Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 1, 1925, Page 7

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(TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1925 World Results ‘ By Leased Wire —_ Grievances Which Commissioner ree u To Be Heard By Colonel Ruppert; F | gins at St. Louis for “misconduct off the field.” Rupert his side of the story. take. denied Huggins’ charges and ac-|racioys appetite and | failure this season. the big pl cro’ ef curious onlookers soon | hext game, which did not please made Babe the center of a swirling | !esins. mass. As he has been playing recently, Ruth is no better than four or five other members of the Yankee club, By JOHN 8B. FOSTER and certainly tg not the squal of Combs, who is really: making his first year with the Yanks should have been good for three or four years more, if not as a home i BRO’ \ run King, at least as a general out By NORMAN ¥, bital outfielder and player. But as things| The disintegration of John Mer have gone recently, to retain his¥ 3raw field at al},| Played a bis part in the weakening Ruth will have to make the biggest | Of his team &fter four years of carry: . Casper Tribune) Sept. 1—The fining ung suspension of Babe Ruth mark the culmination of differences which have been brewing in the family efrele of the New York Yanks for some time, They prove, at least, that.a manager is mightier than a star--at least when the star begins to slip. ‘Huggins, did dare, after all. The trouble with Ruth began last . spring when the Babe was carr: place on the baseball fight of his career, net dare discipline Babe Ruth be- cause of the effect it might have on perhaps, did not wish to jeopardize | (Copyright, 1935, any prospects his club might have NEW YORK, Sept. often, has acted,’ and’ acted drasti-} there cally. He showed that no player on the tear ve dictator, BABE RUTH BAGK IN GOTHAM FOR HEART-TO-HEART”_ CONFERENCE NEW YORK, Sept. 1.—Babe Ruth arrived in New York oday from Chicago to have a “heart to heart talk” with ol, Jacoh Ruppert, president of the Yankees, on Ruth's suspension and $5,000 fine handed him by Manager Hug~ } j Ruth expressed. confidence that he would get 2 “fair after he had given Colonel] otherwise would not have dared to The former homerun king has Late hours, gratification of @ yvo- too frequent eysed the Yankee manager of mak: | looking on the wine when it is red, ing.him the “goat" for the club's|are three offenses charged against yer. Also there has been Ruth was met by a big crowd of }% tendency to disappear after a newspaper men and photographers | ame and not turn up around the at the Grand Central station, while | Yankee diggings until time for the Ruth ——_-.—— ing en and let down easily, After Tl] f W that, when he actually became ill, there was sympathy for him, which seems to have heen wasted. He certainly did not extend very injuries to his regylars. ial eupport to his sympathizer: . But were I asked to name the Many had said that Huggins did most severe blow to MeGraw's team the chances of the club, Huggins, By FAIR PLAY. Casper Tribune) yer had, but now that it is certain that} there was a new man, that ma the Yanks will not get anywhere| Michael MeTigue, .Admitting F i this year, the little manager, whose | the title he held sat heavy upon tried in vain to “cover un" for his patience hag been taxed once too|him, he rose today to ask where | 208ence from the shortfield station, ditfers | McGraw shifted Long George Kelly from the way he was when he was | from first to second to remake his iny not ‘even a Ruth—could] ing of the light heavies. that is a champion who “A man might have been a rorin’ “ 4 Tuth has lost much.of his attrac: | jon before he copped a worruld's | ured ankle. When McGraw wanted Jon as a ball player. Hes not| title,” observed Mike in rich brogue|t® Keep Kelly's hitting strength in china pitching staff may have ing on at a pennant clip. There is no doubt but what bat- ting slumps and poor base rynning by men old enough to know better alded in the eollapse of the team, And even McGraw's bitterest foes conclude that he was hard hit by for the season of 1925 J would name the absence of Travis Jackson from the lineup. Through an injury to his knee this young man was kept out of some: ining like 40 of the games the Giants have played to date. And McGraw field when Capt. Frank Frisch was put on the hospital list by an in- patting home runs as he did and his| “put whin he is the king with every. | th? fray later he sent the tall one general play ix not sufficient to| body includin’ the fans lookin’ to to the outfield and had the satisfac. nake him anxthing more than an | see him dethroned, he gets cautious,” | Mon of seeing Bill Terry fill the bill ivei avents he worst thing that ev ge player. Mike went on to say that tt is not | %t first. © proved that=abput | pecause® the champion: ims turned happened | coward, but he sees chances t6 make When Heinie Groh was forced from the game McGraw again jus: to Ruth was the {dolizing he got| nfoney as he has never made it ber| #04 Nis infield with the aid of when He was.at his boty He was| fore and he is naturally anxjous to | reddy Lindstrom and again saw his “played up’ been for yea: It went to his head | into the has-been class, and let him to tuke license that he Mike says he {s scared of no one Fy now and while he fully counts on beating Paul Berlenbach. he ts 2! most sorry that Paul holds a title. Titles are a fighter's worst enemy, Michael avers, QUESTION If you have some question to fesajonal sport— ‘Write te John B, Foster, on No others playe bene, 814 World Building, New Boston 5, Chicago 3. Tnclose a. stamped, self-ad- ‘Two scheduled. Gressed envelope for your reply. jask about baseball, football, box- Western League. ing oF ine other amateur or pro- St. Joseph 8, Wichita 6. Oklahoma City 4, Tulsa 3. Lawrence Perry, on amateur American League. sports, and No games pleyed. Fair Play on boxing and other ‘professional sports, All are spe- National League, elal correspondents of the Casper Pittsburgh 10, Philadelphia 3. American. Association. Louisville 7, Kansas City 8. QUESTION—Would Connie Mack| Indianapolis 8, Milwaukee 4, jor Huggins or any other manager! Minneapolis 5, Columbus 2. no ball player has yclean up a bit before he gets knocked | am win with the patched-up inner The recent defeat of Frankie Cen. aro, considered the logical successor to Pancho Villa’s title as flyweight champion of the world was a ser ly > fous blow to Genaro's chances of Yesterday’s Scores || sterring into. the tive without 4 long uphill climb, And his defeat also raises the query again as to whether we are getting the best men in the ring these days, Fidel Labarba, the Los Angeles high school boy who whipped Gen: aro in a ten-round bout, was a new: comer in the professional ranks. He first attracted attention a year ago when he won one of the two first places scored by American boxers in the matches at the Olympic games in Paris. In the finals of the fiywelght class matches there he met a British amateur named MacKen: zie and had him groggy and about to drop when the end of the third be permitted’ to put on a uniform| ‘Toledo 4, St, Paul 5, (13 innings), | #24 final round came, in if any one of und play ball a: them should decide that he would Pacific Coast League. lke to do so? No games scheduled, ANSWER—Yes. There ts no age | Umit to baseball, nor is t rule which prevents a manager Faine to active basehall again ic te|| Loday’s Games chooses to do so, QUESTION—The batter gets hit AMERICAN LEAGUE nf on purpose. What decision should | Philadelphia at Washington. the umpire give? Boston at New York. ANSWER—IE it is the third strike 4 = fh there are times when the batter may NATIONAL LEAGUE i] be called out. If it is not the third| Chicago at Boston. t) strike the umpire should penalize} Pittsburgh at Philadelphia. 4 the batter by calling it a dead ball. pore sige re od ie QUESTION—Who were the good ANSWER-—Owen Moran, a light weight; Jim Driscoll, a feather- weight; a welterivelght; Jimmy Wilde, a fiyweight; Freddie ‘Welsh, a Nghtwelght, are some that Team Washington --.--..79 Philadelphia -.«.00s74 Chicago St. Louis ~ Detroit Cleveland New York - Boston -. Team JLMurphy Pittsburgh — Manager New York ---.--. Sanfrancisco }/ Aor, Xort Brooklyn St. Louis -.. Chicago ----. Philadelphia ~~... Boston ..--.----. by Ward, St. Paul, Jefferson barracks. & rae "3 fighters sent over by England who nid made good here? Club Standings American League. w. National League. w. —_——— ST LOUIS, Mo.—Sammy Mandell, WAGHINGTON, Sept. 1,—The of Rockford, Illinois, won over Bob-| Northern Pacific rajlroad company light: [has received authority from the weight, in a fast ten round bout at [Interstate Commerce commission to Genaro had held the title by vir tue of his victory over the late Pan- eho Villa on March 1, 1923, The fight, was a 15-roun r staged in New York As later Villa. and net Genaro s chance at Jimmie Wilde, British flyweight idol, and knocked him out tn the seventh round, winning the world title held by Wilde. A match be tween Genaro and Villa had been talked of often before the latter's death, New, York state athletic officials are discussing plans for an elimina- tion tourney to decjde a successor to Villa. Up to Genaro's defeat on the Pacific Coast he had a legitimate claim to the title. Now there seems little for him to do but fight his way through such an elimination tour- ney if given the chance. However, the state commission Pct, | May ignore bim in selecting the ell- 637 | sible aspirants. Which will leave “a12 | Genaro out in the cold. “340, Meanwhile Labarba will bear ‘528 | Watching. cee 516 469] Scribes with the New York Giants ‘410 | are having much Joy in chronicling “290 | the fact that the Brooklyn Dodger “| scouts had the first look at Fred ‘oi | Abandonment | Of Railroad Is as} Authorized abandon 26 miles of land in Mon: tana, Including its 13-mile Marysville SALT LAKE CITY — Clinton} branch from Clough Junction to “Cracker” Warren of Portland, Ore., | Marysville and a 13-mile portion of won g decision over Jackie Gordon |its Red Mountain branch from of Salt Lake City in six rounds, Helena to Rimini, SPORT DONE BROWN |: IQPMAN F BROW charged, All @he Casper Daily Cribune the west to give battle to Was followed by six more struggles be- tween tlie leading contenders before the c the season, on October games will be played in Phil ntember 7, 8, and 9, {ter which the clubs meet in ty ts at Washingte SENATORS—SPORT: Let the Athletics set the pace in August,” sald Bucky Harris seyeral weeks ago. "We will catch them when they blow in September and finish with pienty to spa f With the Senators three and one- half games ahead, that prediction has been partly fulfilled. The road trip of the Athletics through the west dimmed-thefr pennant hopes. Two victories in 12 starts consti- defense, Kelly was back at ‘second | tuted the Philadelphia record, the and Terry on first. young team crumpling under the Byt when young Jackson dropped Geen SOBER rs eeneenuy out MeGraw labored In vain to fill] ” 4) the gap. Frankie Friech played short |). veaterday as the weet: geptably. but voung Freddy Lind-| levee men ee ina datatn tous atyom failed to the gap at third. | ondaeq. ‘Two games ca nik venir MaGraw then moved Frisch 20 third | fhe National, the, pennancrushing the great work of Kelly on secong | “uumPh over the Phitiies, 10 to 3 Hen oBill Tevey at mar wecatews Seoe noni us Meadows and pow: ¢ at, McG erfy! hitting gave the leaders an team would have suffered more than | aqvantage of seven and one-halt {t did. games over the second-place Giants. Last year Jackson played the e The Boston Braves, fighting to tire season at short—and batted .202,| climb from the senior circuit pit, He scored a total of 81 runs. Recent | edged within two points of seventh averse ae hima era bat 45 | placa by squaring their series with runs so far this season. At last year's|the cubs at two games apiece. clip he would now have around 65. What a difference 20 runs might have made in the scores of the Giant games in the last couple of months! Jackson tried gamely to stay In the game after the injury to his knee, After remaining out a couple of days he returned—againat the doctor's or ders—with the result that the was forced to quit for a longer period, He finally was sent to his home in | Arkansas for a prolonged rest—the while the Giants fought vainly to} head off the pesky Pirates. Cemmunity Golf club players who Jackson is one of the men around | expect to contest honors in the cl whom McGraw must build a new] tournament scheduled for the week team, This year’s play in the Nat-| ef September 13, must file their en fonal leagye has shown that his| (ries by Saturday night, September pitchers, his ageing outfielders and | }?, according to announcement today his catchers are already backing | by A. McCafferty, professional. The along the trail of oblivion. tourney will be the last big event of the season here and is expected to attract a record number, although Umited to Community club members. layers will be divided into three aon § the clubs of the American | flights and a $2 entrance fee will be receipts from this Fitzsimmons, Indianapolis pitcher, | source will go to purchase prizes, purchased by the Glants, and be ies als oer cause the scouts reported unfavor- ably on him, did not bid for his services, Now, in the couple of weeks Fitz simmons has been with the New York outfit he has pitched good ball and gives every promise of becom: NEW YORK—A judge's decision ing. « great hurler, was awarded SidTerris, New York McGraw gave Fitz his baptism of} lightweight contender, over Jack fire in a game against the Pirates, rnstein of Yonkers, N. Y., after allowing him to finish a game start- unds, ed by Virgil Barnes. Then, a few —o days later Fitz got a chance to start NEW YORK — John Devine, Jr., a game against the Boston Braves | six-year-old Philadelphia swimmer, and acquitted himself nobly, defeat-| swam across the mile wide Hudson ing the Braves with Benton andj in 37 minutes. Genewisch in the box. et Although Fitz is twenty-four years DALLAS, Texas—Young Stribling old he has had but four years of real | of Atlanta, knocked Ke War- baseball experience. He got his first| ren of Athens, Texas, in the sixth real chance with Muskegon in the| round. Central league in 1921 and late the following year was bought by Indi- following eae wan bounty int | Smoke Damage grabbed t he New York club. rabbed vy. the New, Sar} ub Cases Are Up ny Neun, brilliant young first —_ taken on by the Tig: last PRESCOT A p has had a rather discou ng year. He showed thi r that he is at go in fast company. Every opportunity t * br Cobb has given him has proyed, for Extension I Neun, a chance to shine. ‘But Lu| United Verde Copper companies Blue is Lu Blue, and as a result, the} W. A. Jordan ard other Verde val young man has had to warm the|ley ranchers, here September 14 bench most of the season. It takes The cases involve damages of a patient youngster not to chafe/ more than $62,000, alleged to have under a bench assignment when he] been done fruit and crops of ranch- has reason to believe he could play|ers by smoke from the two big| regularly if given a chance. smelters. = = (Associated Pres: E Gordon hats hold their bit more in that than appears on the sui 1 <—truth — your To hold its shape a hat ust be made of the very next hat will pest materials put togeth- n the very best way: Gordon hats néver book old—even when they've outlived their style. er i PAGE SEVE First in News Of All Events SENATORS AND ATHLETICS CLASH TODAY N OPENING BIG SERIES Outcome Of Play At Washington To Have Im- portant Bearing On American League Derby; Clubs Rest On Monday. NEW YORK, Sept. 1,—(Associated Press.) —Connie Mack brought his battered Philadelphia cohorts back from hington in the first round of a final stand to rescue the American league leadership from the tightening grip of Clark Griffith's Senators, A two-game series starting at the capitol today will be Bunched hits off Kauffman gave the | Hub victory at & to 8, 'NOENTRIESIN TENNIS PLAY FROM GASPER No entries have been received from ming state ten ‘Aovel by William Basil Courtney sopyright, 1925, Warner Bros. with Monte Blne, fs a pleturization of this story ‘Warver Bros. Picture “THE LIMITED MATL line, in terror, stopped In* Limited} movements of dressi Bob Wilson, idriving Mail up the mountain pass, has failed| ed on, ever so s gnal light has seitched| A moment later ha| tal 403 a runaway freight train crashing|clet down from ahead. the two trains are a mass of fla Bob, recovering from un-| consciousness, rushes to the mail car, ta find his chum, Jim Fowler, the m elerk, dead, but Bobby Fossler, Jim’s| wouldn't wa child, is apparently uninjured. to see that the from green to re. and wife, would you CHAPTER IX—Continued went to) bad nev es of bad news followi Caroline's n not found a chance to observe wh her gown bee form was rev eyes, who thought of|h Jane's jealou ¢ at Cheyenne of stars will compete luding several western Nebraska and north Thursday of this w A hurried pot and Mrs. O'L ng on the door—| Bob's part in this was abovebo: not in her heart to beliey © love to he e was the husband of this w Alarmed, Carc riedly, Mrs. O'Leary ite as her apron Colorado champion, will also contest Organization lected in conr e state tournament Chinese Chase Bandit Forces In Manchuria nection with t Jim Fowler was and Bob and Bobb: t wajt and search though sh rough many long day her| lowed, there was no sight of Bob Jane looked seriou particularly upset. oline remembered that Jane's face had shown no sorrow—for she had her in the tra of the moment, and had seen only|charge of n Jin the air, to be fil-| should he ever be foun 4 trainmen talked—talked in ways th: flame and h en within her—of the soi an Bob must be tk Tun away from the result of his i competence or carelessness or bot! Jane had gone. h ver after, Car- remesnbered past gence of duty h 1 consul at Harbin, has received reports that Chinese troops are continuing a vigorous pursuit of an eye specialis inese troops Jafter many days of despairir One of the g | Western Ution o \tle girl, who also boarded at Mr | O'Leary’s—fall | Caroline one da a combined friend: the lunchroom. “Say, remember that woman yo! d overnight a while ago? “Well, she was a cu ce—an alert thousand troops of the Manchurian Holunging surrounded the bandits aid compelled them te srovince of r , nd dining vis Yank Explorer gave me a message to gu’ go—called him husband. believe me if I back that me: name of her ‘husband,’ a different name no t run a sharem! “The Limited's been wrecked!” sage, rubbed out t tered down the line to Crater City was told as fast as Mrs. O'Leary's excited, trembling, lips could voice “y “Relief trains are bringing in the} pk ging copy to let you read it! Caroline read with a mist of eag erness over her eyes henry Gaston: Hotel Amazon, At last I have c nses comma dear | band comma and realize that I ¢ only you stop V trainmen that Bob deliberately ran past signal that was set against him at} fault, they all say, and his arrest has tly Mrs. O'Leary ¥ weeping—and na dead silence. aah k he “I guess one must expect those]! © message back to the g things on a railroad!” ng that’ the expedition is responsible for anti-soviet pro- paganda, the Mongolian govern- | ment {s compelling Roy Chap- man Andrews of the American, Museum of Natural History, to | give up his explorations in the Gobi desert. 3ob Wilson, t tared at her. true that Bob would ra in the way; If you real- shape, There's 2 good ize this isthe yet, and Carol Jane's declarati ou can go to keep me from him!” e, but if I tell you CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9230 A. M Saves you approsimately 12 boure travel between Casper and Rawlins WYOMING MOTORWAY Salt Creek Transportation Company’s Office TOWNSEND HOTEL PH PARD—313.50

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