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is \ FROM SEALS . THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1925 World Results : By Leased Wi he YEAR I] Ar aUUGHT fe Is Harry wi Aci Back, sguuited On in Yale Game? pe Casper Daily ctioune PAGE NINE re Unieneey of Wyoming Club Ready to Pledge. $500 to Bring Cowboys and Another Con- ference Eleven Here; Help Needed. University of Wyoming graduates in Casper decided last night to commence immediate sly the raising of a guarantee to bring Coach Dietz’ Cow boys and a conf team from Montana or Col members, and will ask the Commerce pnd t inc » subscribing th rast © would its own expe antors. wil actual GAD TEAMO OF PRESENT mM Ice over, and the e asked not to furnish ABOVE AVERAGE: Remarkable Strength Shown by Many in Late Games. By LAWRENCE PERRY (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune) CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., Oct. 29.—Glaneing over the football situ- ation as it worked out in Saturday zames in various parts of the co: the writer's arly t in-no recent season have ther been so many teams of more than | ength and so many play ordinary merit nfirmed. s to this pleasan s to other seo Hf southern foc teal! | care to give the slightest odds Alabama S the st since 1915 and bids falr Virginia ch: eleven lier southern con- eneé sChedulo” undefeated. “THIS would give’ her a high ranking tn the conference when the season’ ts done, dekpite the fact that she will not’ have met several of the outstand- to come “tira: conviction | ence orado here next year. The W. club plans to raise $500 of this from among its own co-ope ion of the Chamber perintendent A, A 1 the club gh. school gridiron. w without c ithorities are played uragement to the W. eleven man F; captain of fore the game WEEK-END GAD MUCH TROUBLE Fields in Prospect for Battles. NEW YORK, Oct —(P)—1nju rie snow-covered an} s and uin travel forec difficulties for eral elevens in the w ot bull engagemen Tn the, two lendingyoldshes. det east,’the Pennsylvania-Ilinois meet- ing Philadelph nd the Yale Army battle at Haven, injury plays an exceptio: large part. The undefeated Quakers, facing the second~ invasion from thé we in two weeks and one which brings the powerful Red Grange to the east for the first time, must plo without Kreuz nd Fields, two backs’ who had a large share in downing Brown 7 e teams. 5 it ae oeat const, ‘Washington {9nd Yale, Long, weighing 168 loos focmilably. Frank Birch, whe | Pounds, will substitute for Kreuz, refereed the Washington-Nebraska | _ Fale faces LN Wan pnt Aesth contest at LincoIn was in Atlanta ath it aaa peta bige Be Jast Saturday, watching the Alaba- PRE NAIC Sopcast $e mide tines, ma-Tech game, and he advised the | writer that while the game between the Huskies and fe Cornhuskers } ended in a tle, hington really have -won at least two touchdowns. akes alone, he said, He liked Enoch of offense, he wa et saved Bagshaw's as the writer did when Seattle and thought this coac scheme turned ont one of the v elevens of the country. Pep Ivania stands up. course. In defeating Yale and ©} cago on successive Saturdays, she performed ah extraordinary feat and if she gets by the wp-and-golng Hil- nols team next Saturday, thé sky will be about the limit so far as the strongest rating of the Quaker team goes. Yale is extremely strong. Per- naps if the players and coaches had aken the Penn game {n a more erful mood there might have een a different stor the erial COLONELS WIN IN 7TH GAME, SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 20 veteran Ameri } thpaw, had | San Francis uid the Loulsyi nampions of t e Indian s: ) Seals ye defeated t San Francisco 4, Loulsyille Francisco needs but one the nine-game e& eo to win , |) A majority while Butterwort out of the running. rown, a tackle, Injuries and. Heavy! $2,000 | G2 GAMES FAGING First in News aF Of All Events WILLG VICTORY lO UNPOPULAR |Floyd Johnson Little ‘| More Than Lamb in | SECOND STRING HIGH SCHOOL TEAM AND JUNIOR HIGH WILL PLAY OFF TIE ON SATURDAY Tie tie etrona Count: ONE OF THE MULE’S BIGGEST KICKS | * now existing | hizh }team and: the ¢: meh T 7 , |g hool will | ; New York Bout. | when th two r he second e jthird time on the I li tte ' fe field. . Junie > y FAIR PLAY . only gamo t APAY WouLo since the first team of t Have DEFEATED YALE Schools. wills ramets Ctinee: ne ; | ; AST EAR. BUT FOR A STREAK OF LIGHTNING, BY THE NAME OF Polo = FOOTBALL SCORING SYSTEM TO BE ISSUE IN RULES COMMITTEE NEW. YORK | the football ru} comm } its next annual session two fesues dealing with the scc jtem in football will be u vation...One ¢ cisive tle game he extra point after Agitation « developed in al! gections of the coun-| of t try‘as a result of a wholesale nur ber of the games and the ber of contests dec after touchdown wh ed by many critics, puts toc penalty on a tea touchdown with another Football's scoring rules ar Oct usa §$ THE BIG KICK INTHE Agay WHE FIMISK { BERETA GoWG \ To PUY WITH THE CNIL WAR YETS } BOX que in that they provide no re! | for the tle game. No o' American college sport of , ort ; 1 © some que to 3 traci, and) tela, : falls’ to : about baseball, tootball, box | means of breaking deadlocks. | The axtra point after n touchdown | was incorporated In the play with| | or any other amateur or pro- nal sport— \the idea of breaking ties, but it| | qOHS Th TF meron : " 3 does not appear to be Ny ef-| ateur) | @—Has the umpire behind the By NORMN E. BROWN. } 16.to.13. It: was tho fir e Peni; to’ H! z ssound | fective. | “SUF | | catcher power to uverrule the other was a sorry day for the oppon-| had ever eked Yale and the first] end that foowel’ se: dgstined| In the os g and other| | Umpire? ents of the Army grid team™when| time in» two: campaigns :that ‘Tad'|to~bring’a touchdown, but °¥alling | ‘al sports. All are wpe| | A:-—Absotutery Harry Wilson decided to make his] Jones’ men had tasted defeat, checked’ the big one’s rush. | al Spcraapocaintelctene Shasa? | footbal! career at Penn: State mere- Helped Tie the Score. plays ‘followed and ‘then | ine World Bulling. New Q—I am an.amateur boxer. 1 ly a preparatory: course and elected It was’ Wilson who, in the cl Wilsoh was given the “ball again: ik coi | find I tire towards the end round to finish at West Point. Had Wilson] ing, quarter of the 1924 contest, jravé| Thréugh’the Yale Une ke a bullet cabin Latamebn aches | | and. sometimes lose on this account matriculated in football as well as|the Army. the touchdown which en-| went Wilson and the ball rested| | |aressea envelope for your reply. i pprolbtves spell taaen ca 8 in his other studies his senor sum-| abled: it to. tie the.score made by,|‘behind’ the goal Ine. ‘Big “Ea’ Gar- | Maybe ¥ ‘ mer at the State College, Pa., inst!-! Ducky Pond, Yale's» great runner|bisch tied thé scoré: with an easy a ae | Q—Batsman hits the ball whieh | « r t Yale might have boasted of a and a point after touchdown. tefole. Ee NAO DET OED) sf home plate and rolls about. one | tory against the ‘soldier boys lasty The Army team -bad tried-rep Yale's! potnts~ hala’ been scored} Carlisle Indian athlete pet |foot in front of the. plate. Umpire | ye n ever ‘ ° might have more hope of scor-| edly without sticcess to circle by’ the great! Ducky Pond, on a 48-|iram hadith lbedl he ott calls the ball fair and calls the bat-| alone will ing is yent. For Mr. Wilson} Yale -ends., They Ind tried -the line} yard run, an@/a goal from touch.| ball team for fi poeoe Ht rote’ wheniithe oetetbe ieetee tlie | ha > of the biggest kicks] with no. better results. Then, as the} down one Nand touches the batter, Cap-| A t rokon in t mile's football heels| last quarter drew to: a close the} Wilson learned his’ football under Sa aA tains on both teams object, saying | | r ever since he became a prospective] Army: got the ball on Yale's/27-yard | Hugo Bezdek, mentor at Penn State,|’ PITTSBURGH — Pittsburgh Pi-}the ball must be at least two feet | when t t " line. Yoeman tried-to smash the/a rigid football task master. The| rates have decided on a lapel but-|in front of home plate to be f and | instru This year Wilson -loomé more} Yale line: and failed: Wilson was| West Painter is n-great runner and| ton, bearing Pirate's head, as em-| that they always have played it that | lin tv an ever as a threat to Yale's hopes | given the ball. On a delayed pass the | « difficult man to tackle. Despite h{s| blem marking them as world’s cham | way. —hopes which took a terrible flop} husky back ran the ‘ball 18*yards. size he seems, to filter his way] plon baseball team withthe defeat handed the El team|* “Come on Wilson,” was the cry. | through small héles. by the powerful Pennsylvania eleven | By’ common: consent: the: ball went 2 ray be iad aan Pee ag pete When you realizethat never before has a cigar achieved the demand—you will readily understand popularity ot too, coming up to its an me with the big green 6 Dartmouth, is scattered in the for-| ward’ wa though Smith, a burly “kle, is expected. to resume activ Hod: who played center i Yale, and Mag probably are out for the of the seaso The navy salls-into a snow-blank eted west with the strongest: eleven it can produce to meet Michigan at Ann Arbor on what promises to be field of snow. - The middies. will work on the Michigan fleld tomor- row and at the,same time Army will be maneuvering in the bowl at New Haven, and Ulnols will be busy at lin Field, Philedelphia, in prep- fon for the next day ) tussles. 500-T0-ONE SHOT CLEANS =: UP BIG PURSE L LONDON, et succeeded in the Am: Oct. 29. Se ieee getting A. sportsman clear statement as not he won a 100: pound arley bet at the oats ot 500 to 1 on. bis horse Masked Marvel win with antl Camb pectivel | uC to make whether two-horse mbe: s tala, Maocdmber Nop pitched steady -baseball~in | Buty Aare ry as 0 Inning but the eighth, when | Peet Se ene ee Tee Seals got to him for two rus | tratiie ‘ » best the locals could do was: to | Sohne ee h him for grounders or popping, | ® pth eget or ‘ y files to the outfield. || Marvel in the Cambri } : Mg “Chief Tincup,’> who shut out) Feo aay, The betting was 100 to § e Seals In the opener, {s slated ty eee en a neal rt for Louisville today, = Bi MOSK MOE ei cM a a a Hunting Come to the Lake of the Woods Hunting Lodge for your big game hunt. No camping out; plenty of game close by; huut in comfort; competent wuides; good fat horses. WELTY INN DUBOIS, WYO. DON’T LET YOUR RADIATOR FREEZE For Lack of ALCOHOL WE HAVE IT! Casper’s Finest Filling | Station INDEPEND White Owls —a million a day to supply the why they are not to be judged by old standards of price and quality. For never before has a cigar been able to adopt the policy upon which all ccessful industries have been built— that of accepting an unbelievably small profit per sale and depending upon bug, volume for ultimate return. White Owls were born of a de- termination to surpass all pre- the twenty-fifth meeting between the teams and if the game should end more in a tle it will be the} venth one. to end without a vy! tory for either team, so evenly have teams been matched at times. The Army. hungers. for -victory. It has not tasted the. Bulldog’s blood since the bloody days of the World| FOOTBALL INSIDE OUT THE WHY. AND HOW SE THE RULES z Sportsmanship and the Rules y NORMAN E. BROWN rei: Ln eae vious efforts in value giving. Br ‘quick’ thinking coaches A aatee eee Sin arpmaaties vic We determined to make # at and third : oe, an Integral tory; however. Three years ago the cigar of pe quality and f r erally oe inte Heeb) score stood 7 to'7 at‘the close of the | aa value could in effort: is made to ellminate “side battle ‘ be found anywhere, And now, White Owls are being heralded as‘ ‘greater Says Nw Stiff line” coaching and all means of con- ducing, such’ coaching, \ previous installment in this ser- ies explained the rules preventing value than over. the sending in of substitutes simply Quite natural, to giyé‘information’to the team.) A "\ too, for tobacco player, upon entering'the game, can- from the finest not converse with his teammates be. op in, year fore the play is begun, No one, in- \ has ad ded an cluding substitutes,> not, participat- ic | v7 ing, ean coach its play. Any person ness even to ‘ @ cigar so rushing onto the field to ald an in: ‘ 3 nod. that | jured player must first report to the |New Discovery Limbers a 4 ha aa CTicleles Wenn Weltapaeettign She ee Up and Even the Creak- ment aching rules are not ¥' i, * seeme No person’ is allowed to walk up)} ing Ceases } im O8- 1 vn delines during the % } le th the exception, of course, t's world | "Tasting ints to the linesman). better er lin t possible i Mthan et wadays ; 1} old 5 creaky k 4 y iueeze a half inch of i t > / ‘ 8 a Obviously as 2 Ee SS Fn a a ¢ 0 2 th shbstance “from™ a A on not In the game to assist “yi n entre J tild— iE > coacher has) (like th spectator) seen all the c bail 1s supposed te be p men on each 'téam. 2 rds, ed by » of the 8 it would be | person watching a card game one of the players, The would- players “Then rub it on the offending. part ‘or about a quarter of a minute or Hi nist it soaks through the skin and Foot- 11 new standard (Tomorrow: Other ‘ viola-4 disappears on ifs errahd of, mercy: of cigar value ire: | tions), | ‘Thien read the;evening newspaper Ly Se reer }and go to bed. big ale | i The chances are’ that your mis Wurtz Ow1s are not to be judged ; va | | behaving nee" joint will, lone > tts |“creak"? while you are dreaming | Jabout the high fences you used to you’ wetet a youngster. says one by old standards of price and taste. Tobacco from the finest crop in years has added a sweetness and ~ LANDIS FALLS WASHINGTON SCHOOL leap when WINS SHADE TILE BY wee = | | tried the: new ‘ aiseovary, | . ON DEAF EARS: 1 Pen hak Me bane thaee yout | mellowness that were never want, to. jimp into” your sportiest | thought possible in a cigar selling AEATI G LINCOLN 26-0 lather and walk briskly down the | : ' strect ust’ to. show the neighbors | at such a price, By JOF SEIN : echt -. e thre aré not as’old as they. think | SEW YORK, ¢ your-are. “4 sacl | the criticisms of Washingtonswon the grade scliool ct tag ct ay ‘ ri nat renee } ) cles ire {Catuall CUAMIDHABEIUD | Dx Cats that-when ordinary rentedies ‘fail to | ¢ eae init ‘ limber up tho stiff, inflamed riteu- OY noon, ¢ ne : toint or reduce the swelling, will be done | ted’ Peck, fullback, made all points | Joint 3 taal Pie Sap ee cember when | for the vidtorg. achleying four touch- |“ ‘a a gobil’name for a (£024, t bs an leagues! downs ant making the extra points. | ataiile rescription that/in hold*their ‘annual meeting. Judge}, pate” between Washing aud Faerie rate eo ie eee He a Landis’ term does not expire at that} Junior high. spool ts’plan pl sbi 7 : time and even {f there was a chanco| ter in the sasson Meer oe pepe te! ao iaey | of oustifg him; as many of the] The If es brat, Meets Sak of than | American league men are known tO] washington Lincoln ‘a Ay Nag ne 8 apa ge ‘fly .; | desire, a first so oppo} cin pom {and york As smpothly as ever. | hae ie pf He won ot geprs| uise= aH. Paat But Joint-Base ie for bothersome e sition o € 0} sionet -Harlow ? ee, elbow, the American circuit the Nationals Foster tye Plante ine fheer)| oth HUNe Whee ue Pine Traseno] ha tor that purpose ite sale, ut 60 | they might have against him and] Jonnson Brown beenta « tubé, fe imnehee. { nd up for his continued rule. Barnett git] en rpbnd nee, | The annual meeting of the Nat-| podds at Drug Co. nelly Gdzesr fonals will be held in Chicago on] Wright Johnson DNeT LAAT miustiatg : evarys or about December 9, If the Ameri-| Samey Saeco hie<daecetat’ <W1° cans decide to id thelr meeting on} Bray —— lways remember, when Jotnt- day somewhere about, that time, | ¢ , SH BIOEN lhissoy ents Ie tiniat agony ath out — amitiion a aa perhaps nt the same place, they can| Touchwone—Pock 4. Goal—Peck 4. | - get her jo! anion Ss —Lowley fe loth, | * : . — et together in a Joint soation of the | Substitutes —Lowley for H. Floth, | Biggest Selling Joint the owners | Sutton for I without calling Brown second conférence majors Referee—Chris: | Remedy in the World for * wih