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TT LANDS ANOTHER BOUT Will Meet Weinert in Mid-November Battle. By FAIR PLAY. (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune) NEW YORK, Noy. 6.—As the writer predicted some time ago, Luis Firpo hag clinched a mid-No- vember date with Charley Weinert. ‘Will the battle be hald in New York? Fe -aqnl R0t. vuu uiagine whet the New. Ye ‘exing commission “would do to fie projéct? Muldoon, in all the pride of his strength, would be call- ed upon to demonstrate that the half-Nelson, the hammerlock and all the other good holds of the 18th cen- tury are still effective in crasing spotted attractions to the mat. Firpo says not only will he meet ‘Weinert in Jersey but two other op- ponents yet to be named. This lat- ter remark caused even the Jersey commission to raise its head. For Luis, if let to run wild,"can do him: self very well in the niatter of op- ponents. . The Jerseyit certainly do not wish to Iet him drag any one- armed or one-legged opponents into the ring. Perhaps Firpo is trying to make Tex Rickard jealous. Tex has not softened to the sort of opponents Luis wants to meet and Tex's list of candidates., when shown +to Luis, caused the big fellow to emit roars of grief and anger that could be heard in Central Park. Luis, as a matter of fact, is by no meens in the physical condition he THE TRIBUNE’S PAGE OF SORTING that he was superfine then—and it Would not be a great surprise were Weinert to outpoint him. RIOT NEAR AS MAT CONTEST REACHES END CHICAGO, Nov. 6.—Police were called to clear the ring and quell a disturbance which arose in the Coll- seum last night when Jim Londos, a Greek heavyweight wrestler di feated Renato Gardini, Italian, two out of three falls. The trouble began in the first fall ce Gardin! persisted in applying trangle bold erent ‘warned by Referee ‘Tairy, was struck by Nick Londos, ae and chief sec- ond of the Greek, who jumped into the ring. The referee awarded the first fall to Londos. The remaining falls were scored clean, but manifest @issatisfaction among the spectators caused the calling of extra police squads. ——_+---— SPORT BRIEFS NEW YORK—Morrie Schlaifer of Omaha, was matched with Dave Shade, California contender for the ‘welterweight championship, iri 12 rounds at Newark, December 3. NEW YORK—Quintin Romero of Chile and Sully Montgomery, Cen. tre College footbali star,fought a six round draw. —_———~___ Improvement in Italy's trade bal- ance js not due to a decrease in fra- Ports but to a. very eubetantig in- a bee, Wet eerie 1 take’ this means. : and’ opportunity’ to many thank my friends ‘supporters who made . -possible my election No- vember 4th. Grand Prize Shoot Special Prizes Every Day REMINGTON AUTOMATIC RIFLE GIVEN AWAY We Make Keys, Repair Guns, Locks and Phonographs SHOGREN’S NOVELTY SHOP 112 North Center St. Phone 2222 @he Casper Dally Ecidbune YOU KNOW. ME. AL Adventiaes of Jack Keefe y en S THEY TO OUTSKIRTS THE oF gon aes 9. CALIFORNIA NOWACCUSED Eligibility Dispute on Coast Takes on New > Angles. By LAWRENCE PERRY. (Copyright, 1924, Casper. Tribuni NEW YORK, Noy, -¢.—-rt is wh{s pered that the dispute over eligibil ity standards which led California and Stanford to severe athletic rela‘ tions with Southern California sin’ 1924. may have repercussioris that will shake more than one college athletic structure on the wast- coast. : It is alleged that the Los Angéles 's not the only college against Pe eharges—whether founded or. no! may be directed. j In the meantime, the case,* mb (it stands, is serious enough. Souther Talifornia has gone a, step ahead of Stanford and has called off the gi arranged to have. been played nj ‘Saturday. Here is an act that “he tang of outraged righteousness. sitienPcalltorn ae the culminatfon “at ‘south institution's attempts to secure athletic timber, The Cole nase seems to have been the climax. Cole is a substitute lineman’ whose vresence on the Los Angeles squad had, it is said, been. protested by sources other than Berkeley and Palo Alto some time agv. Southern “alifornia made an investigation which some of her cirtics seem to think was perfunctory. Whether this: is so or not, the writer does not know; at all events, Cole was de- slared. eligible. In the Cole charges, proffered by. California, photographic proofs of professionalism were presented and ‘t {8 maintained that these proofs ‘were evident to Southern California: Other allegations agai: ern California involy present ‘hig! sera CAGE FLEAGUE MEET TONIGHT |=: The most important’ meeting of the year of the city bakketball lea- gue is called for thia qvening at 8 o’clock in the basement pf the Met: odist church. The mi qup of the league will be decided; and eight teams will. be chosen for member- ship out.of;the 11 teams which made applications. The date of opening and closing of the league season will: alsa be de- termined at tonight's session and all team managers are requested to be present on time.’ Players,and any- one interested in basketball or the welfare of the league are cordially invited to attend. DENVER, Colo., Nov. 6.—KEnute Rockne, well known football coach at Notre Dame university also Sounth Bend, Indiana,” has advised those directing athletics at Regis college; that he wM come to Denver next summer to open a summer school for coaches. The school will be held from July 5 to 25“and while Rockne will coach football, W. E. Meanwell, coach of the University of Minnesota and one of the outstanding authorities on basket ball will give instructions in that game. Carroll Hall at Regis college will |’ be used to house the visiting coaches who enroll for the school. Yes, the Hudson Coach has been reduced in price. R. C. Montgomery; Physician” ee Surgeon Electronic Reactions of Abrams Riverton, Wyoming. {| LARAMIE, Wyo., Nov. WBOY ELEVEN WINS GREAT VICTORY OVER (Special. to The Tribune). 6.—Mon- tana State's undefeated football! team was knocked out of any chance at the Rocky Mountain con- ference title when the University of ‘Wyoming defeated the Montana ag- gregation here yesterday -afternoon by a score of 18 to 17. The game was the most sensational played here in several years and the fre- quent scoring kept the outcome in doubt until the last minute. Both teams scored a touchdown LONE POINT ON HOME FIELD MONTANA BY veer, captain and tackl: halfback, and Paul _O' started the game for three others, John Groves, halfback and Bill Kicher, tackle and Clair Blanchard, end, were used as substi- tutes. , The Lineup: Wyoming )(18) Praition {Montana (17) Mabee. ~«---Glynn Nandeveer.. Olson Greenburg. s@---Yedlicka Erickson. Wilson within three minutes of the opening'|‘ kickoff, Wyoming on straight foot- ball and Montana by intercepting a forward pass. Three Casper boys, George Vante+ +|GRANGE ISGREATEST Lester... Furle....-.. Roberts. ene -MeQuin rh, -------Hatfield ek Gregory HALFBACK, FARRELL. STATES (United Press Sports Editor.) NEW...YORK, Noy, football team has been made simpler for the éxperts by one position with the showing. made by Red Grange, the star Illinois halfback in tho Ill! nois-Michigan game. Grange not only cinched a place on every selec- tion by scoring five touchdowns in 4 major game, but he performed an unheard of feat in scoring four touchdowns in the first period of'a most important game. “Grange, beyond all doubt, is one of the greatest players ever de- veloped,” Alonzo A. Stagg, coach of the, University of Chicago, eleven, saidiin commenting» on. the game, “Considering that he. went'into Tn “ene world's experience always has been very ordinary, Knute Rockne, the: Notre Dame coach, also is a great admirer of Grange. “I neyer heard of any player scoring four touchdowns “in the first period of such an important game,” Rockne suid. George Gipp once ran for six touchdowns in a game against Kalamazoo, but four of them were called back. It is generalty admitted in the ‘west that Gipp, the late Notre Dame star, was the only player of recent years who could compare with the all-around ability of Grange. The Illinois junior can do everything that Gipp did just as well or a little better, but the can’t kick, or at least he hasn’t been called upon to kick. While admitting that he is one of the greatest players in the country, many western critics claim that he has his great interference to thank. It is true that Mcllwain and Brit- ton gave: him great interferenco in the Michigan game, but it will have to be admitted that every runner has to have interference, Grange got a good running start behind. hi interference, but he finished all his long runs alone and it always is the last few yards that-arethe| hardest. eee Ohio State takes pleasure in re-| calling that Grange didn't do any such stunts against the Ohio de- fense last year and the prediction is being made that he will not do the things to Ohio this year that he did to Michigan. Grange was stopped. three periods in the Ohio State-Iilinols game last year—but he broke away and won the game in the fourth period. For all the publicity that has been given him and all the adolation that the campus bestows upon him; Grange is a most unassuming young: ster. “I get a lot of help,” was. the answer he gave when asked after the game how he did it. His father is.\a policeman: in. Wheaton, Il, ‘and he has another brother in the freshman class at Illinois who gives promise of being a great football player. In speaking of Grange, the Illinois IN REVIEW famous high jumper (not Osborne). “Grange doesn't.act ke he has ever done anything, . b hat’ when he did a little bit of jumping woultin’'t talk to anyone on the campus on! when he -was asking for a cigare' they tell. Grange likes to be kidded about being a great baseball player. Last year, he couldn't throw a football and Bob Zupp! the Illinois coach, wanted to make 'p triple threat out of him. Zuppke’ made him go out for the basebal¥ team last spring and tried to make a pitcher out of him. He worked all season and didn't get-a: ch in a-big game, but he learned to throw a’ foot- ball and his Wy: to.the team was | Goubled. Babe's hitting in_ his | ofthe team, .Pefhaps it woyld have worked “if they;could have gotten their hands on and given hima hard fall, but.they couldn't get near him, i ~ Soe BM rs! Deligved in, that kind of football,” Knute Rockne said in com- menting on, thy game. “It is bad football to givb the ball to a fast running opponent like ‘Grange. In the Notre e-Army game we never kicked of passed ‘the ball any- way near Harry Wilson, If a run- ner. like..Wilson or Grange gets away, it's ajfully hard to stop him. If he has‘ to start from a formation you have chance to guess where he’s going’ or getting him before he gets a real start.” Wilson is oné of the greatest ball carriers in the game. He was an all-American star at Penn State and he was expedted to. be a sensation with the Army, but. he didn’t do a thing in the Notre Dame game. Rockhe whult not Jet: Notre’ Dame give him the chance. After Mich- igan’s eXpetience, it is not likely that any other team will kick the ball to Grange to test fim out as he has Fees “thoroughly tested now. ” Mies: for Your ‘Winter Kiorae | Warm, Clean Garage. Rates Redsonable. 223 North Durbin Phone 1146 The Hudson Coach is a real car for a lady tp jhandle, ‘ Basy Steering, Easy Driv. ing and holds the road, Gall for Demonstration. WAROONS WILL MEET ILLINOIS | Additional Zest Given Game’ by ° Victory Last: Week. é By WALTER CAMP. (Copyright 1924, Casper Tribune) NEW YORK, Noy. 6.—The suc- cess of Illinois and Michigan last Saturday has rendered the Lllinois- Chicago game of next Saturday a, test of great importance in the west- ern conference and one for which both teams will point with might and main, Coach Alonzo Stagg, of Chicago, has undoubtedly started burning the midnight oil, trying to devise ways and means of stopping “Red” Grange—and yet not leave too big an opening for Zuppke's other backs, who, though outshone by Grange, are no \mean performers themselves. Thig game undoubtemy will draw a big crowd and should vie in almost every respect with the first of the big three. encounters im the ecast— the Princeton-Harvard clash at Cam- bridge. —— : Saturday’s results out on the Pa- cific coast provided one or two up- sets, Oregon beat Washington 7 * PAGE NINE First in News Of All Events RW euey Was SUCKERS to 3. -Andy. Smith's Californjans managed to get: away with Hender- son's fancy southern California boys 7-0. Marquette had a terrible tumble from Creighton ‘which; beat them .21 to 7 and Denver defeated Colorado college 3 to 0, “Georgia, Vanderbilt, Washington and Lee~and ;Alabama all won. good victories in the south, while Rice, Baylor and Southern Methodists‘ triumphed in. Texas, Ohio State could only tie Wooster, something of a surprise, but Ne braska put Missouri,: Chicago's con- querors, under the yoke, 14 to 6. gies Ties Eh Agee FOOTBALL QUESTIONS ADDRESS: Lawrence Perry, Special’ Football. Correspondent of the Casper Tribune, 814 World Building, New York. If you have some question to ask about footbull— If you want a rule interpreted— If you want to know anything about. a..p! Write to Lawrence Perry, for Cifteen years an authority on. the game as writer and official. If you, want a personal reply en- close. a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Otherwise ‘your. ques- tion will be answered’ in this éolumn. (Copyright, 1924,. Casper Tribune) QUESTION—An_ end on‘ defense, runs the half. on offense fifteen yards back toward his own goal on an_end run. A penalty for ton Yo COME THAT CLOSE Y ESPECIALLY IF THEY HAO THEIR WIFES WITH THEM Y yards {fs called on tho offensive side, As the penalty called for only ten yards and the loss to the offensive side on the play was fifteen we pro- tested and ted to refuse the penalty. The referee refused and said it was not our gain but their oss and we could not refuse the penalty. Was he right? ANSWER—If the foul occurred before the loss on the run was ef- fected the foul takes precedence to the Joss of ground by the runner being forced Lack, But the referee was wrong in“not permitting the penalty to be refused, as all penal- tles for fouls under the rules may be declined, QUESTION—Our quarterback was returning a punt and had a clear field ahead. But at tho 25-yard line tho defending fullback fell and his head struck the quarter on the heels causing him to fall to his hands and knees. The impact caused him to plunge six Yards ahead of where he had fallen and here he regained his feet and could have advanced. The referee put the ball in play where he had first fallen. Wo argued that ithe, ball should be first down where eo; impact had carried our runner, ile .we were argulng, and 1 know Apreitiad: gevelt’ wainutes lett to: play, tine was-called. Should time hava tbeen''taken out even if our captain had not called for it? JANSWER—Ball should haye been iddwn at farthest: point it was car- F tied.” “Time “should not have been ‘Aaiken unless‘ requested. —_—_——>— — During August British India im- ported: eight million ounces of silver from the United States, more than all other couhtries in the world com- bined. Because number of the huge sold, we can afford to take a very small profit. on each White Owl and put the rest into giving most remarkable VALUE. That’s why White Owl smokers never switch,