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ORT EVENT REFINERS DROP OUT OF LEAD IN TOURNEY THRU LOSS TO ELITGH Casper Forced into Double-Header Tuesday, Wins. from Monte Vista but Drops Second Game to Rivals for First Honors in Tournament Casper won and lost in Tuesday’s battles for the tournament pen-| withstanding. | In a talk with the United Press a YAN short time ago. Bronsor fre ad- | mitted that his heavyweight probably ; aspee Daily Sri “REGKETT KNOCKS OU M’GOORTY IN THE 17TH, MARTIN TO. TAK THE EASY ROUTE IN FISTIC. ARENA By 0 NEW YORK, (By Associated Press.) LONDON, Sept. 3.—Joe Beck- ett, British heavyweight champion, knocked out Eddie McGoorty of Bo the eens, Ss SmMY lt Ostoeh Ne Wiskitnlths 17ékiround oF Bob oMertii HeRGy ene pugilistic, * Scheduled 20-round fight. Fred Fulton, American heavy- weight, knocked out Arthur Town- ley in the first round. a champion of the A . doesn’t claim the world’s championship for his pro- te statements to the contrary not- is a long from the erov way heavyweight | FROM CAMBRIDGE 15 said Jex “within lwo 1S, LANDS ARE. movaicrr DEMAND RELIEF —— Western Governors Organize to | Force Recognition of Claims | That Lands Should Assist Development Future If the governors of the Rocky Mountain states have their way about it, more than a third of a billion acres now being handled by the fed-' eral government, withdrawn from! taxation and contributing not a sin-| gle cent to the development of the PLAN NEAR THERMOPOLIS THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., Sept. 3.— The Yellowstone-Wyoming Oil com- pany will install a carbon black plant at their gas well, d the plant will soon be shipped from the east. Sol Chan, secre of the company, re- turned from New York the latter part of last week where he made arrange- ments for the shipping of the plant. The company has a well with a capa- city of 20,000,000 cubic feet a day at will be treated at the plant. The plan to pipe the gas to mopolis is still receiving considera- tion, but no definite announcement will be made as to whether s will be done until the company tisfied that th + will be a suf- icient demand for the product to or not, , —————————— 4 WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 3, i9i8 "MANVILLE TO IMPROVE ROAD TO LANGE GREEK Definite plans have been made for extensive work on the Manville-Lance Creek road entailing an expenditure of between $7,000 and $10,000, ac- cording to the Manville News. Ef- forts will be made to secure the co- operation of oil companies and pri- vate citizens in financing the improve- ment. One of the main points of im- provement will be rebuilding the road over the ‘77 hill” on the road to the oi! fields. —The practice of being trained for the avy has been abolished according to an announcement made by Acting Prime Minister Watt. MELBOUR caning nant in Denver and because of a defeat at the hands of Elitch Garden jy. re mis jing attended by west, will be turned over to those * mourning representati ats € ) tin will beat Dempsey. Re jatates, put to whatever use can be| ant the large expense of bringing nine may take second money in the championship series, according |™« tber wet 1 tell you R th |found for them, and made to pay) the commodity in. to advices reaching here from Denver. The refiners cinched their place sh Taney ze Peaalighh eae a ecard their share of the cost of building ‘ n the finals by defeating Monte Vista, € A. eatly TT ] eae A Se CN OA Le ae up and improving the mountain em-|. Miss Margaret Ennis, of Arapalioe in the finais by defeating Monte Vista, © to » early luesday after- lieve that he knows enough about CAMBRIDGE, Eng., Sept. 3.— /jpire. fcounty. said to be the first woman noon, but the balance turned against them in the last half of the un-| fighting to vo in and defeat Demp (Correspondence of the Associated| The official record of the recent'deputy sheriff in Colorado j expected double-header when the} ———————_ | S€} Press.)—The departure of the Amer-|meeting of western governors at Salt a A ration of” Flitch nine garnered five runs off want to show the public whatican soldier students from Cam-|Lake-City, a copy of which has heen| 4 jative Sitka widow when. she COMPOUND COPAIBA snd CUBEBS Brandt and let che locals down with this boy can do, and I'll do it in a/ bridge University is regretted. They |received here, shows that, meet-}/ b rar cca OO Rare Te athiiegleihithand ahreaninenmiadicnn |legitimate way. We sre not begging puts on paints the upper! [Ask for BY NAME ONLY. ion is rife re; ttle in a all honor t Monte meet in the s 1e Tuesd use Monte V wn to de i to third place iors in the tou to the E} the forme first til the sixth Monte Vist the score h the lo- grabbed at u Monte fought, ¢ el 2 ninth to tie the score again, but was unsuc cessful. Busch banged o three- bagger—the longest of the game but the Monte ret. the other and scored on club could ; ary to tic Busch opened for Monte Vista by ing a McCullock went down, and Hunt. Brown flied to Mc ill. McNeill was first at bat for Cz high fly to Sanders then fanned Pipe 1 left per ere. Haye Monte Vista n the second 1 iber led und popped a 1 three times was hit count when Maples walked, after w center. Maples IcIntosh doubled, Seiber and Sanders, and then himself when C. McIntosh h was caught out k to n the road second, bat After Mets half of th et them home. could not ¢ had struck out, Hunt drew a p and advanc to second on Ros sacrifice. Free walked, but Sanders struck out Abrogast. In the third inning McCullock flied out to center. Brown sent a grass- cutter to third and was out. Sieber flied out. In th count. Harper and Hayes fanned. Then Metz singled to left and tallied on Hunt’s twobagger. McNeill drew a pe Free slashed out a double and cleared the hs. Again in the ei thrice by timely First Game Casper AB.H. PO. Me NH, 3b. 13) FASC Piper, rf. pe + MILWAUKEE LIGHTWEIGHT 4 4 4-70) 3: s0niC 4 H palo ne ) Metz, 2b. Ze ora: .,, (BY Associated Press.) Hunt, 1b. $ 2410 2 0 MILWAUKEE, Sept. 2.—Pinkey |e Roe cree 3 3 09 | Mitchell, Milwaukee lightweight, out- Ree ce ; } | boxed Ever Hammer of Chi Abro es 0 | e¥ery session of a ten-round no-decis- Map a eee 1 o\ien bout last night, newspaper ~ __|ers agreed. Potala, 2assenran 13 Olay ae oe - UDOWD WINS ON POINTS Busch, 3b. McCormick, 1b. Brown, ss. Seibert, 2b. Sanders, p. Rossi, rf. -- = J. McIntosh, c.---- ¢ - PO. A.E. al 4 0 Stover, Graham, = OOO a0 Totals ae Score Monte V 030 000 001— Casper -- 000 003 08x — SUMMARY: Two base hits, J. M Intosh, Free, Metz; three base Busch; bases s which made the Casper- double-header for sing understood id Elitch would t sixth inning Casper tied the] 0 0 0 0 hits, ‘ on balls—off Maples, EL DONE VERY WELL IN BIG LEAGUES n France by boxers. He is ition. “Indeed they are,” said he. promoter und referee of long expe-|«they were a cheery lot. We all (By United Press.) ae te ing conducted high class /iixed them. They lent quite a bit of NEW YORK, Sept. 3.—It was}boxing in Joplin, Mo., for many | color.” Dick Rudolph who vw mainly yeu The university authorities general- sponsible for the Braves’ roughshod treatment of the Giants in 1914. { Milton Stock had quite a finger in the 1915 pie the cut. In 1916, Rube Marquard had some- thing of importance to do with the winning of a pennant by the Dodgers. In 1917, Eddie Cic Red Sox by hefting the White into a world’s c What's it Nothing much, except that Dick Rudolph was tossed off by the Giants, | & and so were Stock and Marquard. | Cicotte was spurned by the Red Sox}t -in the past And Bill Rariden, | Heine Groh, Eddie Rousch and Slim Sallee, now pioning for Ci cinnati, w town off | by Giants. ————— i $40,000 for Ar-| The thus Nel iants paid f—or so it is claimed. Judg- ed by that, what is Babe Ruth worth? ehf lost his first two starts for well i were both pastin al in the a Both games| erages of floundering New Yorkers. In |holes and climbed out another game. | —— | y has left the socking| d is uplifting the cir-| cus, where Jess Willard left off. j And only a few short months ago | he was promising to defend his title | whenever a worthy opponent ap-| peared, | Perhaps Willie Meehan isn’t worthy in the eyes of Dempsey, but he hold | a couple of decisions over the world’ | champion, and the public would like| \ to know how about it. * Also, there is| {Billy Miske. | Jack Demp: business fl 00 0 0} 2 0 Ola 0} Zee O20 2 0 Oo} IN BATTLE WITH LEWIS By Associated Press.) (By SYRACUSE, Sept. 2.— Mike 1 Jean, ah alla, ‘ : . I 32 O'Dowd, middleweight champion, out- G. McIntosh, cf.-- 3 1 1 0 Ll ¢ouens Ted Lewis of New York in ten n, If. - Sies0mre at 0 “DELMONT AND WALLACE FIGHT 15-ROUND DRAW Axsociated 0, Sent. 2 reas.) Gene Delmont 2, off Sanders, struck out—by|of Memphis, A. F lightweight Sanders by Maples, 4; hit by|champion, boxed 2 15-round draw pitche . McIntosh. with Otto Wallace of Milwaukee last = | night. ee = Second Game Jean Webster, one of the most --AB. H. PO. A,E.| successful of American women pl ----- 4 0 3 0 wrights, is a niece of the late “Mark ----4 9 0 O/} Twain,” and is said to possess much - 0 1) of her uncle’s Metz, 2b. - Hunt, 1b. - 0 0 Rose, cf. ~- 0 1 rec an 0 1 Abrogast, c. 0 i) SHH OMAMHS Brandt, p. - sense of humor. Her published stories and plays have been © notable for their wit as well as for little | Y-M.C.A. Phillies | time wo: over the t te ruffled the|A.F Sox | ible :pionship. believe i ell about? £0 ute => the Giants, although he pitched sah [ | M SALLEE (5 ngo in|tional league bailiwick in the sleep for fights. We will take what comes “Qui as been left by the along and we'll m. h straight to the Americans correspondent was championship. Every member of the oii by Raddawaywtote Rite: AEP. believes this, and will back william Hall, censor of non-collegiate his feelings in the matter.” Bronson expresses himself as op- posed to the established method of k since he has seen what was students, and the Rev. P. Whitney | professor of ecclesis history at | Emmanuel college, which was John | Harvard’s, put in a quick corrobora- boxing He said he was unwilling to be- ly were impressed by the earnestness lieve when he went to France as a) with which some of the Americans| athletic director that the /huckled down to work. All did not d ever come when he would | york hard, however, many teking the inute rounds over the view that they would profit more by thod of sending men jooking about in a leisurely fashion, e-minute route. studying English practices and man- Want Martin Xo fight under iners and cultivating the social side rules if such a thing is poss-' of things, than they would by bury-| uvor ablis part of her fi p black. | Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, Arizona, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Washington, | New Mexico and Oregon, not only was a résolution passed demanding that such action be taken by congre: but a League of Western Public Land States was formed for the pur- pose, if possible, of making that de- mand effective. 25,000,000 in Wyoming. Ss jan It was related at the meeting that in eleven states the total of unre- served public lands amounts to 2 448,225 acres, and that in\ addition surface a Colorado ha 71,955 of unreserved and 14 5 —equivalent to 38 per cent of jits area, and Montana has 8,201,- 019 of ‘unreserved and 19,004,583 Natrona Fuel Co. in forest reserves—a total of 4 r Phone 949 eat J. L. BIEDERMANN, Prop illustration of ] GEBO COAL COKE woow City Office 157 S. Center this works for injustice to the public land how Governor Robert D. Carey of g pointed that this state, ) per cent of its domain under with there are 150,083,597 acres of re-|federal control and therefore paying Street served lands, making a grand total of | taxes, is forced to pay as great a 372,531,822. ep proportion of money for the develop- @ Gen. Office 5th and Beech Wyoming has 25,434,194 acres of|ment of national roads as states Streets of Wherein there is not an acre of fed- eral land. { unreserved land besides 8,619,855 reserved—a total of 55 per cent of ©0OSOOO4: 1 this countr: he said. jing themselves in books and lecture s better fighting. rooms during their limited stay. | with a min-| Cambridge is beginning to make a| puction and bid for American students who look ! stalling. The number +5 Europe as a field for postgraduate | id be increased to ex-| work Formerly Americans had great | time of a go, ‘difficulty in securing degrees of Doc- bite fe photograph of tor of Philosophy in British universi- Weed che cr te, had won the ties, so they went to Germany. Cam- allied championship. It showed bridge now has arranged a Ph. D.,| Pershing holding the boxer’s | si Geoffrey said, that will have a| nd appraising him with a smil- special appeal to American research- | ii ¢ ngly critical glance. e English postgraduate students, like the Americans, used to go to Ger-| y. To offset a resumption of that tice, Cambridge is arranging te} » its men go instead to universi- | PRILLIES PARK ves nove ost a (By Unit NEW YOR t. 3.—Slim Sallee (My Associated Press.) came very near 1g the most im-| DENVER, Sept. 2.—Charlie White Pp it part of the famous Red ma-|of Chicago won a referee’s decision » that has run rampant thru the|over Johnny Noye of St. Paul in a pague this year, but there|12-round go here last night. few fans who know that his | fame extends also in another direc- tion. 1 Press.) ee Mme. Sarah Bernhardt, the great | French actress, will celebrate the | sixtieth anniversary of the beginning of her stage career next year. - - allee, canny, wise never has started a game against | Philadelphia in its home band-box.| Mrs. ¢ In fact, only thirteen starts against | band is Philadelphia’s alleged National league club h been made by the elongated | woman in Ohio to be elected to mem- south | bership on a county health board. The reason Her home is at Van Wert, Ohio. |from pitching when his club visits —~ Philadelphia is simply this: He is y for the opposition to touch for long flies. And long flies in the Na- old pitcher, . Saltzgaber, whose hus- . Pension Commissioner, for Slim’s refraining ao y D. Bailey, who has been city treasurer, 1 to hold public office in Flint, | city are home runs. Some one would| aking the home record} ve did much serving | | Occasionally the left-handed mas- | jter finished a ball game inst | jthe Phils, but never in all t he has been curving in the N league—und New York run ational the colors of St. Louis, and Cincinnati—has he started against the Quakers on their home lot. Quite a record? Sure! | » been accused by Cincinnatians of attempting to buy] a pennant. | What would they say if they were told that Col. Jacob Rupert and Col, Don’t overlook the op- T. L. Hus owners of the New|] portunity of first choice of York Yanke ying plans to onr new Fall Suits. pillage Redville of Pat Maran? Would The best patterns will go first — don’t wait — come in now while the as- sortment is complete. Here’s the best show- ing of styles and patterns you've seen since “before the War.” Smart models in single they yell? They probably would, And _ the colonels, while not tampering with any one’s ball players, still are hot after a successor to Mil- ler Huggins, who is believed to have | failed with a high class organization, and they lean strongly either to Mo- ran or Wilbert Robinson, both of whome are in the National league. two Cincinnati probably would call out|} and double breasted ef- the ‘atch. ne watch, ee | eae, For men who want Woman suffragists of New Hamp- shire are confident of favorable ac- tion on the Federal constitutional | the state legislature in special session on something new and dis- tinctive—kere is a regular “clothes show.” MEN’S SUITS $30 to $75. . Potalsy eH OO) eh oaeLo: Elitch AB. H. PO. A. Walsh, ss. - Oe 21992 Reidel, c. - Dae gee Morehead, If. - Bee) 520) Hartzell, 2b. Boa eee Morris, rf-3 3.000 R. Moore, 1b. - ch ahobl (1) VoltzteSpifa---- 252 0 71/0 A. Moore, cf. ----- Hh Ss E. Score by 4 their originality. |amendment by \when it meets 0 Glaze, p. --3 00 4 0 SEAtsRibee 9 0{ Newport, rf. ----.. 2 040 0 0 Ol) Totals —-------<96 | Osete 1B) 4 | air, innings: o| Casper olElitch _- 000 000 302—5 1| SUMMARY: Earned runs, Elitch 5; 2|two base hits—A. Moore; three base 1 1| Brandt, 4; struck out—by Glaze, 6; 2,by Brandi, 3; passed balla—Abro- 0 gast. -- 900 120 000—3 hits—Moorhead; bases on balls—off | New Furnishings, too. KEELEY > INSTITUTE Cor. Eighteenth and Curtis DENVER, COLO. LIQUOR AND DRUG ADDICTIONS cured by a scientific course of medi. cation. The only place in Colorado where the Genuine Keeley Remedier are used. ! | Sts. | SHOE & CLOT ta HING CO | Successor to Bloom Shoe & Clothing Co. has the distinction of being the first | is the first Berd “ey, | Franklins, Kazor . | ; was like bis braitr. RANKLIN’S BRAIN—like his razor—was a thing of exquisite balance. And by stropping his brain on other men’s minds, he kept it always fresh-edged. So when, at seventy, his country pitted him against | Europe’s foremost diplomats, his keen intellect and | : old-fashioned honesty won their victory. <i In like manner, his fine old razor was a thing of time-tested virtue —good heft in the hand, right shaving angle on the cheek, prac- tical working length. All that Franklin’s razor lacked to make ive perfect shaving tool was‘the double-edged, guarded blade of the 5 } A Real Razor~— made Safe For much less money than Ben Franklin paid you can have a real razor—with the old-time balance in the hand—the comfortable length— and the proper shaving angle—a razor > that vwos't cut your face, for it’s best-tempered blade on earth, the longest, keenest and strongest—a two- edged, detachable blade with morc shaving mileage than any other blade. Don't discard this blade when dulled, You can strop it—you can iS guarded —and won't heat your skin, hone it—why throw good steel away? 5 because it has no “wire edge.” Andfor Get a real razor made safe from . thet same small sum, you can have the your nearest dealer today, = These Leading Dealers Sell Them: Casper Loan Office, AAREKELEMRERE 123 8. Center. Casper Pharmacy, Rohrbaugh Bldg. Holwes Hardware € Schalte Bros. Co., 186 8. Center, Schulte Hardware Co,, 182 8, Center. ; Kimball Drug Store, 114 8. Center. Tripeny Confectlonery Com AS Richerds & Cunningham Co, Signe 107 8. Center. Tripeny Drug Co, 143 8. Center. If you are a Durham-Duplex dealer and wish to have your name added to the above list in subsequent advertisements, send your name and address to this newspaper and write the Durham-Duplex Razor Co, fe E azo. , for vin- dow display eee > ONE DOLLAR COMPLETE Greatest Shaving Mileage at Any Price This set contains a Durham-Duplex Razor with an attractive white handle, safety guard, stropping attachment and package of 3 Durham-Duplex double-edged blades (6 shavin; es) all i handsome leather kit. Get it from youn deaier ease Ce direct. Additional blades 50 cents for @ package of 5 DURHAM-DUPLEX RAZOR CO. 190 BALDWIN AVENUE, JERSEY CITY, N. J CANADA ENGLAND FRAW_S *MVictoriaSt. 27ChurchSt. __A. Pioso « Toronto Sheffield 56 Rue de —tt