Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 17, 1925, Page 8

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SS EFSPTTTRI premsP Er eur TMEIt Tews thee tte? ser prerdBet PAGE EIGHT World Results By Leased Wire . Che Caspet Daily Cribune PEARL WHITES AND STANDARDS CHANGING STARS IN GOLF FIRMAMENT Will 1926 Season See Some Dimmed, Others Brighter? CAPTURE GAGE LEAGUE GAMES S. R. Bumann, High School Principal, Scoring , Ace of Laundry Five in Piling Up Big Score on Ohio Team. UNCONCERNED OER HIS ~ With S. R. Bumann as their scoring ace, the Pearl ‘i SMES ore oe | Whites romped all over the team from the Ohio Oil com- pany Wednesday at the Natrona County High School gym- nasium. The score was 63 to 10. The Standard team de- feated the Telephone company five by a score of 26 to} 15 in the second fra) The double-header finished the opening games of the cit d the ¢ half ball league. The sched wiremen resumed after Christmas two winners so far are the dists and the Firemen Fans who marveled at the rate gual shooting of Ray Tr the Methodists, found something fur ther to notice Wednesday in Bu- mann’s work. Although the tatal] number of his points did not exceed | those made by Traylor he netted one more field goal for a total of thir- teen and he worked with ent ease, flipping the sp the hoop from various position, the crowd agreed here was a pls who would make himself conspicu-| K ous during the season, Bumann was | given excellent support with a pass: ing combination that worked the ball to the opponents’ goal in many Instances where it was an easy mat- ter to complete the play successfully. Bill Lester and Fred W. Layman of as te be the laundrymen divided sixteen fleld goals between them. The Standard squad had the edge, bask will ne other Metho: me | box scores: Pearl Whites-Ohio "earl Whites (63) F ann, rf - r, If accu ylor of ese. FAST COMING TO THE TOP Standards-Telephones @ the Telephones from the early ndard (26) FG FT PF | GRID STARS Biase | SAN FRANCISCO, De Jimmy Dixon, _ halfb: *Snooky" Mell, end of the versity of California football terday for Honolulu a poard the steam: f the tee of public element csateae Tene) UA AAB helmina. ‘The grid stars for i the islands a short spher; Timekeeper Ji vacation. | ewel and Jock Hutchison ruled the. roost. ——— SS ~ The others were Why _not_an_Essex (or Xmas? Drink Hillcrest Water. Uhone (151. for them in the big t I Need TOM MOORE! “All tuckered out at the end of my run, I need the soothing comfort and mild mel- lowness of aTOM MOORE cigar to steady my jumpy nerves. “There’s not a ‘red @e’ in a million of them. No danger of ever getting a bum TOM MOORE. Their quality is always on a high level grade. “It’s the prospect of meeting TOM that urges me to take ‘old 58’ around the bends with the throttle wide open.” CAmericas Favorite Panctelas 10c Cabinets 2 for 25¢ in vinetble Cole. fraternity south f some | destined to # the game] light when he did a comeback by being pushed} winning the British open title last inter background SARAZEM SEEMS To VASELF AGADL the fist one of He has tried tn years to draw hison was trio to slip. ain the last four nd| the limelight by a victory in one of ling | the major tourneys and has failed. nes seemed about p out of the lIime- nmer. Just how long Barnes an hold the pace he set that day and in tourneys later remains to en. He is 38 and has had a lfe In tournament play. Walter Hagen boasts of but one | major title now—the national pro- | fessional championship. He ts still | the greatest of all tournament play- ers, due to his sangfro{d, his cool- | ‘Ss under stress, and his usually | nbsolute control oyer his shots. But his work last season anything but typleal of his game. And when Leo Diegel. pride of Canada, turned Hagen back in the Canadian open, the former again indicated quite clearly that ho ts rendy to demand a place in the sun. Hagen and Dtegel were paired to- gether in’ the last round. Hagen nce 3 THE EIGHT CHOSEN CHILDREN “I know what's the matter!’ grunted Great Grandmother Ursus. ‘Cubbies, can't you guess why there is no food to be found where there has always been plenty before?’ “Tho Cubs, large and small and medium sized, shook their heads. “Why ‘tis as plain as the nose on my face! "Lis because we have eaten it all up. You Cubbies have quicker than the roots. As as the acorns have fallen you | have gobbled them up. There are too many of us living too close to gether. And I have just mado up my mind to it—some of you must set out to seek your fortune: “For a moment the Cubs were so quiet one could’ have heard a pin drop, Then such a hubbub as arose, “‘Oh, Mother, let me go to seek fortune! Let me! “No, no, let soon Great Great Grandmother Ursus had thought her , children would hate to leave home she must have been ever so “disappointed. Every mother's son and daughter of them clamored to try his or her luck fn the great wide world—just as you will be doing before long, my dears,” added Mother Growly, and hugged her babies clgse. “And just as every Mttle Cub has done since the worfa began.” “But.” continued Mother Crow- ly, “Great Great Grandmother was wise and it didn't take her long to settle things, “"This litte Cub stays at hom: said she. ‘And the place for this ttle Cub, and this little Cub, and this little Cub 1s at his mother's French Dry Cleaners and Dyers THE BEST IN SERVICE We Call and Deliver PHONE 802 JAKE The Nifty Tailor i THE TRIBUNE’S SPORT NEWS GUBS T0 BUILD FROM MINORS High Priced Stars Not Favored in Plans of ‘McCarthy. By JOHN B. FOSTER. (Copyright, 1925. Casper Tribune.) NEW YORK, '. 17,—Instead of spending a million dollars to buy a lot of new stars, Joe McCarthy, new manager of the Chicago Cubs, will try to build up a winning organiza- tion out of players drawn from the minors. Jax HUICHISON HAS PRACTICALLY PASSED OUT OF THE PICTURE HAVE FOUND dian, but that ordinarily would have made the battle more interesting, with Hagen in his usual form. Magen's tournament play has been a repetition of coming from behind —outplaying the leader. But Diegel matched Hagen hole for hole, The man who once won the British open title two out of three years took an eight on the first hole, a par four. From that point on his game was off form. Diegel played brilliant golf through the entire day. Diegel's game last year proved that he hag eliminated the fault that early handicapped him—that of “keeping his feet” at cructal ‘mo- ments. ‘The Canadian, however, is but one of close to a dozen of the younger set that has been fighting for the Umelight the Big Three have held for years. Numbered among the others are Gene Sarazen, Johnny Farrell, Bill Melhorn, Mike Brady, Bod MacDonald and more lately Cyril* Walker and Willie MacKar- lane. It’s going to be a tough year for the Big Three. OH MOTHER LET ME GO TO SEEK hr BE essed to ey ue SUR Sie wise World, slag, ut you, and you, and you, and you (and Great Grandmother picked out eight of her largest children), you shall go by twos to the East and West and North and South to find your fortune in a far- oft land. “You wouldn't belleve how de lghted were those eight Bears, nor how proud to think they of all Great Great Grandmother's family had been chosen?~ They couldn't have been more pleased if they had found a hive of honey.” Next—"Hiding From Uncle Sol.” erm Dad bs ba kB Why not an Essex for Xmas a RADIATORS Damaged—Frozen Repaired just like new. Good work! Right Price! 24-Hour service for out-of-town. trade. Sam, the Radiator Man 938 East A St. Phone 1381 ‘There has been a lot of talk that McCarthy really has a million dol- lars with which to buy players. ‘The truth of the situation, as told to the writer by McCarthy himself, is that Joe has a perfectly sane idea as the kind of a task which con- fronts him in endeavoring to devejop a winning outfit. He promises nothing and hopes for anything that 1s favorable to a team somewhat run down at the heels. “That talk about a million dollars with which to buy new players {s perfectly good talk." said McCarthy, “but where are the Ipayera? 1 have not discovered anybody that is giv- Ing away players for the sake of the Chicago team and some of the own- ers who have men that would help Chicago are very buoyant in their | | | size and (DISTRIBUTOR’S NAM‘: ) DISTRIBUTORS poe their players ar 3 ideas of what worth. “I am not committed to any policy of trying to buy a team for Chicago. On the contrary, I'm going to work en a different basis, reaching out here and there to get the best I can in the minor leagues and then 1'll do the best I can with what I can get. I'm confident in my estimate of minor league play- ers because I know much about them personally and I’m not ro sure that any big league stars purchased for Chicago would give me what I want.” Joe said he would not predict that the Cubs would win the pennant in 1926, not even that they would finish in the first division. All he Promises is to make the team a fighting outfit. He will go to Catalina early, to get the crowd in trim ag soon as possible. Se Se Edward Miller New Captain Of| Cowboy ~ Eleven LARAMIE, Wyo., Dec. 17.—)—= Edward Miller of Laramle, Wyom- ing, star end on University of Wyom- ing football team during the past year, was elected captain of the 1926 eleven at annual football banquet at home cf President A. G. Crane last night. Before coming to the university, Miller attended Manville, Wyoming, high school, > set Ae Ted Give Her » Chevroiet for Xmas. First in News Of All Events CHRISTIAN FUNERAL | FOR BATTLING SKI ORDERED BY WIDOW NEW YORK, Dec. 17.—(?)—"Bat- tling” Siki, born a Mohammedan and reared a slave in far off Senegal, will be given a Christian funeral from a negro funeral parlor in New York's Harlem tomorrow. The huge bronze body of the fight- er, stricken by two bullets from a murderer's revolver Monday, today lay in an undertaking establishment while his widow and two Senegalese friends searched “speak-easies" for ' his slayer. Although his friends had tried to persuade the widow to bury him as Mohammedan, she said that he had lived as a Christian and would be buried as one. Why not an Essex for Xmas? SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY Diamonds, Watches, Pearls, | Silverware, Rings, Pins, Agates In all mountings, Trunks, Hand- bags, Suit Cases. Some special offers {n unre- deemed diamonds in new mount- Ings. MONEY TO LOAN Casper Loan Office 229 SOUTH CENTER ST. | .—ask him why he smokes a Webster At the better hotels and clubs the 25c Webster Ambassador is much . in demand. does not care for so large a cigar, finds the smaller sizes equally sat- isfying — and the equal embodi- ment of Webster’s distinctive flavor and full-bodied fragrance. The price determines only the Yet the man who shape—never the quality*. ROTHENBERG & SCHLOSS , CIGAR CO, Denver, Colors

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