Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 19, 1925, Page 8

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Che Casuet Daily Cribune ITAR DEFEATS COWBOYS, 7 TO 6, N GLOSING PERIOD OF GAME ntercepted Pass Gives Visitors Break in Game at I aramie; Wyoming Scores on Brilliant Pass and Long Run. 19.—Wyomi tandstill in yesterd whe {5 yard sity bat- confe Boberg intercepted a fo touchdown in the final scored the e> point, whereas the Cow- few minutes later on a forward pas: The t there the v were )0YS talled powboy pas te nton, | he La 1 forward pas: t then | or th ¢ failed, Wyoming ine ball on its 20-yard line as tl 1 nded three dov aing eld fc TITLE CHAKCE CHICAGO, Nov. mage ends today in ‘erence wh when the foot go to Minnesota, wl big ten vided and & ad only one Michigan Wyoming Allsman Linton —(P) Michigan team to 4 with 4 against it du s passing Arbor. The storm cente Mowr sco! back exper nton Halfback Whitman Halfbact “Red” Grange his probable collegiate career Saturday nols morale sent from pi while conferring with his fath garding his acc e of offers play professional football, ente movies, sell real e or write for newspapers The Buckeyes see a chance to end their season of mediocre success by | e has been ts havin for tw | | De defeating Grange and his mates. | sands of plum Karow, fullback star, is unlikely to} soaked with brandy, play, but the rest of Coach Wlce’s | sherry rum are being matted by regulars are In fine trim for an ap-| Brito to fri in the United pearance before an expected crowd| States for Th: ing and Christ- of 60.000 mas. —ask him why he smokes a Webster Onquality* alone Web- ster is adding each day new smokers to the millions who know that ial starred for the Williams | | ag oe te | |66 || 1} Red the Great” Sings Grid Swan Song In Game Saturday Against Ohio State OFF FoR AN EKD RUN have been z, have been {zards in mapping out their flelds , outguessing the opposition. arily they have ail been crafty rumners, in side stepping flying nckles and wrig from the arm ¢ would-be tacklers. But nge has the uncanny abil | {ty to rush full tilt at the would-be the napter y, Noy persons amphitheater of sit I the concrete | univer ange Hopes to write that chap- rin bold, ¢ | And the fooit It} tackler, ston dead in a sing’e stride will be w nd then dash off full speed a Grange’s rp angle, much as a rubber ball He is the most sp: r player | hounces, ever to don ti | The tackler, set to halt Grange One would lik him the | according to orthodox methods of atest football that ever|running and tackling, is left help- nod. Reams can be written, of course sprawling grotesquely on the | | But, fn fairness to thore who wor- | shipped at the shrine of Heston of Michig Cornell, Brickley | 4pout his specific achievements on jand N ryard, Heffelfinger | the gridiron which would only prove | and °c I Pennsyl- | +he point acceptéd—that he is a won vania, of arthmore, ful player in every way. Thor and a dozen oth-| ut in passing {t must be said of | ers, must simpiy class Grange @8| Grange also that he has been a Jone of footKall’s immortals. dit to the game. He has prea That shoutd be enough his mbdesty, cleanliness of | usk than that | ih: ned in the hearts | What more can o} ht and action through. three ‘ome s0 ens! t tic years of football the value of and memories of man that hie deeds] otean iiving’ and clean sportsman: grow In} opin. . | ‘S carry on? Which makes him a greater ath inge, however, can be ranked | tore \2 gre of all in one angie | Grange's efforts have been wast | grid gam | ea {f this lesson hasn't been absorbed » 1s without a doubt the great-|). the hundreds of thousands of red jest oper: field runner that ever lived. | itoodea Americans who have follow } He hag one habit, peculiar alone| .1 nis every run. to Grar nich“has been the prim dnsattatl i i ctor in earning him this honor. | | ‘That 4 | JUNIOR RIGHOEFEATS; «= ROX SOPHOMORES, 131012, | sw'ncros nem tsk about baseball. football box ~ \g Or any other amateur or pro essional sport— | ‘he Junior High school grid team ted the sophomore class squad Write ta John 8. Foster, on core of 13 to 12 on the Na-| | vaseball. High school athletic] | Lawrence Perry, on amateur Wednesday Edington and ria, and ich starred for Junlor high,|| fair Play on boxing and othe Potts and Williamson for the | fessional sports. All are | sophomore 1] espondents of the Gasser —»—__— 1] ine, 814 World Building, New CONFESSED ||" { Vv) 4 | wlose =m stamped, self-ad sed envelope for your rep, Question—Did — Pittsburgh — ever KIDNAPER Is |, in from Ruether when the latter Question—Which sport, baseball or Webster’s distinctive flavor never changes. No secret blend- but the choic tobaccos fror finest plantai l e ster ° SCHLOSS Ct Denver Colo. Distributors NTO Tw, SCHE TADY, N. Y., Nov {ball had more deaths laid up to (A) ntence of te to ff | it last year? rs in. Clinton prison Danne-| Answer—Baseball mora was imposed upon Harry | |, Pairb ssed kidnape | rne son, the young | exanderson, chief | the npsey-Gidbons fight consulting engineer of the General| Answer—Jack Dempsey spoke of tric compa Fairbanks en.| Burke as though he thought so. ed a plea of gullty at his trial her the opening this mornin GOITRE REDUCED | Question—Two men are running “I've got it” and neither of the play- ers gets the ball. Can the batter be 7 x a] called ow H FIVE INCHES | Answer—No, The coneher {s not And Health Improved for Spokane good sport and can be set down aay by the umplre for what he: dia but 3 Green| the failure to make a play on the 4 Since | ball cannot be turned {nto a per a colorless | fect play on the part of either ‘fielder, hort time my Goltre Is sht 1s good. I sleep ' nad 1 ke ald before, r full expert Question—Was Babe Ruth really suspended by the New York Ameri |can league club or was that | bunte? all er Ruth w \the bul of sus: Ad with the commissto: oe ine alt tin neni of baseball for a foul ball and the coacher yells | and | THE TRIBUNE’S PAGE OF SPORTING NEW NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—()— Champions in every fistic division are given three contenders from whom to pick an opponent for a title bout under Tex Rickard’s direction. The promoter, making public this last of logical contenders today. pects {t' to furnish no basis ex for divisions in the ring of Madison Square Garden But in the heavyweight and mid the new VALLEY TEAMS ~~ RBVEAL CLASS Missouri Conference Play Is Equal of | Other Sections. CHESTER L. BREWER. | Head Footbail Coach, University of |i Missouri, | (Copyright, 1925, Casper | COLUMBIA, Mo., d —Inter- sectional games have given flavor to mid-western football this season and the results vividiy stamp the teams from the Missour! Valley con- | ference the equal of those in other sections of the country. \ ‘To show on what an equal plane the teams of the various districts play some of the record {s interest- | ing, now that the season js about |over. Nebraska, defeated by both Missouri and Drake, within the Val- Tribune.) 1 as ley conference, Was able to stop | Grange and Mlinols, 14 to 0. ‘This team also held Wahsington, unde- uted leader of the Pacific coast, to 6 fissourl tied Tulane, the unde- and sen which easily at nal team of. the I Gefeated. North- stern in the western conference. K gies defeated Marquardt Nebraska contests, vith thelr evidence that football is played with about as much skill in section as another, also broaden | the knowledge and vision of various | districts, Five substantial stadiiims have been completed in the Missourl Val- ley conference and Missourl is now building one to seat 65,000. . This added capacity will give further in- centive to the scheduling of {mpor- tant and outstanding intersectional games in the future. In the valley conference, Mis- sourl, by her win over Oklahoma, | continues the only undefeated team. Drake, with only one defeat, is the only other team with championship | possibilities. If Missour! should fall before Kansas next Saturday then Drake, if victorious in her game, | should claim a tie, since the two teams have not met Joint - Ease | Most remedies fail but Joint-Ease surely and speedily succeeds. It's. for joint troubles only, whether in ankle, knee, hip, elbow, shoulder, finger or spine—whether rheumatic or not, It limbers up stiff, inflamed, swol- len, painful, creaky joints so quickly you'll be astonished Two sécends’ rubbing and away t Koes through skin and flesh right down to the bone and Hgaments— that's why it succeeds. Ask John ‘Tripeny Co,, Kimball Drug Store or any reliable druggist. t Always remember, when’ Joint- gets In Joint agony gets out— qulels doint-Kase is the biggest selling i joint remedy in the world. | paren dleweight ranks. the money de- mands of Jack Dempsey and Harry Greb ‘must’ recede before they can be considered for anything but bouts in the larger outdoor arenas. Rickard lists Harry Wills and Gene Tunney as the foremost Ameri. can contenders for Dempsey's title, but creates a surprise in the choice of Paolino Uzcuduz. Spanish heavy. weight, for the third entry. championship‘ frays in most of the| te THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1925 TITLE CONTENDERS IN EVERY FISTIC DIVISION LISTED BY TEXRICKARD FOR CHAMPIONS In the light heavyweight now ruled by Paul Berlenbach, R ard has placed Jack Delaney, Bi port, Conn., ns the ranking contend . and, next to Delaney, Mike Me- Tigue and Young Stribbling. Rickard aecords Dave Shade the listinction of beng foremost con tender In both the middleweight 8s against Harry Greb, and the ight division agalnst Mickey nk Mocdy and Jimmy y ave selected as Grehb’s other anding foes, while Walker's ther main rivals’ are considered to be Tommy Milligan, European champioh, and Benny Leonard, re: Hred lightweight king, who hopes to return to the ring. In. the lightweig which Jimmy Goodrich Iston tn king. Mandel is and LuisyVicentini. Rickard has named Sammy Sia 7 BOSTON, Noy. 19—(#)—Harvard today ‘was agog over the expulsion of 30 members of its varsity foot- ball squad, three days before the annual battle with Y; from the lobby of the Tremont theater. Head Coach Robert T. Fisher, who termed the incident the “dirtiest, lowest Insults he ever knew, will conduct a rigid Investigation to de- termine who charged the squad with being “half drunk” as they entered the theater lobby last eve ning. Last evening thw largest mass meeting ever held in Cambridge, ac- companied by snake dances to the dormitories, was staged by the stu- dents. From the rally the football squad went directly to the theater, Joe. Crosby slipped on the tiled floor and the other players began to jest with shouts. Manager Albert M. Sheehan of the theater inter- fered and ordered the lobby police- man to eject them. The gridiron men became indig- nant’ when the officer ordered them out. They say he charged them with being ‘half fried”. They tool. the matter to a nearby police dta- tion where Captain “Dolph” Cheek EJECTION OF FOOTBALL SQUAD | FROM THEATER OW EVE OF BIG GAME DRAWSFIRE OF HARVARD had Lieutenant Dobbins inspect each man. “They are sober, “all right," was the police officer's verdict. “But I can't d YALE ON EDGE FOR CLASSIC t y YORK, yard and Yale a for ‘ov. 19.—(P)—Har- are boiling with en- their football classic ¥, the annual renewal of gridiron combat that began 50 years While Fischer gave courage to the crimson cohorts for the annual bat- First in News Of All Events tle with Yale Saturday, “Cup! Black and “Bill Mallory, Blue he- roes of other years, were ordering Tad Jcnes' team to fight it out to the finish. “We are going up to Cambridge and beat that team,” Black said. He was captain in 1916, when, from a guard position he led Yale to a six to three victory over Harvard “During the- scrimmage yesterday the last at New Haven, this season, the regulars scored three touch. downs on the scrub, attacking with a viclousness that surprised the coaches, Kline, Noble and Fishwick romped across the line during the practice. Fishwick may have to do much of the signal work as Bunnell uffering from an injured ankle, el SPORT BRIEFS Psa ilo ne CLEVELAND—Gene Tunney New York, won on over John Risko, Cleveland vywelght, (12 rounds). Cley nd, knocked o n welterweigh! in Romero, Chil- { Homer Smith, ERIE, P: can heavyweight, b falainazoo, Michig¢ Rillinge weight, fought a INIGESTION, GAS, STOMAGH MISERY Chew a few Pleasant Tablets Instant Stomach Relief! Angeles, ago, Harvard has footbal material | on a. par with any since the war and} ne moment “Pape's Diapepsin”* has proved itself a game team in|reaches the stomach all distress therwords of Head Coach Bob Fis-| goes. Lumps of indigestion, gases, cher at the pre-game rally in Har-| heartburn, sourness, fullness, flatu- vard union last night, with 18 play-| lence, palpitation, vanish, ers occupying the stage and more| Ease your stomach now! Correct than 2,000 students cheering them. | digestion and acidity for a few cents. Druggists sell millions of packages.—Ady. N Silesian buyers has made ays / ‘, *T’m Sold onTom Moores M Y constant contact with shrewd a hard-boiled buyer of me. For instance, I smoke Tom Moores because they are abso- lutely the biggest cigar values I can find. Cabinets 2for25¢ Inyincible Foils 15¢ There’s a large order of mild and mel- low satisfaction in every puff. Your dealer has plenty of Tom Moores for spot delivery. Get yours today.”

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