Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 2, 1925, Page 4

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Prrter irri reset tet Sveneperscnncesen sense Tertrirrrttrirttiiiiiti PAGE FOUR. i E DAME CINCHES NATIONAL TITLE DY DEFEAT OF oTANFORD Stanford Mistakes *Tumed into Scores Rockne’s Machine in Uphill Fight for 27-to-10 Victory at Pasadena by | | sociated Press.) | all hopes covered | fide once of the ruthless | yesterday, led Notre | liron victory. Yet, it | ng impact of an overwhelming | confounded the Stanford not the In. | had the advantag: wer, and the te bout to 7 enems ‘ers. They, st where 1 but was not. Such | rules of football mathe tanford should he War men m mmase South Benders Cardinals deg Notre Dame made completed 12 out Semdacs Com: |" ; forward pas: Dame netted or rd passes; Stan Rockne’s men 1 four times for a to-| while Warner's suf 15-yard ve won.| gained | Knute gal aguers Stanford vantage of mistakes. all of ther orners opened modestly, the game with his tanford shoved steadily astern un- ckne took: afright and whistled four horsemen". They trot- the field with their first companions, but th: 1 until Cud for for hi 1} ted on 1 the red by ond period, Notre, Dame driving the ball over the line, after repeated gains ough the Cardinal defense. 1 of the four horsemen, car 1 the ball, and !t was Notre Dame's firs nd last touchdown | due to driving ability. Crowley fail d to convert. After that, Stanford's mistakes opened the, door of opportunity, and was always some one waiting the threshold den intercepted a Stan- ‘on to ads tf ull, box ror pro-| | ford p the chalk line; Crowley converting. In the third period came another costly error. Solomon, Stafnord's quarterback, fumbled a punt on his on} |own 20-yard Une. Huntsinger shov- d him aside as he tried to recover, picked up the pigskin and ran un- pposed to a touchdown; Crowley gain converting. same period, Stanford scor- ind for the last time, sr passed the ball over » to Shipkey after the hefty heaved and Notre Dame's - reted— ything If you wa If you + amateur oxing and other All a you want ing came another in the fourth perfod, but on downs less than one the goal line. nother Cardinal er- ayden was the man it of it. He inter- 's had intended nd falloped 65 field for Notre close to the sire; sire on the year old owner; ANSW fifat the two! r 4+-also present | who made the mi J the pass Ne team-mate down the final touchdown Nevers’ ne bucking power made player — is | hin star of the Cardinal offense. league club| Cuddeback’s far-famed toe account- minor club when the four of Stanford's 10 tallies. v1 player ugwdlthitshhot can, get ¢tacular runs outshone a position with another major league performance on club must he give up th position igh Crow- with another major Teague eli te go to a minor organizati Dame's QUESTION—If a ball ed for Layden . carrying sintilate along: members of the valry quartet the all-Ameri handicapped nd Don Miller, rtet though did not equal the mess of his mates. ~ KRAMER AND | KAPLAN MEET THIS EVENING Kid" Kap~| ght cham QUESTION—Why ht build adays vy mre many aying on var th ble ich no: team "thle sity ¢ well buil ticed this now men on the t on the Georgia | THE’ first nd in Jose som! ae City, dd out in the an ‘bast Salt Lake AGE FARE weon Caspe ‘wYOMI NG MO" TORWAY $12.50 Phard hitter. | Martin Creek Tr ortation Company's Office ND HOT! PHONE 144 HOW MUCH pol OWE You 2 Che Casper Daily Crivune CALIFORNIA GRID WARRIORS CAPTURE NEW HONORS WITH | DEFEAT OF PENNSYLVANIA i. for five consecutive year season honors here sociated Press.) ia football team, undefeated was crowned with yesterday versity of Pennsylvania eleven, 1924 post- when it defeated the Uni- rated as one of the best football teams on the Atlantic coast, by a score of 14 to O— two touchdowns with added points. BANTAM CHAMP CAN “TAKE IT Eddie Martin Going to| Risk Crown to Get Battles By FRANK (United Press Staff Corre NEW YORK, Jan. 2 the 2 new champion, we hold him up to the light to see how he got that way The past year kept the court jev elers | of fistiana busy fitting old crowns to new heads, the most re- cent of which belongs to: a stocky little Brooklyn Italian named Ed- ward Vincent Martino, our new ban. tamweight champion. Eddie Martin “Cannonball Mar- un," Joe Humphries calls him, like many of our present crop of non- fighting title holders, came into the championship by virtue of a dublous decision after 15 rounds of milling with Abe Goldstein, the erstwhile in cumbent. But E@ide says he {sn’t going to be ole of the non-fighters long. He promises to bring his new crown into the ring any time that his vaudeville engagements permit Martin ¥s champion for the same reason “Bat” Nelson once was cham pion—be: he can ‘take it” and keep right “taking {t’ until the other fellow gets tired and {s ready to be pushed over, ome four a pondent) Every time “USE score ring nnonball” has no record for knockouts. He is not a But he is as persistent @s @ scared female hornet and about 4s much bother for thore in the rmg with him. There Is no waltg time when Eddie Martin does battle. From gong to gong, the new hampion is on top of his man, slam ang. Like the “battler” of old, he is always boring in, boring in, sock ing from every angle, refusing to rest or pose for the movies or waste ume in clowning. Being a Brook yn Itallan no brothers, Eddie likes to f He always ha The hort, even for oeky with with € ure plenty 1} to reach his man. t of all, from Martin's point of he can assimilate about all the punishme that ever will come his way from the present seedy lot of bantams © every other new champion who hasn't been flattened revent Eddie claims never t have been knocked down in a bout Without inquiring too « jinto thik, It can be suid that it is’ ob viously going to, take a good to knock him down now. Abe Gold defendir s crossed Martin with a right third round the Italian blink >w would stopped mo: fight. It spun die half ound and sent back on his f hanging lim ply at } enting hie advur ent ¢ tion and lear chal len A sh and lefts only way € the what hit for next minute or so t thought that all rs were in the ring helping to sock him. he new champion weathered the 1. He took everything Gold- stein had, took tt on the “button and in the eye and under thé heart, and at the\end of the round, instead of being punch-drunk, he was carrying the fight to Abe, who was backing {n a corner and sizing upthe ropes for a quick jump when the bell ended the round. “Bat" Nelson's jaw, gameness and tire flailing away are attributes of this newest of champions which may keep “Cannonball Eddie Mar- up the ropef for a quick jump when enough Be viey man tithe in the nde little hand: vicissitudes of ringdom gave us | } within seven A crowd of more than /50,000 saw the Californ’ans outclass, outrur and outkick the Pennsyl ns. A view of showed that California played the vist tors in the first, second and fourth lods, The first touchdown was scored miiutes after the gam started. The Quaker players in terfered w'th Imlay, on a fair catch on the Pennsylvania 40 yard Ine Jo one touched the ball; so Dixon ifornia, picked it up and ran 26 yards to Penn's 14 yard line, where ke was forced out of bounds. California refused the penalty for the interference, and took the ball the 14 yard line. Three line nges by John Young, Californ'a ed over the touchdown, and Carlson kicked the goal. A ng attack opened by Penn sylvania in the second period, ended in an unsuccessful attempt at a field goal. California then took the offensive and, by 4 serles of short passes, and a 29-yard end run by Imlay, took the ball far into Quaker territory. W'th a touchdown in sight, the cun ended the second period with Califor- nin on Penn's four yard line. The Quakers came back with more power in the third period, and by subtle reverse plays, and heavy line plunges by Field, Leath and Thomas, carriett the ball, after receiving the k'ckoff on their one yard line, up the field to Californian’ one yard line. On the fourth down, with a yard to wo, California's defense stiffened, and Pennsylvania Jost the ball on downs, and with {t a chance to tle the score. The Californians were able to w'thstand the famous passing at- tack in the fourth period, when they broke it up and left the Quakers wondering. Taking the ball on downs after breaking up several Penn overhead attacks on the Call. fornia 45 yatd line, the western team swung into an offensive once more. The Californiansson four bucks through the center of the Quaker ine, 1ke a battering ram, carried the ball from the forty-yard line to a touchdown, The last plunge, of ten yards, was made right through McGinley, the famous all-American tackle of the Quakers. Carlon’s goal kick for California added the fourteenth and final point of the game. ‘GRID TITLE OF IRISH 1S UNDISPUTED (By The / Notre Dame c Jean football ¢ out fear soh, It defeated teams from t cific and Atlantic coarts, tl and the middlewest. Ti r Rockne started their “all-conquer ing tour at South Bend¥Ind., with Lombard, October 4, y played Wabash the follow ing week at home, and then met } eleven at W ciated Press) 1 claim the Amer ampionship with of contradition this sea. 1 to South Ber east again a week la conquer Princeton, home, field, Geora im, and the * He gressed to Madison, to de- feat the State University. A week later the home following saw the eleven conquer Nebraska Northwestern was humbled at Chicago, and Carnogie fell at Pitts. burgh. The journey to California is recent history. Neither tle nor defeat mars the record of Notre Dame, which cored 285 points a; 84 for its opponents ————____ In the value of its cash assets and the volume of its transactions the insurance business is the second largest industry in the United States. r to their the pro- inst James P. Overstreet told members of the exclusive River Crest Country Club, Fort Worth. Tex., that he was | the son of a Chicago millionaire. As such he was dined and feted Later he was arrested as being one of the four unmasked bandits who robbed | the Shawnee (Okla.) Federal National Bank of $18,000 a week before. HAWAII WINS OVER GOLORADC Island Eleven Shows Superior Football in Big Game * TIONOLULW, of the bes mes it ¢ . the University of —Playing one yor has exhib- Hawaii foot- yesterday defeated the of Colorado team 13 to 0. ts asserted it was one of gBreate s played on the islands. Colorado used very form of offense in desperate efforts to score, but Hawaii's defense was equal to the « of stopping the invader Wise broke loose in the first elght minutes of play and ran 31 yards to 1 touchdown. In the second period, Wise passed 40 yards to Morse, who scored a touchdown. The visitors un- aple to gain on line smashing p’ays, turned to an aerial attack, but this too, while gaining at times, was un- successful in plercing Hawaii's fense. a SPORT BRIEFS MEXICO CITY Mexican heavywel estan over Homer ina 12 ‘Toney IFyente ht, was given a Smith, Ameri. can, t PITTSBURGH—Harry Greb, mid- Gleweight champion, won a judges’ decision over Augic Ratner, of New York, in 10 rounds, TORONTO. sland inds with mnadian a champion, in Vincent, of and a fraction Johnson, f bantamwe round bout ight an Sarmiento, dle over Ed- in a 10-round | of New die Shea, bout. York, Chies NEW who surre YORK have D1 ut title, insisted? the weight agin cabled f OR, NOLAN TO TAKE POST-GHADUATE WORK Dr. M. J arted ye day for Roche n., where he will spend some going through the Mayo clinic taking special work at the ous institution After his rtay in Rochester Dr. No. No ster. JOHN B. F ungainly player but what a er for the By A big, Sam ‘Thompson, and what a p league to pc He played with Detroit and Philadelphia and tw in his career he butted better than 100. There are few players who have lived to do that sort of thing in base- ball. Nine of the years in which he was an outfielder in the National league he batted bette? than 300 and in the other years that he served he was almost 300. Sam Thompson's career began in 1 rather homely sort of fashion. The start was much like at bat where he violated all rules that are presumed to be set down for proper placing of the feet, and a proper stance, and stood any way that he felt like standing. Usually he was half slouched down, permitting all of his weight to rest on one leg, but when he stood up und Jet drive, he could hit the ball so hard that infielders used to blow on their fingers when they tried to stop yund balls that he batted and many outfielders raced half way across the town to catch up with hits that got beyond them. One day Sam was putting a roof on a house out in Indiana where he lved. The town club was to play Detroit and one of the town play- ers was unable to report. The head of the club hitched up his trotter and hurried to Thompson's home. They told the baseball man there that Sam was sh'neling a house In the neighborhood and to the house the manager went. After a Itt’e negotiation he ceeded in getting Sam to play afternoon for his team. It is that the price was $2.50 Which cor- responded to a day’s wages, and Thompson thought he was driving a good bargain to get a full day's pay for a half day's work because he al- so had his time coming on the shingling Job. Thompson was picked right off the roof as he stood and went over to the ball ground. “Almost the first thing that he did was to knock the ball Into the hereafter and he con tinued to keep knocking. He was the “knockingest knocker” that the visiting club had ever seen and there it was that fate changed the cut for Sam Thompson. He bade farewe'l to the hammer and the shin- gle nail to take up the bat and make himse'f famous all over the eastern part of the United States as one of the great sluggers of the big learue Thompson's stance at the plate had every evidence that the batter was the laziest man alive. He hung s0 on one foot and leg that it al- most seemed as if he were going to nod shortly, and forget that base- bail was being played, but the nitcher threw one where Sam Thompson wished to swing at the was atter, suc- that sald it Income Taxes Are Due Again Any Time Now WASHINGTON, Jan, 2—The bu reau of internal revenue chose New Year's day as the time for ad vising all persons who have income taxes to pay that the time for f!1 ing their returns has come ogain, Tt may bo sad, but true, and the bur announcement made {t rat fhfinite adding: “The period for filing «income tax returns for the calendar year begins at m'dnight tonight and Is at midnight March 15."" There however, some onsola. tion to found, officials explained even on New Year's eve, in that thousands of persons will pay 23 per cent less on this year than th aid in 19 > New Year’s Day New Year's day, usual'y produe- tive of law infraction of some char. acter, Was particularly quiet around the sheriff's office, not a complaint having been received nor an arrest made. The entire force epent the after: noon and evening working on tho lan is going east where he will tuke Post-graduate wor's, Hu'se murdet my: ‘stery and in an at- tempt to find the body of the miss- ing taxicab driver, Jational | s Incomo FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 1925 First in News TA Bergan’ Of All Events ae igh 1s by The Bell Syndicate, Inc} NATIONAL LEAGUE'S GREATEST PLAYERS » game He was not a clover outfielder like some ball players, because he did not have a pair of heels that could run like the hoofs of a deer, but he was death to what he co hands on and if ali of delphia club had play did, Harry Wright we with a championship ich was the old mi st ambition and nev ized. Z (7 his next article Mr will recount the career of the est third baseman of all tim my Collins.) * team, ager’s great r to be real. Foster FAECUTION GHINESE ARM LEADERS SEEN Commanders Given but Few Days to Run Down Bandits TIENTSIN, Jan. 2.—(By The As- sociated Press)—General Lin Ching- Lin, recently appointed military gov- ernor Obihli province, and pro- tege of General Ct ‘Tso-Lin, Man- churian leader, has given comman- de1s cf troops in the area where sol- iers raided a train on last Tues day, until next Monday to find the culprits, The commanders will be executed en if the gul'ty are not found, Lin s, adding that he will pay losses of foreigners as a result of the hold. up. th SHANGHAI, Jan. 2.—(By the As- sociated Press)—It is reported that a detachment of American marines has been landed at Nanking to pro- tect the foreign residential district following the looting by the boc guard of General Chi Shieh-Yuan, former military governor of Kiang. of a number of largest silk stores in the city, causing a loss of $800,- 000 Ge al Chi is a anghat refugee here in <a In Burns’ Job Is Quiet Here At IF Sheriff's Office ¥ J. E. Hoover of Washington has been named by Attorney General Harlan F Stone as director of the Bureau of Investigation in the Department of Justice, He succeeds W J Burns, who resigned during the Daugherty inquiry. SrtA In the early part of the last cen tury it was no uncommon thing Ip England for workmen to be impris- oned for daring to join a trade union HANGHAISSION OF PHOTOS BY WIRE IMPROVED New Instrument Used with Success in Late Tests , Jan. 2,—Transmission ross the continent by an instrument known as cele! » (telegraph pictures) been demonstrated as practicable, says the Chicago Tribune today. Pictures of the Notre Dame Stan, ford game in Pasadena, Cal., trantmitted by the telepix to cago and New York for printing to day ‘in the formal inauguration of she operation. The telepix machine will both send and recelye pictures by telegraphic dots and dashes, requiring upwards of an hour to transmit an ordinary photograph. The telepix is sald to be easier ti operate than a five-tube radio set, and takes up less room. Only ba weather, interrupting telegraph ta cilities, can Incapacitate the mw chine. The sending operator fixes ha’t: tone copper plates containing the Photograph to a drum. Where each of the thousands of dots appears on the plates, an electrical contact established on the receiving machine the transmitted dots are recorded in chemically impregnated paper fas tened to a similar drum. It tele sraphs forty dots a recond. Laboratory and experimental work has been done for a year and tests made of the telepix for the lta two months, the Tribune says. ~~ EYES OF SCIENCE Only a few much-favored eyes of men of science have been privileged to look upon vitamins, yet everybody must have these nutrition factor: in abundance to assure growth and sustain strength. Scott's Emulsion for fifty years has earned world-wide repute asa builder of strength. It is the much favored food-tonic that sup- plies vitamins in abundance. Scott’s taken regularly helps grown peopleand children alike realize strength and vigor. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. CHICA! of pictures te egraph by Eat It Here—Take It Out FOOD YOU'LL ENJOY Lunches afid Bananets served anywhere at any time Hartman’s Delicatessen Old Public Market Fifth and Wolcott COAL MAKES A HOUSE ANAN: ABODE : BETTER PHONE

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