Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 20, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE SIX The Casper Sunday Cribune, BY World Results By Leased Wire | ‘TILDEN TRIUMPHS AGAIN IN WM. JOHNSTON FORGES HIM TE IMIT IN PLAY Tournament Finals at} Forest Hills Goes J out m ei Five Sets. RY L. FARRELL Washington a WASHINGTON, 19.—(United - With t By HEN United P: ted his FOREST HILLS, N. Y., N owed Veac Sept. 19.—After all, there is | end only one Tilden. A The national tennis cham-] four: 2 pion smashed his way to vic- tory this afternoon in the] + WwW J Wast tive # k; ¥ Second Game— HE T. II, left] CRicago —-_--.070 062 000—17 24 1 West club he| Washington -.000 000 000-- 0 1 4 pin? Dildes a t Detroit 9, Philadelphia 5, 1 defeated "L: E PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 19. —] t today (United Press)}—Detrolt took the The Philadelphian’ y was] game of the series from th a popt ne. Al najor-| letics today, bombarding § , thi entectatores from the peak in the third inning rsé’ for’ the »1 to finnally win by 9. to 5. Harriss Kontron 4 s followed G game, was € z t t of the | ter ston wa defeat pion. He won the first set s of the play, «lthough 2 002 101—8 with his customary aloofness 001 010 120— d something held back. I r ae Cleve 3-0. ‘ BOSTON, Sept. 19.—(United Press) sities the abt eet tiedan Yana tral The Red Sox and Cleveland divided their double header here, tod: the Sox winning the first 3 to 2 in 10 in- nings while Buckeye of the Indians shut out ‘the locals 5 to 0 in th service to w crowd figured The champion ran and the h th gam n broke the first ugh t was all over out this set at ¢ mat night appeared over. cap. It was e's nth Both men were tired by the strig-| Winning of the season but after they k a 15-minute | First Gam H. ©. rest. {t was a different story. “Lit-| Cleveland —--.200 000 000 0—2 § 1 tle Bill, forehead creased and -000 001 001 1—3 11 hié lean t, came back to the ries — Miller n Myatt; courts de 1 to in. He| Ehmke, Wingfield and Stokes, Bis- broke through Tilden’s sefvice with | ch two brilliant passing shots and con-| Second Gam tinued to win his own until the set d 000101 012—5 was his, 6-4. E mie 000 000 000—0 b They arted ying the fifth Batteries— Buckeye and Myatt and deciding set with Johnston still] Kiefer Zahniser and ‘Bischof outplaying the cham SpaUEL SE m) peared | v But | ‘cowering over bis | 1 fought their in furious ral as’ they b opponent into mid-court s that were sapping the strength , Tilden displayed the brand that makes him indisput their and | the Wa Shocker, WAL Louis W YOE atteries—Win Sha 9-4, New pt. uK, w day Night. By (Copy NEW ing the day night that ver ttle st young ne in the te r kne FAIR PLAY v t in th ements has bee from either camp. This because men have put in the harde! lives to pink of m: that he hi f the urts They were ‘ t and then, so swiftly it], = Seria z seomed as though he wer ving =e aigatnbes 7 aon v Detroit - 65 ¢ through a practice match the cham-| 4) 70 Atl 4) F ¥ a M ey ) 1] ‘either has sho | ' pounds, th | I Pc 1 a titular go and | ttle } | | St i . question to} | 5 é t f 1 box: | ae ‘ r pro | \ on ° pte : Pe a Record Price Paid tor [his Laa be sar What is believed to have been ote Ait ave une | | the highest price ever paid by a Class A league club for a Class B league player. was recorded when the Atlanta club of the Southern Association paid Ashe- ville, N. C., in the Sally league $7,500 for the release of Clar- rrespondents of the Casper Tribune, 814 World Building, New York. Ei a stamped, self-ad- nvelope for your reply. icici atteo sae 1—Will- any one who par-| onc. “Stuffy” McCrone,: flashy a game with or against | ah: 4 ! were in the White Sox | Young first baseman. McCrone scandal in 1919 be able to play in| hails from the sandlots of Cleve- ganized leagues? land. This is his second year adele il >» playe’] out in organized baseball. He ir the titr left Asheville with the remark- 1 1 le ds pe ts play. Thowe | @ble batting mark of .876, top- ho wil hem now | ping all first basenien in the ctr- e made who | cuit. aks Tivo Ghimpses, c Question—Can you knock out a nan as easily with a big glove as with a snlall one, If se why do fight ers use big gloves in the gym? tt te ? nd dt rm | | Question—Who was the biggest | prive fighter that for nt? \ bets Jess Willard and B bets Joe} Dunkhorst, © bets Cart ¥ ? | _ I i and Luebe, E KER-SHADE BETS ARE EVEN “WITH SOX: LYONS IS HERO OF SECOND WITH ONE-HIT RECORD St. York 6-3. 19.— (United Press}—The St. Louis Browns defeat- ed the Yankees in a double header here today by scores of 9 to 6 and 4 to Ernie Wingard, St. Louis Pitcher, featured in the second game with his hitting. He drove in three of the four runs for his team and his home run in the fifth and a triple with two on base in the ninth, was the deciding factor, Earl Combs, by hitting safely in both games to- day, now has hit safely in seventeen straight games. R. H. B. -100 020 231-9 18 1 -=100 000 005—6 12 14 — Gaston and Dixon; Jo’ n and Bengough, Second Game— R. H. B. t. Lot 21 New York 1 Champ Faces Big Job| in Ring Battle Mon- ribune) n notice 11 issued both licks of weight ondition when bell sends them into act n. man sized job on his bands when he con- fronts the lad who has hounded him for a fight in the past two years and as well made life miserable for him swith the New York bosing sc lons, ‘ot only did Daye surprise the fis tie world by his sensutional knock- out of Jirhmy Slattery, but be found Instant favor in his demand for a shot at the welter title The wise guys are not titleholder any the ‘ bettir 1 what two 1 } Babe ADAMS Prete were calling ck in 1909, the his brilliant “. He turn of the year that helping pitch th the league champions! perienced youth wer world’s series against Tigers and proceeded t on their tails three suc This feat placed him- year in big league ly the few immortals vo plished such a f areer i out t babe After year By NOMAN Ef BROWN When the Pirates take the field against the Washington Senators Oc. tobe at Pittsburgh, they are now slated to do, a forty-two-year old gent will be Imbering up hi soup bone on the side ir ’ to start the opening fraca Pirates, He is “Babe” Adams The “Babe” is forty-two years’ old now, but still “Babe hin he sta with the Pl- © be the prize season, ne Pirat nip this inex- nt into the the Detroit ‘0 stand then ve times. in his first eball—among hay om ter that great exhibition of pit —awaiting his turn to shine once | more In the fall classic | tchers by the i him | , their | Few } the pitching staffs, played the cireuits-around in | that campaign of 1909 now don big major league uniforms. Ana Adams marie time “until | the world’s series wii the winning record for the year behind him—a String of victories that helped as | much as anything else to shove the Pirate crew into pennant harbor. Baseball history reveals the name of but cne other man to play on two | pennant-winnl teams 16 years apart. Jim O'Rourke, catcher and] At Loutsville— H. outfielder, was with the team that | Indianapolis _..001 000 011—23 12 2 won the champlonship. He had|pouisvitie .-...011 000-40¢—s 9 0 played with Provid meanwhile. | yenry and Florence; Tincup and O'Rourke did not have fo depend Meyers. | alone upon the cunning of his arm m in the game to kee et tha hitter in ba be Ruth | attle on fafied to ec s not indicate tha falling below w dards. record for home When the Pirates and tling it out In 1909 four home runs to tall felt that the mark some time. we It did—unt d three himse and his teamm: sockers ran t For up to the 1923 se up in one fall meeting was f and that numb orld’s s¢ runs chal Tigers gave ft id stand il Bat If int es an total up to the two teams for the record of homers made by a single team in a ser This record the Wawsht Goose Goslin Inmmed homers and Stanley Harr two Incidentally G f three home runs for tl the one set by Babe Ruth in 1923 and which some scribes felt the home Who m : Doughe ff Leever and Val | 1908—Joe Tinker, Ci D n, Tigers. Clar Pirates, 1909 | Mullin nd Cr Murphy, rhs. Fran E At nnd off Pirates would stand time, In view of the fact in king and in the off Young rty, Red Sox 1, Pirates ubs, off (two) off and Summers, Tigers; Jones awford two off Babe Adams. fen, off Me Marquord ewnon ber tied the | Bill | Keball ay to obl H *|at break nec the hom is still in th And the Jase clout takes on added in a world’s, serie It one of these fall classics that Bak 1d Athlett bin Huahs Athat to oO 1915—Hoo Sex, off i) | Phillies; Lud Phillies, off Fos : Phillie Y « ning s¢ ing | 5 Pentti, ; i | Ww —Ja t Burlel Grime: (pl | 1920—k | 192 Ruth, Ya las, G te; mi! 3 Harper, Yankees Harpe: es, Barnes, Giants les when | 4s common a contest, i two for the Gia 1e runs were sebalis in the | Stengel colle Meusel. 192 Stengel, Giants, off Bush and Jones; Babe Yankees, ( off McQuillan, Bentley and if; Ward, Yankees off MeQuill: R Gants rkees, oft nts, off ft Bush. Johnson, off John. Senators, (thr oft Bentley, Baldwin and Bentley; Ryan Giants off Russell, Senators; Bent- ley, Giants off Johnson; Harris Sen- ators, (two) off Bentley nnd Barnes. ———».—____ regen | Today’s Games NATIONAL LEAGUE New York at Chicago Boston at Pittsburgh. Brooklyn at 81 Philadelphia | AMERICAN LEAG eland at Boston (2). at Philadelphia ENNIS TITLE MATCH SENATORS SPLIT DOUBLE BILL |9*7¢3 ta" Sisteen Years Ago. ‘Babe Adams Awaits Next Ghancc GOLF COURSES MADE READY FOR PROFESSIONAL THLE CONTEST Chicago Club to See Championship Play This Year Between Survivors; Medal Play Between District Winners Is First. By EDWARD C. DERR (United Press Staff Correspondent.) CHICAGO, Sept. 19.—The greens and long fairways of two 18-hole courses were put in shape today for the open- ing round of the national professional golfers’ tournament, which is to be played over courses 3 and 4 of the Olympia First in News | Indians, 40) Fields Country club. Sixty-seven players, surviv Yesterday’s Scores American League. Chicago, 2-17; Washington, 3- Detroit, 9; Philadelphia, 5. Cleveland, 2-5; Boston, 3-0. St. Louis, 9-4; New York, 6-3 National League. New York, 2; Chicago, 6. Brooklyn, 3; St. Louis, 15. Boston, 1; Pittsburgh, 2. Philadelphia, 2; Cincinnati, 7. International League. Baltimore, 9-2; Jersey City, 14-4. Providence, 10-1; Reading, 9-6. Toronto, 4; Buffalo, 1. Rochester, 0; Syracuse, 3. American Association, First game— R. H.E, Toledo --. -~121 000 040—8 13 3 Columbus - 011 300 000—5 10 1 Canavan and Schulte; Northrop and Bird. Second game (7 innings by agree- ment)— R. H.E. Toledo - 200 711 0O—11 12 2 Columbus -. 000 100 2— 8 5 4 Grant and Gaston; Leverette and Moore. At Kansas City— Milwaukee Kansas City - Bell and McMenemy; Olson and Snyder. At St. Paul— R. 1, Minneapolfy --.000 102 @00—3 8 St. Paul 000 023 00°—5 0 Dumont, Hall, Francis and Ain smith; McQuaid and Collins. Pacific Coast League First Game— R.H. E. Portland -... 220 000 100— 5 12 San Francisco 010 000 100— 21) 1 Leverenz and Hannah; Pfeffer, , Griffin and Agnew, Yelle. Second G Portland me— 000 103 000— R, San Francisco 011 000 000— 2 12 1} Meeker and Tobin; Geary, Jolly and Yelle, Agne At Sacramento— R, H. EB. Vernon 600 000 000— 0 2 Sucramento — 000 002 10x— 4 Johnson and Whitney; Martin and | Koehler. | i ae | R { 000 000 000— 6 | 0 005 61x—18 Jaklar Salt Lake ruett Ponde: H os Angeles— R. 100 120 010— 5 025 300 00x—10 Wussell, Chekaluk fe and Sandberg. Angeles mse3 Baldwin; Western League. At Denver— R. H. B Oklahoma City..000 000 040—4 Denver .-- -030 000 20°—5 3 Brown; May and Wolgamot; Lynel: At Des Moines— R.H. DB. Tulsa - ~-0111 210 000—15 18 1 Des Moines..-0 00 012 000— 311 1 Bolen and Dimond; Koupala, Holtz hauser and Lingle. | At Om (ist game)— 1. Wichita ----100 300 100—5 6 Omaha - -130 100 30*—S 14 Jolly apd Haley; Bailey and Wilder. At Omaha (2nd. game)— K.H.E. Wichita 010 262 010—12 16 0 --000 000 000— 0 7 6 Glasier Omaha ----;- Jolly and. Haley; Batley and Wilder. R.H.B. 0 000 200—- 6 12 1) Lincoln -- O12 02%+11 19 2] Love, Allison, Haid and Brooks; Pillette and Wales. react has eine EES Missouri—Haskel! ‘ollege 0, At Lincoln St. Joseph .-.-2 At Springti | Tell | Che Tribune,’ 100 4— o .| x ors of\district tournaments, holes of medal play on Mo em to qualify for match rts Tuesday. the medal round, an- discl d that t off in three somes, for the first 18 play, which sts Pairings for nounced today, players will tee starting at 10 m. holes, nd at ID. 0 for the sec ind 18. The pairings bring some of the leading contenders into the early three-somes. On course number Al the Bull ve and on n, Gene Sarazen, eo Diegel Spinoza start at 10 a. m., other course, Walter Hag Hehihorn and William Crevy at the same time. In addition to these six, play that are ce! in to draw large leries include Mike E John Farrell, Grand Rapi French, of Youngstown, 0! urie Ayton, Chicago; Dave Robertson, Detroit; and Bob Craigs, Loulsville. Hagen, it is understood, plans to gke a hard fight for the pro title th! year, believing that he is in need of another cup. In the a e of Jim Barnes and Jock Hutchinson two old war horses who are not e ‘atrous, tered in the finals this year, Hagen’ chief competition 1s expected from en, Diegel, Watrous, Brady and Girl Swimming Star Defended By Association NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—(United Press.)—The women's swimming asociation, which financed the tri of Gertrude Eu to France for the purpose of swimming the Eng Msh channel, tonight prepare an official statement on the subjeet of the American girl's failure. The statement which probably will be Issued early next. week, refutes the charges made by Jabex Wolfe, the English trainer effect that Miss Ederle “trained on -the front porch with an ukeléle’ and .sub- stantiates the swimmer's yntention that she did not neglect her oppor- tunities but was beaten by adverse clreumstances. Whipped Champ But East Won't Call Him King Fidel La Barba, above; ‘the Oi All Events The BULL'S EYE ——$—_—_————— ew ii id General Manager EditorandiGenerars g Apother “‘Ball’* Durham ad’ jement by Will Diegteld éciexn, bam mowing. Wales ine mcr for them. EVOLUTION HIS is the second issue of the Bull’s Eye deal- ing with that question which everybody is interested in, Evolution. Last week we showed the Mayflower de- scendants originated from the Ape. This week we will take those who didn’t claim to come from Mayflower Descendants. (There won’t be many in this bunch.) Some people certainly are making a fight against the Ape. It seems the truth kinder hurts. Now, if a man didn’t act like a Monkey, he wouldn’t have to be prov- ing that he didn’t come from one. Personally I like Monkeys. If we were half as original as they are, we would never be suspected of coming from something else. They never accuse Monkeys of coming from anybody else. They are unique and original—that’s why. You never saw a Monkey have to have a Fac- tory roll his Cigarette, did you? No, Sir. You give a Monkey a Sack of ‘‘Bull’’ Durham and the Papers and you will see registered in his face real satisfacti I have seen them scheme all day to get ahold of a sack of ‘Bull’? Durham. Intelligence beyond belief. Ve Mugen going to be an . Watch fe on. | SIXTY-FIVE YEARS AGO! In 1860 a blend of to- baccowasborn-“Bull” Durham. On quality alone it has won recognition wherever tobacco isknown. It ‘still offers the public this — more flavor, more enjoyment and a lot more money left at the end of a week’s smoking. TWO BAGS for 15 cents 100 cigarettes for 15 cents ‘Los Angeles high school youth who, in his eleventh professional bout, defeated Frankie Genaro, American flyweight champion, is vot beirg hailed as champ in New York despite the fact the hont was a decision one. Figure

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