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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1925 “ADDITIONAL NEWS OF HIGH OGHODL TENNIG HONORS AT - STAKE IN TOURNEY THIS WEEK, Elimination Play Starting Early in Week to De-| termine Winner; Casper Tennis Club Tennis will share honors with golf in the Casper spot- | light this week coincident with the opening of play in the Casper high school tennis tournament. Forty players have been entered for the event and matches will be played on courts throughout the city, dufe to the lack of courts at the high school. Through the newly organized Casper Tennis club Dean Morgan, director of ath-|yéar has demonstrated the need ¢ w ble to secure the use| high school courts and it is pl » splendid courts of the Stan-'te construct two h courts t dard Oll company and many of thejanother year, The ¢ enne H matches will be yed there, tnelud- {school has six courts for tennis play. ing the finals. Following the close of the tennis ‘The winner of the tournament will} tournament, high school golf en a minor sport letter as first | thusia will engage in-match play while both the champion and| Many b have become ade ) will receive paid-up mem-|the & ring the berships in the Casper Tennis club,|several having spent Interest manifested in tennis thison the tinks as caddies. | ved Couple — Past Four | Sept. core years of :, Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan, are Thelr latest escapade was an “alr: plane ride. A pert little woman of and a dashing man of 89 y A ajpeared at the flying fleld d were C 5 by ¢ Airways h flew over the idan county fair perfect into the osure claimed ve they jd with ed. MeDon- erve to compe plane they a Mrs ake any I'd like to go up again." “I've been down in a diving bell,” sald Mr, McDonough, ‘and I kind of figured Ld like to go to the other | extreme. They are the oldest couple he has elimbed equal t doesn’t CASPER COMMUNITY CLUG GOLFERS TEE OFF THIS MORNING IN ANNUAL CLUB TOURNAMENT Club Honors at Stake in Competition Scheduled for This Week; Douglas Tourney Will Attract Many With Warren L. Smith, winner of the Wyoming amateur | golf championship and former Princeton team star, in the } running, Casper Community club golf players will tee off this morning in their annual tournament over the club course southeast of the city. Included in the list of favor- ites is L. R. (Dolly) Gray, medalist of the Casper city tour- nament, who {is also a member of|the basis of their scores. ‘The first the Community club. round of match play will begin on The qualifying round today will] Monday and {t is planned to 1 an 18-hole route and entrants | finals matcHes next Sunday 7 divided into three flights on| tically all members of the re entered rtfielder Some club members will go to Robbie’s Prize Douglas today t mpete in 18 holes of medal dor the Wyoming Staté Fair cup. Country club play: ers will also cohtest thi which is open to all golf ming. Vance Roe of ¢ in the low score Is Community club ¢ sired to enter the Douglas tourney were permitted to qualify for the local tournament on Saturday and several availed themselves of the privileg Firemen Think It’s Noon but It’s Only A Fire They Learn of that ente | comm up their mi ex posit the dinner table a realization of the more sei nature of the summons dawned | upon the personnel of the volun lepartm which then \P ded with its customary ala os ‘WOMAN ROBS HOMES IN who de-| Wyo. Sept. at Crawford, ng, that Studebaker Standard Six Coach, $1,420, Delivered in Casper. ‘Brooklyn was-the lucky one of the eight Big Time clubs that sought the services of “Chuck” Corgan, voted by western league managers as the best shortstop in the circuit.. The consideration was “over $10,000 cash.” He's a turnover batter at an average of 808 for 126 games, BODY OF MAN 13 FOUND FLOATING DOWN STREAM BY MEN BUILDING DAM WHEATLAND, Wyo., Sept. 12.— ‘The body of an unknown man was taken from the Platte river by men employed on the Guernsey power dam, who -saw the corpse floating down stream and ran out on the im: | proyised bridge used by the gov- ernment, thorwing a rope about It and hauling it in After an examination of the body, a coroner's reported that the man to all appearances been drowned four to five days, and might | have floated some distance A concussion indicating a blow on the head was found, but the men | who hauled the b out sald that they had tied on the end of the rope which they threw, and appearances, indicated that this caused the contusion, WEGWORMS NOT TO HAVE EFFECT ON BEET FIELD N, Wyo., Sept. 12. Regarding the presence of worms in the beets this year, G. ¢ Buffington, agricultural superintend: ent for the Holly sugar corporation, tates that he found about a thou sand acres in this territory this year that had been acked by worms. | Hut that a prompt application of | par's green prompUy stopped then: | and wil) not’ affect the production | field ECAUSE Studebaker bui cars all bodies, clutches, differentials, steering more than competing cars. | 2. A construction advantage: plants. Being built as a unit, pair costs and, finally, higher The net of it is this: the one. with its unit-built constructio: prices are higher. South David St. all engines, all axles, sets, gray iron castings and drop forgings—it is possible to give purchasers two advantages: | 1. A price advantage: Because Studebaker eliminates extra’ profits which all other manu- facturers (except Ford) must pay to outside parts or body makers. Thus Studebaker is able to use steel of extra toughness, fine northern white ash and hard maple, wool upholstery, plate glass, painstaking workmanship to precision standards, and extra equipment, such as gaso- line gauge, clock, stop light, etc.—yet charge no are not only designed to constitute one har- monious unit, but are Unit-Built in Studebaker functions as a unit. This results in years longer life, scores of thousands of miles of excess trans- portation, greater riding comfort, minimum re- offers you a bargain in quality. There are others in our gen- eral price field who also build quality cars, But for models that are at all comparable their ids for Studebaker Others, who gear, springs, gear dash; automatic y| front yard. 12.— Odom, alias Mrs. Lewis ever taken up, Mr. Leferink reports, d he believes they are the oldest uple in Wyoming to have ever flown, He was lavish in his praise of their coolness and daring. But danger is no experience for | either. Mrs. McDonough pioneered on the plains of Nebraska and in the mountains of Wyoming. She has kept house in the shadow of Indian encampments and has seen war parties trailing through ‘her Her bravery is further testified by the fact that she is the mother of ten children, When she married Mr. McDonough she was the widow of Captain John Schuler after whom the local post of the G. A. R. took its name, Mr. McDonough also has a spec- tacular record of action, He fought Indians in New Mexico with the great Kit Carson, and marched to the sea with General Sherman dur- ing the Civil War. He announces that the worst experience of his life was crossing the Great Plains of Kansas and Texas in 1860, He was one of the soldiers ordered out by the government to put down an up rising of the Navajo Indians in New Mexico. ‘The heat of the sun was terri- ble,” he said, “and the ground was so hot we could hardly bear to keep our feet on it." The lack of water was the greatest torture the men underwent, he says, and they were constantly tantalizd by mirages of cool springs and lakes. They made the trip on foot as they didn’t re- ceiye their horses until they reach- ed New Mexico, The government had only three mounted regiments in the United States at that time, he reports, These were the First and Second Dragoons, and the Mounted Rifles. Mr. McDonough was a mem- ber of the Rifles. His present ambition is to cross the Great Plains in an airplane, Mr. McDonough says. The two Intrepid aviators made the flight on the invitation of Mrs, MeDonough's son, John Schuler of Sheridan. Mrs. Odom is guilty of the theft of quantities of women's clothing from homes in Cheyenne, ons in which | she was a guest, and one that she visited. Undersheriff James Woolcox left here Friday for Crawford to bring the two women here to answer the charges that have been placed against them. The muscles of a bird's wings are, proportionately, twenty times more powerful than those of a man’ mm, Or, under Studebaker's fair and liberal Budget Payment Plan, this coach may be purchased out of monthly income with an in- itial payment of $474.00 only One-Profit Value Unit- Built Construction Make Studebakers Bargains in Quality once built quality cars, have made material sacrifice in order to secure super- ficial price advantages. valye for the man or woman who wants that kind of acar, But if he wants a bargain in quality there is only one answer—Studebaker, Consider, for instance, the Standard Six Coach, illustrated above. plate glass; fine trim to hide all tacks; heavy, ornamental hardware; clock; gasoline gauge on These cars are good It has wool upholstering; windshield cleaner; stop light; locks on ignition; steering gear, door and spare- tire carrier all operated by a single key. Slam the door and the sound says “quality.” Swing on the door. Run one wheel up on the Because all parts every Studebaker resale value. , -profit Studebaker n Truth in cAdvertising A reader of The Saturday Evening Post wrote the editor questioning the truth of a Studebaker advertise- ment. Read our reply on page 71 of the current issue of “The Post."* STUDEBAKER curb and note how the doors still open and close. Sit on the firm, heavy fenders. Try the steering gear. See how easily it handles the full- size balloon tires. Test the comfort of the deep rear seat. Its genuine wool upholstery covers two layers of washed, quilted cotton, one layer of genuine curled hair and extra long springs closely held together by small coil springs. Run the engine—the most powerful in any car of this size and d- ing to the soieeeert see tional Automobile Chamber of Commerce. Come in and see this bargain in quality—~the lowered price closed car ever sold - baker, i Py Brads BIG SIX MOTOR COMPANY Phone 1817 YEAR Score Years Get Thrill | In Trip Through Clouds | 12.— Che Casver Sundap Cribune SPORTS | PAGE SEVE!| YOMING | TATE FAIR Invites Casper See Wyoming at Her Best in Agriculture, Livestock, Industry and Art Great Entertainment Program Smashing the © Hindenburg Line THREE NIGHTS.---SEPT. 17, 18 and 19 Best Rodeo in the West, Fourth U. S. Cavalry, Auto Races, Vaudeville Acts WEDNESDAY--PIONEER DAY PROGRAM UNDER AUSPICES NATRONA HISTORICAL SOCIETY THURSDAY--STATE SPELLING CONTEST FRIDAY--CASPER DAY SATURDAY--CHILDREN’S DAY ALL SCHOOL CHILDEN ADMITTED FREE + SPECIAL RAILROAD RATES On Northwestern and Burlington Railroads. Tickets on sale Thursday, Sept. 17, good returning until Saturday night. Reduced rates on other days. ; DON’T MISS BEST STATE FAIR EVER HELD DOUGLAS, SEPT. 15 to19