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PAGE EIGHT World Results \ | By Leased Wire| ATHLETICS SEE MINOR CHANGES CONNIE MACK WILL STAND PAT PHILADELPHIA, n. 7.—(P)—Only two changes are in prospect for the Philadelphia Athletics, runners-up in the American league race last season. In right field, Walter French, erstwhile all-around army 0 to $90 vict Y | bs star, who played brilliantly toward the close of 1925, is | Belgian, whose slated to succeed Bing Miller. Joe ea whose broken ine ee erie ene forced; ted to knee cap early him out of the game imly determined, his right to tt ng 600 to 318, t block of tt trong 0) n tre _ ma clubs this . but ts confi nome combination of youth and e: n his 18 in ings of p benefitted by additional Belgian’s highest wi'l make a strong pennant t 3 better than Shae- 's the loser averaged only 65 10-16. d in his drive e took the Besides one of the outfields in the game and # ~ BEOPEEDEDUP - catcher In Fox Sep : Shorter Playing Season GOLFERS TEE OFF TODAY IN to Mean Action on | Every Day. | Mack has thre: Sammy Gray, im Harriss, in Lefty Grove inve t,| JOHN B. FOSTER. ' SAT ih failed to r la « Casper Trib | Jan. 7.- 1 aking for 1 ing every little od thi le talent in Heimach, | leasue be b ing chedule sed on ge! nour between April 14 veterans: J oid draft| tember 26 annexed tn’ some product of Fort Worth Willis re-| baseball game. 1 talled from Wilke. ‘Barre, Pa The 19 Los Angeles Jimmy Dukes will have the prefer-| the most eff : open golf Chive | eben cuadeo tha ‘ nt ever held int st. and Max| their (irst breath about the middle will south old down short- se, respective as chief utility of April, their next about the middle of July and will hay son to call when they are through around at the end stop and second b with Bill Wamt from the Red Sox, an. ‘Waterbucket” Al Simmons, club's heaviest hitter in 192 fixture in centerfield. Bill left eT eeheddtad In three Saturday eams must sweep through | oN eptember 26 and this will m doubleheaders more prevalent th , but t the with any of the Pirates are all in or Boston deal with It ts r Pittsburgh TOD MORGAN’S DAD LICKED HIM “For Nothing”: Gets $15, 000 Now to Let Others Lick Him George O'Brien, young from Dallas, is a promising in Cxuaciiit PAID MORGANS DAD & 15900 FORTHE RIGHT To ANGE ee, Sas CS He Woul A TRCAMICAL KNocuouT OVER BALLER As WAITS A orkcx, AT KANSAS! TITLE. By NORMAN E Tod Morgan, Valle frew his first t Cstic spotlight « ne knocking out Mike Ballerino BROWN and money ng for years along the himself for nothing, his decisions over Tod, howe Now Mike held a title—the junior] been confined to the sati t least up until Tod began earning Ughtweight ttle—tighting "with | over the moral viétory involved in the ring and paying his green tights and under the juris-{ Comes There a Manager. | t of it. tion ot the Arganistan reform| ut after that, Ballerino r | forgan's great ambition rig ething like that. But | Frank Churchill waited on the e' now {s to meet Rocky Kansas, vet- a title. “And t knows | Morgan. Church had direc an holder of what ts left of the Itke made the most of It b fight fairs of the popular little Pan \ htwelght crown, to the tl of his death Kansas was given a chance tc managed E up t et Morgan in December, after The } battle - lerino affair, but ignored 1 carding Morgan's prospects and Morgan {s a fast, clever, durable > nen casually offered the elder Mor- | little fighter Under Churchill's s | gan just $15,000 for the pri ©| management he should develop if ¢ manag Tod for five years rapidly. Whether or not he can ney Of cx the objective of a good h the crust in New. c r meal t ince the officials ee a who may up Jimn In fact the elder | came elder Morgan that he there paid real money t — THE TRIB ti ry ee BELGIAN IN CHICAGO MATCH be Casper Daily Cribune opening block, Monday to 375. Horemans’ parent the first night, conti: Tuegday and he went Into the final of 428 points to block with a de’ overcome. In his dying effort 231, which with his best of the only triple figure he made. In night, nervourness ap- THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1926 AND TELEPHONE QUINTETS WIN Methodists Again Tied for Leadership of 500} nued on t he ran 243, was half of Schaefer's 16 tries he top- Cage League. ped the century. Schaefer defends his title next mi the against Erich German champion. CHEYENNE HIGH OPENS CAGE SEASON FRIDAY CHEYENNE, Wyo., Jan. Cheyenne high school basket team will open the season here Fri- meeting the Pine Bluffs day night, quintet tn the opener. The Indians have Hagenlacher, a promising tan and are expected to rank well The Pearl Whites brought their unbroken string of victories to three, tying the Methodists, when they de- feated the Standard quintet by a score of 38 to 18 at the Natrona County High school gymnasium Wednesday. The Telephones whip- ped the Oh{o equad, 21 to 11, in the other game of the doubleheader. The laundrymen were leading the refinerymen 20 to 4 at the half and the Standards injected some new in- terest in the contest by threatening to catch up. It was a close race between the Telephones and the Ohios the first twenty minutes, the score being tied 5 to 5 at the half. 7.—The ball with the other strong teams in the| ‘The line-up for the Telephone- state. Laramie hold: a victory over | Ohio game: the Pine Bluffs team and Cheyenne| Ohio Vs. Telephones is expected to also score a win Fri- \c McLean day < Moore Saturday night the Indians will] Woodard - Julian maet tough opposition when they | Kocher Payton {angle with Fort Collins at the high| Haines Engstrom 100! gym. This game promises to jo, Jones for give local dopesters a line on the| Clark, Golbright for’ Jo » Kidd Indians, as Fort Collins has one of'| for Kocher, Hales for Haines. Tele th rade —_——— fastest cage teams in northern phones, Wright for Moore. Ohio 9 FT. PF. TP, Clark 2 2 City Basketball League. Jones ~ <= pa = Won Lost Pet.| Golbright <. Set yi 2 Pear Whites . 3 ® = 1.000] Kemp ~. 1 3 1 5 Methodist at © — 1,000 | Woodar. Stes Standard .. ay 1 -666 | Kocher ~ 1 Bus Co. ~ ae 1 666 | Kidd __. on remen .. 1 2 -333 | Haines 1 Telephones at 2 +333] Hales _. 2 2 DeMolay - = A} 3 .000 | _ _- Ohio 3 000 als 1 UNE’S SPORT NEWS Telephones = FG. McLean ~~. 3 Moore —2._ . Wright "_.. 3 Julian -.. 2 Payton <2... 1 Engstrom a ~ Totals --- 8 5 6. a The 'ine-up for the Standard vs. Pearl White game: Pearl Whites Vs. Standard -- McGrath Kidd ... ~ Layman Substitutions: Standard, Rynalski for Knight. Pearl Whites, Morgan for McGrath. Box score: Standard Fa. FT. . TP. Rae -.. 5 10 Knight ~. Neft -. Erickson Kida 8 Rynalski Totals 9 8 18 Pearl Whites: PG. FT. . TP. Lester ~. 4 8 Bumann ~ 5 10 Sonners ks ae McGrath 1 feu 2 Layman 8 Hi cent6 Morgan 1 es 2 Totals ----- 19 6 38 Officials for the two games: Timer—Mignolet. Scorer—Jewell. Referee—Christopher. Between games last night Ref- eree Christopher announced the Semdac-Bus company game that is to be played in Casper on Friday night. eee Soccer, which® was almost un- known in Spain only a few years back, is now so popula: in the land of the Dons that nearly every city and town of importance has pro- vide" a playing field for the sport. a es Many greenkeepers, assistants, Workers on golf courses and manu- facturers of golf supplies are ex- pected {n Chicago on January 8 to attend the green section meeting, which will precede the annual meet- ing there of the United States Golf Association. GRID COAGHES ARE UNDER FIR Both Alumni and Fans Hold Grudges Many Sections. By LAWRENCE PEBRY (Copyright, 1926, Casper Tribune) | NEW YORK, Jan, 7—More than one footmall coach {s under fire in these post-football season, day One barrage {s being laid by the} alumni and “down-town" factions who are not satisfied un the elevens in which they are Interested wins every game. Out in a big middle western un!- versity, a plot has come to light to discredit an established system of athletics which has produced results when it was humanly possible to ob. tain them and which, win or Icse, has always develolped teams that were creditable to the university. It remains to be seen what the outcome will be. Football coaches, says Hugo Bez- dek, make a great mistake when they are favored with superfine ma- terial of capitalizing their good for- tune by producing a world-beating eleven. Ever afterward the coach is held up to the high standard set by that star team and he {s a poor stiff when his eleven falls below it. “Wise managers in the big base-| ball leagues,” says Hugh, “are not looking for world series champions. Because if they have one, the fans will never be content with anything else. No, sir, the team that {s an- nually in there, on the basis of one, two, three standing in its league {s the club with the happy and carefree manager. And that goes for the football coach, too.” Another well known coach does not altogether agree with Bezdek. “The thing to do,” he argues, “Is to get everything possible out of ydur stars when you have them, and then on the basis of that showing, hook up the college with an fron- in boun First in News Of All Events tract. Then you can tell the barber shop and pool room boards of stra egy to go whistle thro’ noses." That 1s one solution for the trou- bles of coache ~ QUESTION BOX | If you have some question te! | i ask about = or any fessional epett=- Write to John B. | oaseball. Lawrence Perry, on orts, and Falr Play on boxing and other »vofesstona! sports. All are spe lal correspondents of the Casper | Tribune, 814 World Building, New York. Enclose «a etamped. self-ad- dressed envelope for your reply. amateur Q.—Catcher drops the third strike with only one out and the umpire calls the runner out, although the latter gets to first base. I am sure that is quite wrong. Please explalin. A—It is perfectly right. Read Rule 51, Section 6, Q.—I pitch and I play first base. Which position would you take to heart? A.—The one you like the better, Q—Is Mike McTigue really a light heavy or a middle weight? middleweight since nt with the big championship meets, Olas Thumberg, the great Finnish skater, has mapped out a program which will carry: his flying feet through a large part of the eastern United States and Canada during the next two months. a The first intercollegiate football game in the South was played in 1888 between teams of the Untver- sity of North Carolina and Trinity college of Durham. The contest was y copper-riveted, loni won by the Trinity eleven This is “HuNcH” one of the most famous characters in advertising history. Recognized ail over the world as the Prince Albert man. You can find his proto- type in any town, He’s up on poli- tics, baseball and horses, and has the real low-down on pipe tobacco. 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