Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 15, 1924, Page 6

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PAGE SIX. . Che Casper Daily Crifune ——— — | World Results wri zcrt,.= THE TRIBUNE’S PAGE OF SPORTING NEW SENATORS BACK WITHIN SINGLE ar [x @ND THATS MY FAVORITE CZ COME ‘To THINIKC ABOU Ue UH Onalaat, VE INSTRUMENT, TOO. HOW 1% (GUESS.ATO BE ! ISTHE BasiEsy FB }] much 1S YouR SAXOPHONES § wiee roN TOTRY TOLEARN ? THE S QXKOPHONE SOME INSTROMENT fe THAT GIN'T QUITE ISAS EQSY AS Beshditepho egy j ‘ ; QNN THING RLLARE Ue Washington Trims Cleveland Again as Yanks Split Doubleheader With the Browns; Athletics Beat Out Detroit. (By The-Associated Press) By doing one thing at a time and doing it well while the eYankees tried to kill two birds with one stone and failed, the Washington Senators are only one game behin@ the American league leaders today. Finding Danforth rather soft, the Yanks breezed through the opened to a 7 to 3 triumph but in the*sunset r! (Copyright, 1828, by Standings Yesterday’s tilt they bowed for the third con-) over Cleveland with a 2 to 0 shut-out, sective time before the puzzling] Judge made @ triple, double and a 25th and 26th homers, Huggins'| The down-trodden Athletics sprang negregation dropped the final, 9 to]a surprise in Detroit by tieing the aS aaa eS . - Ege AER ME CHECKING UP RING made off Faber inadequate to man ae UTS OF LATE DATE YANK SCULLS torious, 6 to 2. H, N. {‘Woody” Woodman, court reporter in business hours and a BO O LA The»Chicago Cubs, the Giants, only CH AMPS TAKE serious challenger for the National ; it course by shooting a's. “To. do Wt he shot ‘ Es league pennant / sustained tw: birdies on the fourth, sixth ahd ninth holes and sunk ai zt ¥ the fifth. He was over par on only the seventh and eighth. By The Senators have threatened be- Mike Brady, the famotis eastern professional. For the last 12 years he Luis Vicentini Hangs }—-Fists have been flailing|season spurt out into.the van was the Bruins’ pitching staff, probably . has been playing almost datly around Quincy, Pueblo and Denver, Colo. S| P whH seh frequency this summer] the sensation of the June stretch. Tilt be out of the game tor the ret! 3()() Metre Swim To- leep Producer on of the winners. who. is always a great strain attached Brooklyn to St. Louis, obtained de 5 In the heavyweight ranks, we find|to being the league leader in tho Olympic vy wets: doiiga, wctaite vabpenepheneea Y yack lictous revenge by shutting out his — Friends of Homan Pullin, versatile: player of the Texacos, went on sconced in the driver's seat. It| If the Senators were to win the this event this afternoon, defeating | Kremer and Stone was measured by|fficers competing in the Olympic|tished” in the Tribune Sunday showed the oll athlete leading the one pene sn rye Mens locks 2s though Jack might remain| pennant, baseball might come to pi Rahtenen pair by five lengths and| Philadelphia's 8 to 5 win over Pitts-} modern pentathion fell far behind|ciouters with an average of .703. 1 of a schedul roun ut @ e = somebody's chauffeur or some other| might even compete with those in- contest. Completing the acquattic|average of .829. On Sunday he was offictally up three times with two] welght circles over Rocky Kansas terrible thin, vestigations as a dfawing card. ra ry hp iy seen tie eee test at a distance of 300 metre, Lieu-I hits which makes his average .777. Pullin in the three games he has}of Buffalo. ph i such as happens to @: e Americans allowe « that’s fair play. teenth. His time, however, was| Both Dyer and Pullin are all-around players and stars with the willow andj/onds of fighting in the eleventh champion still ‘is Mike Mc- in Philadelp! $e Sn Bae LATE oh pig tron has f nearly a minute behind that of the|which of the two is ahead at the end of the season will not alter the| round, was entirely unexpectet put|Tigue of Dublin. Now, Mike is a| Down hia, from their rivals. he winners’ = . " t the only thing you can 18 3-5 seconds. Lieutenant Freder-|several offers to play semi-pro ball in St. Loufs this season because} After going down in the tenth earn. put’ be sist :Baseie $Bey wait |r Stuy en cy lame iee three and one-half lengths in the] brooklyn ‘sag { tc R. Pitts, Qnished twenty-fifth, | ne considered his job in the oil fields more important than baseball. .tround, ‘Vicentin! suddenly changed|Whereof champions, even in this enth in a field of 39, book early in the season and another didn’t keep a score on @ couple] fident’ opponent in the eleventh|tion to give it up—which is what Pemesuie of games, several of the players in the Of! City league will never bejround. After taking a count of|/he is bound to do the first time Austrian swimming star, Won the/averages was Ted Madden, popular left fielder for the Legion. His aver-| face Vicentini’s renewed offensive, |inveterate and veteran survivor of final of the 1,500 metre swim, free/age showed up three hits in 20 times up for a matk of only .150. As a] and soon wilted to the floor. Several hundred fights, took his title shoots of Wingard, Sisler’s sensa-jsingle and walked once ‘n five at 4 score in the ninth and winning out ufacture enough runs to beat Chi- habituee of the golf links in his apare tme, Sunday broke the record on crushing blows in thelr third t “siden “Woody” is no beginritr at the game, having started to play when (United Press Staff Corerspondent.)| fore, never perhaps as dangerously Once is a decade some flash in the pan marks up a record in athietivs, that every now and then one has| Their time out in front may have ARGENTEDIL, France, July 15.— of the season with a fractured wrist U. S. Battler. > a one of our most (unconsciously)| Second half of tlie season. Kelly and Paul Costello, raced to an| former team mates, 12 to 0, the warpath yesterday to prove that he and not Joe Dyer of the Lavoye quite a while at the top, if he doesn’t | have considerable influence on na- Hungary's by nine lengths on the|%Ursh. the leaders today in the swimming The Texaco score book shows that up to Sunday Pullin, playing in] Queensboro A. C., Luis Vicentini of . b 1 Politics often has an influence on tenant George H. Bare, was best| played in has been in center field, behind the plate and at first base. Vicentini’s victory, which came|>*®vyweight boxer: pair, Stock and Detton, ta set the y stance, Brigadier General *Gimlet leader, Lindmann, of Sweden, who|esteem in which cach man is held by the rooters. met with the hearty approval of| mighty fine broth of a lad, and his we i was 6 minutes, 34 seconds. Fecond and last heat, Time: 6] pittsburgh Captain Doh Scott thirty-third, and Tire, camplexion of the whole affair|Gay and age, are made. Still, Mike St. Louls - e PARIS, July 15.—(By the Asso¢i-|given credit for the hits they made this season. nine on a preliminary knock down,| he sets foot in the ring. style, In the Olympic competition| matter of fact he made four hits in four times up in the opening game ? —- to Michigan City with him. earlier U.S. TENNIS tional rookie, In spite of Ruth’s}tempts, driving In five runs, Washington made it three straight|!n the tenth, 6 to 4 cago anda the White Sox. were vic- the Community Club golf course by shooting a 35. To do it he shot defeat at the hands of New York, : TRIALS RACE by a 7 to 0 score, and the great . +, [he was caddying on the Quincy, Mass., course under the tutelage of; NEW YORK, July 15.—(UniteA]as this year. Their sudden mid- Grover Cleveland Alexander, ace ot| First American 15th in i eae but it is the steady grind at any kind of sport that brings home most to @heck up and see who really is] done the Senators good, but there (By the Associated Press)—The| Dickerman, recently traded by "4 Jens amusing young film actors still en- St iie, easy victory in the Olympic trials in] The superiority of Carlson’ over} PARIS, July 15.+-American army|team was the leading hitter of the Oil City leanne: The averages pub- NEW YORK, July 15.—By virtue .| develop Kleig eyes or get shot by|tloral affairs, The world’s series 2,000 meter course, thus earning the competition, the third event of the|two games, had collected five hits in six times up which gave him an| Chile, today has the call in light baseball, so it is only turn about among the'Americans, finishing fif- A few points more or less makes little difference in the long run.| after two minutes and sizteca sec- the lght-heavies, the pace on the first half of the course. e” Butler has made things so dry covered the course in three minutes,| Dyer, by the way, turned down a‘ contract in a minor league and| the spectators, heart is as big as the side of al =¥ es Switzerland defedted Brasil by minutes, 55 seconds Cincinnati Captain BE. N. Harmon, thirty-sev. Because one team ‘manager was careless enough to lose his score | with a furious aitack upon his con-| has the title, and shows no disposi- ated Press).—Andrew Chariton, the Probably the man who was made to look the worst in Sunday's| Kansas struggled to his feet only to} Harry Greb, bounding Pittsburger, today. ano! for which he did not receive credit. this month. Washington ‘4 and two out of three in another game for That boosts his average up to Sunday to .383 and with his thr8e hits Charlton's time was 20 minutes, Detrott ~----. : +. Sunday, puts him up to .387. Chicago 7 seconds, breaking the world's rec: Mickey Walker, popular” young Elizabeth, N. J. welterweight, is National League. vew York, 7; Chicago, 6. nad ord. Madden for his years has had as much baseball experience as any _ | figuring on taking on Benny Philadelphia, 8: Pittsburgh, 8. St. Louts Chariton’s official time was twen.|™man in the league. He has played with Boston coll Wyoming uni- STARS TAKE Leonard, who has a crown of his Louis, 12; Brooklyn, 0. Cleveland 5 “|versity, Laramie of the Midwest league and a half dozen sem{-pro and own in the next lighter division. F ty minutes 6 3-5 seconds, breakin, 3oston-CIncinnati, rain. seseeert ag “395 | the record established» by himself “'| Sunday by more than a minute. Charlton's time in the Sunday trial was 21 minutes, 20 2.5 seconds. amateur teams In the east This, if and when it comes off, should be the battle of the year. Kid Sullivan's junior lightweight title may have taken wings before this gets into print. American League. New York, 7-4; 6t. Louts, 3-9. Chicago, 6; Boston, 2. PARIS GAME can’t keep a good man down,” “Work will win,” “It's never "and a number of other bromidic maxims that put Horatio Alger, ina class with Sclomon as the original wise cracket of all times OIL CITY LEAGU! G. W. LL." Pet shing 2; cI y 10 3 a : 5 ‘oss, local featherweight. : ‘The veteran Jo | eee Oe A Legion 10 6 4 ciated. Press.)—Mrs. Martha Nore}, Ernie ar in which he was unable to persuade the federaf au-| lated Press.) — Vincent Richards |i20: month, ts findine troabre ne, ning rately en Yar leus of New York, won the final of | Y°8? due to a jam i Innocent. The majority of the wisescres in town|0@ Frasees T. Hunter of the Gag abe stor tae: cen get i 83 he 400 metre Olympic swim, for] tborities that he was Innocent. 5 veg | United States, today defeated wil |‘ featherweight Western Leagu. Glenrock 10 3 7 ; 3 expected Ernie to go the way of the majority of men who have served| Orel Piste today sefeated Wil-/iimit, and may soon be out of things, w 7-3; Lincoln, 6-4 Lavoye 10 1 9 b ninutes seit Her time was! time, On the contrary he settled down, went into the strictest training | rd y sr he “ ALe Goldstein is by ec 6 minutes 2 1-5 seconds. La Ap aan though slowing perceptibly, stil! looks as good as any of them. So there haven't been so many changes after all, but the champs, with a couple of exceptions, are flirting with trouble—and fat purses. eee Omaha St. Joseph, 9 —— ar! and his fighting record since that date looks like John L. Sullivaf’s in > ridge Pound. bd gy Sige ees by Jos Lynch, who wants a crack Oklahoma City, 8; Des Moines, 1 INDEPENDENT aaa gee iy tayaey : ing ye red oe Ps at the crown the Jawith boy won Wor pthare, einelwlet Club A few weeks ago George Wallace Hislop, New York sportsman, saw oth a Dies from him in the Garten last winter. - Merchants Ross in action In South Dakota, Yesterday Hislop sent Ross transporta. .T While among ihe title men, the Coast League. Fordsons tion to Los Angeles with prders to report to-the James J. Jeffries stable. brown-skinned Pancho Villa, al No games scheduled Lee Douds Ross may never be the featherwéight champion of the world, but W LTER iF OWN he has proved that paying attention to business wins. peek pb a PARIS GAMES hita Falls, 8; Houston, 5. PARIS, Jujy 15.—(By The Asso- pacers which has drawn thirty-six entries. Sport Calendar TO. BE GOW OF LEW TENDLER, REPORTS. SAY Grand Circuit Crowds Gather Shreveport, 6; San Antonio, 1. Mscapein ts; Sane ae Games Today HAY—GRAIN ‘There’ something incogruous CHIX FEEDS— SALT about the idea of Washington win- 4 ning an American league pennant.| Casper Warehouse Co. Atlanta, 8;,Mobile, 9. 4 For so many years, the Senators Rock Chatt: m, wet clated Prews§.)—Serenaded by an , * : By FAIR PLAY. #, 268 INDUSTRIAL AVE Bas National League. Afro-American jazz band and pre-| | TOLEDO, 0. July 16.— If the eee, Sooariett, 1986, Casper Tribune) | acns age ay re ae hee TEL 27 Milnthersischeduien New crore at TRICE sented with flowers by admiring| Weather, man Goes not alter his} ptesting of Empire City Racing as-]\ NEW YORK, Ju ny rene | longue, a surefire eighth place team pn Brooklyn at Bt. Louis. French girls, the first contingent of] Promise of fair weather for today. | sociation at Yonkers. - aged by his success against Mickey | UPOP Which all the others could de-|sTORAGE FORWARDING American Association. Boston at Cincinnatt American Olympic athletes to start |the second Grand Circuit program | Medtng of Business Men's Racing| Walker, the welterweight champio. | 20"4 When they sought to avoid the A Milwatleae: 4: eroledoi® Philadelphia at Pittsburgh for home left Paris and will board|®t Fort Miam! track should be @) association at Chicago. of the world, Lew Tendier is going | V*8TC° of the bottom of the Indder.|For the best results in raisin St. Paul, 6: Radisapolis, 2 at on eae te the Leviathan at Cherobourg this|Tecord-breaking affair. Yesterday |- Meeting of Windsor Jockey club|to set sailgnot for the welter tte |, Washington didn't seem to mind.|thickens use Victor Buttermil GoluvibuaB; learn Cites ©. American League. evening. S@veral hundred friends} the t reputed to be one of the! at Windsor. : but for the junior welter crown,| !@¢k in the old days. Now they|Starter. For more eggs feed finn s. 11 ‘Lanlavtive 8 Chicand "ae * of the athletes, both Americans and| fastest mile ovals in the big line. Meeting of Kentucky Jockey club] whatever that may be. want a pennant to float over.the| Victor Scratch Feed and Laying wedi canta A 2 Be. Tooetnt French, gave them rousing che. was in pertect condition. With the] at Aphland. ew in too heavy to be a light-| White House, with merican | Mash, For results try a Tribune Clas | Cleveland at Washington. and American college yells. fine ist of pacers and trotters nomi Trotting. weight any more and yet he can| “easue Championship 1924” in sifled Ad. Detroit at Philadelphia — Rated for tne se eee reef enieetins of! Grand Clrcult at To-lstep on the scales under the wolter | DEominent_kold letters. ied Ad . lowers of the game believe that time | tego. limit, he says. He is i wea etch. snd tewelry repair, | SEE al necteoken ini Ea Athletics. pica ea enough a fighter and has a suf: Headlining the card is the Fort} Olympic Penthalon competitions at] qeent drawing power to make a new 22? Wyoming Motorway 12% | Meigs stake of $3,000 for 2:08 clase] Colombes stadium. clags—the junior welter, lying be ‘ Rowing. tween light and welter—a really n’ Olymple rowing competitions at Ar-| tional division instead of the purely genteuill, France. loca! and unofficial classification it . lawn me ceampion-| ‘Tendler’s first fight in his new s ships at or peste campaign will be against Eddie @ f IT ER . I ing. Casper Jewairy Co.. 9-S Bldg. ——————~— Shevlin, crac! . Y Alabama State trapshooting tour-|Sh8vlIn, the crack Boston welter. The writer learns that the two will nament at Birmingham. ming) an n gle in Boston at a date shortly Yachtin, to be named. If you have some question to ask about baseball— . If you want a rule interpreted— Annual regatta of Inter-Lake 07'S , — . + 7. e ” If you want to know anything about a play. or a pi Re ee eee Toe ey L" LDosianey, the waelack Vight heavy: Ls Y | Sass Boxing. welg who ts now at Gene Tun. eyre (t4 72 “zes Write to John B. Foster, the man who helped make the Olymple boxing championships be. | MOY'® training quarters working out 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—Joln B. Foster, Special Baseball Correspondent of the Casper Tribune, 811 World Building, New York. with the light heavy champion of America, has made a hit there. He has not only the looks of a real Un but his workouts with Tunney are defining him as a clever, hard-hit ting fighter who would make it in- teresting for anyone of his weight. It will be recalled that he and Tunney put Up an interesting no- decision bout in the west some months ago Tommy Gibbons says that Delaney is the best sparring partner with whom he ever worked, — gin at the Cirque de Paris, CHEYENNE YOUTHS ARE RIFLE TEAM MEMBERS CHEYENNE, Wyo., July 15.— Owen G. Troagtle and George B. Cheyenne, July 22, 23, 24, 25 Bigger:and Better Than Ever COWBOYS, COWGIRLS From All Parts of the World ey, ie meeune Leads Them All Pritchard, Cheyenne youths wh ii ii Pris aR cs bry ene orld’s Championships in Every Event military tralning samp” at Fort Thrilling, Sensational Feats in as members of the Rocky Mountain Horsemanship citizens military rifle team which a CES ee will compete at Camp Perry, Ohio Reckless, Bareback Races, Gavalry Exhibition, Indian War Dances Meet Me in Cheyenne Question—Can you please inform —the two Cheyenne boy: 4 one| NEWARK N. J.—Barthelmay Mo- me where I can obtain the full rules| | Question—Please tell me who hit| cach from Viab. Nevada, ‘ond idaho. nero, middleweight nani ot ———_ Secretary, Frontier Committee Cheyenne, Wyo. Nothing else will satisfy smokers who Know quality ‘10¢c-~ 2 for25c ~ 15c lar de Valentine Unvarying High Quality Since1848. (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune.) Question—If a foul ball is hit and|the catch but as the ball is in the the runner on first already has/air the sun gets ig his eyes and he touched second after the ball is hit,| steps away. The ball fails between is he out? f the pitcher's box and second base. Answer—No, He must go back|Is the pitcher given an error or is to first and follow the rule which |it a hit? says the runner must go back to] Answer—Bcore it a hit. It is al the base thet he held after a foul] most impossible to fleld ball with ball is batted. the sun staring a player squarely In the eyes. of baseball as it is played in the|the most home runs last year and France and Italy, was outpointed b United States? how many did Ruth hit? Emil Krug of Harrison, in his first Answer—Buy an official baseball] Answer—Williams of Philadelphia American ring appearance. The rules are in that publica-| batted 41 home runs inthe National league leading that organization and ae Ruth batted 41 in the American Question—Batter hits a high fiy| league for the Yankees leading his to the infield. Pitcher’ goes to make | league, Call the Tribune for highway in- formation. —— Yor results try a Tribune Clas sified Ad. _ 272 Wyoming Motorway 2? 2 COLUMBUS, 0.—Terry Martin, pared York bantamwetght, won the ges’ decision over Eddy O'Dowd, Columbus, in 12-wounds. sed

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