Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 30, 1921, Page 6

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fe t \ a 8 C ] World Results ; By Leased Wire fhe Cagurr Faitvy Krihune THE TRIBUNE’S PAGE OF SPORTING NEWS ‘ SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1921 Lj First in News ATTENTION FANS! SERIES. WITH GREYBULL OPENS TODAY. ~* HEAMAN SCRAPS. AGE OLD MAXIM ‘COME BACK’ IN AING POSSIBLE Whether it was Seateanoutel or One-Eyed Mike who was} he originator of the well-known maxim, “They never come | back,” is neither here nor there, but it failed to fit the case of one Pete Herman who, on July 25, regained the bantam-| weight championship from Joe Lynch who previously had} it away from Pete Captains of Rival Track Teams west hae = 2 STERLING WINS = FROMLARAMIE | heir opin PIRATES ARE SIGNED FOR CASPER CLUB Jake Pitler, an infielder, and Bob Steele, a hurler, both of whom have been with the Pittsburgh National league club this season, have been signed by the Casper Refiners and are now en route here to take up their daties. Both men will arrive here Monday or Tuesday and will take part in the series against Grey- bull. This series is the crucial contest of the early part of the season and may decide the championship the latter half of the split season, which ts being played off. Voth men are high class baliplay- ers and will no doubt be a welcome addition to the Casper lineup. Pit- | 1 1 Pete Herman of ee Orleans, left former paneer ent ler especially Is said to be a heavy {the world, who defi out of BLUFFS TRIM DENVER AGAIN Two Runs in Tenth Breaks Tic and Wins Game for Irri- gators, 9 to 7 DENVER, Colo., July 30.—Seoti= bluff trimmed Denver im the cioeins game of the series yesterday by tak ing the long end of a slugging coo test. Both teams made 11 hits put | Denver's five errors gave the game to the visitors. The score RH Scottsbluff ...041 001 1¢0°2—9 11 | Denver O11 020-131 0—7 11 Batterles—Sdottsbluff, Killeen a Benninghoven; Diamond. 1s LAG FAVORITEN Denver, Scoggins and lefeated Joe Lynch, right, in bea Three-Run Lead in First Inning stick artist. He was released be- this MakesiG ‘ f a cause the Pirates’ second base posi- 1 so lakes Game Safe for th tion, where Ite shows to best advan- ‘ Prairie Dog tage, is filled. Steel, it is said, will | rou Accou SSA be a good running mate for Dave the © tt n tak Davenport, in winning many games His meuitierd best of | ing t for Casper. | Ress reset taw ory te etter Rae Rees | ITHS-PADGETT DRAW. ¢r. continues to lead the batiers of round save one or two Wild re of four RELATIVE DIES. CHEYENNE, July 30—Johnny Grif-/the American, asso tation@® win an ’ a a t or | N. July 20.—The Marquis | fiths, Akron, Ohio, and Cowboy Pad- pipe aS is tied with wee, KELLYS RECO the ninth ing when one tall Serlupl, said to be a relative of Pope| gett, Cheyenne, fought a fast ten- Eunny Brief for hwintiur honors wiih Se ; ; of Pope d t 2 WINDSOR. Ont., July 30, — Six GOES IN DISCARD. pushed acros rau Benedict. died yesterday in a hospita) |found draw here last night. ahem Bike Mapantaae thas welghta, tox’ the When the season open n. H at Pisa, according to the Rome corres es allie “GAN nternational handicap feature event Seater Sorted New) Cost 00 000 O10-- 4 14 af pondent of the Daily Mail. He was RACES ON CARD. 7On DUGAN MEEEy Of; tha Merobanire sabds meeting that lcomed as bis in the “home run , 000 000 00 1 6 OF stabbed last week during the sti COLUMBUS, Ohlo, July 30,—A full PHILADELPHIA, | Juiy 3@—Joe| opened here today. The race. for cium as Babe Ruth did. For several) fF Sterling Noyes a hg | Communist disorders at San Frediano,|ecard of seven races will be run in to- Dugan, Philadelphia American third! three-year-olds, at the milé and an weeks young Kelly made a homer for | Bro amie, Schink und T in the province of Pis: ‘s grand elreuit. Rain postponed baseman, did net report for yester- eighth carried $20,000. the richest every one Ruth did. Since those early | neman Vhoto shows Seagrove, the tain of the Cambridge team, talking to —_ —— the events yesterday. day's game and Manager Mack ex- purse ever offered in Canada. meeks: we: have: not, heard ne . R Captain Trumball of the Yate team. ‘These men wil} be the principals in| ‘The largest landholder in the Bric pressed belief his disappearance was! Aithough top weighted at - 126 Kelly but plenty of Ruth Jt ex Swimmer Sets the dual track meet between the Harvard-Yale tean: and the Oxford-Cam-|ish empire is the new an} ROSTAN AND NICHOLS DRAW. due to his sensitiveness: to the shouts | pounds. Grey Lag appeared the popu FES Sic tagrerw ee credit ADs Caley Ct bridge combination which will take place at the Harvard stadium on July 23.| knight. Sir Sidney Kidmar con} r and criticisms of fans. Dugan is be-|iar favorite. pis ae abel tag: eg rE - pr Ni coc a gre Stk mitinne| fam of Chicago, and Johuny Nichols, ‘leved: to have returned home. Black Servant, the Bradley entry jon games that do not cou Vi Live carry about a quarter of a million] of St. Paul, fought ten fast roumls to jen See a 0 uaa ecore AEM ESTATE LAUERS DEFEAT AE A Te SSS ES ee eee amount ER ie daiatt Natectteas welterweigh DETROIT, July 20—Clubs of the, Dark Horse and Radio. were sinted 16 this boy Kelly has been maxing soot) LY Ale Men Win). Union | Printere jearry 1, and while he will never be the big siam bang homerun star that Ruth fs. he is always dangerous ou HONOLUL never can tell just when he nananie | Club Standing the Midwest League. RUSSE! L HEADS ASSOCIATION. CHICAGO, league began arriving here today for July 50.-—Reb Russcll, the 21th annual. tournament which 4 hard-hitting Minneapolis ouc(ieid- begins Sunday and scheduled to ra close August 6, with the championship pease con ta hey — game, St, Paul won the champ‘en- 18 of thi 1 swam 5 > bi the Lae MDS eS | Won ship last year. * A fastest time he ever made over | | Greybull oa) Last Scores i eae : NEW BROnD ote Ane that distance—in competing uised as real estat J 1 ‘i 1 tet ed et mes reat Denver 8 i BURKE STOPS SHARPE. TEFIES TIME, BELIEF. Outrigger club of Honlulu of big league s } rie os tigen a aptate, sbluf {Aree temas heaton c new bros dump world ‘record| sand elas ine eee tiie bal team | was of the mound for the resitors: | Scottablutt 8 -——-— - | NEW YORK, Juiy 30—Jack Burke.) a » by EB. jourdin of Harvard craity here last night und after the of | He was in and man: u Friday's Games. § of Pittsburgh, knocked out Harry] -NOW YORK, July 30.—The lawn 5 fect 3 inches, will undoubt won the meet with 24 point le cle wat was found | printer too! a healthy swing |9 4 i National League. Sharpe, of London, in the second| tennis clash of the west and east edly withstand all attacks for many althe Outrigger club was second. w tn that thescore was 13 to 6 in favor | at the ball before being culled our, | “rami r Brooklyn! @, St. Louis 1. round of a scheduled 12-round match the leading feature of year. The former record made by ne FEL eaaihcaad Club third with} of the lot peddier alty “of | Natrol gues New York 10. Cincinnati 7 at Coney Island last night. They are state championship O'Connor stood since August 5, 1901,|18 and the Hui Malu clubs t het of vine tc ss mis#ed | Natonal. League. Philadelphia 6, Chicago 2. light heavyweight; tournament pA the turf of fhe Cres which is just two weeks short of 20| Ohtriggers/swoniidhesraey. st: vateiite. atid wonder: | Won —- | =e {erent Athletic club today, | As! the years. i 1:89:4:.5 The duke's, Utne. fon jar apache ho wus also | Pittsburgh 60 merican League. | One New York woman earns a 5004 | winner of the tournament, Miks Mar: fee a strange coincidence that the|yards, which was unofficial, by Ais : ~ Now: York CRM ed Cleve if living by designing hatpins. She de-|K. Browne of Low Angeles holds the two grea broad jumpers of the|his own American mark of _ nst worked like a veteran |2oston tS tee EE Dercoits 18, 8. sins halt & dogen hatbin heads a-day, [place ot. challenger ta; Mise. “Marie last three years have been negroes.|onds. In winning the event ea ‘ und :manya double playi]aro en . Chicago 1, Washington 5 (called in’or a total of 2.000 in the course of | Wagner of New York. the defend Sol Butler was another famous broad|tlocal men defeated. the Yale t aitefor | was started and completed through Vek Gace ors third inning: the year. {og Litle “holder: v jumper and at the inter-allied games|which holds the national record for the news hotinds | bs rapid handling ef the & Bar- | Gincinnatt e at Paris in 1919 this negro got in dn/the 200-yard rela ahaspeln tHe ne was limited | 2&4. Who played short’ for the real Phitadeiphia official say) of 24 feet we inc neat > | to tivetinniries thereat Hatanl tors, also found time to umpire be- j . just half an inch behind the worl Ordinarily chin an toward - if aonigusheratwoute sides covering his pos:tion in error- tees mark held by O'Connor. Both Gour-| the During the night the chim.| ieee ines ete, way uld | tess manner. Andy MeNell's job Ammerion. Eepegues eles din and Butler are wonderful all-|ney ‘walls collect moisture. ‘The side | DAY Beco" { not been forthe short | With Casper wouldn't be worth # looong nagtet sb NEw PR “E round athletes and both are good at alof the chimney which the sun strikes | SCOrns had t : 2 dime if Man Arbogast could, |Tleveland INE Cre number of other events besides their |first in the morning dric rican bl inder-| have seen the way Herrington cov- |New Vor broad jumping. Quite n: ally they |ly than the other, cr westein s I) eectannerny ered third for the realtors. ry earn a have phenomenal speed on the flat|the process of deying the sun 4 Pipette A, | ‘Two other towera of strength for (apo. and bot can run the«hundred and/ly pulls the chimney toward th BaNenin ie. realiocatl wursbedohbe anh ieee eee furlong in close to even time, while | _> aneiauEHods field and ker in left. They nan- |ox “ Butler has beaten evens in the 22¢| Ten thousand Japanese women pais | died alt * chances PA es ap SORRP , inning game died all theirt chances without a | priadelphia yards more than once cen ore the Diet in Arne ee aretha ot Dot @ figured strongly in) the é = er ae os | 2 of 4 great demonstration | triunc has been cuba Thade (beeen cae Si 7 man should weigh 28 pounds for|in favor of the enactment of laws tu| fal estate mon While betiotir G 7 d y i every foot of his height leurh the drink traffic i tracted. When they started hitting | ing crew is too st ames oda the ball and moving #round } Man Daily is - s 7 Daily and his crew urr tan A in . migrating | about inside taee} Nas as aivul red by SRUIEaE Tha rernio thr their opponents Of last evehing. pil) mk There un clouts, three Russeil Finch, who hurled for the | Ssttsblutt at Denver | ‘The keen eyes whigh the played se y who ‘ Ie, pate ] ve for fair gro | caught who! |, easton ate auureh ie New eayouilte toe | ‘ecnnae New York at Cincinnati ae Se of field to the other « | the printers. Other mem: Philadelphia at Chicago. CHICAGO, July 30.— Ruth, | Cutshaw of Pittsburgh for the runner-| elusive pellets which had been hit. | team were oftimes weak | Brooklyn at St. Loulr. baseball's homerun king, has the dis-|up honors to Hornsby for players who Take’ Cy Bon H ld and were lax in han- | tinetion of the first player in| have participated in 55 or more games | played with an ir r- ) dling the willow with their accus- American Loaguts | the major leagues to pass the century |They are tied with .362, wt Mc hard hit balls in. center ed venom ateait hes PAstaneson mark this in runs scored. reg-| Henry of St. Louis is a 9 c Phere is nothing to do but accept | Chitago at Philadclphia istering 101 Sovas: for the ankees. Frisch of N def ‘acefully, sa Tom Daily, Cleveland at New~York. In the al league Frank|among the b. ' certain big ashe. [isos Ot one: z Frisch of Giants leads in runs| fered two ba scouts would rob Casper of a bunch |~* } scored wi | His string of od real esta men and good Ruth batted only three: sin adi fellows if he see the team the 334; M work of that r 5 grounds lat = Bharat w | ly desiring to keep this What is reported to be the largest iver South Bend exe! 39 ol, | over un © time for |known deposit of borax in the world » ‘ a has recently been discovered in Clark = S while f the Indiar nd (10c Dance} No Door Admission TABLE SERVICE Cool As In The Open Air GOLDEN GATE ORCHESTRA __ | | will show you, if you come in, how | much we value your GOOD WILL. IF— We Lost Your Good Wiil If our service station burned down we'd get the insurance. | If burglars stole our cash, we could | borrow some. But if we lost that part of our busi- ness called GOOD WILL, we could | get it back again only through months, | or possibly years, of the hardest kind | of work. That's why we say GOOD WILL is the most valuable thing we own. Our promptness and thoroughness AUTO ELECTRIC CO. 136 East Midwest Avenue Phone 958-J DANCE PALACE ‘Willard Batteries HE new price of the LIGHT-SIX was made possible because it includes but one manu- facturing profit on castings, forgings, stampings, motor, axles, transmission, frame, body, top, etc.— because the amount of overhead per car is very small, due to quantity production — because excess weight is eliminated without the sacrifice of durability or quality. This is a Studebaker Year SMITH MOTOR SALES CO. . NEW PRICES OF STUDEBAKER CARS | f. 0. b. Factories, effective June Ist, 1921 Touring Care and Reedetere 2 PASS. SPECIAL-SIX TOURING CAI PECIAL-SIX 4-PASS. ROAI Bic six TOURING CAR. ALL STUDEBAKER CARS ARE EQUIPPED WITH CORD TIRES

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