for June 2} RAGGED GAME almost unanimous in predict thet bined percentage of 261. And that|at the Polo grounds Taking advantage of a folck of the little American open eh: wasn't all, for sitting on the bench! Muldoon said recently that a li.| errors on the part of Queen Anne's never will be able to repeat his sea- | Were two other flankers. Fothergill|cense would not give Kilbane any|tossers, the Lincoln nine took an sattonal feats of last year, and Flagstead, who would look well|more liberty than he haa been en.|¢asy game af Mercer playfield. A u in almost any outfield. |Joying without one, and that he|Kuay rally netted fur runs in the Thus Detroit had no less than five|would suspend him again if he fail-| ninth inning. © first-class outfielders at its command |ed to meet Johnny Dundee. Mul The score— R. H. E | last season with a combined batting |doon, however, has been overruled | Lincoln... -8 6 8 Javerage of .343. |two or three times by the new|Queen Anne ... -5 12 6 jut William Tilden And they're all on deck again. members of the commission and| Batteries — Tvete and Hyman; t of all tenn And while speaking of outfields|the same thing will result, perhaps, | Johnand McKenzie. ware of hard ¢ t #| act x * Ching to indicate that he is booked to|40N't overlook the one now repre-|{ fhe attempts to interfere aagin| ROOSEVELT SWAMPS coveded. venting the St. Louls Browns. For|with Kilbane. BALLARD Williama, Tobin and Jacobson go to make up a mighty sweet combina tion, on defense as well as on of | fonse. Roosevelt pounded Fox to all cor- ners of the lot, while Garton was holding Ballard to four hits, and the Rough Riders won, # to 1, at Roose- Johnny Wilson, the middleweight champion, having settled his differ. ences with Tex Rickard, is back |in good grace and he will be per- of the queer turn that happen taking place r | fore the Coast men establibh Eastern | mitted to engage in as many bouts | Velt field. | quarters and the value of the Mudson | w from the ¢ this summer as the promoters offer| The score— RH. E. | workouts lies in giving the mon aj job at Yale thru th him. 4 Ballara , ol See thoro knowledge of the currente and | * Bees ice the nee cee | The license committee, it Is under. | Roosevelt . . leu 2 | chance to become acclimated Pe str thle sane stood, will not be as free-handed | FRANKLIN WID ° | “The first-year men would be of| that it » will not make! MAL 1ZAGUR j!n accepting challenges for cham SLUGGING BEE some help to the older crew, how. | {ie sient » eek Be fe Won. Lost. pet, |Pons 88 Muldoon has been in the| Hitters of both the Franklin and ever; and Iam sure they would make] nis friends out of the ‘varsity “ 3 sep | Dast Garfield nines had a great day of it a fine showing.” the coach remarked. 1 ‘ Unless the committee allows Kil. |4t Walla Walla, but the former elub | | 16 } 7 foe bane to ignore the Dunder challenge | Pounded hardest and took the title. | It is rumored in local rowing ctr- to’ batses 3 ‘ zis |'t will have to suspend Jack Demp.| The score— R HE. cles that the expected dual race be-| ‘ vst : 4 1223 |sey, who has been avoiding a legal | Franklin , 3 tween Wisconsin and Washington | in : ‘ challenge burled at him months ago | Garfield, . 4 crews, to be staged on the home! i 9 ecomn fe “? by Harry Wills. Dempsey has main.| Batterles—Patricelll and Kenny; \* asters of the Hadgers while oe Hus- | gompany. Tis le. a aving for ‘the | 4} ' chicago n un. pn |tiined that be is willing to fight Hayashi, Foster and McGuern. kies are on their way East, won't | priesthood. A Ps Ww As s00Nn as some promoter o; - |pan out this year. It seems that | t §|term nim a place ‘and u purse, but | OREGON GRID : Wisconsin has some ambition to take mith; al-|in demanding $500,000 for his end, | : } |the piace of the Navy in the ‘28 re-| |Dempsey is stopping the bout just WORK STARTS — gatta and a defeat would prevent jas effectively as if he had come! i |thelr entering. The midahipmen will | HE Jout with a flat refusal to accept the| Of¢60n university's spring football be on a cruise In June and won't resentty, 4 : defi of the Mig negro fighter. | practice is under way at Eugene with compete. . ements of the Lediennat me _——- 3% men working out under Coach — - Rwede delegates to Intervational etion he practice | Seattle fans will have one oppor- lymple conference were misund Je, Tntreanation of the Practice of paring | Huntington, He has lost both of his | wilt ‘ od and that i was meant that would provide ® nice aituation for some | PeSwlar ends—Spear ™m the examina- } tunity * ba! oe ee py genic ie me Sirotee alisves sesaber sabe se . * holding-out of eal major league base-| tions and Brown by graduation. He sweeps thin ye afte |. wh ” e on wey tal he - . all dime 101 and would | powerful Portiand Rowing club eight | meets of the Me clubs Brooklyn $7118 py if the team should strike for crore] 2 spending & great deal ot iam | visits Lake Washington on May 19, The Rose city eight ts touted as above the average speed of amateur | club productions, and may give the | Huskies an interesting quarter hour. | Among the stars who are expected to pull oars for the visttora are: King and Gallagher, who rowed No. nd bow, respectively, for the! champion vy eight last year; Stephens, No, 7 on the Cornell ‘22 ‘varsity; and three former U. of W. Brandenthaler, former bow; 7 letter men, men, Sam Briggs, ‘16 and and Herman Luft. ‘The champions are playing Sam | Agnew, a catcher, in right field, as }both Joe Kelly and Tim Hendryx, with Sell, McGraw and Gharrity, EG Barney went up as & pinch nitter and Schang. the Indians today with Jim Scott due]in the sinth and delivered with a sharp 7 ona, single to right At Cleveland— R ® aps: — Poo Detroit. face he score follows: Timmy Welsh was also sent wp ne Cleveland shen. To ee THE SCORS ® pinch hitter, but struck out on Batteries: Pillette, Francis and Wodall,|_ 4" Francico— AB. R. H. PO. A EB) three fnot ones. Bassler; Metevier, Shaute, Morton and|Comptom, If wwe, @ 1 1 & — ONeill. Valin, cf -vomesee @ 2 2 4 @ Janvrin stole two bases yesterday and pee Walsh, #> sewenees $ @ 1 9 2 was caught the third time only by « At Philadetphia— Agnew, ¥f cece 4 1. 1 1.6 wonderful play by Kilduff, whe canght rede |Bulsom 1b seme # 2 2 8G the ball with one hand and tagged Jao Philadetpnt ser Kilduff, 22 eased @ @ 1 & nie sprawied on the ground | 1 Mecceeee ® 1 8 2 8 ante deieraal Drees cumin seers # 8 8 8 1 EEVSEE!i11) INJURIES WEAKEN SEALS ff 1k it PO. B Batteries: Levereiie, Wootward and At sa nears ‘ 4 eas a carers Schalk; Vangilder and Severeid. Johnston, 10 see s $ BY LEO H. LASSE? mE Eldred, cf scsenae ry oT 8 San Franctsco Seals and the Harry Lord, former third-sacker of | Grr, as pohbaad ° o| Senttie Indians are presenting the Philadeiphia Athletics, is estab-|Janvrin, 10 -.--- ‘ }| weakened Hneups in thelr series this ‘ ‘ 1 7 ® ° ° regular illness. Kelly won't be able to into the game for some as he is packing around of fingers on his throwing band gin qi serly yet, as they are just healing +|up from being broken by a pitched bail. Hendryx was in the Swedish hos. pital here Tuesday with a bad at tack of tonsilius. Hal Rhyne, regular shortstop, waa on the shelf for the opening game of the series with an attack of ptomaine poisoning. Ray Flash kamper, the clever youngster of the fly chasers, are out back yet ret time a couple tT or} | Seals, If playing his position: Co t | The tnfleld tn weakened, too, by as’ le \the faflure of Third Sacker Mulligan |to report. He is counted upon to} : : ; round out the Infield. Hin wife is A OATES cae seriously {ll In Chicago and Muli Salt Lake « an ¢ gan may be some time in reporting. Mot ah | § 818) The Seals, however, have @ won ll gen wraceloce. Ho} Bi aerful pitching staff and their hurl Sacramento 11 § ‘660 | ers are expected to carry them thru 14 14 500\untii all of the regulars get back + 12 Big lon the Job again. Bill Orr may be missing for a day At Low Angeles R. H. E.lor so from Seattle's lineup, due to A CLUBROOM Peetumeecs scerm+ {18 Ya strained tendon tn one of his legs. | Where You Can Play | “Batterien: Hughes and Koehler; May|He couldn't finlsh Tuesday's game, RUMMY, FREEZE- |and Hannah. Young Bill Ramage replaced him. P noe Yam Yaryan expected to play The ZERO | Portiana es 9 dfankle badly in Tuesday's game and Hatteries: Wallace and Daly; Leverenz,|had to quit. Ted Baldwin, regular 214 Jefferson Bt. Makert 608" Bylst third sacker, 1s still out, too, with a broken hand, WORK BEHIND Harry Gardner is one of the hard est pitchers In the Coest league to field behind, because of the slippery elm that he applies to the ball, An infielder hasn't time to rub the ball Cal, April 24—with| clean, and if he happens to let the Elliott, Klein, Durant, | ball fly it ie apt to go wild, There rms, Cooper, Hill, Milton, Won-| ore several wild throws in Tues. rich, Elmer Reiger ls back with the Ver- non club In the Coast drifting around for a long time. was recently released by Sacramento, He also served time with Seattle and| pretty fair hitter, being particularly Salt Lako De Palma and homas en- tered, everything is set for the 160- mile automobile race here Thursday. IV's the last big event before the In- dianapolis classic Decoration day, league after He day's games, and they may be laid to the slippery elm. KILDUFF IS SWEET PASTIMER Pete Kilduff is without a doubt the peer of the Coast league second sackers when it comes to working around that keystone bag, He's # pip, and it’s a wonder how he ever got out of the majors, He is a Gangorous in the pinahes, AND INDIANS FOR SERIES week, the former squad zelng par | ticularly hard hit by oldman Hard Luck. Pete Compton, who made a thrill Jing actch in Tuesday's game against | Brick Eldred, once made a “catch” |Just a thrilling, and he never got He was playing left field for Seattle In 1919, when there was a knoll next to the belachera, and it was covered with grass, The ball went up on thiy knoll, Pete after It He fell over backward, and the ball over hie head into the But Peto stuck up one hand and the umpire called the batter out. He got hold of the ball as he appeared to slip In getting up, and nobidy was andy the wiser, | the ball bounced erase, VALLA MUCH-IMPROVED BALL PLAYER Gene Valla, Frisco's young center fielder, is a much-improved ball player this year, as he has more con- fidence at the plate and in the field. | And boy, he's plenty fast. When he} circled the sacks on his triple Tues |day he traveled around those basen \just as fast as anybody ever did on these grounds. Seattle fans got their first look at Bill Ramage, young infielder, with the Redskins Tuesday, when he re- | placed Bill Orr. He had a couple of | | chances aud looked pretty good. The | kid is fast, willlng to learn and he |has all kinds of pepper. The older fellows on the team all predict « brilliant future !n baseball for him. MAJOR STUFF With President Harding witching him, Babe Ruth hit his second homer and two singles, drove in two runs and scored one, the Yanks beating Washington, 4 to 0, ‘Three rine scored fn a ninth inning rally off the reerult pitcher, §) lopped the winning streak of the Clevi land Indians and gave the Tigers an #-to~ 7 vietory, After the Robins had knocked Bluume out of the box d four rund in he fifth Innings with one out, Fred John- non, rookie pitcher, stopped the rally, and the Giants won out, 6 to 4 Tobin scored when Eddie Collins muffed throw on an attempted double play, and the Browns won from the White Sox, 1 to 0, Van Gilder, who woa the only previous victory for the Browns, was on the mound, ‘Three runs on thram seratch hite wei all the Red Sox could get off Naylor, and the Athletic won the game, 7 to & Aldridge lot the Cards down with only two hits, and the Cubs wor their weventh atralght game, % to 0, Hartnett, Cub catoher, hit his fourth homer, Babe Pinelif ted the attack with four Ainglos in four timon up, and the Reds dofeated the Pirate, 6 Lo & and evened te sores 6 of the dough Is not known. Blume, F. Johnson and sny. Dickerman an Batteries Ruetner, What the clubs de with the cut | trying to develop another pair of | money’ Just: before thie: guagpiankc wr wing men this spring. lied up on the bort, Paris bound Deberry Who smokes Cinco Survey No. 19, City of Cleveland. A section of the Cinco National Census. Male population 413,398, Cinco sales over 9,689,000 per year. 2,880 stores distribute Cinco, fan aut Cinco sales since 1850 ars gas Cleveland folks content. And dealers, too, they re- cognize Cinco primarily as a sales repeater, They know the cigar that repeats makes steady customers. In- deed the Cinco distributing franchise is the most prized in the entire trade. Cinco’s annual sales run nearly a quarter of a billion—men like you, with your tastes and your regard for quality are the men who smoke them. first acclaimed Cinco their most pop- ular smoke many, many years ago. Cigar distribution as Cinco men now know it, was then unheard of, But Cinco kept climbing, and today, this pular cigar at 2 for 15c, is still the big Cleveland favorite. It leads be- cause it is really the finest cigar pos- sible at its price. Men who yield to its lure know the formula for smoke- 2 for 15c better still, a new-type Cinco pocket-pack of ten for 78c.