Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 26, 1924, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

= ‘Notre Dame Scores 12| '#":° gho ant | > ed ica: nt Cc ing ime on, , nal? nal }35.—A 1s | El ‘PAGE TEN. World. Results ED TWIGE BY THE IRlsh Points in Blanking ‘ Tiger Clan. BY PAUL R. WHITE United Press Correspondent PRINCETON, N. J., Oct. crowd of 650,000 filled Palmer Stadium today to see Notre Dame add to its rat : . . ojlong list of victories over ‘1 ‘eastern elevens. The “fight- =e} ing Irish’, under Knute Rockne teok Princeton into camp, 12 to 0. Crowley and Layden were stars 4 6f the Notre Dame offensive. Time qnd again the intreped Western backs ‘broke through the Princeton defense for long runs. Only the ‘Most spectacular work on the de- , fenee of Slagle, shifted to halfback to make room for Dinsemore at quarter, kept down the Notre Dame 5 score. Despite the fact that Rockne, Sy only a week before in the game ntl with the Army had shoved his sec- oa! ond team into the encounter at the @) start of the game, the gala crowd— =’ the largest ever gathered here to see any football battle outside “Big Three” contests—was startled when it was seen the Notre Dame back- field was without its Layden, Crow- Jew, Stuhidreher and Don Miller at the start. } During the first quarter the two , ¢levens hammered harmlessly away at each other, resorting mostly to a ; Ricking duel. When the four star backfield of Notre Dame assumed , Control of the ysituation in the sec- ond quarter, however, Princeton was no longer able to stop. the March of the Irish, and Crowley, with Slagle’s arms wrapped about him tight just managed to roll over “the line. Bartlett, blocked the Hooslers' attempt to add another pint. ; Not until the final period were Hiockne’s battlers able to score rain, Working the ball to the gers’ seven-yard line with Lay- ; en's wide end runs. Notre Dame ; Man its total to 12 when Crowley again got going and deposited» the Qval between the goal posts, =Once again the try-for-another- Boint was blocked, Captain Stout ; breaking through before Crowley liad a chance to get off his kick, + The lineup and summary follows: =Princeton Pos. Notre Dame - Crowe ~ Wallace Gluekert Maxwell Honseke Bfcndergast | @bson } Gplawen =Score by period Brinceton tre Dame fouchdowns—For Princeton, none; fer Notre Dame, made by Crowley @ Points after touchdown—None. Geerls from field—None. Substitu- tens: Notre Dame—Stuhliderher fer Scherrer, Crowley for O'Boyle, Miller for ‘Connell, Layden for @rney, Collins for Crowe, Weibolt tyr Glueckert, Miller for Wallace, Muntzinger for Eaton, Bach for fvlund, Glueckert for Weibolt, GRowe for Collins, Edwards for Sfuhigerher, Boland for Bache, Max- YSU for Harmon. Princeton—Dinse- Wore for Pre ndergast, Dignan for Waseme MeMillan for Bartell, Wivis for Hills, Weeks for Dignan, Galligan for Gibson, England for ilison for Drews, Gibson an, Legendre for Stout, n for Gates. Officials— Victor thwartz, Brown; Lieut. Nelly, West Point olonel West field judg lender, Time rs—15 MILTON WING - AACE CLASSIC What eo eer eeenE sr "EEDWAY, CHARLOTTE, Cc. OB. 25.—(United Press.) —Tommy Milton won the inaugural 250-mile afitomobile race here today, officials afinounced after rechecking time edrds of the drivers who finished tie. race. @Earl Cooper was second and Bennie Hill, third. eAnnouncement “at the end of the rg@ce guve first place to Cooper, s@rond place to Hill and third place te Peter De Paolo. “Later the timing was questioned agd experts started a recheck. prep aithatre pst aie Satay “\ large new theat patking plant ts to Le built at Prince Rupert, B, C, By Leased Wire INOTRE. DAME TAMES TIGERS: he Casver Sunhan mrifine At Fort Collins, Colorado Aggies, 17; Utah Aggies, 13. At Laramie, Colorado university, 21; Wyoming university, 0. New ‘York, LaFayette, Washington and Jefferson, 6. At New York, West Virginia, 13; Centre, 6. At West eee Army, 20; Boston university, °0. At Carlisle, 20; Dickinson, 25; Al- At Cambridge, Harvard, 0; Dart- mouth, 6. At Philadelphia, Penn,, 27; ginia, 0. At Hamilton, Colgate, 49; Hobart, 0. Ver- At New York, C. C..of New York, 13; Rhode Island State, 0. At New York, New York univer- sity, 12; Trinity, 0. At Boston, Boston College, 12; Al- legheny, 0. At Orono, Maine, Maine, 12; Col- by, 0. At Stores, Conn., Conn. Aggies, Norwich, 0. At Norristown, Pa., P. M.C., Urantus, 0. s At Haverford, Washington college, 6; Haverford, 0. At Washington, Bucknell, 14. At New York, Columbia, 27; Wil- liams, 3. 21; 23; Georgetown, 6; At State College, Syracuse, 10; Penn State, 6. At Bethlehem, Pa., Lehigh, 13; Rutgers, 13. (tie). At Pittsburgh, Carnegie Tech, 6; Pittsburgh, 0, At Reading, Lebanon Valley, 77; Schuykill, 0. At Urbana, Tllinois, 45; Depaw, 0. At Columbus, Chicago, 3; Ohio State, 3. (tie) At Ann Arbor, Wisconsin, 0; Michigan, 21. At Champaign, Depaw, 0; Illinois, 45. At Indianapolis, Butler, 12; Wa- bash, 0. At Des Moines, Drake, 28. At Indianapolis, Butler, 12; Wa- bash, 0. At Lawrence, Nebraska, 14; Kan- sas, 7. At Columbus, Mo., Missouri, 14; Kansas Aggies, 0, At Franklin, Ind., Franklin, 28; Rose Poly, 0. At New Haven, Yale, 18; Brown, 3. Oklahoma, 0; At Princeton, Notre Dame,. -12; Princeton, 0. At Iowa City, Yowa,.18; . Minne- sota, 0. At Brooklyn, St. Joseph, 18; Villa Nova, 0. At Evanston, Northwestern, Michigan Aggles, 9. At Omaha; Creighton, 7; Haske}! Indians, 7. At Des Moines, Drake, 28; Okla- homa, 0, At Atlanta, Alabama, 14; Georgia Téch, 0. At Charleston, Citadel, 6; Furnam, 13; 0. At Troy, N. selaer, 7, At Terre Haute, State 45; St. "Joseph, 0. At Cleveland, Wooster, 14; West- ern Reserve, 0. At Toledo, Scott Ivers, 7. At Hiram, Case, 27; Hiram, 0, At New Concord, Marshall, 3; Mus: kigium, 0. At Cleveland, Granda Rapids, 6; John Carroll, 79. At Akron, Mount Union, 6; Akron university, 2. ‘At Delaware, Otterbetn, 0; dhio Wesleyan, 35. At Oberlin, Dennison, 0; 3. At Birmingham, Auburn, 3; Lau, 0. At Macon, Mercar,.14; Howard, 5. At Nashville, Georgia, 3; Vander- bilt, 0. At Memphis, Missiasipp! Aggies, 7; University of T. Vols., 2. Y., Union, 7; Rens- Normal, High, 7;. St. Oberlin, At New Orleans, Loyola, 13; Ogle- thorpe, 13. At New Springhill, 0, At New Orleans, Alabama Fresh- men, 9; Tulane Freshmen,’ 0. At Greenville, Pa., Thiele, 0; Mar- low, 0. At Waynesburg, Pa., Bethany, 0; Waynesburg, 14. At Grove City, West Minster, 7. Orleans, Tulane, 33; Pa., Grove City, 0; At Richmond, Hanover, 22; Earl; ham. 0. At Portland, Ore., Stanford, 3; Idaho, 0. At Annapolis, West Virginia Wes- leyan, 10; Navy, 7 At Worcester, Ma: Holy Cross, 13: Fordham, 0. At Middlebury, Middlebury, 158; Vermont, 0. At Manchester, New Hampshire, 20: Tufts, 0, At Amherst, Mass. Aggies, 14; Wesleyan, 13. At Amherst, Amherst, 48; Hamil- ton, 0, At Lewiston, Me., Bowdoin, 13; Bates, 0. At Tancaster, Muhleburg, 37; F. 0. Itimore, Johns Hopkins, 87; 0. At Eynchburg, V. P. %., 0; Wash- neton and Lee, 0. At Clinton Miss. Rirmineham Southern, 12: Missiaaippl cofege, 6. At Swarthmore, Pa,, Swarthmore, Cettvehure, Gettysburg, 12; Monnt St. Marys. 0. f At Newark, Del., St. Johns. Delaware, 0. Fina’ at Terre Hante, State Nor- Tal. 45; St. Jorenh, 0. At Reaver Falls, Pa., Geneva, 14; St. Ronaventure, 0. At Prov. NV, New York, State Teachers college, 6: - Rensselaer Freshmen, 6. PRINGETONLINE| GRID SCORES | At Berkeley, California, 20; Wash- ington State, 7. At Grand Forks, Neb., Nebraska Wesleyan, 7; North Dakota, 13. At Cincinnati, Maryville College, 26; St. Xavier College, 6. At Dayton, Loyola, 7; Dayton, 6. At Lexington, Ky., Ky. U., 7; Se- wanee, 0. At eer Waynesburg, 14; Bethany, 0. neat Memphis, Mississipp! A. and . 7; ‘Tenn., 2. oad Boston, Boston college, 13; Al- legheny, 0: At Durham, New Hampshire state, 20; Tufts, 0. At Los Angeles—U. 8. Nevada,’ 7. At Los Angeles—Southern Branch U. C., 6; Occidental, 20, At Los Angeles—California Tech, 20; Loyola, 13. At Claremont—Pomonag 27; Red- lands, 0. At Senttle—Washington, 6; O. A. At Tucson—New Mexico, 0; Ari- zona, 7. Eugene—Oregon, man, 6, At Spokané—Gonzaga, 14; Multno- mah, 0. c, 21; 40; Whit At Butte, Mont.—Montana 106; Montana Mines 6. At Missoula—Washington State Frosh 36, Montana Frosh 0. At Bozeman—Montana State, 59; Colorado Teachers 0. At Austin—Florida 7, Texas 7. At Clinton—Birmingham Southern 12; Mississippi 6. Utah University Young University 6. 35; Brigham Football Star at Vanderbilt Badly Injured NASHVILLE, Oct. 25. (United Press).—Lying Bombar, ‘Vander- bilt’s famous half back was car- ried from the field during the game with Georgia here this af- ternoon, his left side paralyzed. Physicians said he had suffered a hemorrhage of the brain. Bomar was Walter Camp's cholce for all American end in 1922, and for the past three years has made most of the mythical southern conference elevens as end or halfback. Georgia defeated Vanderbilt, 3 to 0. en CITY BASKET LEAGUE TO BE REVIVED Although football will be the predominant local sport for several Weeks to come the basketball en- thusiasts have started working and the city basketball league will hold its initial meeting of the season Thursday evening next at 7:30 in the Methodist church basement. All’ persons interested in basket- ball are cordially invited to at- tend the meeting and any organ- ization wishing to enter a teagn in the-league is asked to have a qual- ified representative present. The league championship ‘was won by the Red Crowns two years ago, the first year of the leaguo’s existence, and last year by the Methodists. Two years ago the league was composed of 12 teams but this proved unwelldly and last season it was cut to eight. Last year's officers were Sam Neff, president and Bill Stone, sec- retary and treasurer. oth of these men have been active in pro moting basketball interest in Cas- per. BADGERS GET DRUBBING BY YOST ELEVEN ANN ARBOR, Mich., Michigan drubbed Wi gridiron 2 ly atoned for before the pow Captain Ste Oct. 25. nsin on the 1 to 0 here today and part- it Inglorious defeat ul illinois team. opened up a bril- Mant passing attack that produced the first Wolverine score late in the first half. Steger carried the ball over himself to the acclaim of 43,000 fans and Rockwell kicked goal. , Friedman and Rockwell tore away for long gains around end in the third quarter that later resu’ted in a touchdown. Another score was made in the ‘inal quarter. 3 Tf was Michigan's first conference game on the home field. Ad Stone recently whipped Young Btribling. Btone, @ light heavy: weight, thus “qualified for a bout with Gene Tunney, champion. But this bout will not come off. Stone'd eyes have gone back on him. Now pe is in retirement. For the winter, Maybe longer. A tough break. Sand to Th BY JOHN B. FOSTER Casper Tribune) NEW YORK, Oct. 25.—Out sin San Francisco, Jimmy O’Connell, the center of the recent bribery. scandal in the Giants,’ has gone to nurse his. wounded. heart, his friends are having a hard time believing he -was solely responsible for the offer to the Philadelphia team of a $500" (Copyright 1924, bribe to throw a game. ‘This despite the fact that all the players involved by O'Connell with the’ exception of Cozy Dolan, have successfully got from under and that Cozy has successfully convinced some of the baseball writers in the east that he had nothing to.do with the affair and was given a raw deal by Commissioner Landis when he was ousted from the game with O'- Connell. O'Connell's friends can understand why he might have acted und what he though were ‘club orders” for he had just been giyen a chance to get back into the Giant line-up. He haq been benched twice for fal ure to obey playing instructions, O'- Connell, his coast friends say, is more of an instinctive ball player than anything else, They regard him as a “square shooter” and re- fuse to believe he originated the: plan to bribe Sand. Here's the story O’Connel is ten- ing on the coast where, from all re- ports, he is near a nervous and physical breadndown over the affair: “L was sitting in the locker room with Dolan and he turned to me and sald: “ ‘You're pretty strong with Heinie Sand. Go_ari@ offer him $500 if the Phillies won't bear down on us too hard.’ “T felt that Dolan,\in a way, rep- resented! the club. I took his in- structions as an order and promised to do what I could. As T left, Frisch wanted to know what T had béén talking about with Dolan and 1 Fumbled Punt Gives Huskies Single Score LAWRENCE, Kan., fumble punt that Re r up and ran for a touchdown gave Nebraska the break necessary to de- feat Kansas 14 to 7, here this atter- noon. q Hodges muffed Bloodgood's punt early in the third quarter and Rob- ertson caught the ball as he flashed by for a 35 yard run to the goal. Both teams scoréd a touchdown on forward passes. Fthodes tossed a fifteen yard pass to Collins who ran forty yards for Nebraska's touch- down in the third quarter, Starr made the Jayhawker marker in the final period on g pass from Zeuber after Kansas h¥a worked: the ball to Nebras' 2°yard line, Kansas threw Nebraska to score in the see: ond quarter when a succession of Oc going through the line repeatedly FRISCO FRIENDS OF JIMMY O'CONNELL STILL BELIEVE OTHERS WERE INVOLVED IN SCANDAL Refuse to Believe Claim That He Was Author of Plan to Bribe Heinie FORM AND DEFEAT THE STRONG GOPHER GRID SQUAD, 13:10 0 IOWA CITY, Ta., Oct. 26.—(United Press.)—Playing. whirlwind footbail a rejuvenated Iowa eleven downed Minnesota by a 13 to 0 score here today. For the first time this season Coach Ingerwsen’s Hawkeyes show- ed a conference brand of football in winning. Iowa got off to a slow sturt and Minnesota advanced down the field to: Iowa's 20-yard line in-a series of line smashes, Here the Towa line tightened and ‘from then on the Iowans had all the advan- tage. . Captain Parkin at quarter made & permanent piace for himself in the annals of Towa’s football heroes. His brilliant open field run early in the fourth quarter netted Iowa's only touchdown. Hancock scored ‘three points on a place’ kick in ‘the second quarter and added three more points with his (oe jn the fourth quarter, Minnesota seemed powerless to stop the march of the Hawkeyes in the last period and r Parkin went over the Iowa-elev™ marched to within a few yards of ¢he Gopher goal but lost the ball on.downs. Ingewersen’s weeks of work on the Iowa forward wall showed fruit today. and after the play once tixht: ened the Hawkeye line was rocky- bedded. Schutte and Ascher did most 6i the offensive work for Minnesota, row Game where told him,,, He said ‘Go ahead and give Sand anything he wants.’ Af- ter that, Young came up and asked me and I told him what Dolan had said. He sald that it was all right and for me to ga ahead. “Then I talked) with Sand. He turned me cown flat. As T came back, Kelly asked me ‘What did Sand say?’ “Then IT: reported to Dolan, who did not seem to care very much and remarked “Well, we'll beat ‘em any- ‘President. Heydler was in. the room when Dolan and I were ques: + tioned, by Judge Landis and Dolan’: reply to all. questions was that ‘he ‘didn't remember,”. . When Young and Kelly were queationed, they denied everything. I guess 1’ have to _be the goat,’ for considerable gains.» Never ,once, however, did the Gopher eleven come within scoring distance except in the first quarter. Iowa made 240 yards from the line scrimmage to Minnesota's 165. Minnesota completed only one pass, while Iowa completed none. The Hawkeyes made 14 first downs to Minnesota’s ,12. Sn ROEAE DS Place kicke*Hancock Goals. from _ fleld—Hancock. Tonehagwna—Pavk: . The lineup: Minnesota Mathews ~ Cox (C) Abrahamson Cooper = Gay Romey - Hancock Farkin (©) - Subs; Iowa—Scantiebury — for Parkin, Hines for Fischer, McIntyre for Fleckinstein,’ Fry for Grahain. Minnesota—Pederson for | Schutte, Morris for Mathews, Clapp’ fer Gay, Pederson for Lidderberg. BASKET SQUAD 5 ORGANIZED Methodists First in Field With Team — for Season. The Methodists, last. year’s win- ners of the city basketball league title, are the first team to get or- ganized for another season on | courts, The Methodists have met. of last year, as ¢ their first practice in ne church gymnasium last night. -Bill Stone will’ again coach the team.and Archie Post has been named as business manager. ‘The Methodists have every man back for play and will start the sea- son. with their Hneup intact. For this reason they expect to give all the teams in the league race stiff competition. ‘The Methodists, after winning the jocal championship last year,. went to the ‘Rocky Mountain tournament in Denver and won their first game, defeating Kimball, Neb., but were put out in their second game by the Craig-Baker combination. The Craig- Bakers ‘had in their lineup “Chuck” Carney, All American forward, and Aubrey Divine, All. American. quar- terback at Iowa a few years ago. ———————— Tilinoia has more than 10 times ar many telephones asthe whole of The “number of tractors India is estimated to be not more than 1,000." pases and end runs brought the ball to Nebraska's 18 yard line. where the Cornhuskers held for downs, Both teams found it impossible to make first downs consistently and 1 Por results cry a Tribune Classl- fied AL | r SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1924. First in News Of All Events | | Ol ; iO AND “CHICAGO Eyes Stop Him | HAWKEYES STAGE COMEBACK IN DROP KIGK BEATS WHISTLE AND SAVES CHICAGO U. FROM DEFEAT Stagg Eleven Battles Ohio to 3 to 3- Tie i in “Gridiron Thriller at Columbus When Bob _ Curley Delivers Goods. BY HENRY L. FARRELL . United Press Staff Correspondent OHIO STADIUM, COLUMBUS, Ohio,, Oct. 25.—For fifty minutes this afternoon, Bob Curley, a little Chicago youth sat wrapped in a blanket’on the bench watching a wrinkled faced old man for the word: that gave him the chance for the glory. There was one minute to go and Ohio State was leading Chicago— Chicago 3 to 0 in a game that meant doom for Chicago’s chances to win the Western Conference champion, ship. Curley had been in but was re- moved for a heavier man but his chance came. “All right, get in there Curley and do some kicking,” the veteran coach Stagg told his youngster. Curley” went. in and with 30 sec- onds to go _he booted a thirty-yard drop kick for the field goal that end- ed the game in a 3-to-3 tie. Fifty thousand spectators in the huge stadium had jist become rec- onciled by the chance for an Ohio State victory when Chicago’ rallied with a game heart and rushed the ball down the field to state’s 15 yard line. The Ohio forwards fought as only college football players can fight when they see a game slipping and repulsed the charges that Chicago made in desperation for a touch- down. ‘When the chance was gone for a touchdown, young Curley took the next best thing and tried to save his team from defeat even if it could not win. He dropped back, kicked away a few pebbles and booted the ball between the posts, It was just before that when Ohio pulled, its rally and passed the ball down within the shadows of the Chi- cago goal posts State tried for a touchdown but the Chicago line was too big and to desperate. With one chance remaining to score, Ollie Klee, the former Steele High school boy from Dayton dropped back to 15 yards and booted over a kick that didn’t clear the bar more than an inch. The teams had fought so furiously and so evenly through three terrific quarters that it looked like State three points were going to win but Chicago wouldn't give up and their stout fighting hearts kept them go- ing until the break came and they made it good. Ohio lost a good chance to score a touchdown in the third period. They broke out with a wild passing and running attack, that advanced tht ball to Chicago's seventeen yard line. Klee, who was to make up for this later, was called upon for a smash off tackle and he was charging through the secondary defense with a touchdown in sight when a’ huge Chicago ‘back hit him and the ball popped out, of his arms into the hands of the Chicago fullback. State had-no other, chance to score until the fourth” period started when young Klee made amends’ for his er- ror. Score by quarters: Ohio State -----..-. 0 0 0 3—3 Chicago 0.0 0 33 Caruse. ‘Thomas. McCarthy. Devoe. ott. ern, mouth, umpire; Summar} Klee. Position Subs.—Ohio State, Hunt, Watts for Young; Karrow for Devoe; Devoe for Karrow; Clair] ¥or Chicago—Curley for Ab- bott;, Abbott for Curley; Parks for McCarthy; Gordon for Barnes; Rouse for Caruzo; Hobbschell for Pondelike, Clark for Rouse; Caruzo for ‘Clark; Ohio State -Cunningham Nichols Kutler Young Dreyer » -2e-----Jenkinus -- Wilson .Comerun Curley, Klee’ for for Gordon for Parks; Burgess for Ab- referee; W. field judgo; H. E. mouth, head linesman, James Maskern, D. Knight, Ralphs, Hedges, Northwest- Dart- Tillinols, Dart- West Virginia © Beats Parsons From Centre POLO GROUNDS, NEW. YORK, Oct. 25.—(United -Presa)— i Centre, 18 fore & crowd of 20,000. 4 tone Farley,a sub-half back took: athe oval over the Kentuckians ‘Mine for the’ winning touchdown. Baseball Play At Seattle Is Delayed Again SEATTLE, Oct. 25.—(United Press) state games of the Rain today prevented the, inter- interleagues games between St. Pau) champion of the. American association: .an Seattle coast league DEMPEE er: ‘The rain which has fallen tor: ten days was falling hard. at: game time. Weather forecasters there sail “that there was chance chat it wou?! be fair for Sunday gam of NATRONA 11 years. County. W. C. [BILL} IRVING REPUBLICAN NOMINEE FOR SHERIFF COUNT Y Resident and taxpayer of Natrona County: for - Former conductor on Chicago and Northwest. ern Railroad and member in good standing of Order of Railroad Conductors. For the past two years undersheriff i: in Natrona An Officer Experienced and : Efficient —Politleal Advertisement.

Other pages from this issue: