Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 15, 1925, Page 5

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SATURDAY, AUGUST 15, 1925 sitar He Gh a EN Che Casper Daily Cribune : PAGE FIVE World Results By Leased Wire GUNTS GANNON PIRATES WITH DOUBLEWIN OVER DODGER CLAN “= First in News Of All Events TRIS SPEAKER LEADING LEAGUE RR cary AAA TERS, COBB STIS THAD ANNO Copyright, 1925; Warner Bros. Hornsby Sets Pace in National With Average | ee eee aicturess duce unten of Os story by Twelve Clubs Definitely Out of Running «in Major League Pennant Races as Above .400 Mark; Dozen Hits in Six | pon arineSTNOPSS (house you were Minnie, the una Baseball Season Wanes. | Games Hold Sensation. FS ieecctedbaed Lj Tie’ Fees os Somat pine baa de tbe hack Tak age in Crater City « girl, who was with the railro CHICAGO, Aug. 15.—(By The Associated Press.)— | magstery al Tris Speaker, gray-thatched leader of the Cleveland In-| gad the advent into 4 dians, now in his sixteenth consecutive year in baseball, is hitting .891 and leading the batters of the American mpression upon NEW YORK, Aug. 15,—(By The Associated Press.) — With slightly less than one-third of the race still to be run, pennants in both major leagues seem to have been definite- ly placed out of the reach of at least 12 clubs, Late in July, Chicago in the American and Cincinnati » of a trying morning of un- her cheeks were ous flush handsome h sal gossip anc o is @ source of ber what you want- i i league. Har Heilmann, veteran of ten straight the lunch room in the stat pid of me.” She wear- in the National, gathered strength and struck out at the with Detroit, is runner-up with .878. Ty Cobb, who joined | morning he is surprised to find the waffles, to recti- leaders in their respective circuits, Detroit 20 years ago, marks .376. | of the night workers rer fn Bue Was apparently a mere flash The average includes Wednesda bre&hfast and detect general air Over t girl’s confusion Bob n.the pan. Standings today again games. | of expectancy | brid hfe crass indicated confinement of the pen: | Johnny’ Moatil of the Chicago | best RGR ‘d his own return to self-pos nant fights to two teams in each clr- | White Sox, added two more thefts | SMHS cuit for the remainder of the sea-| |} or) : Ss to his stolen base record, and ig now | CHAPTER V—Contin | you brought the waffle son, with the White Sox eleven and $ : ‘4 leading with 36, Western League. | Lost in his own reflectic | o order them. Doctor One-half games behind second ve bo 3 Other leading batters: H. Rice, St.| Denver 6-7, Tulsa 6-10. | reading’ he t to eat waffles three ivi drgp ia ioease a cans We 3 Simmons regs a Oklahoma City 8, Omaha 1 | voice was n sa Please leave them— ane Frames bebind the - Sis : 5 Lamar,| Des Moines 9, St. Joseph 0. 6 oi, and don’t worrs it—"” he plodding steps of the running-up| | & Philadelphia .865; E. Rice, Washing- . Biisnar leaned ve 4 aie Ue : , ee ae SS New York Glants in the National. ton .357; Wingo, Detroit .354; Hale ‘ “Gooc , Tags: So re Washington's thrusts at Philadel By NRMAN E, BROWN, holes will be played in Philadelphia | Philadelphia .854; Manush, Detroit National Leagu and eggs, tu ta “You're only saying that!’ Neither Caldwell Nor phia, in spite of the closeness of the} Jim Barnes, holder of the British | also, over the Philmont course.+ 351; J. Sewell, Cleveland 348; Col-] New York 3-5, Brooklyn 2-2 ' fee—and bring 1 tit. first,| charged, defensively suspicious. “I'd American leaders to their persistent | open golf title, and Willle MacFar-| But for the fact that Barnes had | lins, Chicago .347. Pittsburgh 14, Cincinnatt ¢ Please.” much prefer to take them back and Carrol Able to rivals, have failed to penetrate Con-| lane, sporting the U. §. open crown,|Siven his word to friends that he| Rogers Hornsby _ furnished the! philadelphia 11, Boston § The menfolk of ¢ h what you ordered.” nie Mack's first place fortifications. | are matched to play 72 holes for the | Would play at least a part of his|thrill among the National League Chicago 7, St. Louis 4. long since acce > stuck’a fork through S iki P. For weeks the hot breath of the | unofficial championship of the world | frst match of that nature at Wash- ters, in getting a dozen hits in eee | strength of his kr . l, “They're trike Face. world’s champions has been at the| beginning September 12 and 13. | ington, D. C., the match might have | six games, Today he is leading the American Leagu 1 fates the childre 1 dogs for his| Pinay ic as backs of the Quaker City team but And they look forward to the | Dee? Staged entirely inePhiladelphia. | pack with an average of .401. Three| gt, Louis 10, Cleveland 7 lonaeantes : break-|" " adding a : 5 Jit vistory has matched victory and de-| meet! hon heldasiot stuer tines. cranes his sist ‘a Baines seats ct his Ribas were homers, which} Washington 2. New York 0 rae x ad the only | rn I masculine By LAWRENCE PERRY. feat has balanced defeat so closely | major open title of the world wants | t?2t 36 holes of this coming match, | gave him a record of 30 four-baggers Philadelphia 6, Boston 3 bet bee, paths thet hide gling but pretty (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune.) |that the Athletics have clung to thelr| in, Ho is Leo Diegel, Canadian | t%¢?: be played at the national capi. | for this season, Three played. of the mc very Apt acel “and they're just what NEW YORK, Aug. 15.—The two) slender margin of between one to| open champion, twice winner of that |! Accordingly the last halt will] Jimmy Bottomley, also of the Car- body else in Crater City i leading college pitchers who were|two games with desperate tenacity.|}onor and probly the most. for- 4 staged on one of the courses in ginal, ie hitting .387. Milton Stock International League. thought of reading were c ess was stamped taken into the big leagues.upon! ‘They struck oft another t midable tournament player the | Mat dlstrict. : . despite a eater ae still in third place | pochester 12-2, Reading 0-0 duly broadcas the out under the prancing their graduation last June have not | triumphs yesterday, Dominion boastg right now. pat aha wie Kp ibitecyi let pees | 3 ting 483. of nine, points. Hel syracus Baltimore 3, room’s loud spea A fret his radat ia mile Cea Ne gas ae to date of | MS the Boston Red Sox offensive in| Just a few days before the Barnes: | the Philadelphia dates sphere Max Carey and Hazen Cuyler, the Paene erento rain. Trisk, the arid cast rat huckles and good-natured banter. 3 ’, 8 a lozen b s to} Diegel, not knowing such an affair] ‘rhe tit away with the tea i of the tow L + hol Bitebing see who Wore to the Yanks win easily 6-2. Ruether triumphed for | was in the wind, suggested a three- So set puter susgito. tel giader: Max swiped FA Mien feat ot} qe SOUthern Association, tantalizing aroma of s« ed her hold on the waffle plate. was the beaning of Wal pp Washington in a ‘pitching duel} cornered match for tho world's} pe unofficial one + 1] thirty, while his tea tet 1.| Birmingham 3, Atlanta 6. Tumnt uarded beh ty nice of you—but are batting practice, Pipp going to the| against Sa he vac } an unofficial.one and defeat wil ~) ¢ Ns team mate ts trail-} New Orleans 8, Mobile 6. unplumb: bette ; . Rpepttal immaaictely therestter: Sesion arn Jones of the Yankees,| championship, two of the matches} not hurt the preatigo of the lover. |1ne with ‘25, a gain of three occ Chattanooga 4; Nashville 7 the unassz 1 brown fc 5 nee a et wearer Gnaetialcitoning econ, Patera scone in: the: stabet 1 Carag’ i the “states” and one |The ‘same, holds true in a. threc- {last week. Cuyler advanced his scor-| ¢nattancoga 4, Nashville Sena Taint yer‘sad. even: G as sure as I'm sure that I'm c s innings Canada 4 in, rk to 112 ; ees Lite aa : at all—that I’ ill i Owen Carroll, the Holy Cross stars} and rescued the champions. | a pen ee Hikes egies Be cians ’ An unpractised shoving of dishes at all—that I'm still in bed, has been bumped far more merriiy | “7 Tes ins MacFarlane and Barnes will play| And the three-cornered one would} Other leading hitters: Texas League. under and against his paper came having a beautiful dream by opposing batsmen. than his old n the only other game of the| tho first 18 holes of r match on|have the added tmportance of in-| Fournter, Brooklyn, .861; Blades,! mort worth 11, Ween 4, only as a signal to Bob oe SAN} ~ <a he ‘Tiger rival. American league, the St. Louis|the Whitemarsh Country | cluding the champtons of the three} St. Louis .361; Harper, Philadelphia| shreveport 0, Houston 5 Bee Metrect H chani-}| “Do you want your coffee now?” This, however, 1s because Ty Cobb | Browns got aboard the offer club, Philadelphia, The second 18] major golf countries of the globe. | 858: Burns, Boston”.354; J. Wilson,| Wichite Walla &, Bonumont 5 kangal f ast ett at tao e| hastth ! ¥ ens three Cleveland pitchers fc Philadelphia .253; Wrightstone Phil- ped Be ee2 cally picked up a spoon thout | a. has been throwing Carroll into H ightstone Dallas 8, San Antonio 0. The soul hunger of five starved of exile in the barren society, of this railroad town in the moun-'j tains impelled Bob on in a freedom of spirit and speech that would/ adelphia .347; Bressler, Cincinnati 940; Terry, New York .345; Barn- hart, Pittsburgh .343; Felix, Boston -343. Bilss’ of St. Joseph, and Payne of games and letting him take much-| Mts and a 10 to 7 victory. needéd medicine, whereas Caldwell| The New York Giants picked up has been pitching to his team mates | half a game on the leading Pirate in batting practice and warming the | in the National by gathering both bench for the most part when the|¢nds of a two-game effort with Pacific Coast League. Oakland 3-7, Portland 4-13, H attle 1, Sacramento 5, Los Angeles 7 WN umpire called “play ball”. Brooklyn, 3 to 2 and 5 to 3 The Chicago Cub owners have hit} were cut out. Fly balls that seemed ortho atest gat ethe batters|) Salt Lake 10, San Francisco ¢ Ait in te ciie t eed Caldwell had been farmed out to] The Pirates won only one game| upon a nov of checking the | little more than Texas league blows, | or the Western League Biles te tee | hibitions in the old'daye. He tilted Albany for his dose of medicine. | because the schedule offered them | home 1 the Cub park at| dropped into that section, while out-| ting 357 and Mtoe Loeb me 8 TG American Association, 5 chair t and said to her with The dose proved too bitter, however, |no more, but enough hitting was | least league moguls | fielders leaned non-chalantly against! O'Brien of Denver, made the most | 20888 City 6-1, Toledo 3-3 ¢ swift frankness of unconcealed and he “jumped” the team. His | crammed into the contest to decide| wouldn't take any action to bring| the wall and looked on. aiid able sittpa versace the hit, | DMilwaukee 18, Columbus 0. on ~ baseball future now appears dark, | a complete series, Of 28 sufeties made| the ball to normalcy. The] ‘The Amerlcan league bas $8 ters, coming from a berth dawn i, | 2inneapolis 3, Louisville 7. I've heard of sights for sore eyes, indeed. off four pitchers, Pittsburgh collect: | scouts couldn't tind pitchers who short fences, too. Perhaps this-ts| the itst to fourth place etn en} St Paul 5, Indianapolis 11 the first genuine cure’ His difficulty, as with Carton, has ed 16 for a decisive win. 14 to 6. | could hold the opposition to less] the logical way to cut* down the nD SV ery 3 been the difficulty that besets all college pitchers, They try. to fool batsmen with curves and when they have to pitch strikes they center ; " age of .362, He is preceded by Os. The Cubs balanced hits with the | ‘han a couple of dozen runs a game. | epidemic, long existent, of heavy! porn of Omaha, with +363, Cardinals, nine each, but Alexander| 5° owner Wrigley and some of the| hitting. Of course it will. mean bus- u Gorman of Denver, with 46 stolen T. ‘ ? Sphtaned at Erusal Sedans nea con | bod a crow bar and mada the] ier days for outtielders. ‘They willl bases, Is showing the way, oday s ( sames jshe repeated, severely, Then, ‘lease—~ Mr. Bramley is watching , “> “ 7 4 3raves lost | Dark lacs have to return to the habit of get- | the ball over the plate. forthe ‘Patliles in a. oldeeing tee| the lett field of the Cub] ting under every ball instead of|omans sen aenigt ere Rup RsoS I've made so many mistakes This goes in college ball but in| 49 {Pe : 5 ") park n for heavy sluggers. | gauging it’s flight calmly and then | niegert, Tulsa .361; Slmmone, Tone American League. this morning.” { the major leagues, it does not do ; Hits which would have been singles, | watching it drop into a bookkeeper’a| gog; 1%, Wetzel, Den Maree nt | Detroit at Chicago. “I don't blame Bramley, or anys, do at all. A pitcher to get by must or doubles at the most, under the old | hands. Shaner, Lincoln’ .355; Stuvengen,| St- Louis at Cleveland. body else, for watching you.” } work the corners of the plate with — style of ball, became home runs} But there has been a surprising | Dey Moines, 351; B Halen Ween | New York at Washington Sudden. tears” of nereaus’ dulages great consistency and neither Car- When dumped coyly into the bleach-| increase in the average weight of| 351, Barnet es mv Wichita, |. Philadelphia at Boaton, two games Tuenent? acct ie oeeh led} roll nor Caldwell has learned to do Club Standing: ers, Day after day such pitchers as| outfielders of late’ years as it ts. |* pier RIN pase. POMDEOAE | REL A DRHERCE eee this. ver Alexander, Wilbur Coop-| And this js the age of reducing. National League. behind the long lashes that fringed a er, wise old timers who depend upon oe Sane Chicago at St. Louis. er blue eyes like Lebanon cedars AMERICAN LEAGUE making the beys hit ‘em into the air] The ranks of the college men in NE INDIANS 10 Cincinnati at Pittsburgh an pools. eRe A pet, | #Nd drop them into fielder’s hands,| the major leagues is going to be Srooklm at New fork saw you I thought Philadelphia . ; saw ‘ball games slip out of thelr | increased this fall by Harry McCur- Soston at Philadelphia, | Bob playfully stuck a fork through} you seemed bit different—than Washington? <, 642 | hands because of the dumpy teft{ dy, the man who led the University _ | the nest of flat cakes. these others,” she said in a low tone, Chicago sag | eld. of Ilinols baseball team to the: Big | “but I must have been mistaken.’ ‘ Satin fi 495 |. What the bosses have done to’ Ten title three years ago. = having noticed the unsureness of the| you're repeating ‘the same shinee St. Louis jermtnen iat loft field is to remove i Bacanay went up to phe online lee euine tend dg ~mindedness,|in better wor is nine finat sae ae 8 ne bleachers entirely—a section con-] direct from college at the close o | - > for thelr vo: a hears (NEW FORK—Loven Murchiton, | Cleveland 447 | ining SAO ae PreB ICD: | teas ere Pav or iba, tha Bt Lavts CHEYENNE, Wyo. Aus. 15.—| QaEEeuanoreramnppamme | born of a er unger for theling all morning. You're making it SANS TRIAS Gs Raa Chgtion PAgook, | Neves Ter 295 | Tbe elimination of this section} Cardinals giving him a tryout. He| The Cheyenne Indians baseball team | news upon wh yes Were! very ult for me. See, here's Los Angeles, runners, p: out} Boston ..- ww | adds 50 feet to the length of left| caught for the Illini team three| Will enter the annual Denver Post] 4 church house in a certain rural| feasting, scooped up a spor °'/ the manager now—” The girl pree $1,055 In excess of the total fmount i field. years and seemed to have the mak-| baseball tournament, according to] gistrict was sadly in need of repairs,| —wafiles! |tended to be wiping the table adja- they received on their world tour. . aie tt would be well for ithe Giants, | ings of a Mig league backaton. ze cc ag ep Del aa se The official board had called a meet-| He was actually on the second|cent to Bob's place, and said in a iub— Cards, Dodgers and Phillies to con-| was green, of course, and the Cards Gi . a of th ctithal parighionera’ ti) ase’ y : fase tachi tbat: thelt Necks, aenll® tf * MONTREAL—Australia eliminated | pittsburgh sider such sures to lengthen one| sent him to Syracuse in the Interna-| local post of the Legion, eines Made ited Plaine thames: tee pefore hk a a pie peculiar} “ye Mere relly Pit Ws Canada from the Davis cup play In] New York section or the other of their out-| tional league. The jolly bosses of} Tho Indians have been sponsored | Csunry funds. One of the wealthiest | _Stapefruit” had 4 tpg eso three straight victories. Cincinnati fields. There are only three parks | that club decided to make a general | this year by the Legion, and efforts | ina stinglest of the adherents’ of | taste indeed nley strolled up and nodded <a Brooklyn . in the National league where a home| utility man out of him and used him| Will be made within the next week | “What the devil! Say, where did/to Bob with the supercilious defer- BALTIMORE—Japan won from] st, Louis run is a home run. ‘These parks are] at first and in the outfield as well] to raise sufficient funds to send the | these leather flaps come from—|ence of a maitre d’hotel to a good Spain in the Davis Cup Elimination} phiadeiphia . at Cincinnati, Boston and \ Pitts-]as behind the plattér. The next] team to the Colorado tourney. Minnie, you're getting mbe nd orderly customer doubles. Chicago ; year the Cards called him back, fear- —_ bala aly ik a th sur pardon Where's M ” fished Bob, Syed Boston 406 Philly park isn’t as much of| ful that he might be weaned away ; : all wishing to congratulate DENVER—Bennie Berris, Chicago a haven for batters, however, as it| from catching entirely. 01 ae Mis ; Sires ale lat thei lightweight, won a decision over! pripune Want Ads Bring Results was before the center field bleachers} McCurdy broke into almost halt He had been vocally eye gers Buddy Hamilton, of Denver. the games the Cards played in 1923 the waitress without real! | Koen Ss abt as SAN FRANCISCO—Frank Muskle : A f th S cP and thought he was sitting pretty— her, had taken her wf th table ofth nas Ba: be Aik 2 2 until Rickey sent him to Houston’ i nd. th he-table offhand mann St. Paul heavyweight, scored a tech: The Coming Aceo € 90. nnwareaunle, etlothe!plagees tor BOX erantedriand t Oeste. Loe muscle fershee alge, nical knockout over Young Frank. - - ~ Ernie Vick, another backstop who ihat chutoh arced!aud gad iha® he | eee M he comes back lin, Oakland negro in the ii ¥ | first drew attention in the sport would give five dollars and sat down. ne Ls , th be two of ‘er Tele- For results try a Tribune Classi- | ‘The deal must have made Me-| | 8% about baseball, football, box- iam the osiling and Lit hin oq phe the or not a . fied Ad. | Curdy a bit peeved and he proceed. | |!9 OF any other amateur or pro-| | Upon the hea ve erat cat a at 1 c ¢ ng an lees ed to take his peeve out on the pitch. | | fessional sport— 26 iby 1668 oar tubA ROK SEIRLNIA— |. POUR eo eis mtd el 8 ar 1 know. They ers. At last reports he was hover- Write to John B. Foster, on| | @*—I meant I'll gi dolla faecact date " flirt too much, 7] " baseball. then resumed his seat again o seeing v n a ; ing beohnd 1490 Which. isn't badto After a brief silence a volce was | talkin star frown| ® SOP OG er tae Wor, Sapna ‘om any: ee Bae reel begeal tov env 400 ord; hits a full into the girl's fa ; s asked Bob other man’s land. of » : 7 His hitting and catching combined peatres fies ar begigiand ether || ARIS 2 hoteean ra hae cal lessee co. Wieles may? caused White Sox scouts to become fessional spo: are spe- ; Eee that was of ¢ ; page 4 quite enthusiastic over him. And| | Slal correspondents of the Casper|| 4 Georgia woman | whom latest epider ! Dheg | et © 60s Jato 300. tOn sey eee an enthusiastic scout 1s about as| | Tribune, 814 World Building, New | | North found she could not be con-) 1h fog yr ce “wae paste Gave? Gi BiREC RE’ an, sbscromosadl naps] Seeks tented without the colored mamms aay io rar professiona hoast that apaai aiitasivnrBotthotoutsenee ston Wnclose a stamped, seit.ad-| | Who had been her servant for man ey ; thay be the epicurean habits of his that the White Sox closed a deal | |@reseed envelope tor your reply. stad alg alata eae amy od aur fa burned] “* 7 Salt Creek Buss: gary Ning eo bbe fala prloe of1840, 00s mere eer erererrr——e | Raa Cwe MeevaRD:avcived- in dite. aéer |’ « i 1 the world—for usses He joins Eddie Collins and his crowd | QUESTION — Three men are on | %0" ,1t %0 happened that the ( da SOF : |t been missing Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel When the curtain is run down on the | bases and there is no one out. The| very ane mmamy mecieed. Leten toasteabs Bob lamented 8a. m, and 1p. m. end 5 p,m Texas league season, team on the field changes pitchers | departing she had just time to ex-| | ‘ : i s| Bra igged and strolled Leave Salt Creek < “with two strikes and two balls | iain to mammy the modern talk ° ofjover to clean up a table after twe against the batter. Do the strikes | jencos with which her apartment Me La herr hee ; tidy brakemen in his gingerly “I oI BLES TO and balls count against the batter | was furnished. The gas stove w ia}. Danene Wetec are ter - have « to-do-this-but- Ss P Co. when a new pitcher is substituted? | tne contrivance which interested the | !ucid crystallization of the ex ust-to-show-I’m-not = too - proud BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS Can you change the pitcher with | colored woman most. After the mis moulding, the ela refir t, the}? pk Nod ae aie ae ie TELEPHONE 144 | balls and strikes against the batter? | tress of the household had Mgbted| delicate coloring of are cameo, mans ; al Neerine i Tho umpire rules that you cannot. | the oven, the broller, and the other | Bob's impatient frown mercurial Li pl: pearing & cup oO : ANSWER--The umpire is wrong. | burners, and felt certain the old Rename a) peatet # coffee for Bob. You can change the pitcher on ev-| servant understood its operation, the | Pee —— $5 00 R d PLAYERS IS OPENED ery pitched ball {f there are enough | mistress hur for hee train “I'm sorry—so rry—Miss, I (To be continued) Wi pitchers to go around. The balle| she was absent for two weeks and ? ewar / and strikes are always chargeable | one of her first questions tq manin Five dollars reward will be paid | eead against the batter no matter who ts | was how she had worrled aiong, --- -—-——_ - - a ——_— a to the party furnishing the Casper The DeMolay singles tennis tour-| pitching or how many. “De fines’ ever,’ was the reply.| + nd’'1 | Enel Datly Tribune information leading nament will be opened today. The — And dat alr gas stove-—-Oh, my; |, Weeds a ox maid, passing to the capture of the person who 1s | frst round must be played not later; QUESTIN—What is a good coun-| Why, do you know, Miss Flo’ence. | $ lopped and. with's quirk fraudulently collecting subscriptions than Wednesday, Scores are to be} ter for a man who keeps jabbing at | dat five ain't gone out vit?” | 5 rh hump upward, seid) “THis from Tribune subscribers, Patrons reported to Clarence Thompson or| His opponent? aad ]_ Tho Rev r 5 alivis of the paper should ‘not pay any Fred Hutsmith, ANSWER—A left hook for the new housemaid is a troas- | Miverpoo! : rg one: thelr subscription except the Pairings are as follows body is the most effective antidote. declared Mrs. Johnson. I had | S2UBtry, tol t cl st the hus- carrier who delivers the anes oe Holman vs Hufsmith. a bridge party the other evening and | ! *, the John ( band sts arrived ens muttiorised. collector’. trom .the Westfall vs, Knittle. QUESTION—Who has the hardest | one woman failed to turn up. You |‘ to « a | ve Cia 1 deed jy Bee eae ear kin A Wallace vs. Goble. football schedule of any eleven in| know how It le—she gave mo n« nt of have come to take my wife Rae ie iene coliserce, Ae : Hy-are Agreed that Ted Lyons, young | ‘Thompson vs. Young. the country this year? ~"'| notice whatever, Rev. B he explained to show his credentials. If he can Baseball men generally are Agi 3 ch dual ; : hi not do so please call the Tribune. White S is destined to take his place among the Winslow vs. Holland. ANSWER—Hard to say, but few Very annoying. 8 frier c st (oh Diank," said ' hurler with the White Sox, is dv two. Right now he is pitch- | Barger vs. Brown, will deny that Pennsylvania with| “The housemald. however, put on |! of thelr at , why dian seu aaa star hurlers of the majors in a year or two. Tigh Karlee Yocom vs. Kelly. Chicago, Mlinois, Cornell and Yale|one of my gowns and fitted in| ¥ ‘ t prof: ' 4 Telephone 1 ] ing stellar ball and by next year may be the club’s main hurler, McKelvey vs. Hinds on her echedile, is taking on a tall | beautifully." N's thats ona De Py ot ~—s i =e . ~ Overbaugh drew the bye, > ‘contract. “That was helpful." Wes virtua filled b them, 1 sae MG ae init

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