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ointinj posed the ste ate on ndator ct sest ker, fe ner Ww! Casp um to ue, ad us 1 ineral sit, is taxe ce im: xs 0 oduct® ibed t oduct prone This i ion a med 1 ional cons : the ratio ally a stitut st eq pan alifo furry lifor eten in D1 er aE | PAGE SIX. World Results By Leased Wire LONG AND SHANNON ON EDGE FOR CLASH TONIGHT AT MILLS PARK Riverview Ring Card Packed With Thrills for Fight Fans; Webster Meets McMullen and Jensen Will Battle Missou Pyle. TONIGHT’S CARD. Place—Riverview Park, Mills, Wyo., 8:30 p. m. How to Get There—Take the Mills bus at Second and Center. Don Long, Denver, (Denver U.) vs. Bennie Shannon, Laramie, (Wy- oming U.) main event, 12 rounds, catchweights. Al Webster, Billings vs. Elmer McMullen, Kansas City; semi-final, 10 rounds, Pee Wee Jensen, Denver, vs. Missou Pyle, Casper, main prelimin- ary, 6 rounds. Ray Jennings, Casper, vs. Kid Halleck, Casper, preliminary, 4 rounds. Referee—Charlie (Fat) Winters; Judges, Ray MacDermott and Tom Meaney. Promoters Evans and Winters will make one more at- tempt this evening to lure the elusive boxing fan into “Madison Square Garden,” when they will offer three high class scraps featuring featherweights and welter- weights. The card on paper is one of those programs which should be productive of much vigorous action. In the main event the fans will] have been calling each other any- see two youngsters in action who in| thing but pet names in thei# work- all probability will be the next ban-| outs at the Casper A. C. gmy and tamweight champion of the world.| decided to have it out in the rosined Boh Don Long or Bennie Shannon,| arena, This bout which seems to both university students, Long tak-| have developed into a grudge affair ing a course in dentistry at Denver | should be worth the price of admis- U. while Bennie is studying law at} sion alone. Wyoming U. have had offers tend-| Poular prices of $1, $2 and $3 will ered them to join the stable of Ray| prevail at tonight's bouts and the Churchill, manager of the bantam-| arena should be jammed to over. weight champion of the world, who| flowing before the first bell rings would prime either one up for a|for the opening bout. Special bus whack at the’ featherweight crown.| service -has been arranged and With the featherweight crown| transportation facilities will be ade- open since Johnny Dundee admits| Wate to the arena. that he cannot make the stipulated — weight, just what causes Ray Churchill to think that he can in- veigle an elimination contest to in- clude either Long or Shannon ts something not quite clear, but Churchill apparently: is convinced that such an affair can be arraigned. If it should be, there is every reason to believe that the featherweight di- vision will have a new ruler and it e _—_— y be Li Shannon. Shan- = non tan Improved about "ion per(Fighting Eleven Is Built cent in the last year, and right now he looks to’ be the prospect in Up by Lone Star the featherweight division. Dietz : Shannon has won his right to a crack at the title through rough and ready battling. It is seldom that] «Dietz brought a ting. Bennie finds himself in a soft spot-| crew down from Loranie end ween He has been tossed against’ the} the battle was ten minutes old, the toughest men in the country and!/ Cowboys had the sympathy of the during last year he has come! crowd,” is what C. L. “Poss” Par- through with flying colors. If there| sons, Denver football scribe, has to is a featherweight now boxing, Woy say of the manner in which the deserves a chance to win a cham-| tniversit. Wyom! . Pionship it is this same Bennie Shan- Vnpibes ie nee Zon. feat of winning the encouraging In the sem! wind up between Aljcheers of supporters of a rival Webster of Billings and Elmer Mc-| school. Mullen of Kansas City, the boxing The Cowboys, altho facing what is fans of this city need no introduc-| claimed to be the greatest football tion to Al. He has fought here] cleven eyer turned out at the Uni: many times and has always given a] versity of Denver, held thelr heavier good account of himself, while Httle| opponents to a 0 to 0 score until is known of McMullen the feat of| the last three minutes of play when holding Speedy Sparks to a 12-round|D. U. scored the first and, only draw at Kansas City, Kans., recent-| touchdawn of the game. ly should be enough reputation to] The Denver Post scribe in com- fans who know boxers and this fact} menting upon the game at Denver has Webster worrled considerably as| recently, says: “If Wyoming can Sparks is a mighty good boy in the| make such a showing with the ma- Welterweight division. terial at hand this year, the rest In the main preliminary Casper's| of the conference better watch out best bet in years Missou Pyle should| for the Cowboys next season. They outpoint Pee Wee Jensen of Den.| will have a great team at Laramie ver, but Missou will know that he| with the Freshman squad coming has been in a fight before the end| up.” ‘ of the six rounds they are scheduled] The Cowboy Frosh aggregation to travel. recently defeated the strong Ft. D. Ray Jennings and Kid Hallock] A. Russell cavalry eleven to the tune of 45 to 0. An Sas bce A Sa ER ta Casper members of the Wyoming varsity squad include many former stars of the Casper High school team —Vandeveer, Lester, Groves, Alls- Millions Use It —- Few Cents Buys Jar at Drugstore O'Bryan. ————}__ FOOTBALL QUESTIONS — ADDRESS: Lawrence Perry, Special Football Correspondent Building, New York. If you have some question to If you want a rule interpreted— If you want to know anything about a play— Write to Lawrence Perry, for (ifteen years an authority on the he as writer and official. If you want a personal reply en- close a stamped, self.addressed envelope. Otherwise your ques- tion will be answered in this column, (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune.) NQUESTION—Please give me an in- terpretation of Rule 7, Section 1, in regard to choice of goat or kick-off. In the instance I haye confronting me the captain of Team A who the When the Giants returned to New ee If’ your disease in yet curable, by the public in dealing with a reputable firm toss and choise to defend the south | Popular players in Paseball. The) yor they are constantly reminded f 7 WE can cure it, and you may be Weh 1 ‘ goal and the captain chose to re- of the scandal. “Where's O'Con- YU, ME factory and within your soeeat e handle Radiator Alcohol, Accessories, celve the kick. At the beginning of|fumbies. Player of Team B recoy-| nell?” the crowd yelled loudly. 4 Ge: Debility, Weak Nerv: Ti d T the second half Team B_ insisted/ers. Head linesman rules that| ‘Why don't you send Dolan out?” a results | of | expoaui res an ‘ubes they haye the right to choose wheth-| player of Team A off side inJ was another crack that was repeated * Ly} Nature's Laws, divedee oe en er they would receive or kick. Is this permissable? Does not Team A have the right to receive at the be- ginning of the second half? Even obstinate, unruly or sham- Pooed hair stays combed all day any style you like. “Hair-Groom” ANSWER—Team A having won| ble and that the offside may have is a dignified combing cream which | the toss had right to choose whether| caused the fumble, therefore Team wives that natural gloss and well:!to receive or kick at the start of|B. has no right to the ball. groomed effect to your hair—that/ game. Under the rules Team B has final touch to good dress both in|right in fs contention and Team business and on social A had nothing to say in the matter “Hair-Groom” is helps gro imitations.—Ady, THE TRIBUNE’S OF man, Blanchard, Kocher and| said. ball town and tn a strange place and visiting clubs never have been| !t would be taken out on them. abused. They have been razzed and| ‘The team must have felt that it] ¢ he can, get away to run, but it}world’s middlew: cheered impersonally. Their good| W28 in for someching because Hank] must not be forgotten that the retained pinys got just as much recognition | Gowdy and Irish Meueel, represent-| Army team itself showed how thor- feating Heinie Engel, Dubuque, as the home club's and many, times|!ns the team, tried to reach Com-|oughly Wilson could be covered by | lows, trality. from the head of baseball that the Rockne’s light Notre Dame eleven| LITTLE ROCK, ARK,—Clarence could have felt at homo by exercis- of the Casper Tribune, 814 World || ing a littlo imagination in changing | ‘0% they came in with their heads] bandied at qua: | Ernest Glover, of Nebraska. the stadium to look like their own. The crowd not cnly gave the team ask about football— a courteous reception, but rooted elty. The town thinks more of base- penalized Team A as you outline on} win, because they are a fighting ball the ground that the offside preceded iali of whether it should receive or not.|the fumble. Team B, however,|becn developed to witastand plenty . s : aclelists (for Bien Only y thick, heavy, hustrous should have declined the penalty.| of hostiiity from the stands. env: e +, opposite new batr. Beware of greasy, harmful] QUESTION—Team A player (of-|'Thus she could mt retained the <=, fense) carries ball through line and ! recovered bail. : he Casver Daily erihune oA WEDNESDAY; OCTOBER 22, 1924, First in News Of All Events i SPORTING NEW YOU KNOW ME AL—Adventures of Jack Keefe ? = _ By RING LARDNER —= [NEVER SAW SO MeNy| | YES,END THEYS )\ _ Ba y AUTOMOBILES IN My YY oF HORSES ye) LIFE @S THERE ORE LF ; HERE, TOO WN PARIS 4 i (Copyright, 1924, by The Bell Syadicate, tne.)) BRIDE TO BE PRIZE FOR DON. LONG IF HE BEATS SHANNON IN RING BOUT HERE TONIGHT Don (Terror) Long, Denver feath- erweight, will go out to win a bride }ears and gets away to another city, he is amazed that the old Partisan spirit of the bush leagues and ‘the major league spirit of several years ago still exists! ARMY BETTER THAN IN 1923 Racer is Sold tor Nickel at Gotham Track NEW. YORK, Oct. 22—The story of a thoroughbred that was sold marry for some time but has been for a nickel at Empire City track opposed by his’manager. Showers during the present racing meet. | when he answers the gong tonight] announced today, however, that in was told today. . for his scheduled 12-round battle/the event Long hangs a defeat to. Reprisal came out of the rages | with Bennie Shannon of Laramie.| night on Shannon he will withdraw so lame that his owner, Frank | phe story leaked out today follow-| his objections. Kelly, a vetersn turfman was in ing the arrival of Long with his] ‘The girls said to be Miss Helen quandry as to how to dispose of | manager, Lesiio Showers, and need-| Hopkins, student at Colorado col- the animal. .~ less to say he is prepared to extend} jege, Colorado Springs. If Don wins Navy Lagging Behind “why don't you sell him?” adk- | nimselt against his rival for inter-|tonight they will. wed shortly and ? Last Season’s Form, Foster Declares. ed Tommy Mara, noticing the con- | jountain featherweight honors. both will continue thelr studies at dition of the horse. Don has cherished an ambition to) Denver university, where Don is (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune.)| “I would. it I could find some- taking a course in dentistry and NEW, YORK, Oct. 28-—The, last Oot ae rety en “itP TV | seated Johnny Brown in three| paying his way via the ring route, erat "answered | rounds; Loufs Pina defeated Freddie] Long and Shannon fought a bloody football team a little stronger than aye ee ee reeiiy a eking. [Maca in four rounds; Smiling Davis| draw at Cheyenne on October € and {t was last year and the Navy not buffalo nickel and led the animal, | and Young Edwards fought a three| they wil begin where they left oft quite so efficient. aes round draw and Young Tendler|when they enter the ring toright. ‘Were the great service classic to Reprisal will go into the records | knocked out Joe Gonzales in one| One ofthe best bouts ever witnessed ,, be rlayed tomorrow, the Army in all as the cheapest horse that, has | round, Tendler flooring his opponent] here is in prospect as they will be ae would ee af : aioe the} Seen sold since Billy Lakeland sold | six, times with hard rights to the| at it hammer and tongs from the tap teams wi compare by late lovem- Clan we of the gong. ber is, of course, @ “question that RRS ane liane: ey for | Jax — - = only time can solve. behead nied —__ Princeton last year was the first - indication anyone had @ possible fo 4 scoring weakness on the part of - . 4 [the Nayy, The game with Prince- aM: ; e 3 ton this ‘year, “played Saturday, ABE SH N ? < ‘ 4 2 < é again raises doubt,as to the Navy's L = < Army. Gi The Navy eleven is one from which great Improvement may be Ukely\to stand still-in the meantime.| pENVER, Oct. 23.—Bud Hamil- Improvement may be expected! ton, the flashy littlé Denver feather- Don (Terror) Long, Denver featherweight, who will meet Bennie| there, tod. weight, made his come-back appear- of condition this year. In the game’ Mishkind of Salt Lake City in three poabked oA VK iar sta against Marquette, the Middles rounds at the Business Men's Ath- faded out of the picture in the last] letic club in one of the best bouts ¢€ quarter.. Again in the game against | ever seen at that arena. ‘ Princeton, the Navy team, after a] In the otherjhalf of the main 4 “ was niade up of substitutes. The] In the semt-windup, George Kane s regulars had dropped under fire and| defeated Billy Fisher in three Vv a 1 er bas were out. It was not a matter of| rounds. ei neta Haswbo p> * saving the men. The regulars were Preliminaries—! ne le- By HENRY L. FARRELL club has a lot of color and tt aroused | saving the men. 7 condition. ty Cli ar. NEW YORK, Oct. 22.—(Unitea| senting the national capital and by| Just why this should be is some : Press.)—A‘ter the recent world’s| Winning a sensational victory in the pe eed en otecrd remit ° : : series had opened ‘in| Washington, | American league pen Anpanols to Paeailecthe coaches to 10c = 2 for 25¢ = 15¢ with two games, the New York} Washington was an old fashioned =~ BE ba bs re jumped into New York for the third| series. The city was baseball mad, ce pespom pela hick pe iy icra yhaen berg co ny deg Sil game, The Senators could have/like Cincinnat! was in 1919 and like thet it for instance, up at Han: ena arias elt oa rt ¢ ‘ been figured to be assuming the|Cleveiand was in 1930. Perhaps} over w. HL. di : oe Fite taste P ee handicap of a foreign field and a} Washington seemed a little bit ihe hird roun . leagve city but New York. a slow, drab time sitice the Ohio| tor, fuer ner vuppen ie oper eigne Ayycce tight nace I “We won't get upset In New York. | teams were in the series. hitth , *s oe - ~ - 4 x ng back for short gains. The| wrestler defeated Ernest Clover, Ne- We've played a lot of games in the| ‘(he Giants were rather concerned é High Quality Since 1848 The game between’ Navy and ability to run rough shod over the HEL : BOUT HELD IN DENVER expected. But the Army is not : Shannon of Laramie in the main event of tonight's boxing card at} /The Navy has shown a queer sort|ance last ‘night by defeating Abe strong display of line breaking] event, Jack Matlock of Los Angeles ; effort, began to give way and at the} was given the decision over Pat RAZZ A ND B B SPIR end of the fourth period, the team| Keener of Tulsa in three rounds, ~‘ e e . (United Press Sports Editor.) a lot of national support by repre- 3 eam tl Glants and the Washington Senators| rooting town during the world’s| O'S the team along as they host{le crowd in any other major] wilder because there has been such Ob ine ery ee Btmpiey line stood up well until the big} braska, Polo Grounds; and~sve know New) when they went into Washington] Lentz had to retire. After that the M York crowds," Buck Harris, the|for the world’s series. They knew] Navy forwards did not look so well SAN ANTONIO—"Tillie Kia" Her- | * young manager of the | Senators] they were in an old fashioned base-]| Army plays much the same game man, California welterweight, won \t played last year, except it is a! over Johuny Tillman of Minneapolis New York has'the' reputation of| {hat they had never seen before./iittle better. Much has been said|in the ninth round when the re- being the fairest baseball city in| They had a cloud of scandal hang-/about the wonderful aid that Wil-] feree stopped the bout. the big leagues. Visiting players| is over them and they feared that/son, the former Penn State back, (AE oars ‘ would bring to the Army. He will,! CHICAGO—Lou Talabar, ‘als tile by. do it has gone to extremes of neu-| missioner Landis to get a statement}a thorough defense. And Knute team was not crooked. emphasized the point Saturday. Ecklund, of Wyoming, light heavy- When the Giants strofled on the] The Army line plays better than| weight wrestling champion, success- field for the first time in Washing-|it did last year and the team is well! fully defended his title here against ‘When the Senators came in for the third game of the series, they down and were the pictures of em- barrassment and subdued spirit. They acted as if they were expect- ing a barrage of bottles and jeers, but they might have been surprised to get a cheer, Jt wasn't a big one and perhaps {t Was only enough to remind the playrs: ‘You should not get this, but we'll be good f lows with you.’ All during the series in Wabhing- ton there wasn’t a public reference Inasmuch as the Woods Filling station has sold out to competitors, we take this method of advising that we are the only Service station in this- neighborhood that wildly for them all during the game. The Giants might just as well have been the visiting club. The attitude of New York {fs hard to explain or figure out. It is a cosmopolitan city and a very urban Men On y: DENVER MEDICAL INSTITU SPECIALISTS FOR MEN ball than it does a baseball team. handles Tho fans are basbeall fans and not Giant or Yankeo fans. Across the| ‘0 the Scandal from the stands. 830 Eighteenth Street a wm 1a ex. ACO river in Brookiyn titey are Robin | S0™e hot shots could have been Opposite Hntrance to Postetfice fans and visitors are visit Liereg lea ert rrguey eee! COME AND BE CURED GASOLINE AND The Senators are rot a hard team ington didn’t root for the Giant : MOTOR OILS bg ie a Bi ed inh a fine pac The city yelled its head off for tl pod et, oun - bunch of ball players, a game tet s rs. But it dia t o and cure and they possess in Walter Johneon | Vcntrec ‘of the Stents. Me & 7 ike your The same clean, courteous service that is demanded and Bucky Harris two of the most Nature's La diseave of Blad . this play. The referee penalizes Team A for offside and gives ball back to Team A claiming that the penalty takes precedence over fum- several times. The Giants haven't been sup- ported as a home club for esveral years and perhaps their feelings \ iB IN AND TALK IT O° were not hurt,» But the razzing and Sse catch the loud rooting for Washington FREE—Consultation, Examination—FREE didn't amore their moral = did harass so low as obo mat grees the Feéoh ae even the poorest, rengt! thel: r " ayments arranged to sult your convenience, ANSWER—The referee could have | st-engthen elr determination to an Consuttation ne ates ore me to 8 Dm. Sundays; 10 a.m. to 1 p.m AT YOUR SERVICE JAKE’S SERVICE STATION C Street at McKinley WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS club and McGraw's team has always When @ writer has seen most of Postoffice, Denver, Colo. his baseball’ in New “York for four