Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 1, 1925, Page 6

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Che Casper Daily Cribune Leased Wire || HN YOL0S SLIGHT ATTINGAND RUNNING, — Agoregations That Face Each Other in World| lade Up of Hard Hitting Players; | Pittsburgh in Lead. | Cuyler « 3 Associated Press.) department of ba nd Pittsburgh me¢ next Wednesday. impends between the two | squad, Leon (Goose) Goslin, , en (Kile) C I stflelder STRAVBEL. TACKLE | CHAMP 1.05 National Tourney Sees nst 37 f Elimination of M I Hurd 1 Is, ¢ t : £ fo 5 i 1 1 r 5, but with Har 1 figures are h's outfield’s batt tt need with are ee are perier FHan Ny 1 hi ul experts expected to fill the paper ealing with the makeur 1 stars | the serimt of the season, ve % leadin colle th Wils sophomore loomed to the :|Cheyenne High To ‘Wateh for wing | fore ain Aiea te Wes . 7 Tiss — t ar ; Play Lin Lie N ext HARRY M. GOLDEN, | frosh ¢ . pee pe: oe (Cen Press Special Correspondent+thus it appears to become Wis. Oct. 1— Coach | cornered rac bs 53 and his staff of } Spee and little weight is the chief | . Se ie sloy b usset t backline. Little to date ci in & game Unt-| has the following men who have | " ee ‘ hown gr promise. At left hi | , Reluneay, more ng rj he has the speedy McAndrews. The | etd Joust eleven willy) it men 1,| latter was one of the Badger stars | ; eet otis IRTP center, | Litule r | last fall and with Little at the reins | t it, th pore 28 ode Rpcsuse roe Ane wae nucleus to start | looks to become the mainstay of the T Tr ed in _the ng t encounter. | He is} backs. Giving plenty of competition upplied with | to th dy one is Larry Reuland, | ne nds, Capt. j@ member of the ineligible squad ui, wh ur. Reuland Is as fast as Mc- | his third Ws and shows more promi: a the confer: | than the average fans-give him ci ence, Jeff Burr t for He having. will develop and Tom Long and] Aelp Little a lot. Doyle Harmon, who Thane Black last fall alternated between quarter | ompleting a quar-| and half looks better than ever. Attractively Priced | | | | | an} | j | tette of yet husky has all the spe the r and needs only another 5 e Ld e the Ba rome a high class performer, | W il ys-Knig t 6 Touring Has Plunging Back. | ‘ pro’ th yo the plunging type of half. | K, Littl an re on Barnum who | ing Willys-Knight 4 Coupe an out- | was Harris’ ady last Bar standing in the conference, | num has taken on weight an¢ while Straunbel and Kasiska should | the ntfal amount of speed to : ot ar in the rear, The guards | make him a real driving back. Lelt! These two cars have been used for demon ositions are giving Little th is another back who can rip trating—just enough mileage to limbc orry ag Wisconsin lost two r and has in “hate £ * i ere en elp t n problem 10! them up., This is a wonderful opportunity t Tite Platina waph tote tyis att he tausr esis wlikn Herat tt purch » the car you have wanted, and at Miller are proving hard to f tion is taken into consideration. price that you can easily reach. Give us a lone letter man to answer the | Kreuz, Radke and Muegge are thi ring and our salesman will put the car a fo start of this season three leading candidates and to date Rute dianoeal Supek, ‘The husky Monta rere is little to choose betw you posal. ld down {de of the} them. Kreuz is a plunger and be troul nN The Lee Doud Motor Co. | Secs tee | up the defense w while, Muege ility. Radke is and exceptional pun Phone 1700 llowstone OUT OUR WAY ARE YOU GOING TO DENVER? If you are, why not enjoy | A PLEASANT DAYLIGHT RIDE IN THE BEANS Royal Blue Line Parlor Cars ee LUXURIOUS AND COMFORTABLE An enjoyable trip over a wonderful scenic route. TRAVELING ON REGULAR SCHEDULE Casper 8:00 a, m Leave Denver 8:00 a. m. Denver 9:00 p. m Arrive Casper 8:00 p. m. Fare $11.50, at the Rate of 3.6 Cents Per Mile CASPER HEADQUARTERS A TICKET OFFICES GENTLEMAN ON REDUCING oer ¥ Lea | Arrive dD | Henning Hotel, Townsend Hotel, Gladstone Hotel ROUTE HEADQUARTERS Parkerton—Parkerton Drug Cheyenne—Plaing Hotel Glenrock— Cheyenne Ticket Office— | Douglas—Lé Albany. Hotel Gler Ye Denver, Colorado, Motorwa | Wheatland—< Chugwater ( Hus Offices, 1707 California Street. “TRAIN. SCHEDULES \| CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN bd | | Westbound Arriv Departs | 60 Se ----1:30 p.m 1:50 p.m, | Eastbound Departs 6:46 p.m 6:00 9. mw CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY | Eastbound Arrives oparts | No. 3 fees a Ait! 8:00 p.m 8:30 p.m, | | No =e 5 —_—— 4:00 p.m | | Westbound parte | No. 29 S 6:50 a. m T1000 | HEROES ARE MADE -NOT BORN. _THE TRIBUNE’S PAGE OF SPORTING NEWS atch Little!” Is Cry of Western Gridiron Followers, Here’s Sizeup of Wisconsin Team Yost’s Aide Preps Bartlett, Hawley, Orcutt, up but after | Wikdale, Curtiss and Bubridge. First in News Of All Events ’ QUESTION BOX team was recently declared ineligible. | | All is serene | Commercialism? Well, they have a f stadium two thirds complete at Washington and it-is being paid for | | | out of receipts, In off seasons, the public has use of the arena for great ants,\ concerts by _ traveling «a stars and the Ike. More than $41 000 was netted the university If you have some question to last year in rentals for public enter-| | 8K about baseball, football box tainment, Thus the public has an||ing or any other amateur or pro | interest in the structure and there | | fessional sport— Write to John B. Foster, on} oaseball. | Lawrence Perry, on amateur sports, and is no cry of lavish expenditure for a football hippodron And when the TEAMS UNIQUE tadium ts paid for, fe the gridiron must be sodded. It is 7 zr Fair Play on boxing and other now a dirt gridiron, as bare of turf | Sports Expert Finds | (s a clay tennis court. The men like |, preresatorial apace ay ace spe | 7 pad c and isiting teams do not com- correspondents of the Casper | Fine Spirit at Work hate, But Huskies all testity as to| | Tribune, 814 World Bullding. New | :. M S hy Is the splendid springiness of footing | | York. ' | in Most Schools. nén they go south and play on Enclose a ‘stamped, self.ad- | | ae grass at Berkeley or Palo Alta. So| {dressed envelope for your reply. | \ J eventually some $20,000 must be By LAWRENCE f KR | spent for turf. And then there is a eh QUESTION—We have a rule After |‘ (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune) nnasium to think about. our-league that the home teani' shall SEATTLE, Oct. 1.— ‘Those who| that, expansion of the university|take up a collection. The receipts hold @ brief for clean feotball in the } building enterprises. are to be turned In to the secretary | Frar football and other sports | looked to for sinews of the war pansion. To that extent, sports ure commercial. But could thtre a more desirable and commend- for the expenses of the league. A game was recently played at which a collection was taken up and the home team would not turn it in be- cause the manager said the tean sense of scrupulous observation o rules of eligibility and ethical standards { eral find a sort of athletic elysium along | r be the Pacific coast and points more | ' more O° tT erclalism? Senate the ea Neadeal eae eae or less contiguously in}and. This and)" y; \.'4 beautiful university, Wash-| league and he was ticed of it, Can the phsyical dimensions of the Uni-| ., ton. ‘rhe campus 4s specticularly | the game be protested? versity .of ‘Washington football play: | «turin 1 no boy, athlete or oth- re jade Reactor Wate Mahte ¢, may enter wha has nota ree-} answrR—A protest of the game 80 per cent in two-thirds of his is not order because games in | have to do onky with viola- tion of the playing rules. The way | to deal with a club of that kind is | this immense west coast territory. protests, of Your wide-awake aluninus who ir some other section’ would seize upon some wandering youth of size as just the sort of g) school studies. a adequate Bian, fod to suspend or expel it from the league. The refusal of the manager { da alma er is teint veel ara ypem ee to turn over the money sounds a } accustomed to Giants th he ce Bs Pe Reid a ‘3 | tainly doesnot notice them in the grea al e the old cry of e | rough. As for high 1 stars, no . rich clubs of the National league— : oF Neipet =i tt they tr ve al er ‘man or group of men seem to haye P as ci Sh a that they should have all the r time or inclination to divert them} LOS ANGELES—Frankie Edward,|celpts to pay a nom!nal sum Tiparttohannele bet ening to-| Orleans promoter, sald arrange-| guarantee as they were the back- cot which the? are normally and |ments were complete for a ten-round|bone of the league. Others thought ‘eg can | decision: fight between Jack Demp-| they were simply hoggish in thelr naturally headed. tendencles and Martin Burke at } leans, Thanksgiving Day. * few Or-| ‘There is a young man named Kelly } in Montana who has been burning i | QUESTION—Has there been any the secondary school gridirons as ,0S ANGELES—Jimmy Duffy de-| controversy in the middle west over several years. Washington univer- ted Pinkey Welsh in a ten-round Marek going to Ohio State to col- | lege when he lived at Cedar Rapids, Towa, and logically would have gone to Towa? Is he good? ANSWER—No, he sity—and othe nigher institutions cast yearning eyes in his direction. [ But, being a Montanan, he elected enter the university of his state. Ant hone sought to dissuade him, He | titular bout. cd “Strangler” Lew avywelght claimant, MEMPHIS world's is, came of his The quarterback situation is€a eee ne eee nedevited with | Wen two of three falls with Mike|own accord, in'the wake of a friend. hres. cornered “battle reo) | Ry aka fee anit ear arelapteary Alea BPD La) Te is regarded as very promising. Se ae = bray ornare heen offers of various sorts from enthus see , He is very, promisin F lesaie Fe the) Yala anrebe present | 1stic grads of other institutions. | icenroe Sainte eon and . Barofsky, cap-|. Eligibility matters : 1 Ee by CLEnS? oe aie of the 1923 frosh is next in line | in the hands of the | full back, graduated from ¢ but not least is Goodlad. | institutions out : Georsin Mae trio present a merry seramble| of eligible pla ANSWER he ts still in the but our choice falls to Croféot. The | they never are spernrees American League, Club— Washington Philadelphia St. Louis Detroit Cleveland New York Joston Club— Pittsburgh New York Cincinnati Lou ton »oklyn Z0 WINS SERIES ATLANTA, ¢ Worth won the Dixie series by de- feating Atlan LOOK Good. 1S THAT STEAK TENDE! LETS SEE -WHAT ELSE DO T WANT? OH YEK APPLE DIE ALA MODE A COP CUSTARD, AND Do NT BE STINGY WNITH. TH’ CREAM IN TH COFFEE TRwilLaws \90f By NEA nts IN LEAD FOR 1 field general and] worrled about as the bri “f | h the Baltimore champions. Last y was one instit Jack Ogden, who won all three of tion in the ence where th Baltimore's games in the 1921 series faculty was not supreme—ihe Un with Louisville, weakened in the versity of Southern Californta—and | —_ ninth inning of the game yesterday last year an unfortunate eligibility! ]OUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 1—(Asso- row, arose, the firrt and last.| ciated Press)—The jinx humbled, The. Southern California institution} the Loulsville American association re arranged its #ystem. The faculty | club was prepared today for the sec. and the Colonels scored four runs to win. Thomas and Deberry received the pitching assignments for Balti- more and Louisville, respectively, to- the Won Lost Pet. 96 63 ie came into contr stain of the ond game of the junlor world’s ser- day. B48 Nature and the loyalty of +523 a million careful smo! 464 combination hard to beat— 497 have combined to make 447 | White Owls taste better than ever. Not that the quality has ever been anything but the highest. The constant pat. ronageofsuchavastarmy of smokers proves that. But when a tobacco crop is unusually fine—such as that now being. used in WhiteOwls—itis only \\ natural that it should add an extra sweetness of taste, a greater mellowness, an ad« ditional fragrance. But Nature, alone, could not give you this extra value that all the judges of good cigars are uick to note in White Owls. n Were it not for the millions of loyal White Owl friends, it would be impos- sible to use thi super-fine tobacco and still maintain the low price of 2 for 15 cent: Small wonder, then, that so many men who : A can affordto pay | 7 ‘\}much more, smoke White I ry judge eae oa y ee alone. They \ know that the i 3 low price of White Owls is due solely to theunheardof popularity that \ makes neces- sary the as- tounding pro- \ duction of a millionaday “\White Owls areoutstand- ing proof that price no longer canbe taken as an indication \of cigar Oct. 1, — Fort | | i to rs Ww 0, yesterd: 1 four games pss } Tue sweetness of taste that men are dis- | covering in Wurrr Owts is due to the \guality. F le y finest tobacco crop in years and to the ? packoften milliona-day demand which enables us thityon that you have al- ways in yOUr poc- et your favorite cigar — full fla. vored, fresh to use the best the market affords. See oe White Owl amilliona day |

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