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No HERE ID TLDWED UP BY 5 HEYELD ; 3 iprovement Shown by k ve Local Warriors Over ~ Play Last Week. * Playing in a verit nalized € Casper scor urly In the icking off to Riverton uickly obtained il and short b Gorrell, McKelvey 1 it Captain Ha on eping end r The other two score half, one be rehambault and one b IcKelvey tried dropkicks oints after touchdown bu nud soaked condition of t e was lucky to make or There was almost nc ing in the game. ¢ me and it was incomple’ did not attempt an 1 its firs first quarte yssess: nd where 1, ‘The Riv ring football just » made a wondert: nethat brief time. anly, ks more experience w! formidable opponent for a this part of the state. All of the Casper The Ineups: Casper, (19) . Allsman . Allsman Van Doren Shikany . ‘Thompson Kassis . MW jorrell . 43 POINTS IN B enter; F ard; Krauski, tackle nd - Summary—Touchdow uber, Parkin, Dan v- ns; 1d Hat ncock, t, placed kicks, fon and to the Dasper They block hard and with a few censt and able sea B: water standing on top of} n e gravel at the high school CY hletic park, the Casper tc gh school football team m sterday won its second i r to 0. Three 1 one point after a << ndown la the dgop-kick route he Casper’s total The Yellow’and Black squad show- considerable improvement over game a week ag Not blocking, ta nd better but the am play showed that in e last week the coaches have beer aring down on the Cas should hav st twice more the end of the fi 1 E cals only three yards from River 1 line and in the last quar } asper’'team touch of penalties. ( touchdown r After the locals of the end runs, Arch- 14-yard it s took re In the made y Stanton all the by 1t with the he gridiron > forward tried te. River. overhead a rangy up a hard Coach Marshall brought quad of players who put ight but were outweighed two yea) ul showing tackle ill make ny team in players showed Bell # improved form witt as a de © tensive end and Ka as a tackle | FP looking the best on the forward line. Hales and McKelvey led the backfield attack with Archambault, Gorrell and Staton showing streaks of ground gaining ability Of the visitors, Johnson at full back and Boland at left half looked F like the best bets. . Riverton, (0) ~++ Metzler Davidson . Simonson Stratton . Barnes andel| Kelve Hales (C) ..- ne Archambault ... fb ,.- Johnson (C)| Substitutes | for Stanton, trown, Gibson. ne, Mike ‘ant, Colgate; umpire, Zip Cyprean ebraska; head linesman, Bill | lorado U.; time of quarters, minutes; touchdowns, Hales, nton and Arc i for point after touchdown, | Vv JOWA ELEVEN PILES UP ATTLE WITH OKLA. TEACHERS IOWA CITY, Oct 4 (United Press)—Coach Ingwersens burly Towa eleven ran up a 40 to 0 score | ainst the then. n Teachers | of Oklahoms ‘et 3 Charley Brookins or holding hurdler, proved the sensation of the | ame In one quarter in the last | w minute n play he advanced the Nt 40 yards in two plays. A line vash carried it over R ed playin, bot sides characterized the game re first | r showed up many faults | At no time did the Oklahoma ag- | & ution come near the goal, gain. | ing little yardage. Iowa played a straight line smashing game for most part. A | es the forw a ed, ne, eft Otte, Hogan, Scantle Hancock YALE SCORES WICTORY BUT LACKS PUNCH NEW YORK, 0% 4.—(CUnited Press).—Yale easily defeated the Uni- ersity of North Carolina team, 27 to 0, in the opening game of the season today but it's offensive was diss inting, Yale's first score came when Love- picked up Sparrow's fumble of punt on Carolina 13-yard 1 and carrfed it over Yale later | battered it’s way to the Carolina | goal and Cottle | a touchdown. Kline and Allen py their own passed to Pond for d their way from ard line for Yale's third score, in the third quar- ter. In the final period in- tercepted a pass by Merritt and ran h th Alle ter of the rd line, w n from = gains field it oring 1 pits fis BLANKED BY WRITE SOK Blasko | Makes It Three Straight in Chicago Series. Yale's sixt CHICAGO, Oct. 4.—(United Press.) | Pitching in mids ion form, Blan- | kenship blanked the Cubs while his mmates slugged out 13 runs in today’s game. This makes it the rd stral, game for the White fight for the city cham- plonship. The Cubs have one game credit The score R. H. B Nationals 000 000 000— 0 4 3 300 040 18 1 ke, Wheeler, Bush nship and Schalk. © | hit, Falk; Kamm, 2; Hooper; halk; stolen bases, ruck out by Blake, Blakenship, 6; bases on balls, off Kaufmann, 1; Blake, 2, Wheeler, 1 Seiden’ ST. PAUL AND BALTIMORE IN TIE, 6 T06 BALTIMORE, Mad.,. Oct. 4.—Bat- tling 12 inning ‘until’ darkness called halt the .third gam tween the Baltimore. Inter and the St. Paul American Association nine end ed in a six.all tle. Both teams have one game each to their credit in the seri@s for the “little world's championship.” The fourth will be ayed here tomor- row. The champions must annex five out of nine contests, so today’s tie may add another game’ if the series goes the limit The store— Baltimore St ROH. EB. 3 0 and 5 Thomas Harvey Perkins Casper Ught heavyweight who will battle George Manley in the go on the Elks fight ¢ jnight, Che Casper Sunday Cribune ~ Veteran left-hander of the New while his teammates chalked up the winning runs in Saturd: York Giants who held Washington y's game. Ss (United Pr game of the 1924 World series, with- out being init to the finish. It was really the carpenters who beat. Walter. Altrock and Schacht merely supplied the plumbing. The house they biult crashed in the 12th innitig Uke a-house of cards, dash- ing the high hopes of Washington- Jans who came out 40,000 strong, to try and win by sheer lung power. If it hadn't have been for the car- penters, Walter Johnson would have won that game, 1 to.0, in nine in- nings. But in making over this dim- tive park for the series, the man agement had some temporary seats | built in front of the pavilion in left field. This shortened the chance in the plate by 18 feet and it was into 18 fat feet y outs, this that two hit the flies, but the carpenters made them homers. It was by the Senators had been able to gather off the pitching of Art Nehf that New York was leading in the ninth, when Peckinpaugh refused to see Johnson beaten this way and tied the ole ball game with a streaming double to left center. After that time the tide of the ttle told aginst the mighty Walter and the ¢ end found a pinch hitter in his place after his mate had helped him to lose game It was a heart break Ame 1 game of a thousand thrills thr! ng that President Cooll« the stayed until the f. twelfth and ap plauded on several occasions. It had all the thrills of the first world series Washington has ever known—the Wands, the hand shaking, the multi tudes of pretty girls, fierce rivalry of inter-city strife, with two score thonsand hoarse fans screaming and blowing horns, and once holding up ihe ball game as they showered the field with cushions tn nedelirium of joy But this ball game had thrills sur. passing these and here are some of them The thrill as Walter Johnson, af- ter 18 years of service in Senators, t last walked to the box to pitch his first “world’s se game and ked the Gi hat first in as * uger, came to the t time, cool the coo’ vet n—cool as the president one might say. The thrill a Mud * Ruel, catch- ing as great a ball game ns ever was aght, snapped the ball to Pec catching the fastest man or Giants’ team a foot off second. these two runs to one} MANY FACTORS CONTRIBUTED TO SENATORS DEFEAT BY NEW YORK “Temble Coaching” by Altrock and: Schacht And Pre-Game Work of Carpenters In- : : ? cluded in Washington’s Loss. BY FRANK GETTY aff Correspondent GRIFFITH STADIUM, W ASHINGTON, Oct. 4.—The “Immortal” Walter was mortal, after all. Fate and the Giants, some terrible coaching by Alt- rock and Schacht of all people and the pre-game work of some Washington carpenters were too much for Johnson, and the popular big pitcher saw his team lose the first wild yell as Johnson got revenge on Kelly by fanning him in the fourth. The hows of agony as Terry lifted a fly into the same bleachers that trapped Kelly's fluke home run. Kelly’s homer in the second in-the left field temporary stands wending a shiver of horror up and down 40,- 000 spines—for everybody rooted for Walter today. The triumpht: ble play ended the inning. 2 The way Giants got their hands bunged up, three of them in two innings, Nehf trying to stop a line ive, Frisch stopping a sliding Senator by the spikes and’ Gowdy getting one of Walter Johnson's fast ones on the fingers, so that It med they might all be put out action The thrill as Walter Johnson set @ record for recent world’s series by fanning 12 Giants, with his famous st one smoking over and nearly rrying “Muddy” Ruel off his feet. The unforgotten thrill Senators tied it up in the 9th, Bluege as the last of coming home on kinpaugh's. smash to the left center field, while the crowd how 2 cushions’ on the outfield til police reserves -had to be called t. At this. point President Cool : ns forward and grapped: the sil in front of his box. Walter nson came to bat with a chance » win his own game but filed gut After. this it was just one. succes- sion of thrills until McNeely played bad ball in the 12th and old Walter Johnson, who ‘had been tolling on memotionally, weakened ao bit and the hits rattled out and the Giants. rattled home, Tho final thrill of some’ terrible caching that cost Washington the ball game. Young Shirley, North Corolina collegian, was more sur- rrised than any one else when Jack- on dropped bis easy fiy, putting kid on second. A moment later for ohnson as Single to Rice nd as’ himseif, r and Shirley ~ scored d with Harris on second then.and there Altrock and Schacht | proved that as coaches they are good comedian: Schacht held Harris on third while Altrock sent Rice down to second to a certain destination. Kelly playing second as though he had been there Nl his Mfo and the thrills were over. The final score was 4 to 3 but it doesn't tell anything. GRID SCORES (By United Press). At Ithica—Cornell 27, Niagara 0. At Syracuse—Syracuse 26, Mercer At Princeton—Princeton 40, Am- herst 6. At Syracuse—Bellefonte 28, Syra- cuse Freshmen 0. At Washington—Marines 33, Cath- olic U. 0. At State College—Penn State 51, North Carolina State 6. At Washington—Washington and Jefferson 19, Bethany 13. At Annapolis—Navy 14, William and Marq 7. At Elkins, Va.—Duquesne 0, Davis and Elkins 0. At — Galesburgh—Augustana Knox 0. At Chicago—Missour! 3, Chicago 0. At Lincoln—Ilinois 9, Nebraska 6. At Madison—Ames 0, Wisconsin 0, Bloomington, Ind.—Depauw 0, Indiana 21. At South Bend—Notre Dame 40, Lombard 0. At Dubuqua—Columbia 7, Coe 3. At Cambridge—Harvard 14, Vir- ginia 0. At New Haven—Yale 27, North Carolina 0. At Detroit—Ohio Wesleyan 3, De- trol U. 0. At Ann Arbor—Michigan.55, Mi- ami 0. At Pittsburgh—Carnegie Tech 22, Thiel 0. At. Columbus—Purdue 0, Oh!o State 7 At Chicago—South Dakota 0. . estern 28. At Toledo—Toledo U. 7, Philadel- phio Normal 0. At John=Carrol 61, Bowling Green 0. Denison 0, Astiland 0. Heidelberg 0, Mt. Union 6. terbein 0, Wooster 28, Baldwin Wallace 0,* Oberlin 39. Western Reserve 6, Capital 0. Willlamburg 3, Ohio U. 0. At Morgantown, W. Va.—West Virginia Allegheny 6. At Durham, N. Hi—New Hamp- shire State 46, Norwich U. 0. At Amherst, Mass—Aggies 19, Bates 6. At East Orange, N. Wehb Naval 0. At Troy, N. Y.—Rennsselaer Poly 9, Springfieth College 6. At’ Minneapolis—North Dakota 0, Minnesota 14, Marquette 27, St. Mary's 0. Beloit 28, Monroe 0. Rhinelander 20, Tomahawk 0. Ripon 13, Northwestern College 0. At Hanover, N. H.—Dartmouth a McGill 0. At New York—Fordham 34, Man. hattan. 6, At New Brunswick, N. gers 58, Lebanon Valley 0. At Medford, Mass.—Tufts 0, Conn. Aggies 0. At Hoboken, N. J.—Collége of the City of New York 15, Stevens 0. At Geneva—Hobart 26, Clarkson 14. At New York—New York U. Stephens 0. At Hamilton—Colgate 35, Alfrea 0. At Oreono—Boston U. 6, Univer- sity of Maine 0. At Atlanta—Georgia Tech 3, V. M. I. 0. At Athens—U. of Georgia 18, Southern Carolina 0. At Nashvile—Vanderbilt 61, mingham Southern 0. At Knoxville—Tennessee 27, Em- ory and Henry 0. At Charleston—Citadel 19, ford 0. At Philadelphia—Penn 26, F. and . 0. J.—Upsala 13, J.—Rut- 19, Bir- ‘Wot- ‘At Allentown—Muhlenberg 34, Al- bright 0. At Pittsturgh—Lafayette 0, Pitts- burgh 0. At Lewisburg, Pa.—Bucknell 39, Gallaudet 6. At Bethlehem, Pa—Lehigh 12, Gettysburg 0. At Cincinnati—Transylvania 24, St. Xavier 7. ‘At Lexington — Lexington 29, Louisville 0. 3 At Danyille—Centre 0, Valparaiso 2 At Marietta—Grove City 15, Mar- letta 7. HOW BALL RECEIPTS ARE SPLIT attendance was 36,760 and the gate receipts $135 according to the official announcement. The gate money 48 apporttonated as follows: Advisory council, 15 per cent, $20,- 310.30, Players’ share, first three teams of both leagues, 60 per cent of re- mainder, $69,046.02. To be divided among the Giants and Senators, 75 per cent of players’ shares, 60 per cent to series winner and balance to lover, $51;784.52. To payers for Brooklyn and New York, second in respective leagues 60 per cent of remainder of abova $10,356.90. To players for Pittsburgh and Do ‘oit in third place, the remainder 104.60, | The player's share is taken fro | the receipts of the first four games only. The balance of the gross re- ceipts for all games, after the ad- visory council and players’ amounts have been eubstracted, goes share and share alike to the owners of the championship contenders, who in turn must pay 50 per cent to the treasuries of their respective I At Missoula: Montana, St. Charles, 7. At Helena: Inter Mountain Union, 13; Englewood, 0 Holy Cross, 28; St. Johns, 0, At Lawrence: Oldahoma Aggies, 3; Kansas, 0. At Memphis: University of Tenne- see, 34; Prebyterian, 0. At Sewanee( Sewanee, 0; Newman, 13. At Madison: Haskell Indians, 26; Tulsa U., 3. At Minneapolis: North Dakota, 0; Minnesota, 14. At Denver: Denver U., 20; Re; At Boulder: Colorado U., 31; ern State College, 0. At Colorado Springs: Colorado College, 0; Brigham Young univer- sity, 3. At Logan, Utah: Colorado Mines, 17; Logan, 6. At Pueblo: Florence High school, 3; Pueblo Centénnial, 0. At Craig: Craig, Springs, 6. At New Orleans: Tulane, 32; Mis- sissipp! College, 7. At Baton Rouge: Louisiana State, 31; Southwestern, 7. At Shreveport; Loyola, 0; Centen- rary, 51. Fort Collins High, High, 0. Greeley High,13; Longtnont High, 7. Loveland, 19; Teachers High of Greeley, 0. Penn, 2; Graceland, 0. Iows. Wesleyan, 22; Culver Stock: ton, 0. ‘Trinity College, 6; Yankton, 6. St. Ambrose, 3; State Teachers, 0. At Cedar Rapids: Cedar Rapids, 40; Carson est- 13; Steamboat “17; Eaton 32; Springfield, 0. At Philadelphia: Ursinus, 6; Drexel, 0. At Chester, P: P. Me-c. Washington Coll At ee Swarthmore, 20; Susquehanna, At Newark, bet: Delaware, 6; St. Joseph, 0. At Carlisle: Dickinson, 14; Vila Nova, 0. At Wheeling: Washington and Jef- ferson, 19; Bethlehem, 13. At Towa City: Iowa, 43; Oklahoma Teachers, 0. At Grinnell, Ia nell, 7. . At Berkeley: University of Call- fornia, 17; St. Marys College, 7, At Palo Alto: Stanford University, 20; Occidental College, 6. At Seattle: Williamette, 0; Wash- ington, 57. At Pullman: Pacific, 0; Washing- ton State, 65. At Spokane: Idaho, 9; Gonzaga, 0. : Cornell, 20; Grin- IBATTLERS IN TRIM FOR LY BOUTS TOMORROW ON ELKS CARD Last Workouts This Afternoon Offer Chance To See Fighters in Action Before They Step-in Fight Ring. This afternoon between 2 and 5 o'clock Casper fight) fans will have their last opportunity to see the fighters who; will appear on the capa at the é night work out at the Casper Athletic club. lks’ auditorium tomorrow All of the men will be on exhibition and the ring hounds will have a chance to size up the various Harvey Perkins and George Man- ley, local and Denver light heavies, will top the bill f rounds. Per- kins with his adv: of a few pounds in weight, powerful punching and his ability to take Pat Keener Sr Tulsa, Okla, middleweight who At Burlington: Vermont, 13; Proyt-| meets Georg Metlock of Denver on dence, 3. the fight card at the Elks auditor- At Providence: Brown, 25; Colby, 0.’ium tomorrow. night. 12 ROUNDS VS. 8 ROUNDS Vs. Ringside $3.00 Plus HARVEY PERKINS Casper, 180 lbs. . Denver, 170 Ibs. _ JACK MATLOCK Denver, 168 lbs. PAT KEENAN Oklahoma, 165 Ibs, THE MOST REASONABLE PRICES E A CARD OF THIS K Grand Opening of Indoor Sports MONDAY, OCTOBER 6th 8:15 P. M. ELKS AUDITORIUM All-Star Boxing Carnival 32 ROUNDS 32 Tax. SPEEDBALL HAYDEN Saeney ae Ibs, ACK PAYNE Denver, 150 Ibs. 4 Rounds Good Curtain Raiser VER CHARGED F IND bes General Admission $1.50 Plus Tax LA nes GET YOUR TICKETS EARLY SEATS ON SALE AT SMOKEHOUSE maulers. them, will be up against a scientif- ic ring general who ca nhit handity with both hands and who depends jon his speed and shiftiness to get in his punches. The bout looks like a tossup right now with a lucky punch likely to bring home the bac- on at any time, Speedball Hayden, one time man killer on the Mexico line and the pride of El Paso, will take on Jack Payne in the semi-windup. Hayden has fought, so often in Casper that all the fans know his ability. Payne is a newcomer with an excellent rec- ord. His workouts have impressed s and a battle royal is looked nm the two hook up. maker West returned from a hurryup trip to Denver yesterday with George Metlock as a subst!- tute for Shirley in the match against Pat Keener. Metlock won in Den- Friday night against Cyclone lemmons and his work so impress- ed West that he immediately signed him up. Keener, hailing trom Tul made a hit with the fans in his kouts and he and Metloek should furnish some excitement, The show will be opened with a four round preliminary with local boys as the opponents. ‘The matter of the referee was still being battled over by the fight- ers and their managers last night at a late hour. If they cannot come to a decision by tomorrow afternoon the committee of Elks who are han- diing the cards will decide-on the third man in the ring. a eat A a Parsons Beats Des Moines. DES MOINES, Iowa, Oct. 4. — (United Press)—Parron College de- feated Des Moines untversity at the Tigers field this afternoon, 13 to 0. Coach Glenn Devine's players out- classed the loca! squad in every de- partment of the game. 8 ROUNDS ’