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er as es ee ‘. hs TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1924. PAGE FIVE. World F Results By Leased Wire __| First in News Of All Events TOGSLNG ATS DEVELOPED W]S2ESCREAT Ae Sammie AMERICAN LEAGUE PENNANT ANCE) |siiss= 7) 3 Eee Coal ee pte testy au Sv — HE Sato THAT Athletics Only Team Playing Consistent Ball With Other Seven Shifting Positions Constantly; Giants Win Again. (By The Associated Press.) The American league race has developed into an eight-ball juggling act. Connie Mack’s Athletics are the only team capable of maintaining a stable equilibrium from day to day. The other seven clubs shift position with bewildering frequency. Detroit yesterday went into first rain, while New York dropped a place by remaining idie because of | doubleheader to the Senators, who advanced from fourth to third place, only one point behind the Yankees. The Red Sox, losing both ends of a double bill to Philadelphia, slipped 7 into fourth’ place. Cleveland tied St. Louis for fifth by winning two GREAT INWORK| <==. <2: SOCCER IS BECOMING ‘The margins of the Senators’ vic- down the toboggan with 2 to 0 and BY FRANK GETTY 4, Holland. Best to Test. 2 B40 bighover: (United Press Staff Correspondent)| The Uruguayan flag was unfurlet Bi ect fro: taft at Colombes atn- ey 3 By the decistve score of 12 to 5, NEW YORK, June 24.—Soccer m the flag-staff at Colombes ai Fails By LAWRENCE PERRY. the Giants registered their ninth CSS NSS Sn Sy, SSss AUETHER Call the Tribune before you start IS on that trip. year mas En, NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF IN BATTLE THURSDAY NIGHT |». citer ccs In the District Court, Eishth sean District. In Probate No. WITH BERLENBACH, IS CLAIM 22: o voane co w Natrona, ss. In the Matter of the Estate of oni Taylor, Deceased. ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN football is perhaps the most truly| “ium, and the little Swiss captain By FAIR PLAY. international of all modern sports, | called on his tried men for a cheer to Deliver for ovean to ocean. No one expects (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune.)|Greb to receive his quietus, Harry that in pursuance of an order of \Copyright. 1924, Casper Tribune.) straight victory over Brooklyn.|" i his was strikingly demonstrated| for the victors. Then the teams Brookl: De if NEW YORK, June 24.—Young|may pull a bum bout every once in| the above entitled Court, made in NEW YORK, June 24.—Men| “Dutch” Ruether was knocked out] a+ the Olympic games earlier thia| Shook hands, held a triumphant pro- yn spite Stribling, who is training for his|a while, but he always keeps rosin|the above entitled matter, on the Seratd oH the Pamela of sowie: in sae BO eee eee month. cession, after which the South Good Chances. bout against Paul Berlenbach at the] off his fighting trunks. 16th day of June, 1924, the ‘who ave watched he various | 0u' c 3 Americans fell upon their ts * i ¥ vill 0. Wee sa eaty Tia ecb teal ree ae | nurah bead Ginelnnall ado 8: Instead of the United States, ‘ell upo: opponents milk fund show next Thursday w undersigned, as Executor will sell and kissed them vigorously. any of the Olympic crews defeat the| In a twin bill featured by home| Great Britain and France monopol-| "O14 timers said they never remem- decause he will need all the addl-| should stay still a moment and hold| hereinafter described at public Yale varsity eight on the Seine it|runs, Philadelphia scored a two-ply | Mins. victories an ene aie fone | bered seeing a soccer team that By JOHN B. FOSTER. tional prestige he can accumulate] out his jaw, it is more than probable | auction to the highest bidder for ee an Pangea ff Wools Cas bie Ear saag Sh ase pa Saharan fighting Me aiet Ym the penal: showed the class of this Uruguayan (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune.)|to draw a crowd to the Michigan|he would hear the birds singing in| cash, or for notes from the pur- ey expect Yale, in other words, | . t organization, unless it were the old] NEW YOR —The most|city arena on July 4. On the|the magnolias of faraway Dixie.|chaser for the purchase price, to clean up in the’ international |two circuit drives,‘ one with the| finals and finals? English “Corinthians” of 1899. They | @!sappointing “good” left handed coming due one year from date ie, aquatic battle. Edward Leader has | beses full. Holland — Sweden’ — Switzerland| are figured better than the best pro-| Pitcher in major league baseball—| meet Harry Greb. Greb is also on|likely to prove so amiable as alljof sa bearing interest at the shown himself to be an extraordi- a Rae oe —Uruguay! fessional teams of Europe. that is Ruether of the Brooklyn|the milk fund card, facing Ted|that. He is an active lad and lads| rate of eight per cent per annum, nary coach, a man who can adapt With, the possible exception of oe @ Nationals Moore, the English middleweight. |of the sort are difficult targets for|to be secured by a mortgage on himself to conditions and carry his Sweden, none of these countrie Which reminds us that the only| Whenever Ruether is expected to the stolid Paul to shoot at. the property purchased, on the . crew with him in the process. Standings will cut much of a figure in the| difference between soccer in the| Pitch particularly well and the team| suppose both Moore and Berlen:| Stribling, by the way, is training 15th day of July, 1924, between In selecting the outstanding eight wemainder of the games. mang lands represented at the Olym-| Seems to have found its footing on| bach were to stow away their more|on top of a Newark hotel and looks|the hour of nine o'clock in the of the American season, the rowing Neither will Czecho-Slovakia, nor| pics this year 1s in the matter of|the slinpery surface of the league| famous opponents? There would be|to be in the very pink of shape.| morning and the setting of the critic is faced by a rare situation. National League. the Irish Free State, nor Bulgaria.| professionalism. Some countries are|Tace, along comes Mr. Ruether and| mourning among the Michigan City|Pa Stribling is talking about a late| sun on the same day, commencing have to show his best stuff if only As for Berlenbach, {f Stribling any part or all of the premises nation’s great day, he is carded to] But William Lawrence is hardly There exist two crews entitled in Club Le Yet these countries furnished soc-|more lenient in thelr attitude| founders around like an unshod] promoters that would resound from|summer trip to Europe with his at the hour of nine o'clock a. m., every way. to be regarded as great.| New York ---. 20 cer teams that were in the running] towards the line of demarcation} mule in a bog. family. McTigue is met on Labor|@t the South front door of the They are, of course, Washington | Chicago 21 after those of the United States and| than others. If Ruether is going back, Brook- Day. Court House of Natrona County, and Yale. Brooklyn 24 France had been eliminated. lyn will not need him much long Ja EES AEG W: bpitepss oy CRE Vrorine, But Yale must ‘be ranked first—| Pittsburgh 29 One reason for the truly interna- but there is always a grave belief IEFS subject only to the confirmation at least, so it would seem to the| Cincinnati 31 tional scope of soccer is its simpll- > that he Is not ce back physically ‘aor fale, a8; by aw rovided. Reider on EeG Ente Divat on | Boat 32 city. It 1s played on a level field, Yesterday 8 and that he simply does not get pinta property Herein heroes x6 certain refinement in watermanship| Philadelphia -—-—--- 28 32 the object being to kick a ball be-||, there when expected to. NEW YORK.—Pal Moran, New = CO ee that Leader gave his crew and] St, Louis ---.------. 21 36 tween two posts and beneath a In 1919 Ruether won 19 games and | orjeans lightweight, won from Jack rag phd ay! Block No. 19 which: Callow .didnblt- tflose)debos testy s third. Bleven men play on a side Scores lost six for the Cincinnati club and| 7Zivio of Pittsbrugh when the latter FROM SNYDER 010 j Casper, Wi omi ie ae tiny of the outboard work, particu- American League. and that is about all there is to the was one of the big reasons why | was disqualified for foul hitting one 4 Lot "No 2 ne Block No. 19, larly the blade work of the two] ‘cub wr Ls game. Cincinnat! won the championship.| minute and 43 seconds after the Casper, Wyoming. Cure crews, would suggest that the Elis] petroit -.—------- 34. 28 Different “nations may develop Western League. ‘That year, he looked like the coming:| aght started. Lot No. 3, in Block No. 19, were a little more finished. New York cccoiu. 80.925 different technique; some may use| Des Moines, 14; Denver, 4. major league left hander. Ever SALT CREEK, Wyo., June 24 Casper. Wyomin pate On the second count, Washington | washington =a 81 26 their heads like feet or their feet] Omaha, 8; Lincoln, 4. Since then he has had the same] WrW YORK—Because of an in-| (Special to the Tribune).—In a fast t ‘No. 20, Ff; Block No. 67, rowed without the valuable Luft in| poston PEE SEAT: 28° 27 Uke ‘heads, and work up a tricky} ‘Wichita, 4; St. Joseph, 1. appearance but he never has ar-| jured eye, Paul Berlenbach is not]and exciting game of baseball here pi Wyomin ng. . the waist of her shell and a crew| cleveland .- 29 «29 passing game, but, after all, there} Tulsa, 6; Oklahoma City, 3. rived at the point of stardom. expected to be able to oppose Young | today between the Marine Oil com- Lot No. 21, in Block No. 67 has to be appraised, as it was boast-|¢+t. Louls -.--.-----. 28 28 is the ball, and the single idea of has been his fault that he has failed, ‘ t Stribling in one of the four star/ pany and Snyder Salt Creek teams, | Casper, Wyoming. ed, not as it might have been National League. because at various times he has} mink fund bouts. the final result of which was in Lots Nos. 8 and 9, in Block No. the game is to work it down the boasted had fate been tore kind. field some way and kick it through Chicago New York, 12; Brooklyn, 5. been at odds with his bosses. doubt until the Jast man was out,/91 of Butie Addition, Casper, Technical minds were struck by a that goal. x Pittsburgh, 4; Cincinnat!, 2. It might be thought that the five] pogron.—Jack Sharkey, Rox-|the Marines won by the score of | Wyoming. greater celerity in beginning the re- simplicity, more} Philadelphia, 7-11; Boston, 3-7. years which have elapsed since} pury heavyweight, earned the de-|6 to 5. The sensational pitching of West 45 feet of Lot Wo. 8 and covery by the Yale crew, something v. than anything eise, accounts for the] No others played. Ruether made his high record would ver Floyd Johnson of Iowa|Baker for the Snyder Salt Creek] all of Lot No. 9, in Block No. 96 that means much so far as the run| 70am iisaleane fact that the gamé is played well, in otal Save takan'a int olt on his stm and (CMe o eae ee team, who struck out 17 of the Ma-|of Butler’s Addition, Casper, Wy- of the boat is concerned. fone aie sees ee every country. The Swiss could American League. added a lot.to his stability. Neither rines was the feature of the game. | oming. Pennsylvania, taking the season | mecncos rs scarcely be expected to hold their} washington, 5-4; New York, 82, | has happened. The players who The Snyder Salt Creek team — hi Lot No. 10 in Block No. 96, of as a whole was as good a crew, the] Gienrock 2 3 own in deep-sea diving, and pole} pnijladelphia, 2-6: Boston, 0-3. face him when he {s golng well say open dates and would’ like to hear|Butler’s Addition, Casper, Wy- writer feels as Cornell. Many row] region aig vaulting is thus far a lost art in| Gieveland, 44; Chicago, 8-1. his arm fs as good as ever. But he from Midwest, Elks, Glenrock, La-| oming. ing followers will probably place the | ravoye 6 Soviet Russia, but in every land] g¢. Louts-Detrolt games postpon-| isn't going good often enough. voye for gam Lot No. 5 in Block No. 107, of Quakers BAN sic there is some level sward and some | oq; rain. If Ruether were pitching the ball The poore: R. H. ¥.|Butler’s Addition, Casper, Wy- Independent League. boys and men willing to get out and| this season that he did in 1919, the TENNIS | Marines 000 011 040-6 3 3] oming. Team LiPo d en = pel aronnes Giant Saar. Brooklyn club would be a certain Snyder SaltG'k 001 110 011-6 6 3] Lot No. 6, in Block No. 107, of MITH SLIP" Merchants fe if ee No games scheduled. — factor in the championship race, , Batteries: Johnson and Andrews;|Butler’s Addition, Casper, Wy- Fordsons 1 four countries that outlasted ¢ Baker and Rhinehart. oming. ; eh rl H aul Rhera in Olymplo elfmination oe ee WIMBLEDON, June 3-—COr The s Lot No; 7, in Block No. 107, of r matches and came down to ‘the Ameri +. ssoclate - , , , utler’s ition, Casper, Wy- Ik TITLE PLAY Telapioee, = ae 3 S28] anai tests—vruguay, Switzerland,| Kateas City, 3; Indianapolis, 6. Ss ort Calendar Hams II, the American international-| >, Bes are ee oming. Coliseums 3 Sweden and Holland~-showed ditfer.| | Minneapolis, 4; Columbus, 5. P ist, defeated B. A. McGuire of Bng-| .14 wurgeon, announces the moving|_ Lot No. 7, in Block No. 107, of Harry Yessness ~ 5 ent styles of play, different quall-| Others postponed rain. land in the men’s singles of the]? i. Otrice from the O-8 building |Butler’s Addition, Casper, Wy- AT HOY: LAKE "the Swiss tenn was the beet "Southern League. “8 sess | Wosey, Waa el amues armen ebeainp Phone S8t 125 feet of Lot No. 8 The Swiss team was the best at of Queens County Jo » 63, across from Henning. Phone 0. leet 0 ‘0. in § short game, Geibuling end pass-| New Orleans, 5; Little Rock, 3. PE oper Tee se son M. Washburn, America, apes Lae de 96 of Butler's Addi- G Tod ing, feinting and at trick plays. Yet} Birmingham, 2; Nashville, 13. Meeting af Kentucky Jockey Club| defeated Colonel H. G. Mayes, Eng-| For results try Tribune Clas-| tion, cas er, Wyoming, HOY LAKE, England, June 24.— 's AY || tne vruguayans wore them to a| Atlanta, 1; Chattanooga, 6. Litrato “6, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4. fled AZ. LPR, HORTH, (@y The Associated Press.)—Mac- Donald Smith, lowest scoring Amert- handily, 3 to 0.. can yesterday, with a 72 in the National League. Sweden's big husky team was de- Texas League. qualifying play for the British open| Pittsburgh at Cincinnati. feated by the diminutive iss in| Dallas, 9; Wichita Falls, 4. golf championship, took an 81. over New York at Brooklyn. the semi-final and Holland lost to] Fort Worth, 4; Shreveport, 3 (14 the Royal Liverpool course today.| Boston at Philadelphia. Uruguay in a game which was vain- | innings.) frazzle in the finals and beat them| Mobile, 4; Memphis, 3. Meeting of Hamilton Jockey Club opens at Hamilton, Ont, Golf feated ‘V. Rudolph, Executor. 1 United States public links cham- pionship opens at Dayton, O. National intercollegiate champion- His total of 153 1s sure to place him — ly protested. Sweden then beat Hol-| Galveston, 4; Beaumont, 3. ship opens at Greenwich, Conn. among those who will begin the 72 American League. land and the final standing was: Houston, 1; San Antonion, 0. Pacific Northwest championship holes of championship play Thurs-| Cleveland at Chicago. 1. Uruguay. —_ tournament, at Vancouver, B. C. day. Detroit at St. Louis (2 games). 2. Switzerland. se For results try @ Tribune Clas-| Trans-Mississippi championship oes ington at New York. 2. Sweden. sified Ad. tournament, at St. Joseph, Mo. ? 2 ? Wyoming Motorway ? ? ? Philadelphia at Boston. Tennis National intercollegiate cham- pionship tournament at Haverford, Pa. Shooting Mississippi State trapshooting tournament opens at Jackson. Colorado State trapshooting tour- nament, at Denver. South Dakota State tropshooting tournament at Watertown. Boxing Danny Frush vs. Fred Bretonnel, 20 rounds, at Pa ———— ERNIE ROSS SIGNED TO BATTLE FRANKIE LARSON ON JULY 4 Ernie Ross, who recently added to his laurels by stopping Spider Keliy Montana feather champton, in the fourth round, has been signed to moet Frankie Larson of Sioux City, Ia., on July 4 at Belle Pourc Ross will make 128 pounds. Th bout will be over a 10-round route BASEBALL QUESTION BOX If you have some question to-ask about baseball— If you want a rule interpreted— If you want to know anything about a play or a player— Write to John B. Foster, the man who helped make the rules under which the game is played today. If you want a per: sonal reply enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Other wise your question will be answered in this column. Address—John B. Foster, Baseball Correspondent of the Casper Tribune, 811 Ws Building, New York. (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune) thrown out at-first he would be given a sacrifice hit as a reward for his good intentions. Question —Will you please tell me. the work of a captain and man- i ‘Anawer.—Advise you to secure a WY, a ness manual published by one of the con- J F Answer—The run counts {f it {8} cerns that publishes books on ath- home before the third hand is put/letics. It would take too much A-B GINGER ALE which the local battler expects to out. The runner going to s<cond|space to answer in this column, BEVO 10c ~ 2 for 250 ~.15e |e oii ct t,t ince eget nen ' ) man touched the base and there was| Question—Batsman hits pitched | ‘The Tri-State Roundup association 7 5 no force play, therefore, to kill the| ball which strikes home plate. Ball) of Belle Fourche is sponsoring the d ir run. rebourtds and hits batter before | fight and the Ross-Larson bout will ter bunts the ball up-the first base| Answer—Description of the play| Ross is already in training for hts line, Ball is played home and run-|makea it appear to be a foul hit.| go, doing road work and gym work Answer,—It was really a squeere Pxpert watch and jewelry repair _—_— play. If the batter could have been] ing. Casper Jewelry Co., 0-5 Bldg. 11? Wyoming Motorway '? 2? touching ground. A says batter is | be made the headliner of the celebra- alentine ner ls safe. Batter reaches first.| Batter’s box is usually considered] for ral hours dally. He emerged ‘ St. Louis Aso manufacturers of GRAPE BOUQUET Buy by the case from your Dealer A Bros. Cigar & Tobacco Co. Distributo Casper, W: Question—Runter on third, Bat-| out and B says foul ball. tion day card Would this be called a time at bat|to be foul territory, from his Montana fight in good con Unverying High Quality. Since 1B48 [101 how wouta it be recorded? Sem NO dition,