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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1923 World Results NGRAW PLANS MANY CHANGES Bancroft, Stengel and Cunningham Go to Boston Club. NEW YORK, Nov. 14—The pass- ing of Dave Bancroft, Casey Stengel and Bill Cunningham from the New York Nationals to the Boston Na- tionals and the acquisition by New York of Billy Southworth and Joo Oeschger, is construed by baseba!! fandom as the opening move by Manager John McGraw toward al- most complete reconstruction of the New York National League club. If such.it proves, it will mark the fourth time in McGraw's 21 years as New York manager that he has so overhauled his organization. eS RS ee, | SPORT BRIEFS LOS ANGELES.—In a last round comeback, James J. Delaney, light heavy weight of St. Paul, obtained a draw in his fight with Bert Colima, claimant to the Pacific coast middle- weight title In the main event at Vernon arena. Stewart Mclean, Minnesota bantamwerght, won a de- tion of Manager Fred Mitchell of Braves and appointment of Dave Bancroft of Giants as Manager of captain ly Southworth of the Braves. AIR OTAYS COMBED, GLOSSY fillions Use It — Few Cents Buys Jar at Drugstore = NS . HAIR |GROO pee | Combed _—_——_ Even stubborn, unruly or sham- pooed hair stays combed all day in any style you like. “Hair-Groom" is @ dignified combing cream which gives that natural gloss and well- groomed effect to your hair—that final touch to good dress both in business and on social occasions. “Hair-Groom" is greaseless; also helps grow thick, heavy, lustrous hair, Beware of greasy, harmful imitations.—A4vertisement. DONT LET YouR SOLKAND Broek? ‘OU"LL warm right up to our heating ideas. We plan and install repairs and new systems that save heat—cutting down the coal bill, Reasonable prices al- ways. SCHANK PLUMBING SEATING. Gn S PHONE 7II By Leased Wire , of Princeton were sent to the Army- Mis ol PAE Los Angeles—Bob and Emil Meusel, who figured prominent recent World Series, were joyously received by their fellow we sons when they returned to sunny California. Bobby starred with the cham- pion Yankees, while Borther Emil tried his best to keep the Giants in the canning. ETHICS OF FOOTBALL SCOUTING in the fhe Caspet Daily Cridune TEVTOLENE FOR LOUISVILLE Interest Keen in Big! Race Next Saturday WithInMemoriam. | LOUISVILLE, Ky., Nov. 14.—In- terest in the Zev-In Memoriam match race to be run at Churchill Downs here Saturday, provided the condition of the track meets with the approval of Car! Weildemann, owner of In Memoriam, was in- creased materially today upon publi- cation of dispatches from Baltimore that the Rancocas stable’s crack three-year-old was to leave Pimlico for Louisville. | It was recalled today that when | the conqueror of Papyrus and win- ner of the Kentucky derby matches speed and endurance with In| Memoriam Saturday in an effort to| recoup the prestige lost by defeat | at the heels of Mr. Weidemann's' great three-year-old in the Latonia championship, it would be the first match race held at Churchill Downs | since July 4, 1878, when Ten Broeck raced Mollie McCarthy into submis- | sion over a distance of four miles. | So far In Memoriam, which is quartered here has had only slow workouts, with heavy boys up. Mr. Weldemann was here yesterday to watch his horse gallop a mile in| 1:43% and reiterated his confidence | in the ability of his entry to defeat | Zev. The race Saturday is for a mile and one quarter, the Kentucky derby distance. Each horse is to IN DOUBT; carry 126 pounds. | — DISCUSSION LIKELY | SUMMARY OF BY HENRY L. FARRELL (United Press Sports Editor) NEW YORK, Nov. 14—4United Press.)}—Ethica of “scouting” no doubt, will be discussed the next time the rules committee of the in- tercollegiate football association get together. As long as tt can be debated that scouting is in no way immoral, that there is nothing practica! or ethical against it and that it does not threat- en the safety of the game, the offi- elals hardly can ovunsider it worthy of serious consideration. “Scouting” {s an old custom of sending a trained observer to watch a future opponent in action and) bring back some ideas of its style of play and the way to defend against | it. contests in Paris next summer, and {t is not boastful to figure that one big sector of the battlefront ts prac- tically taken. With Tilden, Johnston, Richards, Williams and Hunter to choose from as only five of a swarm of good play- ers, Uncle Sam has a stacked hand to toss down on the Olympic courts. The tennis competition algo may bring out the biggest sport treats that could be arranged for 1924—ea meeting between the great Suzanne Lenglen and the fascinating Helen Wills. The only doubt our well-known Uncle has in his Helen is that she might be too young. Talk that Jimmy O'Connell, the $75,000 California beauty, will not Some colleges consider the evils of scouting more seriously than others. It has been told that Glenn Warner, | the present Pittsburgh coach, on sev-| eral occasions served notice on op- posing teams just what he was going to use. { Stories have been related to rival coaches in friendly agruments, giv-| ing diagrams of the plays with which | they maintained they were going to win. | At Rutgers this year, one of the| assistant managers of the team met five scouts from West Virginia, gave them a hearty welcome and handed them choice seats to the game. Another unusual incident was re- ported this season from Ohio, where two coaches in the conference ex-! changed all their plays, without the! signals, of course, so that scouting| would not be necessary. Many of the big teams in the cast do their preparation work for the big games behind locked doors, with | guards posted outside. Such precautions are foolish when | it is considered how many big games) each season are won by trick plays which would have been unsuccessful if enemy eyes had seen them. The most successful teams depend} upon perfect execution of simple! plays. Most all of the plays used| by this year’s great Notre Dame team are old fundamentals, made ef- fective by absolute perfection of ex-| ecution. | Harvard has used the same plays with success year after year. Scouts found that it was not the equipment | of the Harvard team so much as| their clever and scientific use of the! plays with which they have been equipped. All the best scouts at the command | Notre Dame game, and they went back to Princeton with a complete tabulation of all the best gaining plays used by Notre Dame against the Cadets. But it was wasted time epent in scouting, as Notre Dame used tho same plays, but their execution was so perfect, their fundamentals of| Play so sound that Princeton couldn't) stop them. The Tigers knew all of the Notre Dame formation, but they were un- able to stop them. Fioya Johnson may never get to the top of the heavyweight class, but it il never be for the lack of) “tryin: Johnson’s bid for the champion- ship or a leading place among the contenders has been marked by more sincere and gamer efforts than have ever brought a champion to the top. Making his fling in a day when| champion and near-champion boxers | choose always the easy and safe way in preference to any kind of a risk, Johnson at least will be remembered long as the one boxer who felt he} had something and was game enough | to take the chances of finding out. America, for the first time, ts to enter a team in the Olympic tennis! be with the New York Giants next | season is denied by Manager Mc- Graw. The Giant leader expects the Ca!- ifornia youngster to play baseball in the National League next year Iike he did in California where he was some player. McGraw maintains that fines was mainly responsible for Jimmy’s dis- appointing form last season. O'Connell's ts a rather unfortunate case. He wants to play first base and feels that he is a good first base man, but he has to play outfield for McGraw and feels that he is not a g00d outfielder. O'Connell ‘ts one of the finest and most likable young fellows in the game. He ought to have a chance. BR i A BIG LIQUOR FIND MADE IN MONTANA BUTTE, Mont., Nov. 14.—Fed- eral and police officials of Butte located along the Big Pole river near Divide, 26 miles south of But- te one hundred ten barrels of mash, 300 gallons of “moonshine’ whiskey, several hundred gallons of gasoline, a dozen sacks of sugar, an eighty and a hundred gallon still and sev- era! powerful gas burners. It was the largest quantity of booze and booze making material ever locate ed in this county since pre-Volstead days. The outfit was valued at $8- 000. Last September 25 officers lo- cated a three compartment 8,000 gallon steam boiler moonshining outfit 10 miles south of Butte, : pose—as soft as you wish; as hard as you please; but always smoother than you had dreamed. NIGHT NEWS BERLIN.—An official com- munication, issued after an all day conference between President Ebert, the cabinet and the pre- miers of the federated states, vir- tually admitted the inability of the reich government to “support” the Ruhr and Rhineland any longer, but decliried to discuss the question of an autonomous Rhine- land state. — HARRISBURG. —Goy. Pinchot sent letters to the governors of 29 anthracite consuming states invit- ing them to'a conference here November 26 to consider a pro- gram of federal legislation de- signed to reduce coal prices. OELS, Silesia.—The former Ger- man Crown Prince Frederick Wil- Mam arrived at his castle here. CHICAGO.—Frank O. Lowden, former governor of Illinots, termed “absurd” the statement attributed to Ku Klux Klan leaders that he is now a candidate for the presi- | dency on a platform suggested by | a klan publication. Mr. Lowden | eaid that he was not a candidate for the presidency. DOORN.—It was asserted here that there ts no foundation for re- ports that the former German Kaiser and his sulte have been | granted passports to return to | Germany. Those close to the former emperor said he had no intention of leaving Doorn. BERLIN.—It was reported from Munich that the public prosecutor of the supreme court at Leipsic had received instructions from the central government to institute Proceedings against the partici- pants in the national putsch on charges of high treason. —— SEND IT TO THE PEARL WHITE LAUNDRY PHONE 1702 How about s Motometer tor his Christmas? | (swith or without erasers) | 17 black | Also 3 copying | American Lead Pencil Co. 220 Fifth Ave., New York Write for booklet on pai, Nd erasers, VENUS Everpointed and VENUS Thin Leads Football Star | 2 Earl Martinean, captain of the University of Minnesota football team who was selected last year for the halfback position on Walter Camps All American team is re- ceiving $100,000 a month as a dis- abled veteran from the government. ’§ PAGE OF SPORTING NEWS | RATE. HEARINGS ARE LAUNCHED IN KANSAS CITY Railroads and States Marshal Forces for 10-Day Session. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 14.— Battalions were mustered here today by eight complaining states and do- fendant railroads for a ten-day hear- ing before representatives of the Interstate Commerce commission on @ petition for reduction of freight rates on grain, grain products and hay. The fight for lower rates will be led by Clyde M. Reed, chairman of the Kansas State Public Utilities commission and {t was expected that it would be opened this morning by Dr. Henry J. Waters, editor of the That Martinean was receiving this compensation was revealed in the investigation of the Voterans’ Bu- reau. —_—— — FIRST STREET PRINS IN USE AT GHEYENNE CHEYENNE, Wyo., Nov. 14.— Cheyenneites Tuesday were travel- ing on the first block of street pav- ing completed here. It is on lower Capitol avenue, adjacent to the Union Pacific depo’ HERE is a certain unexplain-,When rich, able feeling that goes with hale and hearty old age—it is @ feeling of happiness, of care un- known, of reborn youth. But rheumatism—that deadly malady which has caused so many to surrender to the woes of pain [and suffering—caused so many to forego the pleasures of life— caused so many to be dependent. Why suffer from it? To be helped about—crutches, canes and willing hands always needed to assist you here and help you there. Rheumatism will van- ish the same as skin disorders— the same as sallow complexion— the same as that run-down condi- tion when §. 8. 8. is used. 8S. 8S. 8S. builds red blood cells by the score. Your nerve power is strengthened. supply. and it is giving better before. Cleaning and Pressing Service AT JAKE THE NIFTY TAILOR Wyatt Hotel Basement CALL 802 “We Call For and Deliver” he World's Best WARNINC! We Will Not Be Responsible! If you go int othe winter with an empty coal bin — it is entirely your own risk. Our advice is to call us up AT ONCE and order your winter’s We have plenty of Hudson Lump Coal Our Phone Number is 913 Casper Supply Company Weekly Kansas City Star, with a review of the agricultural situation in the grain belt and an outline of reasons for which this region’ seeks rate adjustments, The hearing opened before John J, Esch of Wis: consin, widely known as one of the authors of the Esch-Cummins rail- road bill and Johnston B. Campbell of Washington state, both members of the Interstate Commerce com- mission. Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Okla- homa, Kansas, Nebraska, North Da- kota and South Dakota were repre- sented. DUBUQUE, Iowa, Nov. 14.—In- creased cost of producing transpor tation 1 cause for the present red, healthy blood courses through your veins, there is no such thing as inflammation or neuralgia of the muscles and joints. 8S, 8. 8. is what you need to retain that old time vim and vi- gor and vitality, when you turn down the final stretch of life. Mr. M. A. Farmer, Elyria, Ohio, writes: “S. S. S. relieved me of rheamatism and nervousness. It is the best medi- cine for building up the blood.” S. S. S. fs made of carefully se- lected and scientifically prepared and proportioned herbs and barks. Only pure vegetable ingredients are used. Stronger healthier bodies—bodies able to withstand the onslaughts of diseases are the results of 8.8.8. All leading drug stores carry 8. 8. 8. The large size is the more economical, Blood Medicine satisfaction than ever First in News Of All Events comparatively high railroad rates, quarters of the amount gaing to Samuel M. Felton, president of the | former and the balance to the Chicago and Great Western railroad| The local famine fund and chairman of the Western Rail-| headed by C. R. Bennett, Committee on Public Rela-|of the International Bank, tions, said In an address here today. | proved plans submitted by “Few persons realize how great | versities for use of the fund, has been the increase in cost of| includes measures for the preven equipment,” Mr. Felton said, point-| tion of famine and co-operation of ing out that a locomotive, 50 freight | the existing famine rellef organiza cars and caboose which in 1913 cost | tions, for a period of 10 years. about $74,000 now cost around $175,000. He said that a passenger train of eight cars which in 1913 cost $192,000, now costs $342,000. “Notwithstanding the conditions, it ts still contended that rates must be reduced to give relief to grain farmers," he said. “The railroads can with equal propriety and justice | reply that wages, prices and taxes must be lowered to give the rail- roads reltef.” i the committee counsel, composed of representatives |of Missions interested in China, The | committee reserves the right to eus- pend payments if {t disapproves of the application of the funds by the Universities. —_—___. Expert watch and jewslry repair- ing. Casper Jewelry Co. 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