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72 omlad 1 PAGE TEN World Results By Leased Wire Che Casper UNIQUE TRACK EVENT PLANNED Dual Decathlon With Sheri- dan High to See All Boys in Competition. athlon co f the Ca schools will local schoc £ the comps of the chools whereby e Fe track fleld events be basis for the test tb be staged on Home of both # and the Accu ‘ompiled by physics 8 and coaches Yj taken and exchanged and the win yer will be figured by finding an dverage percentage based on the tota Humber of points scored by the com pet The st promises tc drouse no little intest among students Mere. eget Today’s Games American League Metroit at St. 1 Chicago at ( Ni ton at Boston at Washin, Phi delphia. National League. St e)’hilad 1 Pittsburgh Louis at Cincinnat Yew York at Boston. Brooklyn Yesterday’s Scores American League. Wo games. National League. Pittsburgh, 3; Ci ; Boston, 1 NEW YORE Cincinnati, Brooklyn, frinings). Wulsa, 9; Denve Wichita, Des Moines, 16; Oklahoma Cit hicago Louls 2. adelphia, 6§ Western League. r, 3 ; Sloux City, 8. St. Joseph, 7. , 6; Omaha, 5. : Pacific Coast League. Balt Lake, 3; Vernon, 1. San Francisco, @akland-Sacramento poned; rain. Beattie-Los Angeles 6; Portland, 6, game ed; teams traveling. game post as Dost- Team Ww. Pet. New York --_ -1 0 1.000 Pittsburgh —— 1 0 1.000 Cincinnati 1 0 1.000 ARO Cee 0) 2000 Bditton © 1 .000 Bte Louis — 0 1 000 Brooklyn . 0 0 .000 Philadelphia © 0 .000 ee AUCTION, Friday afternoon at 2 p. m. of fur. sfture and ho B.fAsh. Phone 1660. monies in connection with the oper hold goods at 367 lal high mar HE SAID HE HAD A Lot OF WoRK To Do ToDAY AND COULON'T MGeT ME FoR LUNCH CAR GOING To THE BALL GROUNDS Eon [~~ AND HERE HE !S ON THE He ToLD Me He HAD AN ENGAGEMENT WITH HIS WIFE Td Go SHOPPING AND COULDN'T PLAY GOLe with Me AND HERE HE {5 HEADED FOR BALL GROUNDS IT DoES LooK EXACTLY UKE PAPA AND HE TOLD US HE HAD AN IMPORTANT BUSINESS MEETING ON FOR TODAY- Wiee AND DAUGHTER ~ HOPE THe DIDN'T RECOG OF THe a Wewc} annrew { THOUGHT You SAID You To A Your WOULD NEVER GO NOTHER GAME IN lire --- YOU'RE our DEAD - EARLY FoR THE FIRST GAME | Ste — Daily Tribune WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1923. You Toro mca You WERE TAKING A SHORT TRIP OUT Town ToDAT = You'Re On YouR way To THe GALL YOUR. GRANDMA WASN'T lm on TS You ROBERT- - You CAN'T You DIDN'T Foot. ME NETHER WHEN! YoU SAID You HAD To GO OUTA TOuwN DEDICATION OF NEW YANKEE STADIUM FEATURES OPENING OF | PLAY IN AMERICAN LEAGUE CHICAGO, April 18.—(By The Associated Press) —With new opening day athletic records established yesterday in league season gets under way. Topping the junior circuit’s new Yankee stadium, seating 70.000 the league champions will ‘1 season with the Bosto: he other games on th schedule are: Washington at Philadelphia; Ch! cago at Cleveland and Detroit ai t. Lou ‘The three clubs picked as pennant contenders in the National league the world’s champion New York Giants, Pittsburgh and Cincinnati— got off to impressive starts, but It remained for Brooklyn and Philade) phia to supply the day’s feature, a five to five tle game, fought until darkness A throng of close to 34,000 that packed Chic o's reconstructed park witnessed Pittsburgh's hard-fought victor over the Cubs, 3 to 2, while more than 80,000 fans cheered the Cincinnat! Reds to an 11 innin trlumph over St. Louis, by the same score. The Pirates made but thre bingles off Chicago's moundsmen bur Grimm's double in the fourth with the bases full accounted for enough to win RECORD CROWD AT NEW YORK EXPECTED. NEW YORK, April 18—The Yan kee stadium, baseball's largest par! promised to be packed close to its capacity of 70,000 for dedication cer« Notice Mills’ Residents! You Can Now Buy HILL CREST WATER AT BRAKEBILL’S STORE There’s Health In Every Bottle ASK THE WAITER To Serve You HILL CREST WATER vo National league cities, Cincinnati and Chicago, add were looked for today when the ion- American program is dedication of the ng game between tne Yankees and Boston Red Sox. Notables ex- ted to attend include Baseball Commissioner Landis and Governor Smith. Bob Shawkey was announced as nager Huggins’ mound selection, while Howard Ehmke was slated to pitch for the Bostonians, PHILADELPHIA, April 18.—Fair weather and a cpacity crowd were n prospect today for the opening of he American league baseball season, with Washington opposing the Ath- letics. Sammy Hale, inflelder, for- merly of the Portland, Ore., club and Wid Matthews, outfielder, obtained rom Minneapolis, probably will be © only newcomers in the Athletics’ squad. Rommell, leading pitcher of the American league in 1922, was slated © oppose the veteran Walter John- son. ST. LOUIS, Mo., April 18.—Minus services of George Sisler, the eam’s great player, St. Louis opens American league season against Detroit here this afternoon. Collins Detroit and Shocker for St, Louls the probable pitchers. CLEVELAND, Ohio, April 18.— Plans were made to accommodate the largest crowd that ever witnessed an nauguration of the American league CORNS Lift Off with Fingers | ) | | large crowds ‘baseball season here for today's game between Cleveland Indians and the Chi > White Box. Neither manager would announce his pitcher previous to the me. Gleason intl- mated he wou!d choose between Faber nd verette. Predictions were Spaker would rely on Coveleskie, Smith or Edwards. | Sport Calendar | Racing. | Meetinng of Harford and Breeders’ Association de Grace. Meeting of West Virginian Jockey club, at Huntington. | Baseball | American league opens {ts season. American Association opens its sea- son International son \ Western son, Texas league opens its season. Shooting. Prairie Zone handicap trapshoot- | ing tournament, at Houston. | Polo. Annual tournament Polo club, 200 BOYS TO ~ TAKE PART IN Agricultural at Havre league opens its sea- association opens its sea- of Sandhills at Pinehurs | Nearly two hundred boys will take part In the gym show to be given in the gymnasium of the Natrona count: | high school at 8 o'clock next Friday Jevening. Coaches Dean Morgan and Sam Neff have been hard at work preparing thelr performers and they are now rounding them into shape so that they should be able to put across some real stuff on the eventful night. Much of the work will be done to music, and Mrs. Ray Cook will act as pianist for these rhythmical exercises. The program will tnelude an ath- letic pageant demonstrating baseball, wrestling, archery and track, lake sports, and will have siv other events. These will be gym games of all kinds, ® marching and wand drill, pyramid building, use of Indfan clubs, ap- paratus work and dumb bell drill. The gym show is an annual affair and one that never fails to attract of enthusiastic spec- tators, Sport Notes Will Manager Ty Cobbb of the Tigers hit for 400 this season, which will be his nineteenth year in the American league? Both Honus Wag- ner and Nap Lajole fell below tho 300 mark in their nineteenth ma- Jor league season Uttle Dovsn't hurt a bit! “Freezone” on an aching corn, stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fin- gers. Truly! Your druggist sells a ne" for a few remove every hard or corn between tho the callouses, without sore —Advertisement. Drop a bottle suf tiny cents, to irritatio in-| | Pittsburgh’s trio of _ outfielders, | Carey, Bigbee and Russell, are past masters in fielding, hitting and base ‘unning. It's a great outerworks, sizing it up from any angle. | al a | George Owen, the Harvard all |round und all-year athlete, is dis | playing tho same old winning punch in baseball that distinguished his work in football and hockey. Manager John McGraw of Giants and his assistant, Hughey Jennings have been pals ever since they broke into the game more than thirty years ago. | Luls F o's victory over Bill Bren- nan in the recent New York bout was spread all over the front pages of y all of the South Americana pers, | BiG GYAl SHOW ) Unilke his manager, the winner Johnson bout. Manager “sartin” Willard will win. A Champion | ‘Jack Dempsey refrains from picking of the coming Willard: Kearns On every count —it’s the best cigarette ever made!” =| THE TRIBUNE'S PAGE OF SPORTING NEWS F Dempsey, have been completed and the Represtntatives of the two fighters have agreed to all terms for the fight and only the sigatures of the princt pals remain to be affixed to the artl cles to complete the arragements which have been under way for sev eral months. The signing procedure was regard- | only as a formality by Kane. | Jack Kearns, manager of Demp sey, will meet Kane and representa-| tives of the Shelby post of the Ameri- can Legion, which 1s fostering the bout at Great Falls, Montana, within | “four or five days,” to sign the arti cles for the fight, Kane stated. | In a supplementary statement, Mike| Collins of Minneapolis, who with Loy | J. Molumby, state comander of the | Legion in Mdntana, represented the| Shelby post in the fight negotiations; declared the the fight would be held) in a natural amphitheatre one mile west of Shelby. An arena, with seating cepacity of | 40,000 will be built and construction work will proceed imniediately after | the signing of the articles, according | to Collins. | Neither Collins nor Kano last night | | would say what terms the two fig | ters had agreed upon, but was report: | ed from other sources considered re: Mable that the champion would r $800,000 for his end of the purse. | Kane and Collins will leave Salt} Lake today, they announced last night. Their destination was not re. vealed but both stated that they would | be present at Great Falls next week | to meet Kearns and close the final de- | tails for the bout. Kearns is in Los Angeles on bust- ness. The champion also {s in the| | is DEMPSEY-GIBBONS FIGHT FO SHELBY, MOATANA, IS ASSURE ALL ARRANGEMENTS COMPLETED SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, April 18.—Arrangements for a world’s heavyweight championship fight between Jack the champion, and Tommy Gibbons, of St. Paul, Montana, on July 4, it was announced here last night by Eddie Kane, manager of Gibbons. fight will be held at Shelby, SPORT BRIEFS SALT LAKE CITY—Although no formal contracts have been signed } 2 championship bout between Jack Dempsey and Tom Gibbons of §& Paul at Shelby, Montana, next Ju fourth, “virtually assured” Eddie Kane, Gibbons’ manager said. CLEVELAND — Benny Leonard, lightweight champion of the word, | will engage in “no-decision” boxing | contests in Chicago, Louisville and | Detroit, prior to mocting Mickey | Walker, welterweight titleholder and | Lew Tendler, lightweight challenger. LOS ANGELES—Willle I. Hunter, | formerly British amateur golf cham- pion, won the southern California nateur championship by defeating | BE, 8, (Scotty) Armstrong of Los Angeles 2 and 1 In the finals at Mid- wick Country club. | ~_—— | NEW YORK—Tex Rickard cabled | his final offer to Georges Carpentier to meet Mike McTigue in America in | dune. ST. PAUL.—Jock Malone, St. Paul | middlewelght boxer, who was out- pointed here Monday night by Bill Wells, welterweight champion of Eng- land, announced today that he would hereafter confine his attention to the middleweight boxers with two excep: tions. He wants a return match with | Wells before his home town folks and First in News Of All Events : ae “Speedball” Hayden, El Paso fighter, who will meet Charles Long of Omaha in the main event at the Elks next Monday evening, arrived in Casper from his home Tuesday. Hayden appears in fine shape, hav- ing fought twice in the last two weeks and won both, Hayden has also been working consistently all winter, in New Mexico and Art- zona towns. Long will arrive this evening from Omaha and both men will put on five days of training before their match here. They will work out every afternoon starting at 2 o'clock at the Casper Athletic club gymnasium. also wants to meet Mickey Walker, the welterweight champion. 8ST. PAUL.—Glenn R. Kruger, of Winnipeg, Man., a junior, was elected captain of the Hamline university baseball team last night. He plays third base. eed AUCTION. If you have anything of value that you want to sell, cal! 1660 and send it up to our auction Friday afternoon at m.. and will sell it for yo