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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1924. World Results By Leased Wire Che Casper Daily Cribune AMERICAN LEAGUE. RACE. TIGHTENS UP FOR THE ASHINGTON'S|C__Seanainos LEAD SLASHED TO ONE GAME Yanks. Beat Athletics As Senators Lose to The Red Sox. (By The Associated Press) Washington, official and other- wise, is upset today following a so- cial affair not exactly on the pro- grarf of welcome for returning base- ball heroes—a Boston teaparty with the Red Sox acting’as hosts to the Senators. Hospitality was forced upon the blushing debutantes of the baseball season to such an extent that even Walter Johnson, dowager mentor of the narvenu leaders of the league, staggered off the field after being hit on the elbow with a high ball served by Pitched Ferguson of the Red Sox, It was Johnson's first defeat after winning 13 straight. The Senators politely responded by presenting the game to their hosts, 2 to 1. The Yankees thought- fully defeated Philadelphia, 7 to 1. The Senators now lead by only one game. The Giants and Robins rested yes- terday but will resume their battles today. New York by winning two of three from the Phillies, can raech thelr goal even though Brooklyn wins its remaining two from Boston. Pittsburgh awoke savagely from its insomonia at the Polo Grounds and took two games from the Cubs by scores of 9 to 3 and 10 to 6. No other games were played in the Na- tion League. Detroit beat the White Sox, 8 to 2. eee! NORSEMEN ARE COMING BAEK Minnesota Is Hitting Stride Again in Football. By LAWRENCE PERRY. Copyright, 1924, Casper ‘Tribune. NEW YORK, Sept. 27.—Minne- sotn Norsemen are getting back to elr pristine gridiron stride, bit by it. The time is coming when Bill paulding {s going to lead his Vik- ing crew to the top. As showing the steady, if not spec: tacular rise in Gopher stock consid- er her recent history as relates to Wisconsin, In 1921 the Badgers won 15 to 0; in 1922 the score was 14 to 0; last fall {t was a tle, 0-0. Or take Iowa. In 1921, the Hawkeyes won 41 to 7 Next year Iowa won 28 to 14. Last fall the Gophers pre- vailed 20\to 7. That is progress. Observers of western’ conditio: are not yet satisfied, however, that Minnesota’s material 1s as satistac- tory as in 1923. If this is the case the Gophers are likely to find the coing pretty hard in a few spots this season, Clubs Ww. % Pet. ‘New York ~..-..... 59 = .609 Brooklyn ... 61 «1699 Pittsburgh -. 63 = .58T Chicago 7 533 Cincinnati 69 = .540 St. Louis 87 .424 Philadelphia ~.-..... 54 95 .362 ees 52 99 A week ago the writer brought out the point about. the ball not be- ing held for the kickoff. The basis for this is rule 8. It should be inted out that at its recent inter- pretation meeting in New York, the rules committee decided that one man may be offside to hold the ball for the player who kicks off. This Fhall not ‘be regarded as Nps off- side. ery year there is graduated from ‘otre Dame a band of star football players who scatter into coaching jobs north, east, south and west. very summer the ardent enthusl- asts of South Bend, Rockne could be mayor, if he cared to hold ‘that office, fill the air with repining over next season's outlook. And when pessimism is thus abroad, Rockne goes blithly ahead and ar- ranges a schedule that is tougher than the one of the previous year, ——— — | SPORT BRIEFS LOS ANGELES—Sammy Mandell, Illinois light weight, won a decision over Frankie Burns, Oakland, in four rounds. SOUTH Voce aggnry Pa.—Bobby Jones of Atlanta, and George Von of Los rejeies reached the fi- is in the amateur golf tournament. —————— Schooner ‘Lost, Crew Is Safe BOSTON, Sept. ter fishing "schooner Actor was sunk in a collision with the army steamer eneral Rt. M. Batchelder, off Lov- cll's island in a fog. __ The schooner went down so quick- iy that her crew of eight men had to jump for their lives. They were rescued by soldiers, 27.—The Glouces-| National LOnete. YOU KNOW ME: bo AL--Adventures of = Keefe NOTHIN’ ‘Yo SAY ABOUT WHAT WE In SHE OFF- PAGE FIVE. First in News Of All Events FINISH By RING EARDNER 1S ‘THAT @ HARD COURSE bry NO, AND YOU BET WHEN THIS SEQSON IS OVER, KA GOIN! TO TAKE ve GOLF IN Washington ---..... Clubs Yesterday’s Scores National League, Pittsburgh 9-10; Chicago 3-6, No others played. American League. Boston 2; Washington 1. New York 7; Philadelphia 1. Detroit 8; Chicago 2. No others played. Western League. Denver 5; St. Joseph 3. ‘Tulsa 6; Des Moines 2. Omaha 5; Oklahoma City 1. Witchita 15-8; Lincoln 11-4. American Association. Louisville 12-5; Minneapolis 8-7. Indianapolis 2; St. Paul 3. Columbus 1; Kansas City 9. Toledo 9; Milwaukee 7. Coast League. ‘Vernon 1; Salt Lake City 3. Seattle 2; San Francisco 5. Portland 4; Los Angeles 8. Oakland 7; Sacramento 5. erin aie tay | Games Today | National League Chicago at Pittsburgh. Boston at Brooklyn... St. Louis at Cincinnatt, Philadelphia at New York. American League. Detroit at Chicago. ¢ St. Louis at Cleveland. New York at Philadelphia. Washington at Boston. _———— Span Calendar | Racing. Meeting of Queens County Jockey club, at Aqueduct. pwitz= Vo iis COLLEGE FOOTBALL TEAMS SWING INTO AGTION OVER U. 5. TODAY By The Associated Press. » The bulging barrier which more week before starting but the|~ has|rank and file of college teams in all ~ VC WINDS UDO MARK FO PYEAR ABOVE ATE (OTH TIME Detroit Slugger Stands Out as the Greatest been keeping intercollegiate and in-|sections of the country are sched- terscholastic football into the back-| uled to pry the lid today. All Ti ground for the past month, will be| Cornell, considered by many to Record Breaker of Time on Base- ‘ sprung today. More than 300 teams,|be on a par with Yale in 1923, w i ° Qth epcimentiie -citdalipraviryscclags| open itn ite sasal gare with we. ball Diamond; er Averages. f and university from coast to coast|Banaventure. Syracuse will emu. ---—-— and Canada to Mexico will swing in-| late its 1923 opening against Hobart y to action with few exceptions. again this year, while Pennsylvania CHICAGO, Sept. 27.—(By The As-)also leads as a run getter, having ‘These exceptions include the pro-|will oppose Ursinus and Columbia sogiated Press.)—Tyrus Raymond | registered 142 times. \ verbial “big three” Yale and Har-| will meet Haverford. z € Bb, leader of the Detroit Tigers} Eddie Col'ins of the White Sox, vard and. Princeton, which wil! de-]} Dartmouth will entertain Norwich nding up his nineteenth year as q| is the base stealing champion of the : fer their inaugural games for ajat Hanover, Penn State will play major star, today stands out as the] league with a total of 42 thefts. week. Most of the other leading| Lebanon Valley at State College and greatest record breaker in baseball.}| Ruth, the champion batter of the teams in the east, south and west|Boston College will meet Providence ‘The Georgia peach, never out of} /¢astue has as average of .379. will open their seqsons with tradi-|in the other day’s headliners. the select .300 class in hitting with tional first game rivals. Leading] In the west, the most important the exception of his first year in the} Rogers Hornsby of St. Louis, re- teams in the western conference|game on the horizon appears to be big league, 1905, is finiehing the 1924] Peating as 1924 batting champion have also elected to lay off for one}the Wabash-Purdue contest, while race as the only player in major} the National league, settled down in the south, Georgia Tech's golden league history who has batted above} ‘© ® steadier pace tn hitting, hov- r tornado will’ hook up with Ogle- .800 for eighteen consecutive years, |¢ting around the .420 mark, which thorpe. Many other contests are Cobb's average today, with the gea-|4@ hopes to beat before the close ] 3) scheduled for today, which will son drawing to a close is .377. Last} the season, thus setting a new ‘ bring together ancient opening game year ho was runner up to Georgo| bish record for modern baseball. { rivals. Sisler for the 1923 championship, He ed ei of oD is jointly held F y Ty and George Sisler. i: Willlo Keeler, that of making 200}S*mes of Wednesday je -421. hits or more for eight years has}, 2% hitting, Zack Wheat, Brooklyn f ADDRESS: Lawrence Perry, \ te been broken. Cobb has passed. the] Veteran, established himsel¢ as run- : Special Fodkbalt| Correspondent 200 hit mark again this season, mak. | "Cf UP to Hornsby. Zack is batting of the Casper Tribune, 834 World Ing {t his ninth year in which he has | yor, fourteen Points ahead cf Ross Building, New York. collected 200 hits or more. prrciey Sesene aan es If you have some question to pret: | Jack Fournier of Brooklyn is lead- ask about football— Jobb has scored 100 or more runs| ing the National League's home run If you want a rule interpreted— &. year for nine years and this year | hitters with 27. If you want to know anything oe scored 107 runs. a t about a play— H. d »© Ruth although thirteen hom- t Ti ee cawrence Perey, tor || ENgwerson Has Hands ors wehind his record of 60, teas RODEO CHIEF Cifteen years an authority on the game as writer and official, If you want a personal reply en- close a stamped, self-addressed Full in Building Gridiron Team. the league with 46 circuit blows. He IS ARRESTED at Latonia. sociation, at Havre de Grace: Toronto. umbus, O. ship closes at Haverford, Pa. pionship closes at Toronto. at St. Louis. sociation regatta, at Cincinnatt. 4 Track. C., at Travers Island. Bo: rounds, at Edensburgh, Pa. rounds, at Edensburg, Pa. rounds, at Montreal. fully 99 per cent is machine-made. ———_——_. wearing shoes with hand-painted pic- tures on them. BASEBALL QUESTION BOX Meeting of Kentucky Jockey club, Meeting of Harford Breeders’ as- Meeting of Ontarfo Jockey club, at Trotting. Meeting of Grand Circuit at Col-|so? Golf United States amateur champion- Canadian women’s closed cham- Missourt open championship opens Motorboat. Ohio Valley Motorboat Racing as- Annual fall games of New York A. xing. Gene Tunney vs. Ray Newman, 10 Homer Smith vs. Kid Norfolk, 10 Jack Renault vs. Jack! Burke, 10 of the paper now manufactured, Fashionable women in Paris are envelope. tion will be ahswered in column. QUESTION—May all nine players in the field psy on a runner or are three all that are allowed to do play if they wish. it to the right of a team to put out @ runner. fie A Sai Sb cee If you have some question to ask about baseball— If you want a rule interpreted— and Otherwise your ques- th: ANSWER—All nine players may There is no im- QUESTION—How long,has Anson played in the big leagues and wh: position did he play? ANSWER—Anson played more than twenty years and played with third and first and caught. ular position was first base. His reg- QUESTION—How does Wambs- ganss bat and throw and with what teams has he played in the major leagues? ANSWER—He bats right handed and has played with Cleveland and Boston. throws If you want to ‘now 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. of the Casper Tribune, 811 World Building, New York. (Copyright, “ By WALTER CAMP. Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune. NEW YORK, Sept. 27.—Much in- est is expressed out In the mid- west as to how Iowa is going to get along on the gridiron after her change of coach. Since Iowa came east under Howard Jones and stood up the Yale team under Brother Tad and came back with a victory, things have not gone so well. And in view of the fact that Illinois and Mich- igan both made such good records last year and carry over a strong line of prospects; that Stagg has about as good a veteran line as he has had for a long time; that Minne- sota, in ‘spite of the loss of Marti- neau, has great confidence in Spaulding’s development of teams and that Ohio state, after two bad seasons, is making ‘unusual efforts to come back, Iowa realizes that she faces a mighty stiff proposition and that Ingwerson will have his hands full, Outside the conference teams, Notre Dame and Marquette will also the strain and the frice of their vic- tory was, at least temporarily the health of their coach. “Red Grange of Tllnots,, the scorer of 12 touchdowns and ,the gainer of 1,260 yard# in 195 minutes, is that man that aj! the opponents Hills, line candidate for Princeton's tall and is said to be the tallest man playing football on a leading college eleven. Goldstein, his teammate, is Hills comes from Washington, D. C., FIRST ROUND MATCHES UNDER WAY TODAY IN TOURNEY; FINALS ON MONDAY Play in the Casper Country club have been turned in and the tourc ment committee has placed seven players in the championship flight and the remaining 16 in the Country Club flight. The drawings for the first round are as follows: of Illinois are watching this year: Zuppke last year used him when he had to and he always made good. If Zuppke can get'a mate for him this year, Illnole will go far. And the story goes that they really have. Championship Flight. r; Cc. Riker vs, Art Schulte. F. Hamilton vs. F. B, Firmin. oe J. H. Jeffrey, a bye. Vance Rowe vs. Glen Littlefield, Country Club Flight. Hunters Get FALLS, 8. D., Sept. 27.— Th ill Wh H. F. Hall of Sioux Falls, manag TU en of a municipal rodeo show being staged here this week and several 4 performers at the exhibition were Bear Attacks arrested yesterday at the Rodeo grounds by. Dr. T. H. Kindred, hu- mane officer, and Arthur Anderson, deputy sheriff. They are charged with cruelty to animals and their ar- Details of the adventure of Silas N. Brooks and Leigh Townsend in football team, is six feet eight Inches killing two grizzly pears in the | rest was the outgrowth of a dispute , five feet one inch from the ground. | COURtrY above Dubois, September | between Rodeo officials and humane and Goldstein hails frum Pittsburg | 29 has been received here. ‘The | officers over the “zull dogaing” and men were hunting for elk when they discovered a large silver tip cub. They fired. The cub jumped up and squealed, ‘Mama!’ The mother was behind a tree 40 feet roping events on the rodeo program, $5.00 Reward © ‘ged. and tho hunt era fired at it. Mr. Brooks’ gun jammed after the second shot. || Five dotars reward will be paid ‘The bear fell dead not more than | to the party furnishing the Casper Ik teahin teoat oe tenn! Dally Tribune information leacing to the capture of the person who is fraudulently colfecting subscriptions from ‘Tribune subscribers. Patrons of the paper should not pay any- one their subscription except the carrier who delivers the paper or “To atop in one split second an enraged mother silver tip,\a bris- tling ball of concentrated fury strayeling 30 miles.an hour, re- quires marksmanship and nerve,” Country Club Flight. QUESTION—Do Walter Schang| have to be reckoned with and Mar-|annual club golf championship will} First round, 18 holes, Saturday,| says the Tribune correspondent. an authorized collector from the and Frank Frisch bat either way? | quette is particularly dangerous now|get into full swing today with all| September 27th, The skins of the bears were sent teks mh at DP St sure Sad Ase "ANSWER — They do although|as they have planned for their] first round matches scheduled to be| Second round, 18 holes, Sunday a.| to the main camp and Dr. 1H. R. |POgne the rent collector. ask him both of them are regular left hand| meeting with the Navy early in Oc-|completed by tonight. The second|m., September 28th. : Lathrop, who was on a hunting ex- |pot do #o please call the ‘Tribune. hiters until they face left hand/tober and mean to make that a me-/and third round matches will be} Third round, 18 holes, Sunday p.}- pedition in the same vicinity, took x pitchers. morial occasion. played tomorrow and the finals/m., September 28th. them to a taxidermist at Dubois Nebraska, the “giant killer” also| Monday. Finals, 36 holes, Monday, Septem-] for preliminary fixing of the hair e ep. one 15 should be reckoned with, although] ‘Twenty-three qualifying scores|ber 29th. on the hide before sending them the final artistic to Denver for touch. TEAM PICKED FOR NATIONAL RIFLE SHOOT Winter Car Storage IN STRICTLY FIREPROOF BUILDING the play, player! Qu bef hi pamnen behind his QUESTION—A substitute is on the field by a coach, but before he can reach an official play had But the opponents knew a good deal] George Campbell vs. A. M. Gar- Naa! PERRY, Oh! Onto, Bape Aw We Have Room for 50 Cars at the Following more about "Red" Grange than they | pure he twenty men team which ‘will Low Rates did previously and he {s going to be] Ww. R. Finney vs. Ralph Schulte. TePresent the United States in the very closely watched. Bdward Blater ve.Dr. J.C. Kamp, | Mternational small bore teh for Address—John B, Foster, Special Baseball Correspondent ——_—a>—_——_ F. B, Ott vs. T. C, Tonkin, the Dewar trophy which wil be PASSENGER CARS Harty Addo: © 3 ed tomorrow, wags announced to We A. Reed , the team being the high scor- 5 GOLF CHAMP re ctonsenny SAN r ers Jn a field of neatly 100 competi Dead Storage Bp Pe SSA. | 7.00 1924, Psa sonn bela 3 has eee Charlie Baird vs. Dick Miller. tora who fired the final tr) Li St sent a player of Wicker’, team, which ts iS DEFEATED AG kar with a low qualifying} trday, Thore who made the toom|f Live Storage —---.-.-----------$10.00 | 0 4 of 82 is the winner of the tr include: bounds back over goal line and is round swash atte eae rons : : ; 4 rr alist prize, Beautiful silver tro C 3 arker, ‘ebb, Iowa; R, W recovered by the kickler who downs set een Provided for the winners| Ballard, Davetiport, Towa; Storage, including delivery $12.50 started and his team, which is on the offensive, thus has twelve men on the field. Is there a penalty? ANSWER—Not necessarily. or can iaeal The ree has power to decide whether the incoming player had time and opportunity to report to an official, whether or not he interfered with communicated with punter kicks from Ball strikes it. Is this a safety against the kick- jergeant ing team? . ANSWER—Yes. R. two] J. M. Masse dan, Wyc H. T and runners-up in each of the ARDMORE, Penn., Sept. 27.—Max ns flights and are®now display Mar§ton of Philadelphia was de on at} throned today as amateur golf king.jthe Country elub. Westergard, Wh QUESTION—It on this play the | He was eliminated in the semifinals] | The schedule. tor, the. play 1s as} A. ( mor eas Arlington, ¢ punt is blocked by an oppenent andjof the national tournament by follow Fgh Rupert, haw, Baise. tenho, ..Altey becca rolls back over the goal and is|Goorge Von Elm of Los Angeles, 7 Championship Flight. nates include: M. W, Pond, White downed by one of the kicker’s side|and 6. First round, 18 holes, Saturday,| Fish, Mont.; Corp. A. N~ Baldwin, —is this a safety? A new champion will result from | September 27th. national guard, Iowa City, Iowa and ANSWER—No, because the im-|today’s final round between Von| Second round, 18 holes, Sun: Willlam L. Bi enne, Wyo. September 28th, Final, 36 hotes, Monday, Septem- ber: 29th, Elm and Bobby Jones of Atlanta, who ‘defeated Francis Quimet of Boston, 11 and 11. pulse that sent the ball over the goal Hne came from the defending For sified results try a Tribune Clas- Ad, ’ TRUCK STORAGE AT RATES IN ACCORDANCE WITH SIZE The Lee Doud Motor Co. 424 W. Yellowstone Phone 1700