Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 28, 1924, Page 7

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Defeat of Thermopolis, | Change of Plans for Determining Champs Casper Downs Salt Creek. Worland’s 14-to-0 defeat of Thermopolis yesterday at Worland gives:the Washakie the championship of the Big Horn basin and the entire northern Pee of the state and at the same time assures being Casper’s opponent in the state champion- ship game here next week. Dean Morgan, head coach of Worland o ARMY SQUAD IN BALTIMORE FOR BREAT CLASaIG Will Meet Navy Team On Saturday in Big Game BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. 28, — ‘The annual clash between the rival elevents representing the United States military and nayal academies today claimed the almost undivided attention of —Balttmoreans and hun- dreds of visitors are already arriv- ing in the city for the contest to- morrow. The West Point squad of 53 in- cluding coaches, trainers and attend- ants, reached the scene of action yesterday and held workouts this morning. Another: practice session, the last one efore the game, is scheduled for this afternoon. Both workouts will be he!d in secret, with guards posted to exclude the curious and possible naval scouts. The navy team will complete its preparation at Annapolis. Declaring his team to be in the pink of con- dtiion, ang able to win on any field, Coach Bob Folwell said he believed a workout here unnecessary. Elaborate plans for the entertain- ment ef President and Mrs. Coolidge have been made. Arriving about mid- day the presidential party and other distinguished guests will be given in honor of the cadets, midshipmen, army and navy officers and distin- guished guests at Fifth Regiment armory. Ticket speculators, who have been operating more or less under cover ever since te public distribution of tickets commenced, will' be sought out by federal agents. KRAMER LOOKS "IKE WINNER Chance to Annex Title Crown. Discarded by Dundee Good By FAIR PLAY. (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune NEW YORK, Nov. 28—Danny Kramer, the little Philadelphia. south, paw, is sitting pretty in the chase for Johnny Dundee’s featherweight crown, thanks to. Lady Luck, He has to lick only one of two good boys in order to annex the title, while one of the two good boys must lick the other before tackling Danny. ‘~~ Thats’ the way the draw. of the state athlétic commission came out ‘Tuesday when the boxing authori- ties met to pick the semi-finalists in the elimination tournament for the title Dundee had to lay aside because of increasing heft. Luls "Kid" Kaplan, of Meriden, Conn., and Jose Lomardo, the Pan- ama flash, were selected by the draw to meet in Madison Square Garden, December 12, while Kramer drew a bye. Meanwhile, Jf Kaplan feels the need of another fight under his belt before the title bout he can elect to fight elther Bobby Garcia of Mike Dundee, whom he already has de- feated once in a semi-final to the Kaplan Lombardo clash, without im- pairing in any way his chances of starring in the title match. ¥ ‘That title match, by the way, will not be “put on the air.” Tex Rickard has decided not to permit railio broadensting of any more bouts he puts on. The decision is a tribute to radio broadcasting and announc- ers. For his reason is the fight come 80 realistically over the radio that too many fans stay home and listen in, thereby cutting too deeply into the “gate.” TURKEY SHOOT at : SHOGREN’S GALLERY 112 North Center St. \ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1924 World Results By Leased Wire WORLAND RIGH ELEVEN COMING HEREFOR STATE TITLE BATTLE 4 to0, Leads to Another want me to play'cardswith them tonight and tomorrow. They are from Bete Warriors a clearcut title to the local school, went to Worland to witness the battle and at the same time make final ar- rangements for the game here next week. He is returning this even- ing, when complete details of the championship match to be played in Casper will be known. ‘Worland’s title is assured because while the team has lost one game both Thermopolis and Greybull, it: nearest competitors, have lost game and tied one. As percentag: are rated in the Big Horn basin conference, a tie game is consider- ed as the loss of half a game. Casper’s team took an exercise gallup at Salt Creek yesterday; beating the high school team of that school 28 to 0. All of the firts and second team regulars were put in action and the game was never in doubt. With the exception of increasing the Casper string of wins for the season to seven out of eight games played, the game means little, ha’ ing nothing to do with the state title. European Mat Jack: Keefe PENNSYLVANIA DOWNS CORNELL AND EARNS GLAIM TO THE TITLE Yale and Dartmouth Only Others in Running at Close of Grid Season; Army-Navy Battle Only Big Game Left NEW YORK, Nov. 28.—(By The Associated Press.) — Pennsylvania’s victory over Cornell, lifting the Quakers to the eastern gridiron heights with only Yale and Dartmouth to dispute their 1924 title claims, occupies the outstanding place in one of the most stirring Thanksgiving day football Che Casper Daily Eridune CaROS WITH STRQNGERS THAT YOU QNY THIN G ITHINR YOURE SULLY To PLOY DON'T KNOW F SPORTING NEWS TRAINING PROBLEM RAISED BY FIRPO’S FATE IN LAST BOUT By HENRY L. FARRELL. (United Press Sports Editor) NEW YORK, Nov. Press),—Louls Angel well might be held up as one of the torrible examples in future argu- ments on the subject—‘Is it worth while to train?” There have been many views ex- Pressed on this question in the past and there will be further discussion in the future about the value of intensive work to prepare for ath- Firpo's ‘programs on record. This marks the climax of the sea- ton for most of the major teams throughout the country, with the classic army-navy battle tomorrow at Baltimore as the chief remaining feature outside of a number of inter- sectional contests slated later on the Pacific coast. Pennsylvania's 20-0 victory over Cornell was a surprise. Although the Quakers had been favorites, while Pittsburgh upset Penn State, 24 to 3, and West Virginia jolted the “form” players by overwhelming Washington and Jefferson, 40 to 7, in two other contests involving tra- ‘ditional rivalries. « Artist Dead PAU, France, Nov. 28,—Raymonad Cazeaux; European wrestling cham- pion from-1909 to 1913, and a con- tender for the world's title, is dgad, He was well known in the United States. The middle west grabbed all of the holiday's outstanding intersectional honors with four triumphs that tn- cluded an international victory when Detroit University defeated Toronto University in a game played under mixed Canadian and American Foot- ball rules. The east bowed to mid- dlewestern r! ls in two games when Western Reserves trimmed Tufts at Cleyeland, while Marquette swamped ‘Vermont at Milwauxee. Nebraska gathered a far west scalp when the Cornhuskers downed the Oregon Aggies in a game at Lin- coln, GRID SCORES Nebraska, 14; Oregon Aggies, 0. Idaho, 23; Nevada, 0. Pennsylvania, 20; Cornell, 0. Columbia, 6; Syracuse, 9. University of New Mexico, Western State (Colorado), 0. Penn State, 3; Pittsburgh, 24. Western Reserve, 31; Tufts Col- lege, 0. John Carroll University, 28; Uni- versity of North Dakota, 0. Brown, 20; Colgate, 0. Akron University, 17;Kenyon Col- lege, 7. South Carolina, 7; Wake Forest, 0. ‘V. M. I, 0; Maryland University, 0. Jefferson Barracks (St. Louis), 10; Fort Sheridan, 7. University of Detroit, 30; Toronto University, 18. Oklahoma, 7; Kansas Aggies, 7. Florida, 10; Drake, 0. ‘Washington University, 12; sissippi A and M., 13. — 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 play— Write to Lawrence Perry, for fifteen 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 Loyola, 7; St. Vistor, 7. Depauw, 0; Notre Dame Reserves, Franklin and Marshall, 7; Gettys- burg, 2. Bethany vs. Allegheny—No game on account of death of president of Allegheny college. University of Utah, 7; Utah Ag- gies, 7. Colorado State Agricultural col- lege, 19; University of Denver, 0. Colorado College, 14; School of Mines, 0. Multnomah Amateur Athletic club, 6; University of Oregon, 0. Washington State College, 0; Gon- zaga, 0. Illinois Colley 12; Carthage, 0. Baylor, 17; e, 9. Southern Methodist University, 13; Oklahoma Aggies, 13. University of Arkansas, 20; Texas Christion .University, 0. 14; pipe. coe Colorado q (Copyright 1924, Casper Tribune) rect, pas: fensive backfield direct without first going through the quarterback’s hands. B claiams that in order that the ball be passed to any member of the offensive backfield outside of the quarterback the sig- mal “punt f ”" or “kick Mis- thing around them and rush them away from a contagion. “They smoke all right, but they'll be smoking Cust when they start running,” American hes said. he smoking hurdler, it is true, did inhale a lot of dust behind the tobacco fumes when he started run- ning but the other British runners If memory is cor- four of them made a world’s relay record, “What fun do you fellows get out of athletics’ asked a number of American friends during the Olympic games last sum- did quite well. letic competition. There never has been a doubt that physical condition is essential success on athletic fields, but there has been a difference in about the methods physical condition can be acquired. British athletes, who are as care- free about training as any athletes in the world, laugh at training methods of Americans as being something that only takes the Joy out of life and remtoves the fun from competition. from the results of thelr competi- tion against Americans that amuse- ment is offe of théir first purposes in playing games. Perhaps have the right idea, after all, because they are a healthy nation and ap- parently happy. We will never forget the look of consternation and alarm that spread over the faces of American coaches several years ago on the field at the University of Pennsylvania when-an English hurdler, one of an Oxford- Cambridge team of invading track stars, came on the field smoking a by which the The American coaches dia every- boys but gather their one of the * an English 28,—(United opinion strict It would seem ods may be dealing with a situation that doesn't war- player, a mile runner or a boxer. runner mer. He had just knocked off a big schooner of stout and was top- ping it off with a good: smoke. ‘You live like hermits, sleep like chickens, eat like a dyspeptic and drink like one of your prohibitionists. You de- prive yourself of enjoyment for months just for a few minutes’ run- ning.” The Americans replied that the fun they got out of athletics was a trip to Paris, and if they didn't train, their places on the team would have been taken by an athlete who did train. The British boys ike to tell the story of the Cambridge rowing coach who is supposed to have found a crew going stale before the Oxford race last spring and who threw a big champagne party for the boys, telling them there was plenty of room under the tables and that the bottles weren't there for decoration, They pointed out that Cambridge won the race from an Oxford crew that was stroked by an American and trained strictly in the American fashion, “Wait and see what your crews do against the Yale crew,” the Americans argued. “Yale will beat them with only five paddles work- in, ‘That’s the trouble with Ameficans,” the British sald. “All you think about is winning. You take things too seriously. We have fun and we don’t see what satisfac- tion you will get out of a lot of medals when your old men, wish- you ing that you were young enotigh to have a good time again.” The smateur athlete is justified in having his own ideas about training. Some of the strict American meth too seriously rant it. Most of our leading tennis players smoke and they do not live on any strict diet. They seem to get along fairly well and it is pos. sible that a tennis player in a hard five-set match has to have as much durance and wind as a football Tare ate hdl The Shop-o-scope beats any other kinds of Christmas stocking supporters you ever saw or heard of. First in News Of All Events Do (Copyright, 1094, by The Bat Byndicate, Ine) 11-27- 0 ISLES AND EUR By JOHN B. FOSTER. (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune) NEW YORK, Nov, 28.—Of all the trips that have been made by base- ball players ynder the direction of major leagues to the British Isles and Europe, that of 1924 was the most complete failure. The attendance at ‘the games did not amount to much and instead of playing through France and Italy {t was decided that it would be better to end the jour- ney in Paris and let some of the players return home and others vis- it_around as they pleased until the majority was ready to embark upon the Leviathan for New York. In France it is asserted that the games were not properly advertised in ad- vance. Cfiticiam {s made of the lack of publicity. In England there was no rush to see the players at work, partly because of abominable weather conditions. The time chos- en to visit England was about the most unseasonable that could have been selected. The English play their games in bad weather because they have a lot of it, but they do not give much time to cricket in the fall. Baseball requires a dry field even more than cricket because the ball must be dry for the pitchers and the ground must be dry enough for the runners and fielders. In Dublin the natives were so cold toward baseball, in which so many of their relatives excel in New York, that they did not turn out two score to see the opening and only game. When the contest was over, the United States players turned about and headed back for London at once. No particular missionary work was dong for baseball because there were plenty of games played during the war and since then there has been plenty of opportunity to learn what the game amounts to; It 1s generally believed that a wrong time was taken to send two teams abroad and that a wrong tm- pression had been gained as to the probable interest that would be tak- en in such a visit. It is also sug- gested in messages from abroad that the teams were of no particular tn- terest to the foreigners. They did not represent championship teams of the United States in that Chicago finished last in the American League BASEBALL TOUR OF BRITISH OPE WAS FLOP; ATTENDANCE FIGURES SMALL and the Giants were beateri in the world series right on the eve of their departure abroad. The non-success of the trip this year probably will put an end for some time to any other attempt to invade England and France to show off baseball as a speculation. The cost was heavier in 1924 than {t was on other trips because the traveling expenses are vastly Higher than they were in other years, a SPORT BRIEFS ATLANTA—Young Stribling, Ma- con, Ga., Hght heavyweight, won over Harry Fay in ten rounds. NEW YORK—Babe Hermans, Free- port, N. ¥., won a judges’ €ecision over Johnny Leonard, Allentown, Pa., in 12 rounds. SYRACUSE, Y.—Battling Siki, Senegalese, and Frankie Kearns, of Utica, fought ten rounds to a draw. PHILADELPHIA—George Chaney, Baltimore, knocked out Ray Mit- chell, Philedelphia, in the fifth round. Hw GASES Se UR Try a Tribune classified ad for results. wo \ Sef Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel 8 a.m, and 2:30 p. m. Leave Salt Creek 8 a.m. and 2 p. m, BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS Bus Leaves 9:30 Dally Salt Crook Traysportation Co, TELEPHONE 144 Rochester, 17; Hobart, 42. Outchita, 12; Henderson-Brown, 0. formation,’ formation,” must be called. Which is) Washington and Lee, 34; Carolina State, 0. Missouri, 1 Marquette, 61; Vermont, 7. ‘William and Mary, 20; North} Butte High, $4; Miles City, 0. i St. Mary's College, 28; University of Santa Clara, 7. Valparaiso, 19; Dubuque Untiver- sity, 0. Sioux Falls College, 0; Yankton College, 46. St. Thomas College, 6; St. Mary's College, 7. College of the Ozarks, 13; ZAttle Rock College, 7. Still Colle, 27; Ellsworth, 7. Penn, 13; St. Ambrose, 0. Buena Vista, 33; Columbus Col- lege (South Dakota), 0. Columbia, 6; Luther, 0. Texas University, 7; Texas Ag- _sies, 0. . St. Louis, 14; Centenary, 23. Kentucky, 27; Tennessee, 6. Alabama, 33; Georgia, 0. South Dakota, 41; Morningside, 7. AS Sites Se Try « Tribune classified ad for results. . Rich- Puestion.—Please settle argument whether it is a penalty for a coach of a team to send in a substitute while the ball is in motion but does not report to the referee until the play is dead. The rival team want- a@ penalty for 12 men being on the eld. ’ Answer.—If the oncoming man had spoken first to a play or in any way interfered with the play the penalty should have been im- posed. But otherwise, where clear- ly the man’s presence on the field was a mistake on the part of the coach and where he did not in any ‘way come in contact with the play then officials always overlook the foul and quite reasonably. Davidson, 21; Trinity, 13. Sewanee, 16; Vanderbilt, 0. Muhlenberg, 41; Villa Nova, 0. Haskell Indians, 47; St. Jav' 6. University Cincinnati, Miami, 7. Tulane, 13; L. 8. U., 0. University of Tennessee Medical 40;; Lombard College, 7. Stetson, 31; Cumberland, 14. South Dakota State, 10; Bucknell, 7; Dickinson, 11. Marshall, 16; University of Louis- ville, 6. ae Oglethorpe, 20; Chattanooga, 0. ‘Wittenberg, 16; Ohio Northern, 0. Mercer University, 7; Mississippi College, 7. Arkansas Aggies, 24; Tulsa Unl- versity, 17. uestion—Where does McCarty, Chicago's new backfield find, come from? Answér.—He is a Chicago high school product. FOR SALE Chevrolet Coupe legs than six months old. A bar- gain. Call 754-J. Knox, 20; Monmouth, 6, Tusculum, 23; State Normal, 6. Furman, 3; Clemson, 0. All Sports Question Box John B, Foster’s Baseball signin Box rite one <i the big hits of the sports ges during the pennant races. wrence Perry's Football Gueatok: Box now is winning the same kind of popularity. Text ARES the Sports. Question Box. Beginning Monday, December 1, the three famous rts of the Consolidated Press Sports staff will conduct jointly a question box covering all branches of sports, amateur and professional. John B. Foster, af course, will answer questions relating to baseball. Lawrence Perry will answer questions concerning football and amateur sports generally, while Fair Play. will solve the newspaper readers’ problems in boxing and all professional sports. Three questions and answers of general interest will ap- pear in The Tribune every day. Readers desiring it will re- ceive personal answers by mail, either through the paper or direct. a Try a Tribune classified ad for results, $5.00 Reward Five dollars reward will be paid to the party furnishing the Casper Daily bu: information leading to the capture of the person who is fraudulently collecting subscriptio from Tribune subscribers. Patrons of the paper should not pay any- one thelr subscription except the carrier who delivers the paper or an authorized collector from the office. If you are not sure you are paying the right collector, ask him to show his credentials. If he can- not do so please call the Tribune. Telephone 15 SELLING OUT SALE Our Lease Expires Jan. 1st Only five weeks more in which to clean up 4 big stocks It’s all got to go in some way at some price. LIKE A HUGE STEAM ROLLER THIS SALE IS RELENTLESSLY CRUSHING EVERYTHING, former prices, values, competition, skeptics, etc. under it. We struck the right chord in the heart of the buying public. Clothing, Shoes and Men’s Furnishings they need to wear every day at lower prices than elsewhere. M. HELLER STORE OPEN EVENINGS 115 EAST SECOND ST. BETTER MERCHANDISE FOR THE SAME MONEY. SAME MERCHANDISE FOR LESS MONEY of Evansville, CASPER, WYOMING Selling out combined four big stores—Jes- sen’s and Heller's Men Apparel stores; the Big Horn Mercantile stock of Greybull, Wyo., and the Beema JESSEN’S OLD STAND THAT’S THE PLACE "s Mercantile stock Wyo. |

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