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PLAY BALL IG SET APRIL 14TH) American Leasue Schedule of 154! Games Announced Today ; Closes October 3 (By Associated Press.) CHICAGO, @Feb. 10.—The American league baseball season will, open Aprii 14 and close October 3, according to the official 1920 schedule released today by B. B. Johnson, president of the league. ‘The schedule shows a restoration of the 154 games chart, which was curtailed last season because of the world war. An innovation in this yegr's schedule ‘is the listing of Sunday games at Wash- ington and New York. ‘This Is the first time in the history of the leaBue that this haa been done at the time the was responsible for this. Last reason, sehedule was drafted. The world war and’ New York, but the schedule made games were permitted in Washington no provision for these contests. As a} Tesult the schedule was revised and a number of games were advanced in or- der to play on the Sabbath. The four western clubs will open in the west, while the clubs of the east will inaugurate the season at the eéast- ern end of the circuit. Opening games are listed as follows: Detroit at Chicago; St. Louis at Cleveland; New York at Philadelphia, and Washington at Boston. Boston is scheduled to close the sea- son before the other clubs. The final curtain for the Red Sox will be rung down on September 28. A double- header, with Washington billed as the opponent, is on the program for that day. The following day, September 29, New York will close its season at Phila- delphia. The last of the eastern clubs to quit for the season are the Senators and the Athletics, who meet at Phila- delphia on October 2. ‘The four western clubs are scheduled to close the season on Sunday, October 3. The White Sox will find at St. Louis and Cleveland is slated to close at De- troit. The schedule, as in former years, calls for three swings around the circuit. Detroit after opening at Chicago will go to Cleveland, and then return home on April 22, for its first game at home with the league champions as an op- ponent. St. Louis opens at home with Cleveland as an opponent on the same day, following its series at Cleveland and Chicago. New York, after prying the lid off at Philadelphia, will go to Boston for a series and then to .the Polo grounds, to play its first home gamer with the Athletics as the attrac- tion on April 22. The Washington fans will get their first glimpse of the Sena- tors on April 22, when, aftet a series in Philadelphia and Boston, they come home to meet the Red Sox. Washington has drawn the plum? in regard to the greatest number of Sun- day games. The Senators have been given 16 Sunday dates. Chicago and Detroit each have 13, while St. ;Louis, Cleveland and New. York have beéft awarded’ 12 apiece. * Philadelphia aha Boston have no Sunday games at ‘home, because ‘baseball is forbidden there on the Sabbath. Boston, Detroit and Washingtori share alike in’ the distribution of ‘Satur- day games, each being scheduled td play 13 week-end gamea’at home. The other five clubs have iheen ‘given 12 Saturdays each at. home. Independence Day—July 4—falling on Sunday, the schedule makers have at ranged holiday bills for Monday, July 5.. Games on that day ‘will be’ played at Chicago, Detroit, Washington and Philadelphia. Decoration Day—May 30—also falling on a Sunday, enabled the framers of the playing chart to book holiday bills for the following day. These garnes wil) be played at St. Louis, Cleveland, New York and Boston. The Red Sox have been awarded a holiday bill for April 19—Bunker Hill} with Day. Chicago, Cleveland, Washington and New York are scheduled to play Labor Day games at home on September. 6. There are four conflicting dates with the National league, and these are in Chicago, on May 9, June 27, September 5 and September 26, when the Chicago Cubs are scheduled to play at home. of the east on May 11. Chicago will be The western clubs start their invasion at New York; St. Louis at Philadelphia; Cleveland at Boston arti: Detroit at ‘Washington, The eastern clubs will make their first western trip on June 8, with ‘Boston ap- pearing at Chicago, Washington at St. Louis, New York at Detroit and Phila- delphia at Cleveland. a Like Cascarets, they work. while von sleen-—that’s Tribnne Wantads AST WHEATLAND CAGERS FAS | COMING 10 CASPER FOR GAME ON FRIDAY NIGHT | Wheattana high acho! school, which is re- Duted to have the. strongest basketball five in the state, will tangle with the ; Natrona county quihtet ‘here Friday night. The Wheatland team has made @ clean sweep of the games played this season and has defeated stich teams as scores. The unusual strength urday night, makes the Casper players joom up as real contenders against the Wheatland team. Wheatland probably will send a faster and better five to Casper than Worland did for the open- |ing battle of the season. a SPIDER ROGHE DEFEATS WILLIE BURKE IN BOUT (By Associated Preas.): JERSEY CITY, N. Y., Feb. 10.—Spi- der Roche, San Francisco lightweight, outpointed Willie Burke of Brooklyn in eight rounds here last night, paces etd et st a) "THE GAY OLD DOG’ AT LYRIC THEATRE TODAY, It has been said by many eminent critics that Edna Ferber ts one of the ly this week and will reach Casper foremost American women writers of Wednesday. today. It has furt! ber’s best efforts, The New York Times sald, “One of fracas with Taylor. the best ‘stories in the book—perhaps | the very best—is not a woma but a man’s—‘The Gay | Ol" Dog’. Grant M.. Overton, in his book, “The ®rick and from Gunnison's News De- Women Who Make Our Novels,’ “Misa Ferber is going forward.” me ward J, O'Brien, who every year com- Piles the twenty best short stories the year, selected “The Gay O14 Dog, as one of the best of the year 1917, Hobart. Henley, the motion picture | Baseball: Producer-director, was one of the many ai Chicago. who read and admired the story, and | it immediately became Mr, Henley’s cago, ambition to transfer it to the screen. ; This he has admirably done in the cago: Pathe feature. “The Gay O14 showing today. | Inthe Day’s News the Laramie high school by top-heayy | night when they see how the interior of displayed |\for the ‘purpose of holding the Jack against the aggressive Rawlins five Sat-|Taylor-Jake Amends wrestling match. her been said that here an excellent opportunity to look “The Gay Old Dog” is one of Miss Fer-| the heralded Lion over at the Casper story,|ure selling at’ the Smoke House, " wrote pot. +|at Bayonne, N, J. STAGE SET FOR _ WRESTLING ih Sandbar Theater Made Ready for Taylor-Amends Match Next Friday Night TO ELK AT RAPE | 30 TONS A DAY _ Thirty four-horse teams ware now en- gaged in hauling hay to the federal gov ernment's farm ‘near Jarkskon, Wyo- ming, where. itis being fed to wild elk. Each team makes, 4s trip between id thé supply points: sti Bim in three 5 t Sport. fans will be surprised Friday days, carrying: t! each — trip, therefore, hays ivered ‘at the rate of 30 tons Which is suff. cient to provide feds Of the elk, ‘EAT MORE LAMB" 15 ‘the Jazziand theater has beén remodeled The seats have been arranged In “pit” style so that every person will be given an opportunity to see all the moves the sno, wrestlers and boxers make on the pa ft raised platform. F This platform or stage will stand 4 . 4 nearly fout feet higher than the re. mainder of the auditorium. It will. be * For the purpose of promoting an pa Lolium ciganeun l th More Lamb"! club W. HH. Boireal, : @ representative of Swift-and Co,, of the theater but with such a small aud eee eee ee ace isha sued maaan aks |e pastas et a un fag stration in the’ domestic science tosmn ees ts eatloren | of the high school at 2:45 tomorrow af- sharge/gk Zhe snate! ments for|t@fnoon. ~All members of the domes., McLeod has made arrangements mo PE PMO ET? Of -theGmehoot wil; an eight-piece band to play the night present ea oie Haha ree ths of the wrestling match. He has'also 21 Oo invites all ea x ae of tlh completed plans to have perfect order ore intedeateat 4a Be resent Mare who in the Jazzland theater during the en-j present: also, math vs nts’ #2! BOY RUN DOWN BY TRUCK MAY match, returned from Spokane, Wash.,| ington, Sunday night, where he defeat: | ed Sorenson who previously had made| Pleasant Smith look foolish in a match | here in Casper. Taylor came thru his} Spokane battle in good shape and l90ks} fit for his struggle with the Russian Lion. : Amends will wrestle In Montana ear-| ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo., ‘Feb. 10.~ Frank Julius, aged 8 years, ‘Is in. crit!- | cal condition from injuries sustainca | When he was run down by a motor | truck driven by Antone Lambert, which ;inyaded the sidewalk on which. the child was playing marbles ‘with Johnny Bozner, of about - the same *age; The Boaner boy sustained serious injuries. Lambert asserts the accident was the | Fesult of his efforty{o avold a collision | with another car, Newfoundland, was Englund’s first possession heyénd the’ seas, a ‘This will give sport fans Athletic club before he gets into. the Tickets for all parts of the theater the Schule Confectionery store; the Little ‘ : Teme eT ERAT SMS a aktietoe "CARD OF THANKS, f National } Meeting 0} ational league ‘Fa wish to acini oak ies eee A T at Chi-! to our friends, neighbors and Standard Meeting of American league rnén, ‘who-wo: RiGiMly. aabloted wib-“drrine the recent sickness and death of our darling baby, Ermal. Boxing: Willie Jackson va. Johnny; beautiful floral ‘offering. Sheppard, 10’rounds, at Milwaukee, | MR. AND MRS. GEORGE B., KNIGHT | * Byran Downey vs. Harry Krohn, 12} AND FAMILY, Q rounds, at Akron. Al Roberts vs. Dan- O'Dowd, 8 rounds, Meeting of Western league, at Chi- 2-10-1t* NOT RECOVER w= Also for thi; a ~ ANDER SETLE WYOMING VISITS coDY ice Wyo, Feb. 9.—Peter Perrin, 100) years' old, who was if the audience at Ford's theater at ‘the ‘national cap- Ital the night when John Wilkes Booth assassinated President Lincoln, and who came to Wyoming asia séttler) during the days’ When this state was a part, of ‘the ‘Dakota territory, was a Cody’ visitor recently, Mr. Perrin, or} as his friends ‘prefer |to call him, “Old Peter,” enjoys noth- jing more than to ‘relate tales of the frontier dayf—days when he came west he steel for the Union Pa in. ‘the -coristruction ‘He has not yet been compéliea to resort to the use of glasses in reading, and to all outward appear- ances possesses much of his mental and physical ‘vigor. - Mr. Perrin was a member of the posse | Whidi Ohased Booth out thru thé stage jentrance of the Ford theater, and later | Ieiilea him after he had been ‘surround- jed in.a barn in Virginia. He was also ® soldier in the Union army during the jeivil war. = TWO TROOPERS OF 18TH BRE HOLDUP SUSPECTS i CHEYENNE, Wyo., Feb. 10.—James Tracey and H. Merritt, privates of the Fifteenth United States Cavalry, are in the city jail, charged with two high- way robberies on the streets here last Saturday ‘night. In each instance ‘the highwaymen held up pedestrians at the «ames fries sae oceania mente i alee iy NOTION OF INCORPORATION Notice 1s hereby given that the ‘Cer- tificate of Incorporation of Th» Rlack- stone Salt Creek Oil Company was filed with the Secretary of State of Wyoming, on February 5th, 1920; that the Com- pany was formed for Fifty Seats, with the object of engaging in the develop- ment and operation or mineral, oil and gas lands; that the capltal stock’ id $2'- 500,000.00 “With” 2,600,000 Bhares at the bar value of $1.00 each; that the ‘Wwirec- tors named for the first yeas arc ”I7. ‘N. Isenberg, D. W. Strickland, A. H. Smith, J. 1. “Hine, InN Stoddard, H. Ralph Antonides and R M, Aitken; that operations will be carried on in Washa ikie and other Counties in Wyoming: |and that the principal office in Wyom- ing will be in Worland, Washakie coun- ty and the agent inecharge thereof will be George B. McClelland, ‘THE BLACKSTONE SALT. CREGK + OTL, COMPANY. By, H. N. ISENBERG, Vice-President. \e. H. SMITH, | | Assistant’ Seeretary. ub, Feb. 10, 11, 12, 1920, point of a gun, byt felled to, obtain | anything of value: Tracey and Mer- ritt were found near the scene of ‘the Jast robbery a few minutes later, and were ‘taken into* custody. * The high- waymen wore army uniforms, but neither of their victims has positively identified the two suspected soldiers as the men wanted. © NOTICE State of Wyoming, Canneyt of Na- trona, ss. Notice ts hereby givén tha by virtue of a judgment rendered in the District (Court of Natrona County = ihe ses day of Febrnary, 1920, in ron of the WiiGaatl ‘Commercial Company ys. Un- usuny Ol Comphny, et al, T wili sell all of the: lowing descrihed property, to- wit: 1 até) Rie No, 15! tig. 100 1 ‘Dem ine, 10-h.p. No, at. public ae at the front door ef: the County Court House in the County of Natrona, City of Casper, and State of Wyoming, on the 18th day of Febru- ary, 1920, at 10 o'clock: a.m. PAT ROYCH, ‘Sheriff of Natrona. County. FLOYD FE, PENDELL, Attorney for Plaintiff. Pub. Feb, 10, 1920. oto irae NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Willard Clyde Foster, De- ceased, Notice is hereby given that letters testamentary were on the 24th day of January, 1920 granted to the under- signed in the above estate, and all per- sons having claims against the said estate are her®by required to exhibit them, with the necessary vouchers for allowance, to the -uncersigned Mary L. Foster and Carl F. Shumaker within six months after the date of said let ters, or they may be precluded from any benefit from such estate, and if such claims be not exhibited within one year from the date of said letters, they will he forever barred, Dated January 26th, 1920. MARY L, FOSTER, CARL F, SHUMAKER, Executors Estate of Clyde Willard Fos- ter, Deceased. Pub. Jan, 27, Feb, 3, 10, 1920. Aree. ACCOUNTANTS 1 GUARANTEE REGISTRY COR- ‘ORATION Auditors and Accountants See us about making out your In- come Tax report. Phone 660. 211 Ol Exchange Bldg. °° oe When. the, British parliament opens | “Dear Grace:—I knew you did not have today the members and spectators: will:| a good time-at the dance last-evening.- see one of the picturesque and time-|Just’s hint—Hollister’a Rocky Mountain ' "honorvid! ceremonies performed for the|Tea is the best ever for bad breath, first time by a new gentleman; usher| sallow. color, no pep, pimply face, bad of the Black Row, Lieut. Gen. Sir Wil- ‘disposition... Joe. » Smith-Turner.—Adv. lam P. Pulteney, who han succeeded the)late Admiral Sir Henry F. Stephen- son in the ‘post, which is a:huaint sur-| { viyal..of Norman: times. The new Black Rod,” as: be’ is commonly | called, ie ‘in Ania 60th “year, and’ has’ hud a iong''and distinguished: career ‘in the|! Britisharmy,’-beginning with. service in the Egyptiancampaign. in the early '809.. Stubseyuently «he distinguished himself; inthe South. African’ war, be-! ing Beveral | times ;. mentioned in des. Patches” recelving several ‘medals for gallantry .-in * battle. During the Wor\i's. War General Pulteney waa. in vommand o1 Corps in. France: - For: his, services in this conflict» He was, made a K..C. B, by ‘his home government ‘and a Grand Officer, of ‘the ‘Legion of Honor by France. he Third British Army}: Ae a al Business and professional women of New. England are soon. to, hold a con- wention in Boston to form a federa- ‘tion. PRE LEHI aE Have \arlie A5,~. fe “apa julpped for spring Storage cont of car car. manufacturers. trical Co., 111 E. First St. Phone 2-7-6t ITS UNWISE te pat of ree po Boner te Bt ell A pleasant relief from aoe ar scorr snow THE BASQUE is prophesied Paris revels in new modes, Fasci- nating features are borrowed from the Greeks, Chinese, Isolde, the Empress Eugenie——and even from African idols. ‘To know now—months ghead —the. ¢olors that will be. smartesi it the fabrics most favored, and how to achieve the new lines in frock and’ gown, suit, cape and hats, you simply must read the Feérgary Stmpliett red by the di piety acay bythe dest te ind! Bo find ait ihe Harpers Basar February Issue now on sale CHAS. M. GUNNISON Auto Elec-| the mbat pike Phone 968J,| chine in the ' Have You Lost Your Health? Have you been, ac 80 busy that you forgotten it body— Rey alientd ae ee atid you Disease is merel ly some constituent aenset | of the blood that is oxygen. REOLO supplies the blood with | seals fron (ie # form that is i vitalizing oxygen the cellceatts that nourish and re- me pee Paes i ag It ‘wonderful tonic qualities rapid- aac ks of the blood. ye ON THE HOUSES THAT WE ARE BUILD- ANG as DEVINE AND LINCOLN STS. Watch the construction from the foot- ings to completion ~ BUILDERS. Homes Built to Order on Terms—Warmth and Dura- bility are the Features-of Our. Work 3. A. LiKELY PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT INCOME TAX AUTHORITY Notary Public. ‘oom 3, Over Golden Rule. Jc EY ARCHITECTS 1 Lepage GOODRICH Rooms 2435 ‘Townsené Block | Casper, Wyo, GARBUTT & WEIDNER dus Joe ee le eee Phone ale Ae ear BAGGAGE .AND TRANSFER ane Assess Baggage & Transte Hi MOVING A ‘SPECIALTY fOepes = eceeet | Phone 1012 | SFPARLS TRANSFER & STORAGE Oftice— Tait’ ard Hall CHIROPRACTORS DR. J. H. JEFFREY DR, ANNA GRAHAM JEFFREY Lyric Theater Bldg. Genter St. je er Ottice. Phone 706, Res. 93, DR. B. G, HALEN DR. EDNA HAHN Chiropractors Lean a Toman * yg Office 4: iropractor 206 North Maple Phone 360W. LET ME un On B WITH YOU ON YOUR ao yA AAT BLOCK Generat Sentractor Office hon oO. 8. Phone TOTM P.O Bor. 1146, Oe ? CLOTHES CLEANERS THE fo ogg CLEANERS Cleaning, ~Ereasin odeling Center, i inden a8 Railroad Sts. ito. “Service’ Phone 66 oo DR. MYE Physician Special attention giv: ot sone and childr Oftice Phone o Practica fimited te to o diaen oF the ide en of on aaryisee eas Be Dm oo —_— lew MaRsHALe oc. por bbenthnn M.D. yaletan ban pee peits attention wixen obstet- rns diseases f wor men and ‘The bivrrer ‘ey Doig tl e HOSPITAL Phones 273 ana ais 0 freer” Ottice 1 ghia 4; Res. phe e116 eet moe J. ©, reson orticst pe Bldg. Office 130 eran: SM sialic SOI ~ stock, } the total 600,000,000 mate, In abter to huila naw factories for the production of ni- trogen fertilizers. It is conaideted high. ly probable that Getmany will acon :he able to export: instead De bezier! pene i y continue a’ ‘victim of superfiuous *~ gait you want 4n a simple, ‘Fellable wa: fout starvation jor strenuous exer- tho oretn sys ftem’is just what yt ou sneuld. ities ‘ity to the oan al 1% Bare an8 tons ane fat poe itever ehure will be mailed Cia Business and Professional st: Directory = = SHAHHHHE Motor Repateit s. » ing, B ing, 8 Attoiiey neta julte 316 Ol Bx 1. are Wye, Paes | =a | NICHOLS @ STIRBETT 2809-10-11 On y Bldg. GEORGE w. us0N asi: Rooms 22-23, Gwheena, Bldg. Cannan, Phone 190-5. PLUMBING AND HEAT REMINGTON W. L. TALBERT, Representative at’ wri Smith-Turner Drug. Store. Phone 176) VETERINARY IN At Casper aa | vin A Ba a