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S WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 192 f World Results . || By Leased Wire YALE AND DARTMOUTH LOOM AS STRONGEST OF EAST ELEVENS Strong Passing, Rushing Attack Effective in| Game Against Cornell; Harvard Debacle / Due to Same Cause. ral By MAJOR CHARLES D. DALY Associate Football Coach at Harvard University. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 11.—As the 1925 football season approaches its close in the east, it is taking on an | aspect quite different from that in the middle western con- | ference. In the conference, the teams are battling in even contests, fortune favoring first the one and then the other. But in the east each week more certainly than before S the great strength of a evens. he t of these elevens are © and Dartmouth. Yale, with a 5 surplus of very powerful ma- week by week proves her claim to the mythical championship with a mighty and most excellently ached Ine, followed by fast, clever, powerful experienced backs. So far, she is winning from practically all opponents. ‘The Succession of win- ning Yale teams did not spring full- armed from the plans of any one m Teams Such as Yale and Dart. e ure the fruit of several of a broad, encouraging pol- applied to competitive ath- superior players, experienced fast and strong. Princeton also has sev- eral players well above the aver- age. q Slagle can kick, run or pass, and no matter which method he elected he shows a high grade performance. He is one of the leading backs of the east. His running mate, Dignan, is no less worthy of note. He Is pro! and he, too, can kick and pags. With these player featuring in behind very good rushing line, Princeton's team shows strong and resourceful. 17 DRIVERS IN AUTO CLASSIC letics. Dartmouth’s great eleven this past y defeated a powerful Cor- the overwhelming total of 62~points. Ordinarily, this would mean that Cornell was weak and de- fenseless but such was far from the case. This y "s Cornell team has a }- good record. It has been strong on ie attack, It ad ced the ball Sat- y by continuous rushes over 80 yards, through Dartmouth. Its de} —_ rane fense ha# been competent. but such | | CHARLOTTE, N. C—C)—Seven. |, is the chance in football that | ‘*¢® drivers. were entered for the Armistice Day automobile race in the @ team © ned with 2 good line. a | * tontyrt: Renate Sects a Charlotte Speedway today. strong rushing attack and abave ally | CURE 5 | an excellent passer, can by judicious | 78 Face. which is sanctioned by application of the and rush, | fi, ts fore Automobile Associa- well night demoralize any Inferlor | O04 tor &. Durse of $25,000. The T Snentnaa ‘ore at least three |™2¢k {5 a mile and a quarter wood- : ; a te en bowl, making 400 laps necessary an mi st as has been er nm previously in the gridiron aoa the 250 mile race. n uch was the case in the he entrants were Earl Cooper, Bennett Hill, Bob McDonough, Fr Comer, Tommy Milton, Harry Hart q Jerry Wonderlich, Leon Di Pe. rnell game Saturday. I sev degree, the same effect lieved In Princeton's victory " a ter de Paolo, Norman Batten, “Doc” ove ard. Excellence in the run- rf ay os ae ee ean 302) Rien: Shattock, Ralph Hepburn, Reggie did passing game, put Princeton In |202n#0n, Earl Devore, Frank Elliott, ne} Dave Evans and Pete Kreis, QUESTION ” ROX If you have eome questior to ask about baxeball. football, box: ‘ng or any other amateur or ‘pro fessional sport— Write to John B. Fostey. on ‘aseball; Lawrence Perry, on sports, and Fair Play on boxing and other orofersional sports. All are epe and they were rare pped excellent rinceton, alws ade pe: performances such a9 Dartmouth and Yale show ys backed up by a high The ne amateur ADVANTAGES elal correspondents of the Casper Tribune, $14 World Building. New OVERLOOKING BELMONT 1 edie te “atamped, self.ad Yasir naneee AUD | { trereed envelope for your repir. 3 Badersstbe bh tdas Pale ta dah 109 COURSES - -- Q—What ts Babe Ruth's pitel ANEW HOTEL-7O0ROOHS) | record inc he han been mith ped zed baseball? and lost about 55. hi ITS HOSPITABLE © four scattering games which hay ATMOSPHERE - -- Deyor: teak ronan since he has been w the Yankees, SPECIAL ~— MONTISLY RATES Q.—How should a lad beginning | WRITE FORBOOKLET | | G.E.Billingsley i Manager boxing develop his speed? How should he feed and what should he do to harden himself? A.—Skip rope. Sh hard sprints, hadow boxing. Diet depends upon one's weight. If reducing be careful fattening de such ag butter, and all starchy veg: about eating | pota etables. Q—Pinch hitter takes place of catcher. Then the latter is named to run for another player. Can he do so? A.—There {!s no reason why he cannot do so If the captain of the opposing team gives his consent. Certainly his own team {s not gotng SHERIDAN ROAD AT BELMONT AVE ut to object. When he was retired for “9 kite? @ pineh hitter he was out of the game but that makes little differs ence if the opposing captain has no objection to his re-entry, | Q.—On what basis are leagues clas- sified in organized baseball? A.—On the basis of population of the cities that are comprised in the leagues. nee Salt Creek Busses | Lyave Casper, Town Hote) 17a. m. and 1'p. m end 8p. @ Si Leave Salt Creek PP » “HAIR-GROOM” 8 a. m, 1 p. m. and 6 p. m, express Bua teaves 9:30 Daily Keeps Hair Combed, Glossy: Salt Creek Tramspertation Co, | © , i BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS | Well-Groomed all Day TELEPHONE 144 Neate NEARS *Hair-Groom” is a Gignified comb- = ing cream which costs only a few . 2 = D cents a jar at . NOTICE SB] cee drug ore, PR If you fail to receive your -S| Millions use ft be-/ | 9 Tribune, call the office Sieause It gives Phones 15 and 16, and j that natural ents v special messenger will brin LSE oa, gg ia you a copy of your favorit 4! —enat final touch paper, Calls must be reg | 10 good dress both + ‘wainess and tered before 8 p, m. weel i | on social occasion® = 4-69 stubbor days and noon Sundays, meruly or halt stays vmbed all wy Say atyle you CIRCULATION DEP") 2) ie! atalino. US wreamatenss ‘ f also helps grow thick, heavy, lus: NM pous haiy.—Ady, mouth teams include practically all ably a more effective line plunger ATCHARLOTTE. | Does range’s Work Overshadows © That of Kaw, East’s Wonder Man? { | Did “Rea” € the west, crash through the castern football hall of fame and leave be idols? The quest‘on may well be ay the stunned ecasterns who the Ilinois wonder, still over what they witnessed. Thosé who have followed ball, as it has been played on the Atlantic seaboard for years, bs come to hold up cherished memeéric of certain gumes—of ers in those gumes— memories always in saw ponder foot ind, has hetd these heroes up as perfection in football. That Ust included, among the stars of the modern game Eddie Kaw of Cornell. Koppisch of Columbia. Brickley of Harvard. Owens of Harvard. Pollard of Brown, | Otip' | Ted Coy of Yale. | Mahan of Harvard. You might add others. Then Grange came into the eust iis fame had gone befor him How ho had run wild a year ago} against Michigan. How the teams, of the Big Ten had tried in vain | to halt this flaming meteor of the | grid without success. Came so many accounts of his dazaling brilliance that the effete east began to doubt his greatness. He was good, probably. Very} good, in fact. But could he be as good against a different type of game—and against the tacticians of the east? Critics, large and small, flocked to the game. And Grange put on his stuff. On a muddy field, unsuited for speed and daring open field run- ning be slipped Uke a will ‘o the wisp through Pennsylyania’s men SPORT BRIEFS, | By Associated Press GU Nicholls will be playing part: | ner of Walter Hagen in Florida this winter. The pair will represent Pas- adena in the winter golf league. Ernie Jarvis has begun an inter: | national flywoight elimination cam. paign. The English boxer, with vic- tories.over Black Bill, Cub: dolnny Breslin, Srish-American, and young Dencio, Filipino, next meets Willie Woods of Scotland, in New York. The Itallan dike riders to enter the six-day race soon to be stage® in the new Madison Square Garden, Franco Georgetti and Gaetano Bel- loni. Georgetti has been paired with Reggte McNamara, PIMLICO TN TIMORE, Md, Nov 10.—(F). jcess I een won the Bowie eap ata mile ond a half, fe year-olds and up, $10,000 « day Aga Khan was sécond and My Own third, > tme was 42-5, A $2 pari-mutuel ticket on the winner paid $7.60 straight, $9.70 | to place, and $3.60 to show. | TRACK, BAL Prin- handi three- Aded, to LOGAN, Utah, Noy. 10,—A)—It will be a case of brother against brother when Utah Aggies and Mon- tana State College clash on the grid. tron here tomorrow, ‘ET ney Is mentor of the local team while “Ott” Romney, his bro- ther, coaches the Bebe The Ag: om are 7 to 10 favorites despite the fact that three of the vlars are on the Injured Mal » dope sters take 26 to 18 9 fnto ‘aie nover Wyeming. where Slate leet to the Cow derouy hind him « tumbled debris of breken | raised | are |} | wound, writhed, squirmed, cked, sidestepped and sped his to two touchdewns and in be- (ween these scorings runs trl- fied the (housands of spectators | with his long dashes. When a Burbank gives a greased the speed of a frightened an- telope and the cu of a fox he vill -have produ he mechan icaf comparieon to Grange—lack \ing of course, tie 6th football sense redhead carries, fhe easternets at first gazed in eken awe at ange: Them, wanting to be soclable, remarked that he reminded them of such and such a st But on the way home cold and | sane thought came and they be: gan to ask: “Isn't he a bit better than any other yer we haye had?” In that remark they sought of took Grange unto themselves—and ad- mitted what may be the, awful truth That the west has produced Bx- hibit A‘in its efforts to prove’ that | the wést produces not only the best football PLAYET COWBOYS ARE PICKED TO WIN. BATTLE TODAY CHEYENNE, Wyo., Noy, 11.—@) — Weather Indications are that Wyo- | ming and Colorado State Teachers | will clash this afternoon on a sun- less (18id with a raw wind blowing but the weather 1s not expected to prevent the largest crowd that ever has gathered on an athletic field in bu THE GREATEST Wyoming from turning out to’ see Ure game Dope favors Wyoming to win but | 1 core is forecast because the Cowboys have heen weakened by the loss of Deforest, Spears and | a who were injured tn the re. e) e with Utah Aggies. The chers are depending on Brown. their flashy back, to take the brunt in'the offensive against the Wyom- ingites. Coach Dietz has impressed on the Cowboys the necessity for stopping Brown, MILWAUKEE — Allen Schultz and wife, Dorothy, were fined $5.00 and costs for kissing in a parked automobile. Schultz maintained a | man 1 Kiss his wife when he | pleas but the patrolman and} judge had different views. (a ve rient) taken at night will help keep you well, by toning and strengthening your di- gestion and elimination, | its, then candy coated. children ‘and adults. ama GOLD DY YOUR DRUGOISTam }a combination worthy "TIGER ELEVEN Che Casper Daily Cribune GRID QISASTERS HOLD LESSONS “Something Wrong” in| Crushing Defeat of Big Elevens. | By LAWRENCE PERRY. (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune.) NEW YORK, Noy. 11.—Prince- ton's defeat of Harvard on Satur- day and lliinots' success against Chicago and Dartmouth’s victory over Corn together with Wash- ington's victory over Stanford were About the only important games that ended tn accordance with pre- liminary forecast And even » the crushing dis- asters that befell Hurvard and Cor- nell were totally unexpected, There is, of course, something wrong at Cambridge. Somewhere, there is a foreign obstacle in the mechanism. The very demeanor of the Harvvard team was suggestive of internal trouble in the football system under which it was de veloped, Princeton, taking every game up to tho Harvar@ struggle in the nor mal stride of deyelopment, proflt ing by mistakes, accepting every. thing that had happened us con- structive object lessons, came up to the first of the Big Three series in very creditable shape, indeed. Nas: sau, aftr long weeks of mental and physica) labor on the part of play- ers and coaches, has developed into of Princeton tradition. But even granting that’ Harvard was opposed by a good Princeton eleven, the Crimson should not, all} things being normal at Cambridge, have beén let in for the debacle that whe experinced. T men are all big, rugged and spirited. Their chief lack seemed to be instruction and that poise which grows out of lessons well taught and well learned Princeton might on Saturday have had the-t team in her histo’ which she has not—and still have crushed Harvard as she did, had all beon going well in the inner circ at Cambridge this season, BULLDOGS BIG FAVORITE OVER YORK, Noy. 11.—(#)—Yale, Arn Colgate, Dartmouth and Pennsylvania today were favored to win gridiron battles Saturday. | Yale was an 8-to-5 fayorite over Princeton as word came that Ted Jones would be able to send the eream of his backfield—Cutler, Kline, Allen and Bunnell—against the Tigers. Princeton, with the-same Uneup that overwhelmed Harvard in ex: cellent physical condition, apparent- ly will center its attack on the wings, considered the weak spots of the Blue line. 5 Army wast a 3-to-1 choles over Columbia for their neat the Polo Grounds. Columbia stock tumbled when {t failed to gain better than a tie last week with New York U. Colgate was given a six to five edge over Syracuse, while Dart- mouth was favored at similar odds PAGE FIVE CHAPTER 33 fears dripped upon Phitip Wein. | the telephone operator. rich's neck. He “Please, Vera— effort to rise, but she his chatr. “The waiter will be returning in| a moment. Please——.” | “I don't care, I'll lock the doar.” | She got to her feet. He caught her hanil rred uneasily, " He made held him an m “Don’t be “Cull me at 8 a.m." ii Tt was an unnecessary request. } A litte aft seven his telephon rang. His sleepiness disappeare ==| THE TRIBUNE’S PAGE OF SPORTING NEWS = when he heard the voice “Philip, did you get my note “Yes,” he said defensive! it was so late I thought {t best to call you yntil this morning ng bre akt but not Whe First in News Of All Events e dy nued) ‘The Clash CONDITIONS IN go! an idiot, please, Vera.” He had not | es tees. } raised his voice | (In an hour—at §:30," She stood over him. “Oh, I’m an} He was ammoyed. Why had she idiot, am Well, it's because Ij followed him to New Y The love you A new wave of tears | d FOR BIG GAME appeared, They found a table in a corner “Please, Vera, sit down, please.|the dining room where they could Wait until the waiter has come|s#ee what little life there was on with our food.” Broadway at that hour, through| ‘Ti The door knob raitled warningly and she sank into her chatr. The waiter saw, but did not ap- pear to notice ber dripping eyes, which wet paint had given a dis. torted look. The two at the table impatiently watched him serve the food slowly and conscientiously. ‘That wil} be all until I summon Philip said, commandingly. “Very good, s! The actress gave her the food now, Phil) then regarded he noticed before how she wolfed her food “Vera,” want?" Her jaws ceased the work tleating the broiled bird eyes flashed. “Oh, attention to took a morsel, He never had like an animal Ugh! he asked, “what do youy of mas: and her me e you?” | ‘ow — Vell, you can just see my law. | r | Vera, I'm not going to pay you any money: Don't take me for a fool. T loved you sincerely. 1 came} to you like a man when I found 1 couldn't love you any longer. 1 won't stand for any hold-up. Hot anger boiled in her express: Very well then, we'll see, 1 hi some lelters— “You wouldn't dare sue me “T told you, Mr. Philip Wet ave rich of Westland, that you'd pay. Think you ow me aside, do you be Philip arose, pushing the. £ button for the with her food. The waiter appeared. ming; the lady will r ish her supper,” he af She wont on am main and ff. ald simply, | ing several bills on the table. Vera did not look up, but she saw the money on the table, and while the waiter’s back was turned to her, as-| sisting Philip with his coat, she deft ly took possession of the top bill. | At his hotel Philip foun “Philip: :Father is with me in | suite 13-4, I must see, you, “Amoura.” Reading it the second time, he exclaimed, “The devil!” He looked | at his watch. Fifteen minutes of | two, Too late over Chicago for their inter-sec tional battle in Chicago. Pennsylvania's possibility of beat. Ing the Pittsburgh Panthers was | considered an § to § chance. Dartniouth is professing not to| fee) confident of the result in Chi-| cago Saturday because of bruises | sustained last Saturday from which | some of {ts players have not re covered. After the last home prac- tice of the season the team will entrain for Chicago this evening, UO, se tas min wiccen entire { am to pay $1.00, same accompanying this order. pay their subscription 12 months in advance. , year at the regular rate and add the sma)! cost of the policy. scription before the year is up, my policy will lapse. heavy curtains “EF know you think I shouldn't/game h have come,” she explained, studyin his frown, “but T just had to. wanted you to know that I belies fn you. I won't let her steal y Philip.” He felt he had to smile. all right. dear That's | cre I love you for « Th at thleti |dan In T] start a game 1,/0n Armistice day All-St | the ¢ wd is expect ing, Only—." YORK—The “Yea?” Fs 1 yt “Well, ob fool, Am-| e they de de oura, a fool ing but an|beer padlock lventuress, I realize now. But I} = yas foolish, Amoura, I wrote som | MONROE, N.. x has letters. . And she th to] pinched a mastod It dis sue! Jappeared while experts were he paled, but smiled: resolutely.| way to’ view a skeletor “We've both been fools Philip." | by workmer Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Lumbago Headache Colds Pain Neuritis Toothache Neuralgia Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Safe~ Aspirin is the trade Accept only “Bayer! pack which contains proven directions. Handy | “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. srk of Bayer Manufacture of Mononcoticacidester of Salfeylicacté ackage Application and Order Blank Federal Accident and Pedestrian Insurance Policy *' Issued by The Casper Daily Tribune 5 (Write uame in full) Place of birth RB Sa cue OTR Ot ROOLORE on npeapdenm nedinncmee anomie City ... Beneficiary --.-- Address Casper Daily Tribune. NED cd Wenkdanibniumhnrtnuhdatbendginnstwasy AZ@....o.4 Occupation. 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Every member of your family between the stipulated ages can have a policy, If more than one policy ts wanted, just fill out the following and include $1.00 for each policy. Members of Subscriber's Family (Living in the Same House) Who Desire (nsurance, Sign Here physical examination necessary R. F. D, No. {Answer Yes or No) issued by Th ribune be sub- Mu ‘oe hid HEUTE dT OE ELL id ‘a babiitsddari iiesi OPTRER TR Cee eC eNe