Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 12, 1924, Page 9

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12, i924. ; fhe Casver Sundav Cribune “STAG ELEVEN |_ ADDITIONAL NEWS OF SPORTS OEATS BROWN PAGE NINE disease of drowsine the dark continent with a severit that is undermining a large share of the population. It reached this country in a few Instances, but although highly contagious, has be restricted because of absence cof the Right to Dress as They Please i is Main Goal ‘ot disease carrying tse-tse fly that in- | ( | I : o Dr. W. H. Talifiaferro, of the - é Crimson Runs Up 19 to the Ladies---! ot otes University of Chicago, now has dis- 4 covered the surp?ise potion that may Af aN put Africian drowsiness to rout and Copyright, 1924, Consolidated Press| n#tional friendliness toward us| probably inject new life into the 0" tart. Association. which is almost beyond comprehen-| continent, The injection wil consist . SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 11—It's| #0". she continued. | “This friend-| of plain everyday rat blcod and is, = teibe By HENRY L. FARRELL player said after the final game yes- STAGG FIELD, CHICAGO, IIL,| not the right tq vote, freedom of ine ‘ x however, is strictly confined | tg phe made as s0on as good worn, (United Press Staff Correspondent) | terday. Oct. 11.—(United Press)}—The Uni-| thought, exercising one’s right of aa tis xwomerr Sole. * Ths “Tent Gon» specimens can be located. NEW YORK, Oct. 11.—Washing- And it did look like Providence | versity of Chicago eleven took | choice in selecting husbagds or bear ore val because they’ indignantly “We have found that rats are im IOWA CITY, Ia, Oct. 11—(By| Fry. went past all the. back fielas-| ton would have won the world’s base- | had taken a hand to maké Washing-| Brown University of Providence in-| ing children, nor participation in the Benen setting a had ©X-/ mune to sleeping sickness,” Dr. Tal: United Press)}—Coach Witce’s Buck- | Men without any ¢xpecting it, knock-| ball championship if baseball cham-| ton a winner. to camp ‘this afternoon by a score of | the making of laws governing them | “>P'= 1 8 OF Aah a faferro explain: “Ther © evi 3 ss ing any change for the Hawkeyes to| pions were named like presidents.| Fandom f 19 to 7.° The visitors held tt that is most coveted by the billion | !" eveh the men, aD-) gence, . eye eleven invaded ys Le ‘andom for many years will talk he visitors held the 2 y hare dences that they produce certain im: pied Ses ae cone fleld today | gedre in the latter part of the game. | For once the fates took a hand and} about the last game of the world’s | roons to one touchdown and were | or more voteless and unemancipated the handwriting on | ay their blood. that may.3 44 for the first time in the history of| Captain Parkins’ men proved far | ¢levated to the throne of the na-| series of 1924. Fiction could not| one point ahead at the half. But} women the world over. The Mecca owing alittle more | Five an important bearing on éra-s the two schools and came off with| superior to Captain Young's in the | tional pastime one of the gamest and| concetve of better possibilities for| during the last two periods the] of their desires lies in'a much more their “viewpoint | 5 cation of the disease. Just what© ¢, & nothing-to-nothing score, neither | line bucking, getting 245 yards to| undoubtedly one of the most popular feminine dir drama, thrills an heavy Chicago team uncorked a se- stion. The thing they heart breaks, he ¢ : e hav team being able to push the ball | Ohio's 79 for a total of nincteen first | teams that ever hus played. No more popular player and no| Ties of line plunges that the Rhode | want most fs the right to dress them aven in Turkey, where women é Mt y ae tata bualea"t See re se: tt over in the critical moments. Towa | downs to five for Ohio. . There may be . stiggestions that | cleaner citizen than Walter Johnson | Island gridders.could not stop and | selves as they pleas ise threw aside the vell and attained |"°rty Sart of the experiment will 2 missed chances to score time after| Iowa Position luck played the decisive card, but | ever lived. When he went in as a|the Maroons carried’ tho ball down|age-old feminine foibles to make | many Brey Say One BOI an bers tha negroes: MiehE time, by fumbling and poor judg: no one will deny that the popular | pinch batter, after he had been| thr field always at will. themselves attractive. their uppermost thought is still lode. “The. doctontia, metaiiigeto ment, A last minute stand with team won and that the nation at| downed twice, no better situation| Harry Thomas was the hero ofthe| Such is the message just brought ov dress freedom Sete: tha, aftect thie reeetienn Gn ae arley Brookins, world's record low large 1s happy over thetr victory. could have developed by the most | game, making two) of the touch:|to America from 27 forelgn coun- are bitterly opposing it.| Predict the effect the ae eevee of hurdler ding, the Hawkeyes It would take the wise minds of | imaginative mind. Perhaps it was! downs. But neither were as spect tries, most of them noteworthy f Y apanese, both men and women, | Mit blood will have On tN ives, Ww th ‘e brought the ball 25 yards closer to a supreme. court to find the reason | sound basebell strategy shat catised | war as that of Jack Keefer, who ul] the restrictions with which “they |! larze measure already have adopt-| Africa. These same natives, Witt; ig Ohio State's goal, but Towa. still had for the unpopularity of the New| Bucky Harris to ugsle around his| most unaided scored Brown's tallies. surround womanhood by Mrs. Eliza. [et American occidental forms of] thelr hook worm affietlons anes 40 yards to go when the final whis- ‘York Giants. It would take more | pitchers so that Johneon could | He was also good on defense. beth Murray Shepherd garb, althougt je wouter look | cbse. -allmenta—sre | aenay., a a Ue blew. Sixteen hundred saw the wy" Wendler | than the average intellect to explain | throw his fast ball past the Giant suffrage worker and much ‘more and proposness-| cause of many troubles, wh ganw. -Hunt | Why the National League champions | batters for a few Innings, but thee kaown American clubwoman, who,|!"g in their “native kimonas, The] ‘The hook worm in Africa ts not Both teams tried to score vy the Mark | Were razzed bitterly by the fans in| always will lurk the hunch ¢h-+ in the past two years, as representa Japanese royal family always ap-}the same as that which confronts drop kick method in the earlier part iGameron | New York, where fans are consid-| Bucky Harris used this pleco of tives of the International Council of | Peat in public in American dress. thore jn America. The meee of the game, but nelther was succes: jowns to|ered the fairest and the squarest | strategy to bring around a situation Women, has launched national], “Next to emancipation in dress,| ness that js causing hundreds of ful. te’s famed forward pass | Ohio's five. Officials — Referee, | Around the major league loop. that would enable the grand oid branches of that organization in all| foreign women desire the “privilege| diseases on the dark continent ts formation failed to become danger-| Birch, Earlham, Umpire, J. J.| Perhaps it was the dark shadow | veteran to win one game of his the countries which she visited. of secking their own careers, earn-|not the same variety that has put, ous to Coach Ingerweiers team, un-| Schommer, Chicago, Field judgo,| that had been thrown over the whole| world series in 18 years of noble En route from the Orient to|!"s their own living. In some coun-|in appearance here. It 18 of two til the last part of the fourth quar-| R. N. MCCord of IMinols. Head lin team by the O’Connell-Dolan scan-| and honorable service. Washington where, on Oct 14, | tries women girls are permitted] varieties down there, gambian and ter, when a pass, Cunningham to| man, H. G. Hedges, Dartmouth. dal. That certainly had something There was a talk about scandal she will report the results of her|'® Work in factories, but net for Rhodesian Cameron, made forty yards for the! Substitutions—Iowa, Fry for Par-| to do with it. But the sentiment in| before the series. There ts little be- tour at an executive board me themselves. Husbands and fathers} ‘This country has another kind« visitors. The Hawkeyes then smoth- | kin: alloway for Krasuski; Brook-| favor of the Senators was created | ing discussed about dirt now. The of the international organization, | “" on hand to collect the! that does not enter into the rat blood ered the Buckeyes and regained the ball. Towa was within 25 yards of Ohio's goal when a pass, Griffin to Much of the eign women for don’t princtpally by respect and admira- tion for a club that had a Walter Johnson and Buck Harris and the most spirited ball players that have trooped across any diamond since the Boston Braves pulled the first miracle in 1914. “The Lord was the tenth player on the Washington team,” a Giant ins for Fly. Ohio—Klee for Clart Griffith for Kutler; Mackey for Kut ler; McCarthy for Jenkins. GRID SCORES pay ence rever American interfere conversation is all about the Sen- ators. Under the same cjrcum- stances fh 1920 when the game was staggering on wobbly legs, Babe Ruth came along and turned the conversation away from the White Sex. The Senators are now sav- ing baseball again. If the Giants had won— discovery. The whole thing shows its import ance when it is reallzed that ‘Gery many, Whose sclentists claim to have discovered a cure for the gam? variety, are using that cure 5 club to get back some of thelr col- onies. Here enters the rat blood finding’ at the University of Chicago, Mrs. Shepherd cast some brief but interesting sidelights on feminine re flexes to the universal suffrage movement, which she found in her two-year round-the-world tour. “It's not emancipation of spirit so much as emancipation in dress— the right to garb themselves as they please—that’s uppermost in the of fe men ts because they with women seeking careers.” MADISON, Wis., Oct. 11.—(United Press)—Coach Ryan's Cardinal line. up missed victory by inches and was fopoed to accept a 7-to-7 tie with Coe College at Camp Randall this afternoon. Up to the fourth quarter the Mo- hawks, with one touchdown to their s AAT BLOOD 10 Save ee + PB eOR Fee COWUNWWINY | tt Denver—Denver University, At Chapel Hill—North Carolina credit, held the Tigers. minds of women in most of the coun- which offers a toxin for both the ing Univers: 0. ; y, In the start of the final peried, | tries of Asia and Europ says Mrs. Rhodesian varieties. I oming rsity, 0. U., 6; Trinity, 0. ; ‘Wisconaii hed fi ldtiela Shepherd. “In th t’ majority of } gambian and Rh r t na Iniv i eal ih 4 =, ° nsin marched from midfield to| Shepherd. ‘In the great majority A ats an fandl.t0) the=> Canteen: 5 hese Colorado University, eat New York—New York U., Senat rs Will | ive | O Coe's 2-yard line. Gillespie inter-| the countries, there are no ‘styles Len Sgn ari: * OF nion, 6. Oo V n cepted a pass, but lost the ball on a| except common ones. The women ) great has the death rate been, At. Salt Lake—Colorado. Colleg: At Tuscalooca—Alabama, 51; Mis- fumble. want styles of their own, dress free- frém’ tha Glaease\'in -Afrion (huis 9; on University, 0. sissippi College, 0. ° After a pass and a line smash by | dom like we have in Ameri one community of 300,000 it is re», At Chicago—Brown, 7; Chicago,] At Chester, Pa.—P. M. C., 20; Al- t th F e Harris had carried the ball to the “Equal suffrage, birth control, the pee dette sp ey smatre: Alea eee 19. bright, 0 ect1ions O e an 12-yard mark, Harris heaved the ball | right to love and wed accordingly ported that 200,000 have died from. | ev 2 its effects in a short time. The tse t Urbana—Bulter, 10; 1 villa: Ne iene - to Quarterback Doyle Harmon, whp|and a part in the framing of laws fe : serane ioe Se eed] are ree ove ayower > ° ee crossed the goal line for a touch-| which affect them most are among ———s tse fly and other insects are carfye» r Lebanon Valley, 7 F S t D . 7 c Saheie 4 Rete hand vie z ing the sleeping disease over the con- 3 ; low: ‘et caecer n d down. Lou Harmon kicked tho goal, | their great. ambitions, but in their : K P e ‘ At Iowa City—Ohio State, 0; Iowa,| At Columbia, S. C.—University of 1 e pili emonstrate tying the score. alphabet of desire all others play sec- Cure in Prospect for bag iurgaatey arabe * m tt = “5 AIL L “At Madison—Wisconsin, 7; Coe, 7 states wees Speirs sae erent ee EE ST ECO eal ah Sl Y Si ky wa kat Wie to bat, thelbunghaaaa’ a ie » Fs » 7. | State, 0. —emancipatic dress. a that remains is to get the immun 7 At Evanston~Cincinnatl, @; North-| 4t Clemons College, 8. C.— Hy ROBERT’. SMALL demonstrations any sport has ever sroatlibed, eter pe Mie to eeping Sickness, bodies out of the life fluid of the. ¢ wertern, 42 .. | Clemons, 14; Presbyterian College| Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune) | known broke: loose when word fin- garb themselves attractively, regard S R t rodents and in rome way get them) 4; ele Kiahoma, 14; Ne-|o¢ south Carolina, 0, WASHINGTON, Oct. 11. — The|a'ly came that the Senators had less of customs or the dictates of Say Ixeports. injected into the blood of th Diack A - Jaa Bas .| Washington Senators nave been a their male lords and masters. —_-- Once that’s done, there's expected to t At Omaha—Creighton, 34; Des|_4t Greenville, §. —Mercer, 23; finally won their first flag. These ,] The U By vival in Afric aes Furman, 0. revelation in baseball spirit. They The United States, to these mil- y OTT. be a great revival in Africa. f Moines, 0. yak demonstrations have been renewed . d igh 1 ‘ 4 t ight he on co a e y, i At Birmin; — Birmingham | hava exemplified something that the - sreni fons of unemancipated women, says] (Copyright, 1924, Consolidated What e!se might happen once » At New York—Columbia, 35; Wes-| hong: Si eae Parte baseball worid has been waiting for | % the Senators fought back at the d Mrs. Shepherd, is rated as second Press Association.) black man takes on rat blood has hayes cect lis — Marquette, 2; At Nashville—Vanderbilt, 13; U. S.| 2nd hoping for. And they have come see. time after time to even the only to Heaven. Likewise, she says CHICAGO, Oct. 11.—A few Iinjec-| not been a subject of conjecture at a po! quette, :| ayarines, 13. forward with this display at just | Word series. ‘The greatest) of all American men are regarded as] tions of rat blood into a few sleepy|the Chicago University laborato eS aan 14; Cornen,| At A- and Mf. College, Miss—A.|the proper moment— at the tlme these @monstrations for the lads] Callaway's Furniture store, 183] saints on earth, because o fthe un-|plack boys of darkest Africa may |T¢ it will cure him of his sleepiness " on jams, 14; Cornell, | ia M., 0; Outchita, that some of their opponents were | (/o™ Te national capital were those | Hast Second street, has received re-|stinted freedom which they allow] spring an important surprise for the] this life fluid of rodents may break ae signarnmeeeedbiak, 27; Waal At sDxtord Miss—University of | accused of darkening the traditions | ‘#8°4 in the Giants’ beloved Polo] cent shipments of new furniture n female of the spectes.| hordes of that contingnt, as well as|him of imaginary hookworm fe ionic at Aca poh Mississtppl, 7; 8. P. U., 0. of the national game beyond hope of eT ieed which they are displaying and offer- the Balkans, India.} well as for scattered sufferers here, | ments and make a new man out of Ate ane eet Amino. 3 Bates ‘At Worcester, Maxs.—Hotly Cross, | early redemption. he Washington baseball players }ing as remarkable values for this | China and Japan, where restrictions! 1¢ yat blood wont do tt, there's | him. At ungwick—Maine. Bowdoin, |. 6. soston U., 7. ball + have shown the inspiration of the] month. There are several bedroom | imposed upon women are partieular-| norning known to science that will.| Until it does Dr, Taliaferro is mak- 16, Amherst, 14. ‘at N s. Baseball ),has da peculiar | old Christian martyrs. They hi a ly galling, the Mberties America has} anq if it does do it, there's Ikely| ing few claims for his rat blood dis- “St Lewiston, Me.—Tufts, 12;| 4t New Brunswick, N. J.—Rut-| piace in American ° history. Al-| been yy have] suites. Many of these are of beau- Ani does 5 y | ing few claims s ‘ Bates, 6 s gers, 35; St. Bonaventure, 7. though from. its inception it has | ree", ,resdy to sacrifice themselves | tiful velour that cannot fall to at- ee ] to be 2 hot time down among the | covery. Ho wants it, to prove itself ey At Baltimore—Johns Hopkins, 21; and thelr careers on the diamond so | tract the eye. items of furniture. The merchandise} Africans when the rejuvenation | under fire first. That test is com- At Athens, Ohio—Oberlin, 13; been essentially a professional sport}| that Washington f1 } . "i c Ohio U., 7. ey san 0. ra with a tremendous amateur follow: | of ‘the cup of hard Pinchiee yp Orcalag The store also has purchased is very high class walls not out of | takes place. Sipe ane ias soon as experiments can be Z At Was! ‘on— Georgetown, 2 victory. tables, beds, rockers, and all other range in the matter of cost. deathly | made in At New Concord, 10; Muskingum, 0. At Granville, Ohio—Wittenberg, 17; Denison, 7. Ohio—Kenyon, King College, 7. At Waterville, Maine—Colby, 19; Trinity, 3. ing, of course the American people have chosen to call it their national pastime and to believe in its integ- rity. Time and again they have been Sleeping sickness —the Afri . N. At Clinton, Rochester, 16. At Psa arc N. fal At * Berkley —Catitornia, mona College, 0. At Palo Alta—Stanford, 7; Olym- pic Club, 0. At Los Angeles—University of Southern California, 29; U. of Ari- zona, 0. At Pasadena—Whittier, fornia Tech, 6. At Redlands—Occidental, lands U., 0. At Eugene—Pacific, 0; Oregon, 20. At orwallis— Multnomah, 6; Oregon Aggies, 7. At Seattle—Whitman, 0; ington, 55. At Missoula—Idaho, 41; Montana, 13. At Spokane—W. J.—Hamilton, 30; ‘At Wooster, Ohio—Akron U., shocked by some unexpected dis- covery of wrongdoing, but they have put these lapses down to the same unhappy percentages that find other trusted men in other trusted profes- sions listening to the voite of the tempter. Since Eve let the serpent hiss his wicked story in her ear, ze world has not been free from sin. Baseball, in the professional lea- | sues, has survived all its set-backs. It has survived because the people looked beyond the salaries of the players and believed that back of this desire to make money lay some- thing finer and higher—loyalty to the old home town and an ambition to achleve the highest honors of the sport. : The Washington baseball team has written this year a golden page in the history of the game. ‘It has come to represent the ideals for which the fans have prayed. The whole coun- try has sensed this knowledge ahd that is why from one end of the land to the other, the most remarkable NORTHWESTERN STAGES Y.—Alfred, 16; Buf- m—Yale, 7; Georgia, 28; Po- 1 At Pittsburgh — Pittsburgh, West Virginia, 7. At Pittsbursh—Carnegie Tech, 54; ‘oledo, 0. At Carlisle—Dickinson, 20; F. and M., 7. At Washington, Pa.—Washington and Jefferson, 25; Grove City, - At Beaver Falls, Pa.—Bethany 10; Geneva, 0. At Des Moines—Drake, 19; Knox; 10. At East Lansing, Mich.—Mich- igan U., 7; Michigan Aggies, 0. At, West Point—Army, 20; troit, 0. ‘At State College, Pa.—Penn State, 26; Gettsburgh, 0. At Philadelphia—Penn, 25: Swarth- more, «7. ~ At Cambridge—Harvard, 16; Mid- dlebury, 6. Condensed Statement of Condition of | The Casper National Bank ‘At Close of Business, October 10, 1924 7; Cali- 47; Red- Wash- 8. C. 12; Gon- ; CASPER, WYOMING Established 1889 5 raga, 14. Grinnell, 14; Washington, 0. At Fort Worth, Texas—T. C. U., 17; Oklahcma A. and M., 10. At St. Louls—Missouri, sour! Wesleyan, 0. At Bozeman—Montana State, Brigham Young University, 0. ———— Nationalized 1903 14; Pa. — Haverford, sri At Indianapolis—Louisiana State, 20; Infiana, 10. At | Princeton—Princeton, high, 0. 3; 0; Le RESOURCES LIABILITIES wat South Bena—votre Dame, 6:1 OLympic Star Wooarisy= Gevetidy. Nareee NET Sea $1,493,510.24 Capital Stock ____- PE EE ----$ 100,000.00 At Minneapolis—Haskell Indians, 7 7 ‘hima cams, ve| 28 Andured im | COMEBACK ONGRIDIRDN | Stocks, Bonds Eic—----stazaas © Surplus - -------------- po r= t90;000.00 ependies 42; Ores Poly, 3. Grid _Batt DEFEATS GINCINKAT| Banking House, Furniture and Fix- Undivided Profits _-_-_----___- --. 27,456.48 pdt Athens, Ohlo—Ohto U. ETBACUSE, B. ., Oct, 11. — J Lu) tifese to Se ae ~ 143,574.72 Circilationeerss cae wes ee --- 100,000.00 asht Des Motnes—Drak@, 19; Knox, Olymple eprint, star asd, brifiant | Other Real Estate _-_------------- 1,675.00 DEPOSITS 2.873.950.42 cr Lawrence—Kansas, 10; Ames,| to nis back and neck and will be out Gai bane rite NOME es Woasonas —— totes ee SARE LOL Wii sien enruk Meep Rn as Ah TAT eg 4 ay of the game indefinitely, while Syracuse was defeating William and Mary here this afternoon, 24 to 7. ‘The southerners held Syracuse even in_the first ha‘f, during which Bow- man starred. Dartmouth Has Strong Eleven HANOVER, N. H., Oct. 11. (United Press.)—A powerfu! offen- sive, led by/ Dooley and Oberlinder, enabled a much {imported Dartmouth eleven to crush the University of ‘Vermont today, 38 to 0. Sage, sub- stitute end, and Winn Robinson, substitute halfback also starred. CASH AND SIGHT EXCHANGE__ 1,323.166.50 TOTAL..__------.----$3,201,406.90 ple-clad warriors for many years kicked all over the big ten football conference of the Midwest, showed amazing strength today in disposing of the University of Cincinnati, 42 to 0, Ralph Baker, North-vestern’s flashy half back, was the “ig atar, smashing his way over the line for four touchdown: Columbia Beats Light Eleven NEW YORK, Oct. 11.—(United Press).—Playing hard, straight foot- ball here this afternoon, the Colum- bia untversity football team had no trouble swamping the light Wesley- an eleven, 35 to At New York—C. C. N. Y., 26; St. Stephens, 7. At Easton, Hobart, 3. At Hamilton, N, Y¥.—Colgate, 41; Clarkson, 0. At Orono, _Maine— Connecticut Aggies, U. of Maine, 0. At Atlanta—Georgia Tech, Florida, 7. At Lewisburg, Muhelenburg, 0. At Philadelphia—St. Joseph, Drexel, 0. At Collegeville, Pa.—Ureinus, Delaware, 0. At Green Castle, Ind. —De, Pauw, Hanover, 7. At Hanover, 83; Vermont, 0. Attention! Retail Clerks Casper Local! 102 will hold two meetings each month hereafter at the Knights of Pythias hall, Beginning Tuesday evening, October 14th. Several candidates will be obligated at this meeting and a large attend- ance is desired. ‘ Pa.—Lafayette, 30; TOTAL --.-$3,201,406.90 ci Pa.—Bucknell, 33; 35 Years of Service, May We Serve You 13; 0; OFFICERS A. J. CUNNINGHAM, President PATRICK SULLIVAN, Vice President Q. K. DEAVER, Vice President C. H. McFARLAND, Cashier 2 N, H.—Dartmouth, H, E. SMITH, Asst. Cashier H. J. WALTERS, Asst. Cashier H. J. CLARE, Asst. Cashier BARTON, Audi Harvard Evens re Up Middlebury CAMBRIDGE, Oct. 11.—(United Press).—Harvard got even with Mid- dlebury for last year’k 6.6 tie by win- ning this afternoon's game 16 to 6. DIRECTORS Patrick Sullivan P.C. Nicolaysen A. J. Cunningham Q. K. Deaver C. H. McFarland Lobo, Middlebury halfback, scored JOHN D. SALMOND, Secretary thetr only touchdown in the third E, C. ROMAINE, President period. Gehrke and Cheek scored touchdowns for Harvard and Zare- 4 kov kicked a field goal,

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