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‘ STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAR. 29, 1916. PAGE 7. | MUTT AND JEFF—The Czar May Stand Strong in Russia, But That Don’t Get Him Much Here. COME ON FeLLows NERE WE ARE BACK iv AMERICA, LE Ts LAND. WE'RE Just iN MONTREAL, Mare March 29.—By win | last night's game from the| Hens, Portland and the locals now tied in the championship on here. The Oregonians/ the fourth game of the series 5. Each team has Won two and lost two games Despite the fact that Ernie John said yesterday he would not be} the game, his name decorated summary. He went into the fm the second period. He was penalized, and the) put over three goals | siz goals. Lalonde of the featured for his team | two dents fn the net. ‘The fifth and deciding game wil! tomorrow night, the coming out on top retaining Stanley cup for the next year./ Canadiens and Portland will two Say in New York! Jn order to introduce our new ~ (whalebone) plate, which fs the and strongest plate known, not cover the roof of the ; you can bite corn off the 3; guaranteed 15 years. $15 set of teeth (whalebone) $8.00 $10 set of teeth .. -$5.00 Bridge work, per tooth, gold $3.00 Gold fillings ... $1.00 up Silver fillings .... -80e Platina fillings All work guaranteed for 15 years. Have impression taken In the morn- : img and get teeth same day. Exam- {nation and advice free. Catt_and seo Samples of Our Plate and Bridge Werk. W. the Test of Tim Most of our present patronage ts recommended by our early custom- ers. whose work ts still giving good satisfaction. Ask our customers who @ tested our work When coming to our office, he sure you are in the ght place ng this ad with you OHI Cut - Rate Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY 9ST. Opposite Fraser-Paterson Ceo. AMU SEMENTS THE BEST OF VAT 2:20-—TWICR DAILY HENRI DP V Presenting “A Case In which he portrays seven distinct characters WILLARD SIMMS—ANDY RICE— “THE GIRL, IN THE MOON"—MA~ SON & MURRAY—TWO TOM BOYS —ORPHEUM THAVEL WEEKLY, Extra Added Attraction VINIE DALY, L’Opern et In 4 MetropolitanTheatre| TONIGHT and All Week Witkes Stock Company in Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm Nights tfc to SOc. Main 6211 Mais Thurs. and Bat, 350 and 26 __Naxt Week—"Within the Law. EMPRESS SEVEN BIG ACTS CASTELLUCCIA MARIE STODDARD Prices 10 and 15 Cents MAT. DAILY—TWICE NIGHTLY NEW PANTAGES Mata, 2:20. Nights, 7 and 9. “SEPTEMBER MORN” Big Musical Comedy Tabloid BOWMAN BROTHERS iT STauD Bacn! Wr TIME FoR THE At THE aM THE SPORT ZONE wHar's Te IDEA? fies Se ad T WARD FRON O SAY that Wynn Noyes is getting away to a flying start in Coast league company is putting it mildly. Walt Me- Credie, the Portland boss, figures him so good that he will be used in the opening game. Bs | This is quite a boost for the former N. W. leaguer, as pitch- | | | | Tw THE CzaR 4 (Quire 30, OF ALL THE Rugssras Nick, eur a, Whar AsouT tea yas ? Whig WELL IN RULLIA NO ONE 16 ALLOWED To PASS ANY PLACE AHEAD OF THE CLAR® Must Go FIRST 1918, by MLC Wh ‘rk New UM Pat her oft. BY BUD FISHER BOB BROWN |CALLED THIEF IN SUMMER GETS GOOD BACKSTOP VANCOUVER, March 29.—Bob | Brown, prexy of the Beavers, has | signed up a setond.Johnny Kling ing the opener in the circuit below is considered quite} some honor. Portland for four years and form to beat out Hig. RB 8 Wynn must be showing 2 Old Irve Higginbotham, whose home is tn/™ Seattle, by the way, has been twirling the first games Leastwiee, that'a what be thinks The backstop'’s name is Baldwin. Halwin's contract came in the {1 yesterday afternoon, The yer is a youngster who showed r for up so wel) in sembpfo and amateur some ball around San Frangisco that Danny Long signed him ap for the Chicago White Sox, Baldwin went up to Chicago, but thru same rea Noyes has the longest reach in the Portland camp. Spread son or other didn't get a tryout eagle, from finger tip to finger tip, he measures 6 fect 3% inches. sas i, Fla., training camp of the Boston Braves, that Bill James cannot come back as a pitcher. Hill's! chance, and Friday, Saturday and Sunday the Chicago colored team will be here. za s He was shipped to a team in the Three! league, but, after the prom- ise of « try-out In the Big\ Top, the [necessity of playing in thé Three-t) league had its effecteon him and! he went back to San Francisco. This year the Three! | team to which he was farmed didi arm is gone, they tell us. This|Thle kid pitcher, Moreland, seems £0 after him, and Bob Brown tn will be sad news to the home| folks who have been pulling for Bill to regain his old-time form| a 8 pitched his arm away to win the flag for the Braves in 1914 He is now a castoff when he should be at the height of his glory. It seems a pity that one who did so much for the Braves as Bill should be shanted out into the cold with- out so much as @ giad hand shake, Dut such ts the frony of baseball—and life. ss 8 Having sent out his transporta. tion, Prexy Dug can now loll in ease for the rest of the week, waiting for Monday and the opening of the training season to roll around. ae A portion of the training echedule has already been lined up. Mon- day will be devoted to giving the players the onceover. Tuesday and Wednesday the Giant rooks and regs will battle with the college nine; Thursday a local semt-pro team will be given a eee FigH TALE Oe Pretty nearly every Sunday from May to October last year I arose seems to be the bone of conten tion for more clubs than Seattle It 1s reported now sign who hi busy and Ariett, mediately got him up. “Pop” that he has|seen the youngster perform, thinks signed a Tacoma contract and | that Baldwin is another Kilng. Hi will report to the Tigers. He was turned over to Tacoma by Salt Lake. Dug still has hopes, however. gare OF Bil! Hurley te stipping around Seattle boulevards as secretive as the Christmas mouse of jingle fame. Bill took a trip out By- erett way yesterday, and, as a result, the Great Falle club may train there. Bill says he ts fast getting a strong team lined up, but will not give out the names) of the newest additions. , 2as The Portland club has five play- ers ready for shipment to the N. W. league. They will prob. ably go to Spokane. Among them is Al Bartholemy, the kid ‘waiter catcher, who caught his first regular game when Portiand | played an exhibition game with the Giants here last year. He is some backstop and whatever touts the boy highly. The training season for the Beavers will commence on April 4, lat Athletic park. Nine Beaver players will leave San Francisco on April 1, on thetr way north, ar riving here on the night of April 8. This band will include Hughes, a pitcher, Baker and Baldwin. The Beavers will get out Tuesday after-| pire noon for the initial practice, and the rail birds shonld be on hand In number on that day to give th team the double 9. BILLINGS, “Mont, March 29.— Miller and Mike Yokel |wrestied three hours and three minutes here last night witbout a fall. The match was eves as to aggressiveness and ability to an simfiate punishment. Yokel weigh club tn this clreutt gets him gets|0q yc8 and Miller 154. a future great in the big tent. 2 a. m. and went to fish on Lake| | Washington, going to Ma on} Union bay, where I learned art of throwing a plug. Mac has this) art down to a fine point, and catches s bass there once in a while. To be sure, I never saw him) catch one, but always on Monday,| in the sporting goods store would be exhibited half a dozen plump bass that had fallen prey to his skill, I would then swear that the following Sunday I would catch a bass or swallow a dowagiac. But, altho many a time have I flogged| | the water all around Union bay, I/ have never seen & bass or one caught. Probably just coincidence. I would give it up after half a} day's casting and turn to trolling| for trout. Always would I catch a half dozen fish within the first couple of hours. Then the rest of the afternoon I wouldn't get a bite until dusk, when I'd land a six-inch grayling. And every Sunday 1) would take home seven fish. There) are four of us in the family, and I always wanted to get enough for} two fish apiece. The fact that I caught seven, a lucky number, | made me hope for a big catch the following Sunday, but all the year) thru I never caught more. However, the other day I found! a four-leaf clover, and am sure that this season my luck will Read | F. C. RUNYON, 3205 Judkins st. ‘BOB BROWN GIVES OUT HIS LINEUP VANCOUVER, 6. C., March 26.—Manager Sob Brown of Beavers has announced his en tire squad as expected to line up next Tuesday as follows: Catchers, Gaidwin, Faliman and Baker; pitchers, Ariett, Callahan, Acosta, Hug! 4 liame, Russell, Clink, and Sabourin; infleider dings, Roy Brown, mons, Hamilton, Carpenter, Bullard; outfielders, Murphy, Calvo and Connolly. Dode Brinker will not report until the middle of April. You can get a lot of good land bargains in Star Want Ada. events of which you write oceurred in the state of of the story mast be the judges, Piper & Taft have do- mated am 618 5yy-cunce hand-made fiy red. | For the second best story Piper & Taft have donated « $5.50 De Lase | leather-bound fish basket. | | ‘There prince are now on display in the show window of Piper & Taft, 1117 Recond ave. ‘The beat stories submitted will be | run in The Star and om the | | Five's" Feet austin Carat | —! o~—- CURES MEN who, through Errors and Excess, suffer from Chronic Weakne Impaired Manhood, Pain | Back, Nervous Debility, tality, Kidney and Bladder Trou. bles, are quickly cured by DR. By mati $1 | Every box guaranteed. ¢ HAYMOND REMEDY C©O., Hotel Antlers, Phone Main 12882. FREE DOCTO or ix boxes for $5. i or writ . Room 1 100 milk ot delivery, ing and Bring bottle ” ad ao STALL 1] In the) Lost Vi-| Fourth and Union. 0 | sows FLOOK, FIKB PLACE MKT. WHY FOLKS LEAVE HOME The attractions at the New Cecil are increasing daily. Why live in the country and pay car fare? You can get light, airy rooms at $3.50, $4.00 and week. Then they have some chef, who prepares all the dainty} dishes of the season. Business Men's 25c Lunch! at noon. A Ia carte service in| the evening. Very reasonable prices. At 9 o'clock dancing and Cabaret, with new features each week. The attraction at present is| PIETRES,” who is accorded | the distinction of having PIERCE’S SEXOID) | played before all the crowned | heads of Europe. He and his | Accordion are hig hits. BULL BROS, Juse Printere ®: | 9013 THIRD @AIN 1042 profit, | | pontte Pustoftice | r am to 8 p.m Bundays. 19 & m. to 12 $5.00 a} Ump Sells Burglar Al: Alarm in Winter) 5 ?\iome Lire oF ump NO, 2 Y HAROLD JOHNSON league fans who call Um thief,” “burg- fon thet dimpjeases, are not at all famfliag with the winter workings | }of th ky official, when baseball | its pla only In the stove league.) Rigler pat Masillon, ©., on the |daseball map, but now calls Cleve }land his home. When I bumped into Rigier on a busy downt®wn street, ‘he was mov- ing even Driskly than any of the other trians. In his right |hand he carried a black case, not) unlike that of the average physt-| clan. “I anppose you carry all the clone Gocistons tn that bag,” was the sad |I broke the ice. | “That case keeps me from starr tng during the winter,” was Char |ley's response, and immediately he branched out om another line of (* TRAINING GAMES | With Alex the Great on the wn the Phils walloped the Cubs at St. Petersburg, Fia, 3 to 1. eee | New York was defeated, 8 to 2,/ by the Detroit Tigers, at balou hachie, Tex, eee Detroit recruits lost to Houston, | at Corsicana, Tex, § to 2. | eee New York Yanks ‘walleped Chat} tanooga, at that place, | | Brooklyn oot d Athletics, at Jecknonville, rua. 3. to 0. Cleveland won over the Cincy) | Reds, at New Orleans, 4 to 1. Mo- Kenry twirled part of the game for |the Regs. | |my part. | working model of a burglar-proof | window lock I have ever seen. | THE NIFTIEST % Y M, thought. “Perhaps you have that dark nee tern and a jimmy fn there, that s0/ many of the fans tnaist you use, during the summer months.” | “A lot of people class me as 8) eae burglar during the months,” said Rigler, “but I am against that class of people with a vengeance during the winter,” was, his response. While talking, he/ was busy opening the case, which |had aroused so much curiosity on It contained the nifttest While he worked the model, Rig-) ler gave a lecture that would make) A sure customer out of the tightest | proposition tn the world. Rigler,| himself a mechanician, not only sold the lock, but also Installed tt as well, “I make living during the winter keeping the peopl and honest, who, during the sum mer, insist IT am the worst cont outside captivity,” he said. | VICAR HURLS BOXING DEF LONDON, March 29.—Re H. Evans, vicar of the Some: mining village of Coleford, ni Bath, has challenged al! individ uals who have been cailing him a shirker in the present wart) crisis to don the boxing gloves |) with him. He has been recelv- Ing anonymous letters urging him to practice what he Preaches. “in college and curate days | defended myself ably in the box- Ing ring, and do not remember being beaten under fairly equal conditions,” sald Rev. Evans. “I am now ready to put on the gloves with any of these un- known persons If they will re- veal thelr Identity In public.” j Fim Fad Winans Baie tor} | Prices Paid Wholesale Dealers for i Vegots lew ruit asada a le | (Corrected datly by J. W. Godwin & Co.) | Arttehox 0” @ 1 Beets, wack Tananas ... Cabbage... Cal lemone, : orate. ces Cranberries j Bol. Carrots, encle. | Cucumbers, hothouwe ... Florida grapefruit ~ | bien, tow. pubs | | Froney, atrained .. % | Fa aq ‘ head let Rhubarb, “hothgass ees Florida, @-bae- ket crater ; Yakima Turntps, Delictour | al apples Yellow Newtown Pippins eeces3 9 6 Walla | 0 | 034 | wim Ontons, green Ontons ™ green, Walla, don Oregon ontor nm greet Yakima local : REPORT Petatoce White river Yakima Burbanke | Yakima Gems | Sweet potatoes .. Early Rone 27.00 @20.00 Prices Paid Prod: Poultry, Vea! Reletan hares Rretlers Ducks, fat Pork, good block hogs Squads, good alte, dom | Turkeys, live Turkeys, drem Veal, large | Belling Prices to Retatler for | Butter, Kags and Chaese x Nutter [Native Washingt creamery, b |watve We creamery, solid pack ony Domeatic wheel . Limburger Young Amert Select ranch ees ° Alfalfa, Rarley 32.00 Eastern Washington oats, 30.00 Puget sound oats 20.00 Straw, ton Timothy . Wheat .... 1:24.00 oa 6.00 ver ere long. Yes, KID, BUT You'RE EXACTLY FOUR THOUSAND, \ BIGHT HUNDRED AND Stery one mies FROM Ue Y RUSSIA (fi Invincible In Name, Value, Price Cheasty’s Invincible Suit $16.50 Always “Values Tell” PHILS STRONGER THIS SEASON, SAY SCRIBES IN CAMP ST. PETERSBURG, Fila. March 2.—Champione by right of conquest in 1915, Pat Moran's Phillies, training here, have been picked to finish fifth in the 1916 National league flag race, but the Quake con- tent to be neglected, Dopesmiths who last spring con- signed the Phillies to last place probably are oblivious of the fact that Moran has been steadily add- ing power to his machine. Foremost among the pickups are Chief Bender; | JOHNNY CHAMP AT TOURING He never fought a champion- ship fight, yet Johnny Dundee, Scotch-wop ringster, is a title holder in one sense. From Wind- sor, Canada, to Albuquerque, N. M., and from Boston to San Francisco, jumping back and forth until he has covered in his (Mghting career more than 185, 000 miles, is the little chap's record, and he has met ‘em all from 122 pounds up to 140. Dun- dee has never been knocked out, he has drawn $306,000 at the gate, and, from 150 battles, has banked $75,000. uurling Karl Pugilistic News and Gossip Billy Weeks, the Canadian, and Al Sommers, Portland middle weight, tangle in Centralia Thurs- }day night. . Billy Mascott, Portland feather, again triumphed over Tex Vernon, Aberdeen boxer, in Portland Tues- day night. Jack Dillion, the knock-'en:-dead | kid, bad the worst of the going in| a 10-round bout with Battling Lev- |insky, in Brooklyn. . Battling Jim Johnson and Sam Langford are to tangle in Den- eee Freddy Welsh and Benny Leon- ard will meet in a 10-round tilt in New York, March 31. Ada: taken from the Cubs; , who shone In the Amer- fean association, and Fortune, @ | Dixie youth. Coming back to the | Phillies is Joe Oeschger, who was |farmed to Providence last season, and who won 21 games and lost 10. Indian Was Worrled Bender has not gone to pot. The Chippewa was discouraged after going to Baltimore. He invested severa] thousand dollars in a sport- ing goods store, and the sheriff seized it Just before the joined the Feds. This preyed on his mind all season. The chief has regained all his jold-time poise and confidence, is jcheery, and never has experienced arm trouble. He is one of the mem- | bers of the Philites’ glee club, |which swings {nto action during jeach workout. In addition to these reinforce ments, Moran is banking on Alex- ander, Mayer, Rixey, Demaree, Mo Quillan, Chalmers, Bau and Tincup to furnish the required curving efficiency. Bill Killefer’s arm still has @ question mark on ft. He will not be allowed to do any pegging until early next month. Bil! insists his | whip {s sound again. In addition to Killefer there are Jack Adams and Eddie Burns. Moran stands pat on his infield lof Luderus, Niehoff, Bancroft and |Stock, with Byrne and Dugey re |servists, The outfield is better propped. He has Paskert and Wik bur Good for center, Cravath and | Whitted for right and left. Los ANGELES, 3 March an Griggs, former Brooklyn Fed, has been signed by the Vernon team of the Coast league. ond base, Griggs was traded by Montreal for Cather and Moran. KANSAS CITY.—Joe Stecher threw Dr. Roller twice in 11 mim utes, 2 seconds. eee SAN FRANCISCO.—It took Ad Santel 1 hour, 24 minutes and 55 seconds to pin Pete Visser's shoul- ders to the mat. The state of New York cut In for $11,295 as its share of the Willard- Moran money. He will play seo -