Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 15, 1921, Page 5

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1921. World Results EGER FOULS PLESTINA IN MAT | CONTEST, PURSE ORDERED HELD Nebraska Grappler Disqualified for Tactics Used to Defeat Taylor in Casper and Is Barred From Wrestling on Gotham Mat \ NEW YORK, Nov. 15.—Local promoters of last night’s wrestling bout between John Pesek of Nebraska, and Marin Plestina, Serbian, have been ordered by the state athletic commission to hold the Nebraskan’s share of the purse. Pesek was disqualified for rough tactics and forever barred from wrestling activity in this Plestina was awarded the first fall) on a foul after 11 minutes and 19 econds of wrestling, when Pesek ignored the referee's warnings to de- sist from his savage attack. The Ne braskan continygd to gouge and butt Plestina and at the end of 24 minutes and 4 seconds, Plestina was awarded | another fall. | Members of the athletic committee | then overruled the referee and ordered the match resumed until a legitimate fall was gained. Pesek again resorted to gouging, the boyt was stopped and the decision uwarded to Plestina. Reports from the New York match as given above by the Associated Press would indicate that Peeek re- sorted to tactics used against Jack Taylor tn Casper two weeke ago. On that occasion Posek deliberately fouled Taylor by gouging but the ref- eres did not call the foul and the judges were loath to interfere. Tay- lor, it will be remembered, was a cusing Pesele of @ foul when the ref- eree awarded Posek the first fall. ————— BILLIARD PLAYERS TRY FOR TITLE IN TOURNEY CHICAGO, Nov. —Piay in the World's 18.2 balkline billiard cham- pionship tournament, which opened last night, was resumed this after. international flavor of the tournament, supplied last night w Welker Cochran beat Roger Conti of France, was also maintained by Edouard Horemans, Belgian cham- pion of Europe; who met Ora Morn- ingstar of San Diego, Cal.,-in the first match for today. Willie Hoppe, world’s balkline champion, will start tonight when he meets Conti. Sport Notes eocceosoocccccococs coccescccoooonoes The season of amateur boxing tournaments has opened in New York and the simon pure shows are going big. There is no denying the fact that Cornell has about the sweetest scoring — seen on the gridiron in many a day, It 1s said that if Benny Kauff, for- merly of the Giants, is reinstated he will become a member of the Cincin- nati Reds. Tex Rickard says he will give Cham- Pion Benny Leonard $40,000 to box either Tendler, Kansas, or Friedman at Madison Square garden. Leach Cross and Shamus O'Brien have been matched for a battle te take place before one of the New York clubs the latter part of November. Walter Cox, the grand circut reins- man, is expected to return to his old training grounds in New Hampshire, now that the Laurel Hill horses are to be golf at auction. No fewer than half a dozen of the major Jeague baseball clubs have been reported recently as looking around for new training camps for next spring. —- Jockey Earl Sande, the brilliant Western rider, is duplicating his spring success on the Maryland tracks at the meetings there this fall, A crowd of 2,000 with a 20plece brass band met Dave Bancroft, cap- tain of the world’s champion Giants, on his arrtval home at Superior, Wis. / Admirers of the Yale eleven figure that the Elis will trim Harvard and wipe out the 9 to 0 fefeat suffered at the hands of the Crimson warriors last year, From the way Notre Dame has Plowed through their opponents this season it's a safe bet that the South Bend gridders could hold their own with any football outfit on the map. Tt is the opinion of many boxing fans that Johnny Wilson will have to start a campaign and show the follow- ers of the sport that he is or is not the middleweight champion. England was unable to cop a cham- Plonship of any sort in America this year, but the all-English women’s took a turn, | The soreness felt by many Boston bageball fans over the loss of so many stars from the Hub te: healed any by the made by sald stars world's series. owing ecent state. Prevention of Forest Fires Is Meeting Subject SACRAMENTO, Cal., Nov. 15—A conference to last two weeks, called jfor the purpose of formulating a na- and representatives of the United States forestry service were present at the first session y . A pro gram was outlined and routine bust: ness transacted. Speakers of national prominence in forestry are scheduled to appear on the program during the conference. ——————___ Eskimos have five full meals « day. Courage! This Gir! Kills Mice to Earn Vassar Money Ruth Hyde, Captain 2nd Coach of the Vassar Hockey Team, who is Earning Her $100 pledged to » 66] KILL centipedes," a Vassar sophomore was heard to re- mark’ gravely to one of the professors. “For the Endowment Fund,” she explained. ’ Tt seems that vines grow over the walls of Lathrop Hail; that centipedes live in the vines, and that the students hate to crush them, but will shudder all evening for fear of having the big one on the wall drop down. The yore merely capitalized her cot » and will answe~ emergency calls irom any ie of the dormitory, charging a fee for her services. One other girl has offered her cour+ age for sale. She extracts mice from traps at ten cents apiece. “You see, there are over four hundred people here in Main,” she <xplsined, “and it's a@ very old building. The first of the year the freshmen don't understand that they have to keep crackers and candy in tins, so the mice wax fat and multiply. My trade will die down as the freshmen leatn better.” Vassar students have made it 4 tne Vassar Endowment Fund point of honor to earn the handred dollars é¢ach that they have pk id to the Fund. Many of them started dur- ing the summer and ran tea shops or sold lemonade at he turn of the road. Three Poughkeepsie girls set al! the Vassar women of the neighborhood to work making candy, which they sold very profitably. Two students taught impnit id $3 'ran automo- “Off-campus” meals are not the vogue now, but the girls relieve the monotony of college menus with food sold for the Fund. The “cat and grow thin” tray.run by three seniors in the candy kitchen is particularly enti Every evening at nine-thirty girls through the corridors, trays slung by ribbons round their necks, and sell the favorite fall refreshments --cider and <oughnuts. Then there are the vendors of hair nets, soap and powder, “canned heat,” cocoa and condensed milk—all essen- tials for the college girl. The profits on these popular articles are promptly turned into the Fund. de Casper Daily Cridune Sytawe wre F| THE TRIBUNE'S PAGE PENN STATE 10 PLAY ON COAST Will Meet Washington on De- cember 3 but Will Play © ‘No Other Games. SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 15.—Penn State's football team will play only the University of Washington on its trip to the Pacific coast early next month, according to a letter received here from Hugo Bezdek, coach of the easterners. Efforts were made to get other games for Penn State against the Oregon Agricultural College, the Mult- nomah Amateur Athletic club of Port- land and the Pacific fleet. Besdok's attitude, it is sald, is that Penn State would have nothing to gain and every thing to lose by playing a second game. Washington meets Penn State ff the stadium here December 3. TAYLOR LOSES ~~ TOCHIPION BOISE, Idaho, Nov. 15.—Stanislaus Zbyszko, heavyweight wrestling cham- ion, defeated Jack Taylor of Wyo- ming in straight falls here last night. prcsaleas cahdt ~ aA bd Six Princeton Stars Playing For Last Year PRINCETON, N. J., Nov. 15.—Six members of Princeton's football team who earned their letters will be grad- uated In June, 10 have at least one more year of intercollegiate foot- ball ahera of them. Those to be grad- uated are: Keck, Lourie, Garrity, E. Stinson, Hooper and Wittmer, Those available for next season area Baker, Bnively, Scott, Rutan, Van Schilling Lipscomb, R. Stinson, Euwer, Cleaves and Gilroy. ‘GENTRE PLAYS HARVARD ‘WEEK EARLIER NEXT YEAR | DANVILLE, Ky., “Nov. Centre College football team will play "Harvard on October 21, 1922, ‘Week earlier than the game was play- ed this year. Centre officials an- nounced today that acceptance of Harvard's invitation, received yoster- day, will go forward within a short time. After accepting the invitation, Fred Moore, graduate manager, explained the advance date by saying Centre and Princeton are too much for Har- vard on successive Saturdays. 15.—The | Delegates Named to Big Water Meeting one} OF SPORTING NEWS Foiled Again! ww York women have turned to fencing, rowing and avrestling as & means of keeping in physicm@l condition. Here Mrs. Edgar Leslie is fencing with her instructor, Artinu A McGovern. St. Louis Clubs In Old Camps aficioen amen sone @ncing Team gnd the Americans to Borauma, Ta.|. F’pom Britain Gets in Trim for spring training, the local baseball j college elevens. | coast clubs, }land and the cisco, had su year. Two other Pacific 16 Multnomah of Port- lympic of San Fran. sful elevens this managements announced today. —_—_—_ LOS ANGELES CLUBTO 9 ORGANIZE GRID ELEVEN eeu nasa ternational trophy, today started prac: tice In preparation for first bouts of the tournament, to be held in Wash ington Friday and Saturday. Slipmats LOS ANGELES, Nov. 15.—The Los Angeles Athletic club will have a foot- ball team next season to play other Furniture castors are now made of Soast clubs and southern California compressed leather. BASIN, Wyo., Nov, 15.—The water users association of Garland and Frannie ¢lected delegates to represent those projects at a convention to be held in Billings November 17-18, at which time representatives from the interior department will meet the delegates from’ 12 northern govern- ment projects in an effort to devise The necklace, now an ornament,| Tie possibilities of the necklace for/a plan whereby the matter of sellet was formerly something that was a| decorative purposes caused {t to lose from delinquent and accruing con- badge of disgrace, worn only by | its servilo significance and become an strycti slaves as a symbol of their servitude. | article of wear. rere, charges and penalties can ‘be mi MIGHTY ENJOYABLE —and quite out of the ordinary—is that spicy 4-leaf flavor in a Spur cigarette. Just let your taste —that Spicy ee 4-LEAF FLAVOR Kentucky Buriey for good old tobacco taste Cutorcz MACEDONIAN for spicy aroma Goren. Vincnaa for life arid sparkle Broap Maryianp for cool-burning Spur CIGARETTES Liocerr & Mrers Tosacco Co. The on No. paste. crimped cigarette in America , JOSEPH SWIKARD as MARCELU DESNOYERS Cae exist. drama their. lives constituted. PAGE FIVE — First in News Of All Events Track Meet at TY CORR-BNTS. SAN QUENTI. Cal., Nov. here will hold a track and field meet Thanksgiving day. Several athletes from the Olympic club of San Fran-/Roger Hornsby Is Second and Trapshooters in Tourney at K.C. KANSAS CITY, Nov. field shooters were here today for the open Ing of the fall carni which will end Fri are here from lows er middiewestern and wi | Heilmann Third in Winter | League Averages. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 15.—Ty Cobb of the ‘San Francisco club, leads the California Winter league hitters thin week with @ percentage of .899. Roger Hornsby, Los Angeles, is sec- ond, with .384; Harry Heilmann, Mis- sion club, third with .381; Jack Knight, Vernon, fourth with .356 and George Sisler, Vernon, fitth, with .350. Vernon leads the league, Los Angeles is second, Mission third and San Fran- [cisco fourth. 15.—A large of amateur and professional of trapshooting, y¥ visitors sas and oth ern states We Need Your Printing —You Need Our Service We employ no solicitors to disturb you dur- ing your busy hours, but we are just as near to you as.your telephone, and a call will bring our representative at your convenience. PHONE 980-J Commercial Printing Co. EVERYTHING THAT’S GOOD IN PRINTING Basemen: Postoffice.) Midwest Building (Main Entrance Opposite ) LYRIC THEATER Starting Wednesday, November 16 People You'll | 3 Never Forget DOLPH VALENTINO, WARWICK a Juuia as CHICHI it de BRUL' as TORERNOTE® Bn, bi : They are really only shadows on a screen | ; of silver. They do not, nor did they ever, k F And yet you will know them, } . speak of them by their first names; dream ee - of them, perhaps, and of the great human oun SAINPOUS Fas LAURIER The FOU They are people you will never forget: the principal characters in the Rex Ingram Production of the masterpiece of Vicente Blasco Ibanez's novels— Aun WALE 4s KARL VON HARTROTT eens, R HORSEMEN of the APOCALYPSE A REX’ INGRAM PR \ Adapted by June Mathis, ODUCTION Photographed by John F. Seitz "

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