Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 4, 1923, Page 11

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NOVEMBER 4, 1923 NEW SENSATION UNCOVERED IN ee ILATONIA EVENT with Purdue today, difficulty in winning _—— Kentucky Colt Romps Home Far in Lead Of Favorites. little early in the game that pletely outclassed the Boil- their Irish took things pfs gr Diggs og penton pf every hole and shoved scores slowly and method- © scored a touchdown f the first three quarters put over two in the last good measure. fought vallantly before ds but was simply out- the Micks. N BLAS BITE NIG GAME | INIMPOLIS FELD OLIS, M4., Novy .8—(Unit- ‘Working up to tts expect- the Navy eleven won from = Colgate team, 9 to 0, crowd of 15,000 here this Continued from Page One, jovial brewer, owner of In Memor- fam, proclaimed him the greatest horse in the world. Turf experts scoffed and the public, the 45,000 that came and stood tn the rain to see the championship, put thelr money on Zev. Now these same thousands acclaim the Wiedemann colt the world beater his owner held him. The king is dead, they cried, long ive the king, but ‘horsemen shook their heads. One victory does not make a champion, Yét no horse could have done more, or won 1 moré convincing fashion than aid I Memoriam tis afternoon. Mack Garner, who rode the western cot to victory, held him off the pace, which was made by Zev. Th: promise of early morning that the day might be fair was not fulfilled and rain fell during the afternoon dampening the track until it was nearly what horsemen call heavy. It was a track much to Zev’s liking and Earl Sande took the Rancocas in n ichdown and a field goal Midshipmen the points for ed victory. : 's 60-yard run through Held in the final period for touchdown, was the fea- je game, had three good chances to it lacked the punch to get the Navy's defense. _————$—$————— ornia Asks e Delegates | G. 0. P. Meet — ICISCO, Nov. 8—Cali- ts more delegates at the) ubdlican national convention} a tength lead in the first furlong. off from stands Positions maintained for three quar. ters of a mile. Zev was setting a jam well Grayson in hand, lapped on the colt. Rialto was two lengths behind. As they came around into the stretch, the first time, the multitude that had bet {ts ddllars on the son of The Finn, set up a tumult of shouting. The king was ahead; he was winning. At the mile and a quarter, In Memoriam had moved up past My 2 Own, which did not seem to relish Se Seer eet | tha rather cb gene, cout eer RB. of Was out in front, flying. They came pelle he vated PS PT Were lo d that the committee is out/ Garner made his effort. won his own the representation of|7@ce, and snatched from the dusky Ma south,” which Boynton|head of the Rancocas star, the ito be “disproportionate and|CTOWn of three years old class. many western and northern| As they swung into the stretch, @nd increase that of Ca'f-| mud flying from drumming heels, In New York, Massachusetts,|Memoriam closed with a rush. Ohio, Indiana, Michigan,| Sande went to the whip but he could n, Kansas and Minne-| not meet the challenge. No one ever questioned Zev's heart but this western animal was all triumphant today. The Wiedemann ocft’s rush not brook resistance, ven Leading the erstwhile champton to a championship all his own and of his homeland, In Memoriam was an easy victor at the judge's box Zev's dying challenges was more sustained who dropped away rapidly tn the last fur- long. The @ereaming crowd that forgot their mutuel tickets and cheered the home horse that had won, and closed in on the track almost before Rialto, which had been ret UD, cantered past the finish 6. Carl Wiedemann was the center of an applauding throng. They put a Wreath of roses around his neck. They presented him with a gold cup, former Democratic nominee James M. Cox making a lengthy speech of presentation, Then Wiedemann took ont his fountain pen and wrote Jockey Mack Garner, a check for $10,000 on the spot. The fractional time by quarters of the leaders was as follows. 24 2-5; 49 1-5; 1:4 2-5; 1:41 9. 2:08 1-5; 3:00 4-5, Those who held a $2.00 mutuel ticket om In Memoriam were warded with $23.60 and $3.80 te place, show out. © the total republican state in the 1920 elections. This uld give California a total of tes as compared with 28 ie plan proposed by the re- national committee, ton has asked every republi- the stata to use whatever he may possess to effect e for the benefit of Cal- nd has annqunced he will to start similar campaigns » particularly in those Which like California would ER SOUGHT BY HEVEANE POLICE a Wyo., Nov. 8-—The office here is endeavoring ite a stranger going by the R. A. Mason, who’ victim- Cheyenne business houses for $79.50 each drawn ‘oudre Valley National bank Collins. The checks were re- marked “no funds.” They fiven in payment for mer ordered delivered at a fic- ddress here, the purchaser transaction receiving in out one-half the amount for he check was drawn, re —_—____ ASK YOUR GRANDFATHER, RONG DARTMOUTH EVEN IS TRAMPLED BY CORNELL; 32 TO 7 BR, N. H. Nov. 3—(United| ting causing the loss of several good ithout a chance for thre®| chances to score. . colt away from the barrier and into] Press.}—More Scarcely had the roar of “they're | starve-out and centerfield| leagues seem to be a sure winner died, before the horses were in the| over the leading minor leagues tn show its real power, the/ prann, the Cornel quarterback pnéll eleven found {ts oppor-| was the sensation of the game and ind made good here th's af-) ho almost cinched an all-American by overwhelming the power) position with hig brilliant exh{bition. pouth team 82 to 7. Ramsey also starred for Cornell and e years Cornell has made} the entire line distinguished itself. the eastern Ce sari ick Tho lineup. claim was tossed off w! ‘ cal reply—"You haven't penis Reees Socal ybody, Oberlander Lr Kearney Diehl LG Morris we Ellis c Affeld ,secepted as a “football| ,schenbach RG Trousdenl Bt’ woe seusrced 68-000! Statch RT Sunastrum est powerful teams in the| yacenbuckle RE Henderson offense that combined run-| y73 va RHB ‘Ramneey ing end kicking, ‘Cornell 7 cavite FB Cassidy Dartmouth team at its The s: e like a prep school outfit. eas S x outplayed Dartmouth 1n| Cornell -— 6 9 7 10—32 partment of the game and| Dartmouth — —-9 7 9 0-7) in every quarter, Only|H -. -eh ETAOIN SHRDL CM of game defensive despera-} Touchdowns: Cornell, Pfann, 2; Cornell prevented the score 2. ig higher. For Dartmouth, Aschenbach. outh not only lost but was| Field goals, Sundstrum 2, Goals look bad by bad judgment} after touchdown, Sundstrum, As- handling of the ball, fumb-chenbach, Che Casper Sunday Cridune SPEEDBALL HAYDEN Speedball Hayden, Columbus, N. Winfrey on the Elks’ ring card. DRAFT QUESTION IS STILL BIG OF MINOR LEAGUES By HENRY L. FARRELL (United Press Sports Editor) NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—(United powerful and with greater resources to withstand a campaign, the major the three-year-old draft fight, Superficially, such matters as the dizzy pace along the rail, with My] draft might be regarded as some- Own a length behind and In Memor-, thing for club owners to fight about during the off-season but, as a mat- ter of fact, the draft is of para- mt concern to the fans in the ler leagues who want to see good baseba'l. . Fundamentally, the draft 1s this: The major league club owners want the privilege of getting the best players developed in the minor leagues for the least expenditure of money. Major league scouts look over the minor league players and suggest to thelr owners, for instance, that Play- er Smith of Atchison, is a good pros- pect. Late in the season the major sue owners convene for a draft sion. Where more than one club asks for a certain player, the play- ér’s name {8 placed in a hat and the bidders draw slips for the player. Different prices, depending upon the class of the league from which the player is taken, are paid for the players when drawn. Class AA players are worth $5,000; class A players, $4,000; class B play- ers, $2,500; class C players, $1,500; and clasq D players, $1,000. The fight, which apparently is now reaching the finish, was started when the owners of club in the class AA leagues—the International and Pacific Coast leagues, and the Amer- ican association—refused to make thelr players subject to the draft, because they considered $5,000 too small a price. ‘They preferred to place their stars on the open market for the highest bidders. The Chicago White Sox paid $100,000 for Willis Kamm, the Giants pata $75,000 for Jimmy O'Connell and $65,000 for Jack Bentley, and nu ™erous other players were sold to major | @ clubs for prices rang- ing from $25,000 upward. With the market running so high, the class AA owners naturally r fused to accept $5,000 as the stand- ard price for their best players and they pulled away from the major leagues, Various forms of reprisal were tried by the major leagues in the at- tempt to force the little fellows to return t6 tho draft, but last season they struck the plan that seems to have been the winning punch, The major leagues refused to farm out any young players who were not ready for fast company to leagues that would not accept the draft and the class of baseball In those leagues suffered a bad slump, Minor league club owners learned that they depended more than they thought upon players handed them For the first time in 40 years, {two Bleeding Heart baboons ha’ arrived at the London Zoo. “Sam,” shown here, kept the photographer buey for half an hour before hg M., battler who will meet Young PROBLEM - from the big leagues and when their supply was cut off, they found their leagues slipping down below the class of leagues under them. During the world’s series, several minor league managers said that the class AA leagues would have to go back to the draft or perish, and the major leagues feel the same way. From the business point of view the leading minor leagues now feel sure also that the day of immensec prices for ball players has passed and that they will not be doing so badly when they get $5,000 each for their star players, After the experience that the Giants had with O'Connell and Bent- ley, it is a cinch that McGraw will not put out any more small fort- unes for minor league stars, and nearly all of the major league clubs have been burnt the same way. There are no players in this year’s crop of minor leaguers that the major league club owners would spend $40,000for, even if they want- ed to, and there may not be any in the next four or five years, Jack Dunn, owner of the five- time champions in Baltimore, has succeeded in keeping the Interna- tional league from accepting the a PAGE ELEVEN MEMORIAM PASSES ZEV AND MY OWN IN BIG RACE SCHAEFER IS DEFEATED IN CUE TOURNEY NEW YORK, Nov. 3—What ts be- Meved to have been the shortest game In the history of billiard tour nameats as well as the most crush- ing defeat, was staged here when Welker Cochran won from Jake Schaefer, 500 to 64, in seven and a half innings in tonight's game of ament for the world’s 18.2 billard ._champio: It was Schaefer's first defeat tn the tournament which makes Hoppe, Cochran and Schaefer tied for first place, each having won three games and lost one. Monday afternoon, Cochran meets Horemang and in the evening Hoppe and Schaefer match cues, —_—_—$————— draft, but the ant!-Dunn faction has kept in the running, and it would t be surprising to see the Interna- vote to accept the draft this winter. her club owners fn the Interna- nal league feel that the draft is » only way of forcing Dunn to up what they considered a ma- us team in a minor league. Sentiment in the»American ‘assoct- ation ts o said to be changing. Managers several association clubs the series that hopeless, un- me help ere able to “Cap” le, of Louisville, sug- gested a plan whereby the majors ‘would be allowed to draft one play. er from each association ‘club for $10,000, but it fs @ cinch that the major leagues will consider that too much money, from th ‘The Pacifico Coast league does not @epend es much for help from the major leagues as the International | league and the American association. All of the good players at the pres- ent time are being developed on the coast and as long as the Pacific Yoast league owners feel that their products will be in demand, théy may not be willing to accept the ératt. Three Airmen Are Injured in Fall of Plane PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 8-Three civilian aviators were seriously in- jured late today when an aeroplane they were testing crashed at Me- Henry field, Roosevelt boulevard. ‘The men were rushed to Frankfort hospital where their condition was reported as critical. | The Personal | QUESTIONS ON PIANO Element Many economic changes have oo curred tn the rapid developments of the last few years. One of these is the disappearance largely from the stores, Of person- al salesmanship. Merchandising relies on scientific and dependable advertising to sup- Plement and become a part of the sales force. Intelligently read advertising so This aystem paves the way for convenient, safe and easy shop- ping. Furthermore, real merchants know that bullding a store into a ren! community institution requires keeping faith with the public. Shop in the Tribune before shopping in the shops. MAN KILLED BY GUNSHOT OMAHA, Neb. Nov. 8—Victor White, 30, S¢ranton, Pa., tried to knock apples off a tree by clubbing them with a loaded shotgun wh: hunting near nere today. A charge f shot entered his chest and he died in a few hours. Society Belle Takes Own Life, Motive Unknown NEW YORK, Nov. 8.—Refusing to explain her motive, Mrs. Gregory Van Sicklen McLoughlin, former so beauty, died today jn a hos pital after shooting herself in the chest at her Mount Kisco home. “I did it because I wanted to,” was the only explanation she would give, This, with a note she left on the dresser {n her room tn which she said “ding it; I always knew I wouldn't go tn a normal way but wish to do so with a neat closet,” led police to believe she was suf- fering. from some mental disorder. Mra, McLoughlin was known as ono of the most beautiful women in New York society and was prom!- |nent tn charity work and the daugh ter of Mrs, Cornelius Van Vorst Sewell, member of one of New York's oldest families. She. was the mother of three chil- dren and her husbaml was the son of James D. McLoughlin, banker and was well known as an artis! Picturesque Oregon City indian Blankets They are woven in true Indian designs with all the splen- dor of color and beauty of design which the Red Man js noted for, The Indians themselves buy Oregon City. blan- kets—Navajos, Klickitats, Crees, Blackfeet, You, too, will find many uses for one of these vividly col- ored beauties. They make excellent gifts. they’re couch throws, covers for window seats. Outdoors you'll see them in automobiles, on canoe trips, spreads for picnic feasts—useful everywhere. Come in and see our displays of these gorgeous blankets. Campbel!-Johnson Head-to-Foot Clothiers In the home equips and informs the shopper that BUYING KNOWLEDGE |! takes the place of SELLING | « skill. ‘ ANSWERED BY GULICH Under this head questions Piano are answered cach week by Music company. a. finish on a piano from checking? A. There is no way nently prevent thi of care, a piano w: get old, varnish Is there any way to keep the to perma- With the best the care and mechanism of the I, I. Guiich of the Chas. E. Walle when fn the horizontal position. An other point is the fact that in the grand the.sounding board is ex posed both above and w and permits freer and fuller vibrations will lose its tus’ It| for the produetion of ‘The ac cannot be avoid © to pro-| tion of the grand piar 1 the beau void | being more responsi L xtremes of b Do not | No matter how good t a t the piano n rate, over a furnace or hot register, or where the direct of the sun will strike through a window. Q. Are planos as well made to. day as they used to bo years ago? A. today then they used to be. “saturated” hammer improvement over the old hamme because of the fact that it ms tains its oval point longer and pre serves the mellow tonal qualities of the plano. The new water-proof glue now being used ts a decided ‘Phe the piano Pianos are better constructed is a decided in- piano {t requires a good action get the proper effects. =o fe I~ Ae JEWS ASKED ° TO DEFEAT FORD BOOM NEW YORK, Nev. 8.—A plea to jAmerican Jews to prevent Henry improvement because glueing-up 4 from ascen@ing to the presi processes enter so largely into the |/qential chair was mace tonight by . construction of a good plano. Ac-/tereal Zangwill in his address on tions are more responsive and keys |“antiSemetism” at the Brook better finished. ‘There are 7,000 parts in a good piano and the piano ndustry adopts many tmprove ts in material and methods of wor! | manship. Q. What ts and upright piano? A. The ifeal piano fs the grand The tone is richer and lasts longer. As an experiment factories have placed grand pianos in the uprig' position and have found that the same good tonal quality 11-YEAR-OLD GIRL HANGS SELF, CLAIM} FLORENCE, Colo., Nov. 3—*You will find my body upstairs The foregoing note on rone from her bedstead. Rosenburg went to work at the He re turned at noon to learn of the tragic usual hour this morning, sulcide of his daughter. Eva had been in several months. the difference bp. | tween the tone qualities of a grand | the | strings fail to vibrate and produce | os is dining room table led A. B. Rosenburg to the body of his 11-year-old daughter Eva, dangling at the end of a small ill health for She rebelled when her parents told her they were going to Grand Junetion to place her in |acdemy of music, | “I am not tn favor of a éry poltcy Jout wo “It Chartle Chaplin would a jhe was a Jew it would be a great kelp to the race,” Zangwill declared. Discussing race hatred Zangwill said the Jew breeds dislike for his race by attempting ta ‘break inte >clety as soon an he accumt wealth. | Trial of Man Who Moved Mortgaged Property Delayed CHEYENNE, Wyo, Nov. 3. <4 Hearing of the case of J. W. Fredere ickson, charged with removing mort gaged property from Cheyenne to Colorada, set for November 1, was postponed until December 1. Freden ickson became notorious fn the Rocky Mountain region about 18 through his connection utomdbile theft’ ring several of the mempers of which were convicted and sent to the fed- eral penitentiary at Leavenworth. He turned state’s evidence and was not prosecuted. Sieur Mr. and Mrs, M. N. Wheeler have a hospital, and this, it is believed, returned from a two-weeks’ business led her to end her own life, YOU'RE ENTITLED TO IT- BUILD WITH BRICK The radical world owes you a living” covers you have a right home. - in upkeep and_ insurance---the comfort and beauty found in brick all belong to you. Why not investigate? BUILD WITH BRICK Casper Brick & Tile Co. Cc. E. STARR, Pres. Extreme North End of Center Street Phone 1076 too much ground for the most of us. But if you’ve worked and planned for a home of your own--- * The protection---yearly saving and pleasure trip to Den Ir proverb that “the to the best in that

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