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WSITORS HELPLESS BEFORE SPEEDY TEAM SATURDAY After Touchdowns Are Piled High; First Ma By Casper‘in First Minute of Play Smashing thro team, the Casper the heavier but helpless Worland igh school demonstrated conclusively Saturday afternoon that the class of football played in the Basin is not on a par with the grid ability of central Wyo- ming teams. Starting with a touchdown which came in the first minute of play the Casper aggregation of grid warriors ran the ball over the scoring line at will, making long overwhelmingly in favor of the Cas- per team, Coach Dean Morgan of the local squad pulled out the regulars, one by one, until virtually every sec- ond string man was in the line-up. It was at this period that Worland held final count showed Casper 82, Wor- land 6. The strength of'Casper’s offense be- came evident in the first moment. ning, carrying the 38 fore he was downed. On the next play Captain Groves, Casper’s righ half, skirted the left end of the Worland line and deposited ball within scoring distance after a pretty 60.yard run. Scott made eight yards around end and then seven more through the line for Casper’s second touchdown. Groves missed oae Groves carried the. ball over the line after a 35-yard run for the next touchdown and Scott kicked wae ee anoke scored on a 35-yard jured when he ie brought down vhile making @ long run. * Severance ‘was substituted for Scott in the back field. From that time orf) {t was just a repetkion of the attack, gains by carry- the wide Casper making of ing the ball he visitors. 4 ; Captain Groves with a total of 23 points, was the individual star point getter for Casper. Bill Lester, who handied the team like a veteran at quarter, scored three touchdowns and defense kicked. goal twice. Harry Scott with 3. before he was in- jured, and with 13 were run- ae up. Eastman and Severance each had a touchdown to their credit. ‘To show the relative strength of the individual stars, the following comparison of their yardage is inter- esting: Boot made 119 yards in his five longest runs, Groves gathered & total of 195 yards to his eredit on seven runs, Lester had a total of 108 yards on three runs, Quinlan 121 yards on five gains, Eastman 70 yards on three advances and Severance 4! yards in four The line-up; CASPER Skeily.-.--.. perks Archambault... I. Eaton. en WORLAND Peo Om RG. RT. R. EB. QB. Ta. Mo —-aeGifford RH. —_--Hars FB. Warwick uf qa—s2 6— 6 Worland ~. ~ 9 Summary: Casper — touchdowns, Scott 2, Groves 3, Lester 3, Quinlan 2; Eastman, Severance for Scott; goals from field, Groves; goals from touch- downs, Scott 2, Groves 2, Lester 2, Quinlan, Worland—touchdowns, Pow- ell. Substitutes, Casper—Severance, Cody, MeéClure, Fleming; Worland— Herron. Referee, Markley of Hary- ard; umpire, Mike Grant of Colgate; headiinesman, Simpkins. Timers, Rei- merth and G, C. Bruton. Time of pe- riods, 15 minutes each. pacstnec toe 7 STREET CARS GET LAY OFF. CHEYENNE, Wyo., Oct. 24.—Chey- enne’s street railway system, out of cornmission in th business district for several weeks because of storm sewer excavations, is to return to nor- malcy within a few days, when the vewer trenches will have been suffici- ently filled in for service to be Tre sumed on the “loop.” Lunch pets, napkins, etc. for Hal: fowe'en.—The Mills company, 189 wi 10-22-2t run through the line and Groves down by skirting prgery! eey Scott was in-| ‘on and Jefferson 14, Lehigh 7. ‘CHEYENNE DEFEATS UNVERSITY PREPS CHEYENNE, ‘Cheyenne high University of Wyoming props 6 to 0 here Saturday. $ At Denver—Colorado University 10, Denver University 7. 14, Colorado School Mines 7. Fi At Colorado Springs—Utah 14, Colo- Prineston 0. At New Haven, Conn.—Yale 14, Army 7. At Boston, Mass—Detroit 28, Bos- ton College 0. At Ann Arbor, Mich.—Ohio State 14, Michigan 0. At Providence, R. I.—Brown 0, Springfield 0. At Urbana, IlL—Wisconsin 19, Ill- inois 0. ag At Cambridge, Mass.—Harvard 21, Penn State 21. t At Hanover, N. H.—Dartmouth 31, Columbia 7. : At Ithaca—Cornell 81, Colgate 7. At South Bend—Notre Dame 7, Nebraska 0. At Pittsburgh—Pittsburgh 35, Syra- OUT 3-00 . ‘a York—Lafayette 28, Ford- ham i. At Ames, Towa—Kansas University 17, Towa, State college 7, Ate ‘Virginia Military At. Me \ 0, on At South Bethlehem, Pa.—Washing- At New York—New York Universit 7, Wesleyan 7, % At Washington—Villa Nova 6, Cath- olic University 0. At Cleyeland—Wittenberg 7, serve 0. At Alliance, Ohio—Mount Union 6, Kenyon 0. 7 A At Oberlin, Ohio—Oberlin 38, Hiram “At Marietta, Ohio—Marfetta 22, Thiels 0. At Wooster, Ohio—Wooster 17, Case Re- At Pittsburgh—Tech 42, St. Bona- venture 0. be At Schenectady—Rochester 28, Un- ion 7. % At Minneapolis, Minn.—Minnesota 6, Indiana 0, At Omaha, Neb.—Creighton Univer- sity 3, Marque’ University 0. At Manhattan, Kan.—Kansas Ag: gies 7, Missouri 5. At Cheyenne, Wyo.--Fifteenth Cav- alry 7, University freshmen 0. A’ Decorah, lowa—Champion college 6, Luther College 3. At Des Moines, Iowa—Drake Uni- versity 41, Cornell 0. High Ekland to Get FOOTBALL FINALS SATURDAY At Laramie, Wyo—University of} <At Wyoming of} ginia Poly TRIBUNE'S P Trial at Stan Zbyszbo Soon SHERIDAN, Wyo., Oct. 24.—Stan- islaus Zbyszke, world champion heayyweight wrestler, and Clarence Eklund of Peckville, Wyo., light heavyweight, are to grapple here the night of Armistice day. Zbyazko must throw Eklund twice in an hour to win. Zbystko weighs 235 pounds and Eklund 172 pounds. > U. P. PRESS BUREAU MOVED. CHEYENNE, Wyo., Oct. 24—Head. quarters of the Union Pacific Railroad company’s. press bureau, which has been here during the last year, soon is to be transferred to Salt Lake City or Omaha. & Miss Marion Hi: of championship of the United BASIN PINS DEFEAT ON At Cedar Rapids, Iowa—Coe 22, Du- bygue University 7. i ried haa 10, Vir. yf. ’ { At Appleton—Lawrence 36, Beloit 0. At Kalamazoo— Kalamazoo 21, Northwestern College 0. f At Walla Walla—Whitman 17, Col- lege of Idaho 13. At Galesburg—Carleton 14, Knox 6. At Fargo—South Dakota Aggies 54, North Dakota Aggies 0. At Philadelphia—Pennsylvania 21, Virginia Military Institute 7. BASIN, Wyo., Cct. 24—In one of the best played games ever seen in Basin the local high school Saturday defeated Thermopolis 35 to 21, tying Worland for first place in the con- ference race. A large crowd from *|Thermopolis accompanied their team. Least Week ermopolis © defeated Mass.—Amherst 13,| yy, ; Massachusetts ‘Agricultural College 0.| haa qeteated Basin, ns v.iston, Universit, of feam hanine.f, Baten 7. 3 y At Cowley the t of that town ‘At Morgan: Ww. West Vir- defeated Greybull 21 to 14. vee oo oo THERMOS BURGLARS WASTE NO TIME, TAKE TAOUSERS ALONE, TOD At New Orleane—Tulane 7,. Missis aippi Agricultural and Military 0, THERMOPOLIS, Wyo., Oct. 24. —; Six occupants of the Acme rooming At Cincinnat!—University of Cincin- nati 115, Kentucky Wesleyan 0. house who awoke to find missing as At Aberdeen, 8. D.—Dakota Wesley- an 14, Northern Normal 0. At Atlanta, Ga.—Georgian Tech 43, Rutgers 14. At! Worcester, Muss.—Georgetown 28, Holy Cross 7. At Stillwater, Okla.—University of Arkansas 0, Okiahoma Aggies 7. g At Waco, Texas—Baylor 34, Phillips many pairs of trousers aré giving the ried uneeais Kan—Haskell 14.|-rhermopolla public the once. over as Sire : they pass down the street in the hope ore, Pa—Franklin ana Swarthmore 7, a At Berkeley, Cal.—University of Ore- gon 0, University of California 39. of finding the rothers. The burglarr made no efforts to search for money but appropriated the trousers of six men &s being the most likely articles Re A dee yy = aa later tito contain the booty. - The yictoms At Toboka-cWeshburh ae nanee 1.) Were. Kenneth McCullough, Jerry ths 4 er ss] Caldwell, Dave Sellery, John Hoff- . At Dallas—Vanderbilt 20, Tézas U.! ian and Dutch Schlesman. palais Pa pata At Emporia—Emporia- Normal 61, Southwestern 0. At Norman—Okliahoma University 26, Washington University 3. At Berkeley—University of Cali- fornia 39, University of Oregon 0. + At Corvallis—Oregon Aggies College 24, University of Washington 0. At Logan, Utah—Nevada 41, Utah Aggies 0. At Davenport, Iowa—St. Ambrose 46, Quincy 0. ; NOTICE, Ol Field, Gas Well and Refinery en: a ‘Workers, local 43, with drawn dorsement of Blackmore party count error. 7 10-2 oe Argentina has nearly a million wom- en wage-carners. Do You Have a Daily Di 2 NOTICE. This is to notify the public that I will not be responsitée for any debts contracted by my wife. lL J. SS neg SgERee KT DANGEROUS CURVE AHEAD | Liccerr & Myzrs Tonacco Co. “Man, oh, man, you said a mouthful!” —and for cigarettes Virginia tobacco is the best New York, left, and Miss Alexa States, photographed THERMOPOLIS ELEVEN; | LOOM AS MOUNTAIN CHAMPIONS COWLEY STOPS GREYULL eres Miers Colo., Oct; 24.—The University of Colorado and - | SENSATIONAL RUN First in News | Of All Events ,_ CANADIAN SCHOONER CAPTURES | oMILING TROPHY IN WIN TODAY American Fishing Vessel Elsie Loses Championship of North Atlantic When Bluenose Finishes First in Second Race of Contest HALIFAX, N. S., Oct. 24.—Bluenose of Lunenberg today defeated Elsie of Gloucester, Mass., in the second interna- tional fishermen’s race and won the sailing championship of the North Atlantic, captured last year by the Gloucesterman Esperanto. apm 2 gaining of Mayfiow- & the sec- heeis eir second race toda the international fishermen’s series. The official starting times were in Elsie 9.00:32; Bluenose 9 a mark at = and Blue: The Boston schooner Mayflower, mi ot 2 which had bern ruled out as a con he fourth mark at and began tacking up the harbor tender in the race startled officials and spectators by appearing on the course near the start Captain Marty Welch of the Elsie id some clever ‘maneuvering at the start, which enabled him to get away In the lead. A ten-knot breeze, shifting from north to northwest, had indications of increasing slight! Elsie turned the first mark at 9:45: Bluenose at 9:46:00. Off Chebucto head, the defender caught a snappler breeze and opened % up @ lead of four lengths. THI At this point the Mayflower ma {fest her intention to pro against tho recognized fish-| Sacus]awen(0 dog of the| ; ens 123 for the finish line. Bisio rounded the fourth mark at 1 When Mayflower had given up the chase and headed for Halifax harbor Delawana, defeated last year by the American Esperanto, also left the course. " a apr of Atlanta, with the cup symbolic of the at Deal, N. COLORADO AND UTAH ELEVENS ermen racers. Crossing t press boat, she gave chase. Elsie was leading Bluenose about «| half minute when the, schooners ded. Sambro lightship, the halt. official turning times niversity of Utah loom as championship contenders in the Rocky Mountain football conférence as the result of Sat- urday’s games. Colorado won a hard fought game from the Denver University team, 10 to 7, and Utah crossed Colorado college’s goa] line twice for a score of 14 to 8. em | DPSHOUTER LEADS SINGLES RECORD virtually eliminated from the race in previous contests, fought to 14 to 7 result in favor of Wyoming at Lara- mie while the Utah Aggies was de- feated 41 to 0 by the Untversity of Nevada in a non-conference game and NEW YORK, Oct. 24.—Averages just released by the American Trap- shooting association show Art Risser of Paris, Tl, to be the leader in sin gles shooting and E. F. Woodward of Houston, Texas, to be setting the pace the Colorado Aggies were idle, Utah and Colorado still remain un in the doubles. Risser has an average ‘of 9177, he having broken 569 of his , Do You Work Overtime? DANGEROUS Bluenose was doing better in the while Mayflower was cking her nose into it with every lunge and taking green water aboard. Lunenburgh schooner Del unsuccessful contender tn las [Political Advertisoment} For a Better Moral and Financial Casper Support the AMERICAN TICKET defeated, Saturday's game being the first contest of the year for Colorado. The Colorado Aggies have only a tie game against their record, WINS FOR COWBOYS. LARAMIE, Wyo., Oct. 24.—-A long ards 310 pairs. Tho final figures for the se ee une tie: pie deri 1921 eeason will be announced in Jan- ROBT. J. VEITCH, For Mayor. yietory over the Colorado School of| U&yY: JOHN J. HANCOCK, Councilman, Ward 1. Mines, football team today. In the ae HENRY C. POSEY, Councilman, Ward 2. second quarter each team made a ‘ ¥ i ane touchdown from which goal was| RDER OF DE MOLEY GROWING. ROBT. E. M’ELVENEY, Councilman, Ward 3. Wicked, and the score stood at 7 to 7} SHERIDAN, wyo., Oct. 24.—The MUNICIPAL ELECTION, TUESDAY, NOV. 8, 1921. REGISTRATION DAYS, OCT. 18, 19, 20, 1921. . till near the close. second Wyoming chapter of the Order of De Molay has been organized, here with a charter membership of 23. The first chapter in the state was grean- ized recently at Cheyenne. Select decoration for Hallowe'en Frolic at The Mills company, 139 West Second _ street. 10-22-2t Lower Prices on the New Improved ESSEX Effective October 20, 1921. F. O. B. Detroit $1195 1195 1395 : 1995 Cord Tires Included. A Better ESSEX In Every Way For Less Money ing but they also get the New and Improved Essex. F. O. B. Casper $1435 1435 1700 2395 . o Cabriolet Sedan . é The new Essex prices must appeal to all Official ive Essex another advantage. cia ee ea the testimony of thousands tell its performance and reliability. Buyers today get more for their money than ever before. They not only get this price sav- Ride Today in the New Improved Essex This new car retains al] the attractions of its forerunner. It is a smoother and finer car in many ways. All must now recognize the Essex for its price advantage as they have recognized its quality. Phone 1406