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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1925 Che Casper Daily Cribune PAGE FiVe World Results By Leased Wire DIFFERENT STYLES OF FOOTBALL WIPED OUT BY SECTIONAL GAMES J Colorado Grid Coach Says “East Is West and| West Is East” in Modern Coaching and Average Ability Raised. By MYRON Football, (Copyright 192: BOULDER, Colo., Nov. 16 Joach ot in all sections, close. The reason isn’t hard to find. at football is pl son with mu out section I thas cea- h the same style, with- 1 characteristics or reg: SK TITLES WILL BE AT STAKE IN QUAKER EXHI Swimming, Track and Field Honors to Be Decided. PITTSBURGH, Noy. 16.—@— Athletically speaking, the ‘Sesqui- centennial of Philadelphia is a suc- cess, thanks to the executive com- mittees of the American Amateur Athletic union, which, in the opén- ing sessions of the annual conven- tion, awarded six national champion- ship meets to the Quaker city. The flower of the championships, the national senior outdoor cham- pionships in track and field, will be held at the Centennial stadium the it week in June and just prior to that the junior honors in the same 5s will be decided. inding off this»stellar event are the national senior outdoor swim- ming championships for both men and women, the junjor cross-country *championships and the junior Box- ing champfonships. Boston was awarded the national marathon and ‘the national senior championships. 3 Chicago was granted “the senior oor championships in track and eld and swimming. The 15-mile national championship went to St. Louis and the national senior cross-country to New York. ‘St. Augustine, Fla,, will be the scene of the national senior in- door swimming championships for women. New women senior shi STOMACH “QUEER” GAO, INDIGESTION Chew a few Pleasant Tablets Instant Stomach Relief! eve York will entertain athletes at the indoor women's the national champion- Lf you feel full, sick or uncomfort. | It wishes? here js harmless gestion the moment it reaches the stomach This guaranteed stomach correc: tive costs but a few cents at any drug store, Keep it handy.—Adv. Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel 8 a.m. and 1p. m and 6 p, m. Leave Salt behing 8 a.m, 1 p. m. ep p.m ©xpress Bus Leaves 9:80 Daily Salt Creek Transpertation Ce. , AGGAGE AND EX! $s PRE! TELEPHONE (44 j xy’ NOTICE If you fail to receive your Tribune, call the office. Phones 15 and 16, and a special messenger will bring ou a copy of your favorite vaper. Calls must be regis: ered before 8 p. mi. week- lays and noon Sundays. CIRCULATION DEP'T. MN The University of Colorado 5 The Casper Tribune) -—Except in the east where a} few teams appear to stand out strongly while others are| not doing so well, there is a general improvement in elevens with conference title races exceptionally | E. WITHAM It comes largely from the fonal peculiarities, Last is west and west is east, so far.as methods go, due principally to the extraordimary Browth of coaching schools, num-} erous intersectional games and gen- eral improvement in press reports/ on football. 1 Most prominent feature of the sea son which stands out as it draws| near the close, has been the unus- ual number of hurried or blocked | kicks resulting in an unusual number | of safeties and touchdowns. One explanation may be found in the fact that some teams have over- stressed the offense on the principle that the best defense is a scoring offense. Adequate protection for kicking, particularly in the danger | zone, has proved lacking often. Another {nteresting dévelopment is the increased success of the forward Pass. Better handling of the ball, training of which !s even now start- ing in grade schools and up through high school is undoubtedly respon- sible. This earlier schooling has pro. duced almost uncanny revers and players are making extended use of the bullet, base-ball throw pass, which is rapidly replacing the old style floating or “hope’’ pass. Modern passers are sharp-ehooters, zipping the ball at all angles with speed and head high and receivers are catching the ball more like a baseball than like a football pate Ae wn ae, QUESTION a. if you have some question to ask about baseball, football, box ing or any other amateur or pro fessional sport—, Write to Jobo B. Foster, on ogsebal), Lawrence Perry, sports, and Fair Play en boxing and othe; professional sports. All are epe cia! correspondents of the Casper Tribune, 814 World Building, New Tork, Enclose a stamped, self-ad dressed envelops for sour reply, ————-——$ on amateur Q.—I am a baseball. pitcher and I have not finished high school. I wish to get on some team next sea- son. How should I go about it? A.—Frankly, if Io were you I should stick to school a little longer and let professional baseball go. If you are determined to be a ptayer try out in a minor league. Q—If a team makes two kick- offs put of bounds does the ball go to opponent and if so on what line? A.—It goes to opponent on the opponent's forty yard line. Q—Batter hits the ball for extra | bases. On his way to second he stumbles and breaks his leg. One of his team mates rushes in and touches the last base the runner had passed and then touches the player who is hurt and completes the home run, Is this play legal? | A.—It is not. A substitute run-| ner must have the consent of the aptain of the other team Q—Can a team have as many men on the line when on attack as A.—Sure it can—up to ten men. | With eleven on the line there would be no way of putting the ball in pay, ne The Line-Up | The masculine arm now is the only teal indication of the normal waist line. On frocks, the waist line has gone up. For those who heat- tate to wear a belt or girdle at the higher levels, the designers have in- vented a method of setting the gir- dle on skirts so cleverly into the bo- dices that a high effect is achieved without a special marking line, Creaky Knees Quickly Limber Up Nothing: on this earth so good as Joint-Base for joints that are creaky painful, swoolen or stiff and any good druggist will tell you fo. Just rub it on and away it speed- fly goes through skin and figsh right down to the tendons and liga- meuts of the bone—right where all Joirt trouble starte—then {ts com- forting influence is quickly felt. Used by millions for bothersome rheumatic joints that need helpful attention, A tube for 60 cents at John Trip. eny Co. Drug Store and all druggists America over.—Adv. Biggest Selling Joint Remedy in the World Joint- Ease TRIBUNE’S PAGE OF SPORTING NE First in News Of All Events BIG BUSTS OF 1925 Urban Shocker, Whiz in St. Louis, Bloomerin N.Y. ~ \ GAMES For THE BRowNs (7 YEARS, BuT iT DIDNT MEAN ANYTHING HAd His PooREsT YEAR SAICE 1916 — Als FIRST YEAR oP By NORMAN E. BROWN. Urban shocker, he of the red shirt | ditions and baffling spitter, had been with Star Attraction in South. the St. Louis Browns for seven] During the campaiyns when he was traded the New York Yankees last winter In his first yea a Brownlie Urban won but six games. However, the next year he stepped up and won 14, and for the next four years ran up a Ust of 20 or more victories every season. In 1921 he copped 27 fames. Over a span of six seasons he never won less than 14 and piled up a total of 121 games, an average of a fraction better than 20 games a campaign. {good right arm, the general con: notwithstanding, training Petersburg Shocker tractions of the show. And he real that. He reported for practice when he cared to, and left at the same time. One had to arrive early and sit) through the entire prac session of the team to be sur glimpse. of Ruth or Shocker. en came the opening of the season, Babe Muth was in the hospital, The team season in St the big was one of of Yankee | | | THE TANKS N TRADED Elid ~: “To THE BRowns For PRATT AND PLANK £55 Ane, wonderful for the league about the occasion ocker faces the 1 tpon his “ow get 0} have to and win the b owners und players a little g: that the eight men be- hind him can help or hinder a pitcher, Heaven knows the Yan- Kees didn’t help him much. somet game m | Fort Collins. of conference | Shocker to], DeM fr WYOMING-UTA FLEVENS MEET ON WEDNESDAY Cowboys Gag to Fort Collins for Turkey Day Battle. MIE, Wyo., Nov, 16.—W the 18th the Wyoming V meets the Utah L at Yaramie and on Saturday the Wyoming Freshmen play the Colora Aggie Frosh at 145 a Fort Col Thanskgiving Day will |-ports; stock witness the Cowboy Varsity in action against the Colorado Aggies. The y decide the ynference mpionship and will be played | Former ‘Wife Of fh Wafer witht Caruso Awarded y Mill s € one wonders how much money there Divorce Dec ree man. nd will be left for the Englishman ——— ‘KOA RADIO Tuesday, November 1 Weather markets; live e following rabede |r Ingram, whe m. Herald to have Hiatto e impending divorce Fie sek r several at Up to and including the game with the Colorado State Armistice Day, the Cowboy eleven has won four out conference game nd has 88 points to their opponen Bver though V should lose tl final two games of the season, team will have o record torles and three and scored Gain 5 Pounds in 30 Days— Good Healthy Flesh Rei gieeie inclusive non-confere r nacists y Oil is full of make flesh, create builds up the power to re 1 puts good solid men and women, orrible tasting stu: wer people are om DOVE HUFFMAN FACING BATTLE BY FAIR PLAY | nt 1925 The Casper Tribune) | € NEW YORK, Noy. 16.—Hddle| the es ge he ra} 9 fan, who has de a big rep| hind L on the coast, sure ked | t Welly to the bad f ron 1 Kimt all Orug Store. Midwest Pharmacy. and days woman o: has a | daye, | refund A friend rushed to | Be xclaimed: “Are | orig | bilities. Dex FORS Residence—living room, two bedrooms, kitch bath; 40x125-foot lot. Located southeast. $2,500. P. O. Box 1081. Pay- ments like rent. fighter, por he is, 1 game. o far ax Huffman is con he is touted to he the best looking Prospect in the light-he: With young Stribling out of the going for the time being, it tooks as though theaoutcome cf the Huffman | ¢ DeMave, about the Loxing| 1 {Tri uilty of murders th, but + the ma Th, nose to be class, | ed to de cid for them- | promptly seemed tempor: shattered. A But to get back to Urban. Last winter the New York Yankee bosses were making frantic offorts to find so to speak. The Yankee outfit was | cracking and Manager Huggins and | Owner Ruppert wanted something | to save the pieces. They decided T0 BE SOUGHT that Shocker was the man. Yep. with Shocker, they would just about BY JOHN B. FOSTER (Copyright 1925 The Casper Tribune) romp off with the pennant along NEW YORK, Noy. 16.—When the about the early part of August. major leagues get together in joint A deal was cooked up that sent Shocker to Yanktown in exchange) session in New York December 10 it is possible something will be done for Joe Bush, Joe Giard and Gaston, } to remedy abuses of the walver sys- three pitchers. Three Cheers for a Flag! ‘The pennant seemed “in’ tem which have been creeping into baseball, Certain restrictions in en- gagements between majors and min But when the smoke battle cleared away late last September ors in this matter are advocated by some managers the New York Yankees were nest- ling in sventh place—happy in the thought that the Red Sox were lower. And Shocker had won just 12] There have been charges of bad faith. At the meet- ing a suggestion will be made to put to an end the practices whereby a club whieh has transferred games. | player outright—after the And had lost 13. | Now, for an ordinary pitcher this has been optioned two st | times— record might not be bad, consider- ing the winning average of the ation of th disputes and a player team. But Shocker was supposed conaive to carry with him the ility pitch the team to victory h OUT OUR WAY to y Be 14E15Z1o=1 [as “ora AN LONG TILT ~— 3; to. be done in the interest of the be tied up in one channel! for life |if s club pursued him relentlessly. | There is undoubtedly abuse of the | waiver system by which managers, |leaning to a gentlemen's agreement permit players to pass league to consummate baseball trade because they expect a similar |favor when they ask for waivers. | Baseball debts have been paid delib- erately by securing players on wa ver with no other intent than to move them on to some minor league to help make good for a player taken fn a round-about ¥ out of 4 ENGLAND TURNS TO U FOR HORSE RACING IDEAS LONDON, Nov. 14.—(United Press) England, the home of horse-racing is turning to Amertfea for {deas on the turf, American methods already are be ing introduced in the handling of tace horses’ hoofs, and a plan is I being considered for sending mares }to the States for breeding purposes, |in order ¢o improve the staying qual- ities of the next generation of Eng. Ish colts and fillies ---By WILLI AMS 19.=20- OZTURBUL IM “TWENRY ONE — ONY, NINE MORE MEERS~ GuESS TKN’ STAND. WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY - THINKIN, OUT ‘Loup! Sao oe w Y peta TAT, MUCH LONGER, T HAPTA I GUESS ~ BUT AFTER hanged on un ash tree, playet because a man could wimost | THE WORLD'S GREAT- EST RACING RECORD In i920, Man O’ War, the greatese race horse of all time, retired after winning 20 out of a4 starts—a rac record that has never been approach | ¥ two short racing seasons, Man O’ War, th ther ] remarkable racing thoroughbred ever seen on the American turf, took stake after stake and turned in the greatest record of winning performances ever made by a running horse. Yet—there have been faster race horses than Man O° War. What is the answer? Man O' War had more than great speed and stamina. He had courage, game- ness, the unconquerable pride of superiority. He was a thoroughbred! And he won! 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