Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 8, 1924, Page 7

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, Casper Daily Cridun ; : PAGE SEVEN. =| THE TRIBUNE’S PAGE OF SPORTING NEWS First in News Of All Events World Results By Leased Wire FROWN GIVEN DOUBLE SETBAGK| *OUsNOW ME AL Adve fick Keefe THAT'D OUGHT To BE THE LEQST OF YOUR WORRIES, HOW TO SLIDE. THE ONLY TIME YOu EVER HAVE. “TO SLICE ts INTO © BATH TUS \ WONDER WHICH Is | WHEN ATHLETICS CAPTURE GAMES|)" = \SszesEs"7 Yanks Defeat Indians by Heavy Hitting as Detroit Loses Series Opener to feces Giants Maintain Winning Streak. (By The Associated Press) ~ As the result of a double defeat at the hands of the Philadelphia Athletics, the St. Louis Browns are now five full games behind the league leading Yankees. Sisler’s team went down to defeat in the opener, 7—3 and drop- ped the night cap 2 to 1. The Yankees increased their lead in the race for the No, BUT @ MAN LIKE | WHO 16 AS VALUAGLE To CLUB LIKE LAM, HE'D OUGHT To SLIDE $0 @S NOY ‘TO GET HORT wett,For ves \\(///] THEYS ONLY j)—t! ONE ANSWER— To THAT—— I. ty yt, 1924, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) advantage which this underdog posi-|too. She is bulwarked thus by = sus tion in sport is usually supposed to] preme confidence ‘that usually if I | NG GOLFE g EP DIK. well backed by her game, The veteran of tho British outfit is the Hon. chael Scott, who is 45 The triumph of Howard years old. W. A. Murray is 38, the| over Bill Johnston was foneie next oldest. Major C, C. O'Hazlett |s| lessened by the victory of Johnston 40, famous for his exclusive use of|and Griffin over the Kinsey broth- Meet! - eeting of Saratoga associat! at Saratoga, N. Y. ish Meeting of Business Men's Rec: association, at Chicago, J Annual regatta of National Assos at Lake vho has had experience playing in| test the odds wtre strongly in favor] George, N. Y. America, English golfers now in|of Miss Collett. his country seem to feel that the| The younger woman dominates her 's - championship eam will be characterized by a cer-|fleld and has done so all season.| tournament, at Chicago. pennant when they defeated the In-) game lead over Pittsburgh in second dians in a free hitting contest, 7 to| position. 5. Detroit lost the opening game Brooklyn landed the last game of of the four game series with Boston,| the series from Pittsburgh, 9 to 4 to 2 The Cincinnati club made a clean Washington's: winning from Chi-| sweep of its four-game series with iFTAe cago, 6 to 3, did not gain on the| the Phillies, winning the closing Yankees, but cut the Tigers’ advan-| game of the series, 6 to 3. tage in second place to one game. | The Braves went down to defeat The McGraw clan made it five]at the hands of the St. Louls Car- games out of six from Chicago-in the| dinals, 6 to 2, Hornsby’s timely hit- National league, winning, 5 to 3. The| ting being largely responsible. ATURE OF BIG Giants now have a nine and a half —————— four clubs, the driver, mid-iron,| ers, a signal ; °° Bristowe's age is set at 32; George - os aw Arg debe en ial British Walker Cup A. Torrance is 33; Dennis H. Kyle jational eee. end Beh An additional incentive to play]gross score will win the cup and W. H. Hope is 26; BE. F. Storey 4 haa MARES a hard with his bat.|{2 the Wyoming state golf tourna-| three wins by any one club will con- Team Age Average Cambrigde University team captain S rt Cale dar ting order, aince he got his Tigers on| ment Which will be contested late/'stitute permanent possession of the 1s 23 while Tolley, the captain is 28. po! n Detroit soil, in order.to get the most | ‘his month on the Casper Country | trophy. Is Low, Report. ag of his batting out of his players,|club course, has been provided in}, Every man who plays in the state a They were not winning on their own | the form of a cup which will be] tournafnent this year will be asked reekrreert ‘ W: d d field after they had made a record|S!ven for the state team champion-|to donate $1 towards paying for] | By LAWRENCE PERRY. alker and Leonar Philadelphia _ on the road that brought out the|*P- the cup and any defictency -will be] (Copyright 1924, ‘he Casper Tribune) - BEART ot ee fans bearing “Lo, the conquering|, All of the golf clubs tn the state} taxen care of by the Casper Coun- NEW YORK, Aug. 8.—New blood, To Be in Good pe alicia a i have been advised of this trophy|try club. young blood. ie Ty started in Detroit with Blue|Pens put up by a personal letter! ‘This trophy 1s expected to brin These are the two sallent charac- Condition. patting fifth. He moved Biue ap | sent out Monday by Ferris Hamilton | up the standard of play during the| teristics of the Walker Cup team fiation of Amateur Oarsmen | until he had him batting first in the|°f the Casper Country club. year in the various clubs and will] Which the British will send to this DEFEAT 1 MAS Hl} il at Springfield, Mass. a second game against New ‘York.| Each club in the tournament will|servo as a continual incentive to} country to play American amateurs . ‘Athtetics. By FAIR PLAY. z3 That brought-Blue back to the posi-| turn in the names of four men, at|members to cut down their handi-} %t Garden Clty next month, Continuation of Tailt (Copyright 1924, The Casper Tribune)| s+" Touts _ Be 20 eaz| tion of lead-off man, which he fill.|Jeast one day before the tournament | caps. ©) As British .gole) gpa: the Beibigh atDattin, Inna ae NEW YORK, Aug. Mickey | Cnicago --..nnee ed last season and which he filled| Starts, whose scores in the.quality-| | The cup has been ordered and will outtit is .distinciy, = young, teat, & + ty aes Walker and Benny Leonard, now with fair credit, although he did net| ins round will be taken as the team | shortly be on display in a downtown | "uch younger outfit than has com-| | By WALTER CAMP. Canada-Ja) 7 that arrangements for their New Philadelphia @o so well as in 1922. scores. ‘The team having the low! window. Pee PRUE amis cbc ag PEN! mp, FB Le MSA es match, at ese path Se 8 ecision battle have been per- — ax golfers mature later in e . . 8.—Psychology note e yee - eS -Reltle Ravebess per-! Boston —.2---.csn-ue- 45 60 419 Pang patesiie an pike Searn tant British Isles than in the United] on golf links is indicated as patent-| Western championship tourna: training, Mickey in Jersey and Leon- ust be Keyed up to the foint where | Sistea anated Aumetiosons mill Be nal iy ae on, ceber Seine Scryers, DEN" Gotten: Sanaa ehe is the (Cataitila’ \ eltheedp eoith MaMhadt sat: ve LH, mpressed by the youthfulness of| Dorothy Campbell Hurd semed able,| Cotton States champtonshtp tour This is sure going to be the battle Soudte Yer thay are! to etaha-” an < the British invaders which, after|for instance, to score quite as low|Mament, at Birmingham. of the year. Walker has seldom chance of taking the ledgue lead “df . : Il, “is comparative—as the English} #8 Glenna Collett and sometimes| Pacific Northwest championship fought with the wraps off, but he ig not that one run in each ‘score al: ritics are, lower on the way to the final brac-| tournament, at Tacoma, sit have to daiitcupon’ this: coca, Wave. fapcabunte: tha. ditterestosstet\: Cyril H. J. Tolley, captain of the| ket in golf at Shennecossett. ae fs ange 2s ect abe eae nvading band, is the only member| But when the two met for the final] National trophy rac ie ee a a hearer 4 most games the score is so close at onard wi up some int that one ru! e - SGposition of a Sart he tas riot tacbd vig thetised ‘eu the aa pie era BY FRANK GETTY onds.to leave the ring, at the end gince he was champion. ‘age that goes withithe lead: (United Press Staff Correspondent)|of the first round, under the impres ‘Betting men. have not. started. to NEW YORK, Aug. 8—(United|sion that he had knocked out the| ‘ain element of rawness, but on the| Her opponents ‘are submissive. They| Maine open championship tourna- ight,yet, or at least they : Press)—-Deciding the question of algiant, who lay stunned on the can.| ther hand, since they will come|know she can outdrive them and|ment opens at Saco. ived At any definite con- peer 30... foul in the prize ring is always a pre-| vas. But the timekeeper decided the} "re, with everything to win and they know that if she fs “on her Boxing. <n apviGns > carious business, bell hd saved Jess, and there was] .°thing to lose, #0 far at Teast A$} game’* sho can defeat them. And the] Sonny Smith Harry Gordon, ‘The hitch tr the ari ts for Yesterday s ‘Boxers, from, time immemorable,|a hurry call to get Dempsey back | Jrestige goes, they may find all the| real fact 1s that Glenna_knows it 12 round Edgewood, N. the bout was Jimmy Johnston's un- - and one of theclatest of these {8/into the ring before Willard’s sec- willingness to assume all the fi- Georges Carpentier, have .shown|onds should claim the fight for their nancial obligations with respect to Scores adeptness at taking advantage of|man on the groun® that Dempsey the fighters that Rickard had prom- technicalities involved in the Mar-|had disqualified himself by quitting ised. P auis of Queensbury rules the ring. Tex will plunge big when he wants League. As it stands at present, the ref- to hook up champions and lesser New York, 7; Cleveland, 5. eree is the sole judge. If a boxer] By the way, Andy Griffin who promoters are naturally scared when American League. Boston, 4; Detroit, 2. makes a claim of foul, or the referee|refereed the recent much-disputed they try to stand on the same ‘Washington at Chicago. Philadelphia, 7-2; St. Louis, 3-1. observes a foul blow, he must/Tunney-Carpentier fight, says he ground. As a matter of fact, if the] Philadelphia at St. Louis. Washington, 6; Chicago, 3 (10° in-|award the fight to the aggrieved/did not try to stop the fight in the fighters get as much out of this} Boston at Detroit. nings) party. tenth round, as we all imagined battle as Rickard was going to give] New York at Cleveland. Often, the third man in the ring|Griffin says that after the official them, they will have to do it out of National League. is not in a position to judge exactly | physician had indicated by a sign their cut on the receipts, In other National League. New York, 5; Chicago, 3. where a blow landed. This was the|that Carpentier appeared in a bad words, Johnson is making the fight-| Chicago at Boston. Brooklyn, 9; Pittsburgh, 6. case when Tunney stopped Carpen-|way, he asked the Frenchman if he ers gamble with him. But it does} pittsburgh at Philadelphia. Cincinnat!, 6; Philadelphia, 3. tler. Andy Griffin, ordinarily the| wanted to quit. It was then that not look to be much of a plunge, as} st. Louis at Brooklyn. St. Louls, 6; Boston, 2 coolest and most able of referees,! Georges spat out his indignant “No” had to decide whether the French- wa thas | man had been struck low. He de- cided to the contrary, stuck to his guns and the outcome was as sat- t. Jcseph, 2; Des Moines, 0. isfactory as possible under the tur- pitta bulent circumstances with which| Swinging into August, the Bam was NIE ao oy y, 1; Omaha, 0, 4 1 SPORT BRIEFS Oklahoma City, 1; Omaha, % I carpentier and his crafty manager] only five behind his best year and ; B Texas League. Francols Descamps, sometimes man-|was tearing off four-ply, belts at arx ' a CITY.— William T.| Daas, 11; Wichita Falls, 5 (12 in-] 28° to urround a defeat. double the rate he showed at the Cl h ‘Tilden, national champion, “- 5 It is argued by some that the|end of July three years ago. announced that he will play on the Kenn} ‘Werth, 10; Shreveport, 9. judges should be polled in an in- ' American Davis Cup team in the} Houston, 10; San Antonio,’ 3. Beaumont, 5; Galveston, 6. staneo like this, since they are so] Luis Angel Firpo engaged for distributed about the ring that one|training quarters, for the Wills , might conceivably have been in a}fight, those at White Sulphur ND N B T { Const League. better position to judge the blow in|Springs (not far from Saratoga Sa eee Ft 5 | goa question than was the referee. Dempsey last year. Asked about i a Ts ‘jae But think what this would mean.| Springs, used by Champion Jack for tha: a pday pa ol aged ccaer San Francisco, 10; Los ae 1) tired fighter, struck in the stom-|this, the Wild Bull of the Pampas LONDON, Aug. 8.—(By the As-| bstween Tom ms aul light Sacramento, 11; Beattie, | a ach, would yell, ‘Foul.” ‘The ref-}said “Well, they weren't unlucky, sociated Press)Tom Gibbons, the| heavyweight, and Jack Bloomfield} Portland, 6; Salt Lake, 2. OO eee Rais to ato ithe ant eae koe , American light heavyweight, is stil |°f England. a and consult the judges. Meanwhile, Gees reverie ah pe tees ie EE ashy ghia mr seated on the floor, the tired fighter over Jac! jor eld of Engl in : ya. wv ave covered his breath thelr tatch, tomorrow in the great|tithers, athletic director of Coo col-| st. Paul, 6; Toledo, 5 Seer nbe: oueetet thes Date: Wembley stadium. The advance sale|lege since 1915, resigned to enter} Kansas City, 3; Indianapol! Moreover, he would be able to con- totals 60,000 seats. The capacity of | Private business. Milwaukee, 10; Louisville, 6. tinue to cry “Foul’, on similar oc- the stadium is 127,000 and if this Saniots,ad-Ub. is reached tomorrow it will set a Mistakes happen under the pres- new world’s record for attendance ent system—and one may have been at a pugilistic affair. made when Carpentier lost to Tun- - ; 4, pey—but it is a better system than the battle is certain to go big. through bleeding lips. Rickard, according to the inside dope, is going to get 5 per cent of the receipts for turning the fight over to New York. Cincinnat! at New York. _ Western League. Denver, 17; Wichita, 3. Lincoln, 8; Tulsa, 2. The Yankees are beginning to root for Ruth to put on a little spurt and better his home-run record of 1921. Harking back to the blow that stopped Carpentier, the question has been raised as to whether it may not have been a solar plexus punch, knocking the wind from his body and leaving him with a pain such as may have made him think he had been fouled. It was this blow which gave Fitzsimmons the heavy- welght champlonship from Corbett Counts in Everything bo That’s why sales of Hart Schaffner & Marx and not much is “put over" on them. If you want a rule interpreted— They are keen of eye, auick of de- cision, and have the® confidence of If you want to ‘now anything about a play or a player— absolute authority which would be A MAZING results have been ; lacking {f their decisions were dis- AZING steal aye eee Write to John B. Foster, the man who helped make the || iwi, it would be as” though Sf edsema, pimples, blackheads || Twles under which the game is played today. If you want a per. || appeal were permitted from the do- and other skin eruptions. If you || sonal reply enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Other: cisions of an umpire at a baseball have been troubled with eczema, est: be game on balls and strikes. . cedgoa have wise your question will be answered in this column, A fighter 1s entitled to all he can used skin ap- Address—John B. Foster, Special Baseball Correspondent get—within the rules. A good !dea li i is to have as few rules as possible. Bi aare saat4 of the Casper Tribune, 811 World Building, New York. ber, make a test pth (Copyright, on yoursel estion—Two strikes are called with a bottle | aq the batters bat on the third what of Jim Corbett, both having something of an alr of reserve about them; reserve, that is, against ~ the proposed substitute. at Nevada, * *. ; : Referees are generally old-timers. Clothes keep right on growing year by year. top t at If you have some question to ask about baseball— They know the game and the men,| Gene Tunney reminds one some- ‘And it’s why there are more Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes sold the world over than any, three other makes of clothes in existence. Eczema! great fighter. Tuney has a pen- chant for things financial, and is one of those rare things—the sub- llnated boxer. You get more for your money in Hart Schaff- The world’s worst break on a home run came to Fred Merkle, more than & decade after hiv failure to touch second base In a crucial game made his name synonymous with “bone for many a year. Merkle is pla: It would be no new thing to have a good referee make a mistake in an ; important fight. Sometimes it seems . fly ts caught. The man on third re- as though the more important the Ing for Rochester now, in the In mains on the base until the fly is ternational League, and in a game re of eae Mr S., one | strike touches the catcher's mitt,| caught, and then goes home. ‘The taker ie el Pianos AP with. Baltimore, which the Orioles pt Poon a Bs 8. pikes the aoe: batter sSieees - the eet oe suey. is made to the catcher but} rorgotten "Dempaey-Firpo go there rman itd) ng sberuplon hard tuck pletely and it goes beyond ¢ late to get the runner from], reale occurred. ner & Marx suits—in appearance, fit and your blood is freed of impuri-| 1. he out or is he safe at first? and the runner who had left Merkle belted the ball over the fence t for Vi af: 3 a all over the fence. #ties your stubborn certing eee ‘Anawer-cif, there. were less: thar'| second tout, [boss the run count? seeriyat aE the. Cftent mareaee See, |The runner on second started with wear. : setter, skin ‘ectntons, two out and there was @ runner on ——! the pitch, and d the runner blackheads, blotches and acne are | A" “the batt mia be OGt, | 3t oS Apayee Tt does, The third out/ criticised i¢ he had observed the| who had been on third, and who wan bound to disappear. There are no | "St, the batter wo I made on a runner who had) strict letter-of ring law and award- ‘ unproven theories about 8. 8. 8.3 | tere were, two out he would be) already touched first base. ed the fight to Firpo. SORE BE phn Bh pete: the third H . 8.85 | sate. If the umpire decided the M Onoe, ehan simu Wild tos] Ut and none of the three runs the scientific results of each of its | Cotcher interferred the batter would| Question—Two are ut and there|ing his tile to Pancho Villa, the lit.| ounte: @ rely vegetable medicinal ingre- Te rorse, Fro¢ rents acctainl ted by ci oritiee, | be tafe. is a man on third base. Batter hits | tio Filipino started a punch with the! was tlet ton the lnneue lend. ta $ the ball to tlie infield sending the| etl, and it knocked the Englishman | yor i thatites oe Question—With runner on third home but the batter | kicking. It yas technically a foul,) °™*r* ®t ‘he tim is put out at first.. Does the run|because the blow landed.after the Bi. count? bell had rung, but it wasn’t claimed. London has no fewer than thirty Answer—The run does not count. When, Dempsey won the heavy-| places of worship where the services The batter was out before reaching | weight crown fgpm Willard at To-|are conducted in the Welsh lan first bas ledo, he was permitted by his sec-| guage. 1924, Casper Tribune.) me. is sold érug si in two larger size is more economical. OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P. M. me,

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