Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 26, 1925, Page 5

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ATURDAY, SEPTE ‘ i i SATUR| TEMBER 26,1925 Che Casper Daily Critune PAGE FIVE World Results First in Neue By Leased Wire Of All Events | ING NEWS f= "ssi one, Any way, you can address me ; : 5 in care of general delivery, at the Both Turn in Wins Yesterday and Standings \N t Ay ; ; . } ; z on Michigan aver ept her| “Love and kisses, mother, dear Remain Unchanged; Athleti’s Drop Game oS a SSS : SS | when Amoura left her ita-dny [etruggling with ter skin he ltanate at on tie back ten Mires room to seek for one with a rental| was reminded t mid’ (Alusley; tha dean olé to Tris Speaker’s Clan. = : Siena A Si nearer $12-a-week, she had no plans| petite. Sh« as to how to go about it. She would|in the first resta postoffice. I suppose I can get mail Tay cS j é é just go out, she decided, and walk | down In tt The possibility of Qetroit and Sf, Louis setting their long Ighborhood she would find what | joint. sd ctabte gnd bitterly contested American league struggle for third 7 she sought. She had with her $25| vapor dish.water, s } in a small purse, the rest of her for-| laughter of orkmen place in the closing series of the schedule between the two \ tune remained in her room, hidden | it a forbidding atmosphere. But teams loomed strongly today. _ , between the leaves of a book. went in resolutely, and - The margin of two and one-half games which separated WA: 5 | The stranger of the grill-room | initiated into t t he third place Browns from the|seore and in the ninth to win by & 4 { ; , jcame upon her at the revolving door | Ing “pod Tigers at the close of play last week | ® Single run, 4 to 3, the Browns yes- i naide J He lifted) nis) hat | with toast i, terday profited by the geod pitch- y. “Just the of ay jepss, a dish of pea a ick ing of Dixie Davis to defeat the ‘ : S a Wali ian €:10h faved» t) about her, : that was the forelads club yesterday recorded its fourth] champion Senators. 4 ihe ig. ‘ A “Oh, IS it” With that she pro-|8te. consulted th walt! mation, she led victory in six starts this week. With] A six-run spurt in the eighth frame tyt yeh eons , z eeded out into the street and walked |!" which haa : to an anteroom where both teams hitting hard and getting} gave the Cleveland Indains a 9 to y \ ‘ ¢ ‘ quickly to Michigan boulevard, hop-| S¢veral ads that gaye promise | there a row of wooden lockers fair pitching, interest of fans in the|5 ‘verdict over the Athletics, while ' . 5 :; ote SE: y ; s that he wasn't following her. | Providing a job t an open one, she s two cities hag begun to center en a] in the only National league game, AE ¥ ee), $ ie Lip & j, = | Sk solved that if he was, and) Out again into the : ; your, clovtjes: thes three-game battle next week in St. | the retreating Brooklyn Robins drop- % aie OPS e ¢ |b red her, she would complain to| bash str with the s ‘ 1 ring an apror Louis where Ty Cobb will lead his} ped their twelfth straight to Cincin- 5 ‘ e Mi i S | the first policeman she saw, She | like a song through the 1 ee that ) eohorts against Sisler’s men, October | nati a sthe Reds touched of a with- i. Bs - ’ } ? | was re ed when she turned the|she sought direction: hange clot 31, and October 12, ering salvo of nineteen safe blows i . . at ‘ | corner and was able to see that he|man. After riding around Sand. It's a state law, Rallying in’ the eighth to tle the| for an 18-7 triumph. Me i a , i 2 DLAUGHTER IS was not behind her. vated loop twice, she got off provide your own GIVING AIS. ENTIRE Along Michigan boulevard she|station where ho had told her she | Usually takes ab FE id have to get a train always tell M _ k P f ATTENTION TO THE went slowly, fascinated by the shop ne le > . iN NES Semper és i a ibys LINE Men | windows; the traffic, which seemed | ‘ T 1 she had “H fsiode. eo ape , eas Pa fF 6 ‘ move at fanatical speed; the r fir itrigue | . : MWh dos fine glimpses of the foggy lake; the par- | ‘t asing. It cal fae . u/ if 4 } ade who can keep their mind on their | ave a few apro: on the sidewalk, She turned | . . vie: pea | South opposite the Art Inatitute, and|J0> for easy factory work. No dumb.|%°% Want to buy them n ‘ Sa ‘ f | in a few more steps was in that cur-| bells wanted,” tevincere h : p eae f }ious clty-within-a-city, the Loop, a he found t ory to bea! WeRbtYbu Ge settee nuosr i ! é \. |sigantic handcuff of steel upon the |*uat building in a; 0 | iris Betines at prices 60 pe struggling giant whose roars are in : : CHICAGO, Sept. 26.—(By The As-, Sisler, St. Louis, .355; E. Rice, Wash- eS t woe | distinguishable from the roars of the sociated Press)—If past performances | ington, .351; J, Sewell, Cleveland, . levated railroada that form the loop : count for anything, Hazen Cuyler|.347; Collins. Chicago, .345. $ Along Madison and State, in Ran-|utzive to pet arougd entilen teas of the Pirates should cut a wide| The home run smashing of Bunny ; dolph, and back along Michigan | morning than this to get work here swath with his trusty bat in the|Brie¢ of Milwaukee was the out- : i boulevard Amoura eddied with the|\'s she walked away trom cho one world’s serles. standing drive of the American as- 16H crowds. Five o'clock found her| rare Ypmenuway from the small The ‘Pittsburgh fly chaser picked | sociation season, which closes tomor PP g beck at her hotel again, footeore| tion wan given he saw her trim up thirteen points in his last seven| row. Brief bagged five home runs, +h and weasy, the “home! unfound. | 9 the sheer stockings and the gnmes and today {s third in the list | Which placed him in a commanding ; Toes solled by perspiration greeted fe shoes, and called her back of leading hitters in the National | Position for the 1926 honors. He has : r through holes In her sheer crepe-| «cot a date for tonight?” } league, with an average of .361, Cuy-| Connected 36 homers to date. In ad: vs hing stockings when Ghe took ler also leads the league in scoring, | dition to his long distance . hitting, eae ean ay painful shoes. Mrs. J. h ned and! faving counted 148 times, and is on| the Brewers’ star did some climbing = : Reginald Ainsley, had she been Pres. | without answering him Having Counts lee ‘Cavey. another | among the batters, and ts perched ent would have forgotten her self Kit the wag hokie GRE ts spected the small Pittsburgher, tor base stealing hon-| !n fourth place with .356, Eddie Mur- HE PLAYED GUARD ON THE MICHIGAN pores ssion and cried over this for-| toon again, and she ought a designing eye ors for 1925, with 36. Carey is set-|Phy of Columbus retains top place TEAM FOR THREE wens orn figure that was her daughter, | formation from a policeman ting the pace with 309 thefts. with .397 with Guyan of Louisville By NORMAN E. BROWN. After Amoura had bathed, using |was annoyed at herse ‘ogers Hornsby of the Cardinals, | hitting. 863. Douthit of Milwaukee,| George Little, chief aide to Hu the salts and essences and powders | sent her back 1921 batting champion of the league, | although in only 92 games is Mur-|Up Yost of Michigan in late year she would soon have to do without, | sne could have s f fs making a desperate drive to finish | Dhy's closets competitor with a mark | and now “on his own" as coach of sho sat by the window of her room. |i¢ only she had made ina of > in a soft, clinging robe that empha- remained unchanged today as each ge h are t Two dollars for ten dollars, ness:like fashion me two dollars a week e men the money he othe room and changing th looked over Ar the season with an average of .400 the Wisconsin football eleven, had leaving the other or better. His latest mark, based on Christensen of St. Paul with 49] plenty of opportunity to study sized the superb line of her figure, | present destinat figures including games of Wednes-| Stolen bases will carry off the hon-| Michigan 1 « in his career at WITH RI ERTON mo azed omey at the traffic be- lor nine block dav, is .399. He boosted his average | ors in this department. Other lead-|the Wolverine school. Quite ob low. Dusk fell and lights blazed) ‘This time seven points within a week, but | ing batters: viously. \ sate lake could on hee seen | more pleasant. Fl failed to increase his record in sock-| Lebourveau, Kansas City, .354;] It is significant, then, that one ee ides re twinkling rad-) around the neat, three. building ing homers. He is safely leading,| Tyson, Louisyille, Fisher, of|of the men he has working with} Coach ©. D. Phillips of rton| 5 Patan tat wiecs chen Amoura’s | devoted, she found, to the manufa havenasr, with 87s Minneapolis, ,350; Duncan, Minneap-| him this fall to give the Wisconsin] ana his crew of lusty warriors were | !5 y unkr Ronee Bhat coat tar aS in West=| ture of paper noveltic ‘Timmy Bottomley, also of the Car-| lls, .345; Durst, St. Paul, .389; But-| eleven a good team is Ed Slaughter. The Rivermen are reported to be Lat as a vanes alt tek tae or A fat wrinkled woman with p dinals, Horneby's nearest rivat»for| ler, Minneapolis, .339; Griffin, Mil-| Slaughter played guard on the ie eines heavier on the average than those of | Won paler Hes ieee, Oat rot [oxide colored hair, whose onl batting honors, is 20 points behind | Waukee, .332; Ainsmith, Minneapolis, | Michigan team three years, end-| to keep an engagement with Conch) tast year, while Casper players’ are| oe°nitoctive there, nom lonmod un | ‘ire seemed, was a white wrap: his boss, with en average of .379, | -352. ing his career last fall. Ho won| Fred W. Layman's Natrona ‘county | lighter mney pha he ser oae rac imate perf shoes and stockings, recelved| The girls were Pty : : Other leading Batters: all-American honors from various] high school grid men at 0 o'clock The Casper men apa ig! + A iieale ie, nas hae the visite tcation with a se. oa psc baa oe expe ed t 9 place the Wheat, Brooklyn, .358; Fournier, critics all three of those years and|tbis afternoon on the high schoo! | Friday afternoon in th : Re dpepattnd tsel€ upon her that | vere expressic k 2 n gold or silver wra was almost a unanimous choice last | athletic field. tice before the game pretnpts ‘Have you had any exper Ha, anid’ & ieticeig sit bok Boe re the gar An evening breeze, whipping in| «xy 7° = , any experience and do it neatly without break lyn, 349; Harper, Philadelphia, ‘346: Blades . Lou 3.46; Burrus, Cl b Standi year. The game will be the first of the | cludes some likely timber i u ‘ haVeRTt. Bhsceets tate. t © It Bost ; u ings Little probably knew better thanfseason for either team and conse-| attract more than ordinary attention the lake, and cutting through | intea voice was in violent cont choco Thavih Wakts Boston, .42; Roush, Cincinnatl, 342; 4 2 : - wh contrast | certs eahntnuar eo 4biw Carey, Pittsburgh, 340. anyone elso Slaughter’s real worth. | quently will reveal something of the] throughout the state before the end diaphanous garment, sent her! with the illiterate twang of the | Sone te ee i gt . The guard's job is a thankless one.| relative strength of the two aggre-| of the season bi window, chilled, and} | Naturally, sh as slow prons as d presented on their way oyerland this morning m outside where she was to wot This work, she speedily leayned was the wrapping of choco 4 other woman Harry Heilmann, star slugger of AMERICAN LEAGUE However, he plays a muchsbigger she noticed {t was seven o'clock. She} «\wyorancey ng, and the first thirt the Tigers, by smacking 22 hits I) cyp— Won ngry, but she did not want to] wyyy u worked?’ pleces she wrapped Lost Pet.| part in defensive play now than he 1 ; Ae : er ral his last nine games, advanced fo¥r | washington Le akee bs ota under the bia bone-crushing Ko back to the gril! room, for fear | wos * 3 etly. Tint just | acceptable ‘ate fr aadoy x nt Ae ate ete ra Philadelphia - 87 61 .588| mass style of play. Then his chief | ae the flirtatious stranger would |.) rained elur Ge the first © worked Speaker of the ’ e ah lst. Louis 80 6) duty was to lay down and let the , i »@ there, and she did not want to! pho other wom | lence, except for the promp ting leadership of the American | Detroit _ opposition trip over him. Oh, what THE WHY AND HOW OF THE RULES brave the grand dining room alone. | ;,, oth omoman evidently dis-|ings of the for A 2 the girl league. Heilmann is hitting .385, Chieago — OT “490|a carcass I’ve dragged home while ————————— see | A)! of her courage had gone. | allen aa Hise this girl was an the long table toc at h while Foeektt: ny SRR aN Cleveland 68 8 $6] dubbing around at guard in those | She went to the telephone and|«poicok and Jew irl acting as pinch hitter, ts New York - 65 3 6| days, trying diligently to get a few , ; asked the news-etand to send up all ry aa paps phos bah rer neigh a list with 390. Al Simmons, Athletics’) Boston __ A 327 | cheers rion tile’ gasembletl)- MaLttl+ The Defensive Lineup the afternoon papers. ‘And please a fed pet ine she ed ovar| y a eg oy 3d 2 star, gained 12 points and moved up tude. The opening up of the game BY NORMAN E. BROWN | send up two bars of milk chocolate |“ sr don't thins ee ono net erly |" to third place with .380. ‘i ; NATIONAL LEAGUE gave the guard a greater playing} While the rules state specifically and some salted peanuts,” she ad-|ene gatd, w baer haga abd Bob Meusel of the Yankees is) | cup— Won Lost Pet. | range. that seven men of the team in pos | des Asnou threatening to become the home run} pittsburgh 4 5 i Slaughter is one of the greatest | session of the ball must be " So Amoura Ainsley dined that | riuenin pene f trouble making king of the league. He smashed out! New York — 83 “489 | defensive guards the Big Ten has|within a foot of the line of scrim- evening on milk chocolate and salted | hearanes did che re een teut for: | move fast three four baggers during the week | Cincinnati! — 79 ‘520 | had in recent years. “He was halt|‘mage and the other membe! S| Peanuts as she searched the class!-|tng tace of the Pe quant Ft} -: 7OB,, you do at. frat running his string to 31. St. Louls 33 “49g | the Mne himself when his side of]one exception, must be on fine fled advertising columns. foal n nan's you like it? smiled pleasa ened away, angry, and her cheeks in k about a w Johnny Mostil of the WMite Sox} Boston _ 68 § 2 the Ine was faltering,” said one’ tive yards behind the scrimmage line In Westland the Ainsley gold din-} As. she walked with 41 thefts, is so far in front} Chicago . 39 Michigan grid follower the other}no limitations are placed upon the ner service shone that evening as eaten he of the base stealers that he bas n0| Brooklyn 3 44g{ day. On offense Slaughter could| defensive team’s formation—-exc f bright! ever upon the fine If “theta danger of losing. Mostil also has | philadelphia 61 “421] be counted on not only to open up| those regarding “off-side" (to be ex- g , ens that always enriched the \ Ment Ol comfortable lead as a run getter oo a hole but arry through" with | Siained later.) . walnut dining-table, and the . with 136 tallies. Other leading bat- the play. Ti awrectomsiys ohbone; howeve g was, as ys, perfect in qu ters: tf At Wisconsin, Slaughter is giving} that the defense must #0 p' . : Rad cular bute the’ palecat {te They . fortis clothes) neight : Cobb, Detroit, . H. Rice, St. his entire attention tothe linemen.| men as to check the advance of t A . table had'no appetite. Mra. J. R errceelng She realized with | length, able to 36 ,, ways had a see yj nald Ainst |e She mista different fr res Were Louts, .368; Wingo. Detroit, The Dodge school has 4 erent dats Une ant bake ailly-daliied with powerful attacking team. Little} \ ogress of the mah with the fc 2 subconscious expres- | wants to build up ith this at-|i¢ the runner passes the n ‘ that she 1 denc RATES WON tats vee ean gor. se. Slaugh: | of aerense : 1, In the 3 r < | Hy A f With Slaughter coaching the e1., tite BAC : BF men, Irwin Uteritz, Michigan back: | Cihers directly behind th BY FAIR PLAY tile. Stary as | backGeld. ¢ and) ait the pile-driving bac ‘ Little, fresh from Mi caer ng. ba (Copyright 1925 The Casper Tribune) opposition should the r Otee T Rhnk el oversee the entire task, Y 1 | bro! : - © can't nd-ft. Resine NEW YORK, Bent. 26-—Ditter. |win tace a “home 4" team this | Ok ee BY JOHN B, FOSTER ences of opinion make return boxing chen the Badgers and Wol- " ye (Copyright 1923 The Casper fipibune)| matches ax well as horse races, een akae 7 ads eral and then the ever-growing use a worry, Mary, NEW YORE, Seut. 26.—Winners| Which means that Mickey Walker ae of the forward pass made t utter 4 bet she'll be coming b 1 1 , ntinued of the Natoinal league champlonship|@nd Dave Shade will meet in the of defense,.a more intricate one ich wh prec neue Be chree ft t kid In the next chapter; Unwelcome by vittue of Wednesday's results, for the fourth time before the The defense must be eq well mundred, dollara; she won't he Attentions. the Pittsburgh Pirates will go into|cash customers have lost all inter- Prepared for forward pas ¢ | went for a while aatiai : ms % the World Series against the Wash-|¢@st In the still unsettled question | Kicks, etc. as {t is for t 1 HESTION <2 SUR U are silly at times . Li eek ew ington Americans because their bat-|4s to which is the better man. Tex 5 oho pe 8 Toulous > reallz the dangers a jen 4 8 t of the| Rickard would like to have the show he best defensive team, of ’ 7 is In In big city lke | , " ~~ 1 girl Y d ’ S eles da Het esterday s Ocores; The opening of the ¢ in gen: | ting was superior to th ; ow York Glants. ‘The Pirates have | for his new garden, opening in the he ond which has the tightest | D 1 she jn.alons end with t ate fa yw e ne. one which can bloc at nds. And you know that led the batters of the circult as an|late fall or early winter and all h ‘i ; JCIBCO—Frank Ca oF ¥ I | a a Teh organization and that is why they | has to do is get Jack Kearns to lis- E Bee Ee ¥ rank wpe att. ng team's Ine, preve: m | r ould rather die than come ain uve broken New York's succession | ten to reqson, which is no mean task ‘anolsco Uight-heavywelght | trom opening holes for the backfield edad wo « now; she haw all of yo ; , Western League ¢ champlonships and have put a|in_ itself. won a ten round decision over Frank) and the man with the ball, and tr 1 Vichita vestern club at the head of the or-| In the meantir » controveray | Maskle me ah, rey +4 ‘ebster, | second defense which can a” eabaat bese damball! bos think ganleation tor the first t since| still rages over the sion after | O@kland negro, and Mi 3 ay at its {nception and cre or ar mateur or pro nalities,” he ren geese y os San Francisco welterweights drew] defense instantly Yor tt | tare you hatanatite the fight between t ‘© men last . fessional t ¢ _ a ‘of Sas iene ‘ wn the} Monday night, The experts are all|*!* rounds, and Mike Doyle, Yuma,| (Tomorrow: Penalties Write to eflected @ moment. * National Le Pirates have been able to put on the | het over, for oné‘reason or another.” ATI2., welterw , Won a six-round | violations.) 1 i y dear, T a e CHAPTER 12 1 18, Bro base nond nine regulars, all of whom,|Some maintain Shade should have Taibatibs Par r ‘ ¢ h fecision over Mauro, St. Paul aS See | | priy dete ; st { except the pitchers, could ‘bat .300| had the decision, others contend that cae | | sports, anc set t i at. evening I ig ag ire the fight should have been declared Toots” Mondt, | air I indy pee POOLE Cant ay tg sat a an|a éraw,and still a third group has and George Gosto- ed Pt ve ; HAPTER 11 at you have been American Leaguc ca ba ot P aattad tb Or: nd aleen doing a great Io een 1 vich, of Pubelo, wrestled to draw. Pal Gubresbendonta Ot the Caster |! 1 sleep f ‘ 4 great deal of unnecessary I almost infinitesimal fraction under|no fault to find except with those tn better 2 worrying abo He. safe. r the Giants. The percentages were|who criticise the decision i ta Sas Tribune, 814 World Building. New | | | Deter sutt ng as Tee ove F Aine j oie Glants, | ‘The percentage aS ae ig oe et lav Vexioas Oktas 1 | secon | | vivifiea when she ernwled trom he 4 Tam happy, (She underscored rotia é teabucgh To 198i when the firat| been the same, in effect, ay the de-| Homa bantamwelght won a decision Enclose a ) thd to pull down the window and ey maplischre Nae Geet ittsburgh 92 e e first} been the . effec he ; gy, Svs , anclos phat ‘par the . ro te of the duels between the Glants and|cision rendered, insofar as it would Cheyenne, Wy0., tf dfessed envelope for your reply hut out the shivery breezes watt-| {7 8 candy fect : Lend Bt {Pirates wan staged the former were} have affected the welterweight | te” rounds, $$ {7,1 from the Iake. A Ilttle after) viet i'm supposed fo. but T as ste © fo E e | B o'clock she feat 4 ay ‘ay | What Tm su to do, second in league batting with .208|championship. But it would have | Question—No one is out. Runner | § ck she issued from the hotel a HP Maat Oped pe ec el bo nay’ f Lert ta Hunner | ceith new determination, She had] really believe Wil like it immensely, and the latter fifth, with .285, Ever|#0 smirched Mickey's claim to the on first, two strikes on Hie ba lees to get @ f0Kt Kedbie thaline because there's sueh a goody-goody since then, the National league fight | title that he would have been com- ’ a New pitched ball iso stril a blake’? abo . has annually resolved itself Into a|pellod to meet Dave again tn order Today $ Games MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept.”26.| dropped by the catcher. He picks |r." Place to live : ae Pret Meee ay *home* scrap between these two teams, at|to clear tt. —(By The Associated Press —Gene|the ball up and throws to the see- o bigehte.in Che face of & wind present I'r at the hotel some time of the season or the other] It would be amening that there : Tunney, New York heavy ond baseman for a force out. Second a = fast tima wa Ban Franel although the Pittsburghs have not|should be such a widespread differ- ational League. proved himself a more «i s| baseman throws to first to retire th k. Dempsey a better man than , you know. Of course I alwayé been the runners up in the|ence of opinion, but for the fact) Philadelphia at Chicago contender for Jack Dempsey's|batter, Umpire rules a legitin: ry Willa? t afford to continue to Ive there, final days. that practically all of the experts are| Boston at St, Louls (2). crown last night when he knocked | double play but was it Answer—Not if Dempady ts tn Besides, 1 think I'd rather have x Three times since then, t Glants| voting the way they predicted, Brooklyn at Cincinant! } out Bartley Madden, heavyweilg wer t u le dition to fight at his best, It fe a cozy little room som ere in the led the league in batting. although | Those who advised t follawe*s| New York at Pittsburgh (2). trial horse, im the third round r ou | question whether he ts or not sGBuvka Wiens’ Li oan ieean aud f1983 the Pirates came. withiit ) stake thelr coin on Shade are the ay ie“ cheduled ten round bout the runner befc touched t lat blooming things when Ef like fmotion of thelr mark ones who are yelping now that he American League A pjerfectly timed right, after t c " three strike r Question—What western elevens| “TI am sending to you by regis: ‘This year, the Glante, who once| was fobbed, while those who picked | Chicago at Boston (2) ulfutes of fighting in the third Ie Y t : does West Point meet this year? tered mall » package containing were second, seem Ukely to drop to| Walker to retain his title are, in| St. Louls at Washingto ‘ound. complished for Tun t ball Lught Answer—The Army meeta Knox,|the jewelry I wore away, except. A sad seventh In hitting when the|the main, those who néw are up-| Detroit at New York. what Harry Wills,,the negro heavy —-— | Notre Dame, Detroit § is | ing my little scarab ring, and that final averages are compiled holding the decision. | Cleveland at Philadelphia | weight, could not od in 15 rounds Question — Wonold you consider rat » mi¢ t small string of pearls, Of 1 had : estion to| yet. Portland 0,

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