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W4 are building up our trade because we give "merchandise of the bettor kind" aud keep the price low. thOKIUB 320 MARKET STREET NEWS OF THE S 7WAS A SLUR AT DANCE LED TD AL REICH'S DOWNFALL Coffey Anxious to Wipe Out Insult De cides to Fight and First Refusing to Be Party to Opponent's Making Money New York, May 7.—Trivial inci dents in the past have led up to great wars. As a result of merely turning his back on Jim Coffey at the ball of the Avonia A. C. last winter A 1 Reich has lost much of his prestige as a heavyweight boxer and was knocked out by the Irish champion. Coffey was anxious to wipe out the insult. That was the true reason why ho agreed to box Reich at Malison Square Garden on Wednesday night. It was the first boot since Coffey be gan his career as a boxer nearly three vears ago in which the good-natured tig fellow has shown the slightest trace of anger. The memory of Reich's deliberate slight rankled in his heart and was foremost in his brain. Coffey made up his mind to clean the score with a knockout or be knocked out himself. Coffey and Reich were quite friend ly at one time. They used to box to gether in a gymnasium. The night of the ball Coffey was led into the mid dle of th« floor and introduced. Just as he was about to step back Reich started for the centre of the ballroom. Coffey said, "How do you do, Al," at the same time extending his hanl. Reich, much to Coffey's surprise, de liberately turned his back on the Irish man. Some of the onlookers jeered and' that brought a flush to Coffey "s face. Later Reich, so friends of Coffey told | him, said things about the Irish "cham- j pion that were far from complimen tary. This further incensed Coffey, and when Billy Gibson, his manager, | proposed a match with Reich, he at J first refused, saying he would not be I a party to affording Reich a chance to make money. When Gibson said "You «-an wipe out the insult by knocking him out," Coffey consented to the match. \0 SIGNS OF PEACE VET Ban Johnson Makes Further Statement Denying Report New } ork, May 7.—Hopes that the I statement by President Johnson, of the ; American league, in Boston, Tuesdav, | tavoring withdrawal of the legal suits | between th e Federal League and organ ized baseball presaged peace were di | miiiisheil yesterday by a further state ment from Johnson. "No secret pact, regardless of the many conflicting reports has been signed between the American League and the Federal League,'' the Ameri can League president was quoted as saying. '' The American has no under standing of any kind with President Gilmore or his organization. There will be no peace as far as I am concerned. '•I wish to say that neither the American League nor the National League has made a single proposition to the Federal League that would re store peace in baseball. All theee re ports about peace negotiations and the American League and the Federal league coming to an agreement are fabrications. Organized baseball, so far as I tcnow, is as determined as ever to de cide this fight on its merits. Nobodv is looking for anything or expects any thing. If our case is wrong the sooner we know of it the better. We believe that we are right. We ask no favors. " e stand by our record.'' TRENT!.\I IX DIVORCE SUIT Wife of Composer Friml Names Her Co respondent and Wants „ N « w V ° rk ' May 7.—Mrs. Rudolph 1 riml, wife of the light opera compos er, has brought suit for absolute di vorce, naming Emma Trentini, light op era prima donna, as co-respondent. Mrs. Friml has also brought suit against Miss Trentini for SIOO,OOO for alleged alienation of Friml's affections. The papers in both suits were served on I riml and Miss Trentini last Monday. Friinl is a Bohemian. He came here six years ago as the accompanist of Kubelik, the violinist, and turned his hand to writing light opera scores. -Mrs. Friml charges misconduct on the part of her husband and Miss Trentini at the Hotel Statler, Buffalo; the Ritz- Carlton, Philadelphia; the Bellevue, Boston, and at various hotels in this city. Tunnel to New Coal Vein Hazleton, Pa., 'May 7.-—Many years' productiveness was added to the life of the Tresckow No. 23 colliery, of the •Lehigh and Wilkes-ißarre Company, yes terday, when the engineers completed the tunnel to tap the Buck mountain vein. At the point where it was struck the anthracite is five feet tihick and stretches for 450 feet. EARRISBURO STAR-INDEPENDENT, FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 7, 1915. BABEBALL SUMMARY STANDING or CLUBS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. PC Phiiadelpfliia 13 5 .722 Chicago 12 6 .6(57 Boston 9 8 .519 Cincinnati 9 9 .500 Bt. Louie 10 11 .476 New York 6 10 .375 Pittsburgh 7 12 .368 Brooklyn 712 .368 Yesterday's Results Philadelphia, 3 ; Brooklyn, 1. New York, 3; ißoston, 1. Pittsburgh, 9; St. Ixmis, 3. Chicago-Cine iima ti —'Bai u. Schedule for To-day Philadelphia at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Pittsburgh. New York at Boston. Cincinnati at Chicago. Schedule for To-morrow New York at Boston. Philadelphia at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Pittsburgh. Cincinnati at Chicago. AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. P.O. Detroit 15 6 .714 New York 11 5 ,R JS Chicago 12 9 .571 Washington 9 8 .529 Boston 7 7 .500 Cleveland 9 11 .450 Athletics 5 12 .294 St. Louis 5 15 .250 Yesterday's Results Washington, 11; Athletics. 2. New* York, 4; Boston, 3 (13 ings.) Chicago, 10; Cleveland, 4. St. Louis-Detroit—Rain. Schedule for To-day Washington at PhilaJelphia. Chicago at Cleveland. Boston at New York. Detroit at St. Louis. Schedule for To-morrow Detroit at St. Louis. Chicago at Cleveland. Washington at Philadelphia. Boston at New York. FEDERAL LEAGUE W. L. P.C. Chicago 12 8 .600 Pittsburgh 12 8 .600 Newark 11 9 .550 Brooklyn 11 9 .s'oo Kansas City 10 10 .500 Baltimore ." 10 12 .455 St. Louis 8 11 .4 21 Buffalo 7 14 .333 Yesterday's Results Brooklyn, 3; ®t. Louis, 2. Kansas City, 4; Boston, 2. 'Buffalo, 4; Kansas City, 1 (2d game) Baltimore, 9; Chicago, S. Pittsburgh, 5; Newark, 3 (10 ings.) Schedule for To-day Pittsburgh at Baltimore. Chicago at Newark. Kansas City at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Buffalo. Schedule for To-morrow Pittsburgh at 'Baltimore. Chicago at Newark. Kansas City at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Buffalo. AMATEUR BASEBALL The benefit festival and bazar of 1 the Albion Athletic Association, held April 29 and 30, in the old club house, ! 113*6 Market street, was a great suc cess, nearly five hundred people at | tending. The club has opened new | rooms at Fifteenth and Walnut streets | and the public is invited to make an inspection. The Keener A. C. of Harrisburg, will play the Marysville team of the Dauphin-Perry League to-morrow aft ernoon at Marysville. The local nine will leave the Macl&y street station at 1.30 o'clock. Frank Haley, of the Ewi A. C., is ; anxious to schedule a game for his j team for to-morrow. He can be reached j at the Harrisburg Leather Companv. The Baker A. A. will'plav the Mil l lersburg club of the Dauphin-Perry | League to-morrow afternoon. The team will leave here at 11.30 o'clock to morrow morning. The Hick-A-Thrifts and the East End A. C. will meet at Nineteenth and i Greenwood streets, to-morrow after noon at 2.30 o'clock. The Camp Hill High school team is without a ijame for Saturday after •noon. Carl Beck, Camp Hill, is the man ager. M. F. Landis, manager of the Hum melstown team, is desirous of arrang ing a schedule for the season. The team has ilieen recently reorganized and new uniforms have been pur chased. The Agoga A. C. will mobilize to morrow at 12.30 o'clock at the home of Manager Hunter, 1223 Susquehanna street. A game with the Steelton All- Stars will be played o« Island Park at 1.30 o'clock. Penn State. 3; Princeton, 1 Princeton, N. J., May 7.—Pennsylva. nia State College defeated Princeton in a 12-inning game here yesterday, 3 to 1. Crawford, the visitors' right "fielder, saved the game for Penn State in the ninth inning when h e leaped into the air and pulled down Scully's long drive and won it in the twelfth' with a three bagger which scored two runs. R. H. E. State .00100000000 2—3 5 3 Tigers .10000000000 o—l 8 4 Hesselbaoher and Vogt; Link and Kelleher. Umpires, Keenan and Conn han. Central Meet This Afternoon The inter-class meet of the Central High school was held this afternoon at Island Park. On the result of this meet hinges the selection for a team for the ARROW COT/T.Att into a makin's cigarette and it will produce more real and true happiness than any brand at any price you ever bucked up 0 - ; '*rftvrcan't bite your tongue, I « l- k®csuse it is made H''i2^S ( b y a patented process oR that removes the bite and r»!?M the parch. No other to- 'M bacco ever was or can be [M made like P. A. And §Pj|| P- A. tastes as good as that sounds! So the warm tip is: Get r*oM - the jimmy pipes out of fl \ j. dark corners, out of the rafters, where you've hidden \ Wk them for fear of more tongue bites. Get'emoutand ' II ® re U P with P. A., for you can go to it fancy-free from LZXail | sun-up right down the line to the pillow-period! 1 i 7 li Ifll <> ik. And the sooner you know this little thing personally, -n : ff ' IP 'lf Prince Albert is sold everywhere in toppy red i^Jfuf i 'i• '■ f /fmm, bogs, Sc; tidy red tins, 10c; pound and half' tidily if IMm til'J MWSL pound tin humidors—and —that classy pound I ; Jsl|l I | crystal-glass humidor with sponge-moistener I ISjCT J ■'* I |p&? iS> top that just beats the band for keeping J 1 g» gi PM t A' fine like silk• You buy one quic!.. HHRST Winston-Salem, N. C. P* * | iuterseholastics. Eugene E. Miller, former prominent State athlete, rcf- I ereed the meet. CLERKS WIN IN THIRD Bunch Hits Off McCloskey and Take Game, 5 to 2 The Clerks of the Lueknow Shop! League bum-hod hits in the third in-j ning of yesterday's game with the Fed-1 erais and scored five runs in that ses sion, winning the game by the wore of! a to 2. Chard allowed but two hits, j The seore: FEDERALS AB. H. O. A. E. Gough, If 1 1 1 o 0 j Fcgley, c 2 1 3 0 0 1 Buffington, lb ... , 2 1 6 0 0 McCloskey, p.. .. 1 0 0 3 0 Weigle, ss 2 0 0 0 0 Lcvan,. 2b 2 0 3 1 0 Burns, 3b 2 0 0 1 0! Dunlap, rf 1 0 1 0 0 j j Forney, cf 1 0 1 0 0 i Totals 14 2 15 5 0 CLERKS AB. H. O. A. E.I "VValtz, o 2 2 5 0 lj j Smith, 3b 0 0 1 3 0 ! Wolfarth, rf 2 1 1 0 0 , Geary, ss 2 1 1 1 1 j Green, lb I 0 6 0 0 i Taylor, ef 2 1 1 0 Oi Fegan, If 2 0 0 0 0 ; Leedv, 2b 2 1 0 1 0 j Chard, p 1 0 0 2 0 Totals 14 G 15 7 2 Federals 1010 o—2 Clerks 0050 o—--5 Two-base hit, Geary. Sacrifice hit, Smith. Struck out, by Chard, 3; Mc- Closkey, 3. Base on balls, Chard, 2; (McCloskey. 2. Hit by pitcher, Green. Umpires. Ellis and Lebo. j PLANT IN HATE KILLEI) MAN Expert Says Emotional Vegetations ( War on All Animal Life Philadelphia, May 7.—Blue rockets s»ho\v fear and t'he deadly nightshade is full of hatred. Both of these are' plants, but that does not prevent them ! from declaring merciless war on all ani- : mal life. The blue rocket perfume car- | ries one of the deadliest of poisons. One- j sixteenth of a grain shot from its | poison pistol has proved fatal to a man. "Give this plant the semi-muscular! | system possessed by the carnivorous ! 1 plants and it would be more dangerous than the cholera,'' said Prof. 'Henry O.! ' Walters, head of the plant research j bureau at Langhome. The professor, who maintains that I plants have memories and are capable of love, believes also that there are plants whitth exercise all the emotions of enmity. SERVICE FOR ANNIVERSARY P. R. R. Y. M. C. A. to Celebrate 2flth Year of Association Sunday The twenty-sixth anniversary of the Pennsylvania Railroad Young Men's Christian Association will be held Sun day afternoon at 3.30 o'clock in the •association building, when there will be a special service. The anniversary address will be made by the Rev. E. E. Curtis, pastor of the 'Westminster Presbyterian church, while a number of soloe will be sung by Miss Stella Butler. A report of the association for the past year will be read by the president, A] E. Murray. Decorations will consist of flowers and potted plants. NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia, Brooklyn, 1 New \ ork, May 7.—Pat Moran's boys got the Quaker City pennant spe cial bat'k on the rails again yesterday at. Ebbets field and buffeted the Dodg ers out of their path like chaff. R. H. E.! Phillies ....00010011 o—3 7 i j Brooklyn ... 00000001 o—l 5 2 i Mayer and Killifer; Pfeffer and Me-1 Carty. New York, 3; Boston, 1 Boston, Mass., iMav 7.—New York ' bunched hits, including a triple bv j Robertson, off Tyler, in the seventh iii | 1 =! YOUR It will fit, look distinctive and give you a stylish appearance at a price you can afford to pay. SUITS TO ORDER $15 D "> 4GO PATTERNS LOU BAUM 13 N. Fourth St ASK FOR> Lancaster's Favorite Brew RIEKER'S BEER JNO. G. WALL, Agt. Harrisburg, Pa. Frank J. Rieker, Mffr. ning. for two runs, and won yesterday's game from Boston, 3 to 1. R. H. K. New York .0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 o—3 8 1 Boston 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0— 14 0 Tesreau ami Meyers; Tyler an.l j Whaling, Gowdy. Pittsburgh. J); St. Louis, | Pittsburgh, May 7.—Overcoming a : three-run lead, Pittsburgh hammered ■ out a 9 to 3 victory over St. Louis yes : terday. R. H. K. St. Louis . 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 o—3 11 3 | Pittsburgh 00004104 x—9 10 0 Meadows, Griner, Robinson, Sallee | and Snyder; Adams and Sehang. CENTRAL PENNA. LEAGUE Stan ling of the Clubs W. L. P.C. | ■Lebanon 1 0 1.000 i ; Middlctown 1 0 1.000 New Cumberland .... 1 0 1.000 j Hershey 0 1 .000 : Highspirp 0 1 .000 j Steelton 0 1 .000 Schedule for To-morrow New Cumberland at Middletown. Hers'hey at Stee'lton. Highspire at Lebanon. FEDERAL LEAGUE At Brooklyn— R. H. E. I i St. Lauis 2 3 0 Brooklyn 3 5 0' Watson and Hartley; Marion and 1 Lau i. At Baltimore— R. H. E.' j Chicago 8 12 0 j Baltimore 9 10 3 Brown, Prcndergast, Johnson and I [ Wilson; Bender, Smith and Owens. At Buffalo—First Game R. H. E. 1 Kansas City 4 7 1 Bnffalo 2 4 5 Main and Easterly; Anderson, Mar-j shall and Allen. Second Game — R. H. E. Kansas City- I 3 3 I Buffalo 4 4 II Johnson, Blackburn and Easterly; Krapp and Allen. At Newark— R. H. E. Pittsburgh 5 10 5 Newark 3 7 1 (Ten innings). Allen and Berry; Mullin and Rari den. ' AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington, 11; Athletics, 2 Philadelphia, .May 7.—Washington scattered base hits all over sHfU>e park | yesterday and, with the aid of soma ! weird fielding 011 the part of the hoina • aggregation, ma le the circuit of the [ I bases 11 times in three innings. I j R. H. E. . 1 Athletics .0 00001 00 1— 2 8 7 i Washing'n 254000 0 0 o—ll 12 1 IVnuock, Bressler and Sehang, Lapp; Gallia, 'Harper anil Henry, Williams. Chicago, 10; Cleveland. 4 Cleveland, May 7.—Chicago defeat ed Cleveland, 10 to 4, scoring six runs in the first inning on three , asses, three errors and three 'hits and driving Mitch ell from the box. R. H. E. [Chicago .. 60000100 3—lo 13 2 ; Cleevland 10003 000 0— 4 8 4 Beuz, Ci-otte and Daly; MitoheH, i Coumbe and O'Neil. New York, 4; Boston. :5 | New York, >Mtay 7. In the most ex | citing game played in this city this seii ) son, the New York Americans score l : a 13-inuing victory over Huston vester j day. | Boston— R, H. E. 00100 0 110 0 0 0 o—3 12 4 ! New York— -0 0 0010011000 I—4 10 2 Ruth and Carrigan, Thomas; War- I hop, Pisle and Nunatnaker. DR.KLUGH, Specialist Pliyifctaa and •nrKfoi I Offlcem 20« Walnut Harrlabnnc. ri. Dlfteaaea off women and mrni apeetal, private, apeclfle, nrrrooa and ckroale illaeaaea. General ofllce work. CanenU tatlon free and confidential. Medlclna furnlabed. Work mnrnnteed. Ckarsea moderate. 20 yeara* experience* i tilt. K LUG 11. the well-known Speelnllat j h My prompt relief Ky without inconvenience, Wk ■ CATARRH of The H