Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, February 14, 1924, Page 6

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of ale ior at, n 16 Eewre GAO ata MOR &@ Cane 9.2 ORO Se “SAS Le World Results By Leased Wire McGinnity and Bresnahan, Old-Time Stars Cage Fans Witness Close Contest in Game Last Night; Methodists Trim Salt Creek Gas Plant Five. The Legion basketball team lost all chances at the city title and the silver loving cup emblematic of the league championship Wednesday night by dropping their game to the Red Crowns by a score of 28 to 25. It was a nip and tuck battle with plenty of football and roughhouse by both teams and the spectators were in an uproar. The result of the game last night leaves the championship between the Red Crowns and the Methodists who will PORTLAND, Ore — After each won a fall, Ted Thye of Portland meet next Wednesday night. In the preliminary the Methodists defeated the Gas Plant five of Sait Creek, 24 to. 20. The Gas Plant have the cleanest organization seen in Casper this winter and every was awarded the decision over man on the team plays the ball and not his opponent. They are also Perse Engel of Dubuque, Towa, on speedy and accurate shots and kept the league leading Methodists on the go to beat them. The lineup and scores: LITTLE ROCK, Ark.—Rudy Du- sek, Omaha heavyweight, won two falls with Clarence Eklund of Wyo- ming, ight heavyweight champion. PARIS — Fred _ Bretonnel, French pugilist, was proclaimed ¢| lightweight champion of Europe by ¢ | the emergency committee of the In- 0 | ternational Boxing Union, taking | the title previously held by Harry —| Mason, the British lightweight. 28 Veteran baseball fans recall the announcement: “Batteries— for New York McGinnity and Bresnahan.” At left is shown “Iron Man Joe” McGinnity who joins the National League champions this icagus apure twenty years azo ad twisted for’ th (ants sehes tor spurs twenty years ago ani or wi won the World's Series in 1905. “Iron Man Joe” was active as a pitcher until last season ‘when he played the lead'ng role in winning the pennant of the Mississippi V: League for the Dubuque, Iowa team, of which he was manager. t the right fs Roger who also was a star with the Giants in 1905. He will act as scout for the’ Giants, FARRELL DESCRIBES TP. the Patterson, c. Dave Rae, rg. Kidd, lg. — wlocoonnd TULSA, Okla—Joe Stecher, for- American Legion (25). mer heavyweight wrestling champ G. F. T.P.|/ ton won the first fali from. Clift Maupin, rf. 2 ) 2) Binckley, Columbus, O., in a match | E F Cochran, If. 4 1 ®| here, but could not take the second REA GAM G R Clowery, c. 6 1 13] fal in the two hours time in which Morgan, re. ° 1 1] he had agreed to throw the Ohfoan Reimerth, lg. o o © | twice out of three times. The first me a fall came after one hour and 38 25 | minutes of wrestling. SEATTLE, Wash.—Bobby Har- F. T.p.| Per, Seattle welterweight, decisively} | By HENRY L. FARRELL business and went right along tak- Byram, rt. ° 1 1 Cane tae ered Cline, of Oakland, (United Press Sports Editor.) ne etary thing as it came and say- Johnson, rf.___.2 0 4 gskes round bout} NEW YORK, Feb. 14.—(Unitea | ing nothing—- Post, If. 3. 8 | here, Freddie Mack, Seattle Mght-| Press) —No one but a sood game | ‘Then you would be the gamest Robinson, c -_-2 0 4| Weleht, knocked out Jimmy O’Brien| tellow can get along in boxing and | UY that ever lived. Traylor, rg. -—--__1 0 2|0f Los Angeles in the third round| no-one can get along with boxing Se Mechling, lg. .2 0 4/0 six round go. - but @ good game fellow. By one of those breaks in luck rere. Pac! PAR) Romantic fancy loves to paint a| which come once in a decade, John 10 4 2% IS—Marcel Niles, French game fellow as one who rode the| McGraw discovered such a fine Gas Plant (20). heavyweight, kmocked out Larry! Tange alone in the old wild and| young shortstop in Travis Jackson " o-. @p. ; Ontario, Canada, in the third] woolly days; or one who ran a| that he felt safe in disposing of one ti igs aicem gambling house in Alaska when a|of the best players/in the league. It would be unusual for another club in the same time to duplicate the feat, but the St. Louis Cards have the hope of doing it. Lester Bell, a youngster who spent last season with Houston, ie being touted as the boy who may step into the St. Louls infield next year and make it. Branch Rickey has been making desperate efforts to land a player to relieve Doc Lavan, but Charley, Barrett, one of the St. Louis scouts, thinks he is wasting time, “He's got the best prospect in the business right with the club and he'll find it out when he sees that young Bell next spring,” he said. “rod” on the hip was the only law; or a fellow who would push his whole pile across the board when the little ball started rolling around. The game fellow is always asso- ciated with such situations in ro- mance and fiction and many times these situations are found in real, every day life. There isn’t the same romance to- day in which the game fellow can show bimself, but the times are just as tough even if they are less spec- tacular and if they lack the old trimmings of the melo-dramatic. Suppose that you put every cent vou had into the promotion of box- ing in a state where the sport had just been restored to legal standing; that you put a lot of bum fighters and bum managers into wealth that they never dreamed of; that you provided the means whereby Broadway became cluttered with imposing offices wher presided the managers who used to do their busi- ness over the bar in a cheap booze joint; supposing then that these leeches turned upon you and dug the knife in your back. Suppose that the men with whom you were dealing thought so much of their benefactor that they helped get you Jnto criminal court on a 6 CHICAGO—Pancho Villa world’s 4 | flyweight champion, will meet Bud 2 Taylor of Terre Haute, Ind., in a 5) ten-round no-decision contest at > | Milwaukee, March 6. ‘The weight 20 will be 118 pounds at 3 p. m. Says His Prescription] «3. cro, rents, Londos th fal wi Has Powerful Influ- | 72"ro Mivake, the Seeasee oa ence Over Pion wrestler, in a match here Miyake won the first fall in 20 Has Also Proven Remarkably Suc. minutes, using jul-jitsu | arm lock holds. Londos took the second in cessful in Severe Cases of Rheumatic Neuritis. 35 minutes and the third in 25 minutes, using the flying headlock. OAKLAND, Cal.—vVic Foley, of Vancouver, B. C., Canadian feather. weight boxing champion won a close deciston over Bud Hamilton of Denver, at the end of a fast four- Mr. James H. Allen suffered for round bout here. Hamilton fought with rheumatism. Many times in Vernon Tuesday night when he bana ble dis left him help- | ¥28 Stopped in the first round by tee pestige attcrering rhein Billy ‘Kennedy, New Orleans feather- He finally decided) after years of weight. Kid Mexico, 160-pounder jess study, that no one can be | ¥25 awarded the decision over Sun- connel ed ism until the|™¥ Jim Negro, in the semtwindup. Haale nyse tim ennerr at commonly | The bout was filled with action, called uric acid deposits, were dis- ees All the experts around the circuit last season thought the Cards had a real prospect in Freigau, the youngster who took a job as batboy that he might get a chance to make the team. x : eee , The closer we get to the smell of baseball in the air, the more im- pressive that pitching staff of Luque, Rixey, Donohue, Benton, Mays, Sheehan and May looks. The Cincinnati Reds are going to get pitching if nothing else. solved in the joints and muscles and expelled from the body. With this idea in mind he con- ¢ | ~ Sport Calendar Racing '. Meeting of Business Men’s Racing association, at New Orleans. Meeting of Cuba-American Jockey club, at Havana. Meeting of Tiajuana Jockey club, at Tiajuana. party i it cost you sulted physicians, made experiments marty chargé an and final lly compounded paler pisces to prove that you were innocent. tion that quickly and completely banished every sign and symptom of rheumatism from his system. He freely gave his discovery, which he called Allenrhu, to others who took it, with what might be called marvelous success. After years of urging he decided to let sufferers everywhere know about his discovery through the news- papers. He has therefore instructed | 8Ylvania 26, Smith & Turner to dispense Allen- At Galesburg—Knox 23; Lombard rhu with the understanding that if | 22- the first pint bottle does not show] At Crawfordsville, the way to complete recovery he | Dame 23; Wabash 16. will gladly return your money with At Los Angeles—Stanford Unt- out comment. Mail orders accepted. | versity 31; University of Southern Suppose that the same gang after the jury had acquited you shrugged their shoulders and whispered from the corner of a thick-lipped mouth that you had bought the jury and the state. : Suppose that you had taken a foreigner who had ariived as a tumr in the steerage ot a ship and made $300,000 for hin. in two.years and the same foreigner turred around and sent you a cable: “Ddh't count me in on any more of your fights.” Suppose that some managers who came to you and said: “Put this At Milwaukee—Marquette 18; But- ler 24. At Norman—Oklahoma 45; Ames 27. At Corvallis, Ore—Oregon Aggies 19; Gonzaga College 11. At Washington—Princeton 82; Ca- tholic University 25, At Cambridge—Harvard 24; Penn- ” Skis. National ' championship tourna- ment opens at Brattleboro, Vt. Ind.—Notre if. ‘Texas open championship tourna- ment, at San Antonio. St. Valentine's tournament for —Aavertisement. California 23. boy on in a preliminary. His | women, at Pinehurst. heerasarias ae family’s starving’—and you not| Gran championship tournament, aia only put them on once but a dozen | 4+ miami, Fla. 5 - SQ w Ka ZZ times until their family got so fat|° ,nnual mid-season tourhament, Quick Service they had to be hauled around in a] + Camden, S. C. on =_> twelve-cylinder limousine and then|” annual Frick Cup tournament, at . —S oe your friends sald: “He's got a] augusta, Ga. : Packing —- 3, | monopoly. He's got the chairman |” ¢; valentine's Cup tournament, and Crating of the boxing commission. We have to fight in the Garflen to lve and he robs us.” Supposing that you did something for your big city, got something for that city that the smartest bus!- ness men and the wisest politicians had failed to land and then you heard from the alley: “He'll make $300,000 out of the concessions, He'll make a fortune bootlegging. He'll scalp the tickets.” Suppose that you knew a certain fight between two heavyweights could not be pulled off; that you had been told from high up to lay off it and that you made no attempt to arrange such a fight; that the at Summerville, 8. C. Bench Show. Annual show of Newark Kennel club, Newark, N. J. Badmint TO‘'NIGHT Tomorrow Alright mlld, NR iutecommipation and Bde ‘Ousnesa and Leep the digestive and eliminative functions normal, Phone 948 and 949 Natrona Transfer Storage & Fuel Co. Gebo Coal ton. Canadian championship tourna ment opens at Quebec. Bowling. Annual tournament of Inter- national Bowling association, dt St. Paul. Skating. Eastern championship races, Saranac Lake, N. Y. Curling. Head of the Lakes tournament closses at Duluth, at Wiring Supplies FIXTURES, LAMPS, manager of one of the fighters knew (I Oi ES ELECTRIC APPLIANCES Chips the Old k ae Soul she eae ae ne 508 South’ Cha well Phone 2542 off Bloc cut loose on you, ass 07 Radio Suppl i a discriminating against his man and Motor Repairing mM JuNtors— that the howl by the members of WHEN IN OMAHA Little Nts his race went to the legislature and 7 | One-third the regu- re ri y killed the game. Electric Supply Sas Nae YI) te re coen| HOTEL ROME id ction Co. wie MES critic was the man for whom you Roan eee oe ee . Midwest Phone 483W For sl i i had built a house and paid for it. coms with bat! -00 and up gchar Furnished 60 ee Supposing that all these things Homelike Surroundings Estimate Gladly ‘ were true, that you figured out they OMAHALNERE. 8MITH-TURNER Wore just the penalties of a funny a ground at New Orleans where the world champions, Yankees, will train is the bal! ground of the boss of the New Orleans club and the bosr of the New Orleans club, Alex Heineman, is one of the most affable men in baseball. His geniality pervades the local atmos- phere to such an extent that the sun is shining in New Orleans when it is raining and blowing cold in At- chefelaya or néar there, which is near New Orleans, advertises that he has the biggest playing field in the world. near a canal and now and then the sweet song of the siren lures the ball players to peek over the fence. This is no skirt siren, It is a sirén on one of the big tugsc that haul craft loaded with shrimps and crabs between Lake Punchartrain and the New Orleans markets. of his more active life bustin’ the fences at New, Orleans, but he stil! has two or three objectives which ABOLITION OF PLAYER BONUS (Copyright, 1924, Cusper Tribune.) Christy Mathewson to fight bonuses to players by adding special clauses to their, contracts, tice which has gone on intermittent- ly for years, the National has decided unanimously to discon tinue the practice. contracts which hold over from 1923 nor will it affect any which may have been offered for 1924. against the bonus it might have continued, although it. is doubtful. However, would say that bonus premiums of any kind, Na- tional league men who were hesitant were ready to get into line. Amillio# ’S PAGE OF SPORTING NEWS e See 2 Belected feeSpeing Work Short Sketches of the Clubs and NEW YORK, Feb. 14—The balljhe would be glad to conquer, and for that reason we'comes each an- hual announcement which says the Yanks will train at New Ori Other inducements for train! is at New Orleans are pralines, excellent near bear, one of the longest street ear rides in the south for a mere pittance, Iemonade made in twenty- seven different ways all inc'uding ice, opportunities to walk uphill to the Mississippi river which flows in the first story above the town, and fine fodder. To the ball player the eats are one of the more important parts of a spring training trip. The player goes south to shake his fat and get in condition, but this cannot be successfully accomp'ished with- out proper ham and eggs. The field at New Orleans is likely to be a lttle rough in the early part the New York ‘The boss of the New Orleans club Tt is of the season, but it is fast and the a’ways good. The field has been hung with horseshoes for the New York Americans because they win there about as often as they go and continue by winning championships when they arrive home. Babe Ruth has spent some years GOOD FOR GAME, SAYS FOSTER By JOHN B. FOSTER. One old National league player, when he heard what action had been taken, declared: “I never knew a retired player who was for the players.’”* That is the player attitude for the most part. For the good of baseball, abolish- ing of the bonus system is one of the best things that ever happened in the National league. It has made no end of trouble, not one fiftieth part of which has ever come to light. There still is no rule against club owners making presents to Players after the season is over. NEW YORK, Feb. 14.—With lead the the granting of against @ prac- league This action will not affect any But for Mathewson's leadership The International league worried all day over its pair of schedules and could not arrive at a solution. Finally it was suggested that the meeting knock off work until eve- ning and that in the meantime the schedule when a former player he was against committee try agian to light is splendid. Batting is ‘work oyt one that would please verybedy, ° 2 All day and evening the commit- teemen tried to put seven cities in the eighth on the best day of the season, but they couldn't make it work, Es ‘They went at it again today. again dire misfortune was predicted. “That's major league propaganda direct from Chicago,” said. one member. GRID WARRIORS TAKE TO NAT Yale Coaches Working With Stars at Wrestling. By WALTER CAMP. (Copyright, 1 Casper Tribune.) NEW YORK, Feb. 14.—All Yale's big football men are at work under Izzie Winters on the wrestling ma- terials. Captain ths A believes in this kind of work, and is not only hard at it himself, but has Milstead, Deaver, Landis, Burch, Knowles and Guernsey on the mats as well. ‘True, he may realize that he can- not use Milstead next Yall, but Mil stead is a good example—and mean- time Winters is chuckling over the addition to his mat possibilities of all these husky football warriors. When is the “closed season” tn sport today? The answer is “never. A professor once remarked to the writer, when he saw the crowds be- gin to flock to basketball games, “this is the end of all things.” He said that formerly the last football game of the season heralded a “closed season,” whith lasted until spring and during that period the collegians did most of their study- ing for the year, What would he say now with hockey, basketball, swimming, wrestling, boxing and the big in- doors permanently established for the winter season. — ee VENICE, Cal.—Johnny Weber, Los Angeles light weight, won the decision over Denny Kilroy in the main event of a boxing program h a da 3,000 growers of tobacco (farm owners) contribute their leaf to us that we may meet the daily demand of Amer- ican smokers for this ° truly remarkable cigar —the greatest value, by long odds, you can buy. LUSK TRIMS SUNRISE ——AIGHIN FAST Gane . LUSK, Wyo., Feb. 14.—1n the fastest game seen on the home foor feated the Sunrise team by the score of 39 to 21. The frst hat ended 17 to 13 in favor of the tocai, but had been an uphill fight a) way. The locals opened the Becond Lalf with four field goals in many minutes and from then o; the game was never in Goubt, Bicarri of Sunrise at guard 5; the loop for six baskets, To date Lusk has made a tota) of 216 points to thetr opponents 101, The team left yesterday for the Chadron tournament. ASPIRIN Beware of Imitations! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty-three years for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Neuritis Rheumatism jeuralgia Pain, Pain pt “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin* only, Each unbroken package con- tains proven directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade ‘mark of Bayer Manufacture ot Monoaceticacidestér of Salicylicacid —Advertisement.

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