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\ , » \ Di ch PAGE SIX Kutsch of Iowa, Attractive CHICAGO, Nov. nks of college football ple foot which now bo ir ve Yards” McC I o what Grange was r to play against the fo ¢ fe tmas day, says Examine opposed to it,” ts tor un desired it nuld not discuss lingness to fore status, He is @ ayer and figured on the n fis “HAIR-GROOM™ | Keeps Hair Combed, Glossy; Well-Groomed all Day PRAMS SIRE DEN IEE Bs ‘Ha m" is 1 dignified comb: cream which groomed t the hair—that fi 1 touch to good dr ' both in and on social occasions. bern, unruly or stuys combed all day you Uke, "Hair-Groom" less; also helps grow thick, heavy, lustrous hair.—Adv, Tell the Advertiser—"1 saw it Ip The Tribune. Havana's best filler crop in years —in your lac World Results By Leased Wire —(?)—Further inroads into the | th All Targets for | Proposals. vers may be made by profes- asts Harold “Red” Grange. arty, who is to the University to Illinois, has been made an xrmer Illinois flash at Coral FINE TRIM TO BATTLE IRISH CHICAGO, 25.—P)—North- western’s con s of the big ten title to Michig ttled the western conferer tball cham- pionship dispute, there is left’ for settlement or argument only minor gridiron honors Any claim Notre Dame has to a we mpion: C ern ch hold @ win over proteges, fulfilling half of tockne’s predictions that his team be beaten twice. in fighting trim, hopes ke good the Notre Dame men- prophe Flanagan, full back are oy Mneup. The Missourt winds ur Aggies-lowa Grinnell-Wa. All-Sectional Elevens Named | In Two Regions ne's to Ifback, and Enright, of the Notre Dame Valley conference season with the Kansas te clash at Amen and hington meet in St. Here's 1925's ‘All-Bastern team as selected by Major Charles D. Daly, THE TRIB GOLLEGE STARS DELUGED WITH __ OFFERS 70 TURN PROFESSIONAL McCarty of Chicago, Friedman of Michigan and Ninn HL HOW CN HE CO TSO on Ainrirr \ YESSIR® MARVILUS) BETTER by | TH LADEE = THo ELLA | A REALLY \N GENTS ? ? VENTRILOQUIST!P-—— LHEAR YouRE A GOOD SINGER ZPPy! How BourT SINGIN A NICE SONG FER ee, ee / RUBEN RUBEN T BEEN THINWINY THAT MY DORG J HAS GOMH FLEAS, BUT I CANT JUS WARE HE GoT THEM COZ HE DOES NoT sueP Dignan, of Princeton, Center: McMillan, of Princeton. Guards; Stuarahan, of Yale, Diehl, of Dartmouth. Tackles: Joss of Yale. Coady of Harvard. Ends: Bonne, of Army. Sayles, of Harvard, AW-Missouri Valley Eleyen Chester L. Brewer, of the Univer- sity of Missourl, picked the follow- ing as the most versatile football players in the Mfssour! Valley con- ference: Halfbacks: Spears, of Drake, Whiteman, of Missourt, Fullback: Rhoades ,of Nebraska. Quarterback; Behm, of Iowa State. Ends: Bacchus, of Missour!. Sloan, of Drake. Wier, of Nebraska. associated in football at Harvard University Backfield: Slagle of Princeton. Overlander, of D: Keener tmouth Lindenme: of Missourt. Guards: Smith, of Kansas; Me ec, of Kansas Aggies. ond then he changed to Blackstone hanksgiving cigars (Real news this year) Chanksgiving smokers, you can thank Mother Nature this year. She has pro- duced the finest crop. 1 hile Blackstones—a fact al of mild Havana r in years for your Thanksgiving most worthy of a presidential proclamation, Change to Blackstone for Thanksgiving. Get that exceptionally ild but full fl here are bigger cig mely 4 fine tobacco—ex- avored, } ars if size is what | you seck. But at Blackstone prices it is impossible to make a larger cigar of such choice tobaccos years WAITT & BOND ston CIGAR Metropolitan Cigar ( Distributors, Denver, Colo Blackstone was a fine years ago. It was even finer 10 ago. It is at its very best today! | 10¢ and | 2 for 5¢ a ‘ ‘ somewhat branded as yellow, ards and ignoramu yBuffalo defeated She | i 7 me 19> le sne-thira doses, |e ‘or children and adults, 2 y Your Druggist MOMENTS WE'D LIKE. TO LIVE OVER THE GULLIBLE-PuUBLIC A ia BY NORMAN E. r, Ernest M. Hopkins, president of Dartmouth College (you recognize the school first perhaps as having of a football team), is one of the so-called younger gen- eration of educational leaders. Bo- cause of this it aay well be sups posed that he {s in close touch with the spirit of the times. Dr. Hopkins is quoted at some length regarding his views concern. ing athletics ond®the spirit that prevails regarding sports and the participants, He {s quoted as saying in part: “I think the public's attitude, par- cularly toward the players, is all wrong and decidedly unfalr. long a3 a team is winning it 1s a body of heroes, touted to the skies the fickle public. But let it lose me o> two, make a akes, and where is it is promptly gang of cow: 7p by a ga WwW little mii It “And there you strike the fault of our American Itude toward sports—to the detriment of » CASPER HIGH © TO SHERIDAN FOR BIG GAME defeat earlie the season, n since that, ~~ 2 § ONIGHT GrQmorrow ALRIGHT . Be Well | And Happy | | } ~and you have Nature's | ion, ‘Biliousness, Sick Headaches. Tenewing that vigor and good {eel- Recessary to being well end Usead for Over 30 Years “Zi Malet res Peatady y" <>. BV ear re /74 Chips off the Old Block PR JUNIORS—<Littie Ws r 1h NOTICE If you fail to receive your Tribune, call the office. Phones 15 and 16, and a special messenger will bring vou a copy of your favorite oaper. alls must be regis: tered Sefore 8 p. m. week- days and noon Sundays, CIRCULATION DEP’T, JNE’S PAGE OF SPORTING N _-By WILLIAMS = ORwiLlams, Meds BROWN “It ien't the playing of the game we're interested tm, but only the winning of the game. We seem to have a sort of mania to worship the winne: ‘We cannot give credit to the man who hss fought a splendid, clean battle and lost, credit because he made such a fight. We forget all about how finely and how clean- ly the loser playey and lost in oyr immediate worship of the winner. “And {t Is & bad thing for feotball and a bad thing for the players, 1 have seen men driven out of college over the matter of the dropping of a punt. O, it’s a fact. I’ve actually seen it. Players have made mis- takes and had no peace In their lives at the university afterward, so keen- ly were they made to feel what they had done all through our wrong at- tltude, “Now all this might not be true of older men, but it is of undergrad. uates. They aro suceptible to /t, and therefore the public's attitude works to their detriment.” There ts food for thought in what Dr. Hopkins has sald. The wish t6 win myst be a vital factor {n ath fetics. But as’ the Dartmouth head points out It can be made the over, ruling factor and at that point strikes at the heart of the game. ‘The public and the directing heags of all branches of sport may well ponder over his remarks, YALE BUNGLED HARVARD CAME Scoring Failure of Blue Eleven. | (Copyright 1925 The C Tribune) NEW YORK, Nov. 25.--“‘Hell'’s |of football signal calling, creation said Tad Jones. of Coach Bob Zuppke of MUlUnots, That‘explosively eluguent comment | pow ts nation-wide. It has been uttered most audibly and with’ em: | used this season by such outs phasis that would have drowned an| teams as the versity anvil chorus when the writer asked] ington, Pacific Coast Tad what he thought of the outcome; Michigan, leading lewestern | of the Yale-Harvard game. Just|ejeven, and Princeton, “Big-Three" | about sums the feelings of al! Yale} titie holder. i} men about Saturday's dizzy nothing. A ad nothing encounter, 2 Lack of team-work, bad general ship and pretty much favorite, failed to win. Yale played the first five minutes of the for the Elis got the ball to Ha ard’s six-yard line in a twinkling. It looked lke a big score victory for which Yale has been praying for years to wipe out the memory of past defeats, Then, Yale started floundering, finishing up with a forward pass, in- tercepted by Captain Cheek, of vard, which seemed to take al! the Starch out of Yale, From then on until the last quarter, they stum- bled around over each- other's feet. | They raliled a bit in the last quarter and twice were within striking dis- tance of Harvard's goal—but again | their feet got in the way. etl But {f\the game was gall and | wormwood for the followers of the} big Blue, the result was as honey In the honeycomb to supporters of the Crimson. Harvard had expected a thorough trouncing. To get off with an even break was #0 satisfac | tory, they feel today as !f they had | won. ame, ——————____ | LEONARD WILL FIGHT IF GOOD MAN BOBS UP NEW YORK, Noy, New York Evening World quotes Benny Leonard as saying he, {a ready to return to the ring only “when a good fighter comes slong and there is an enormous demand" for the retired lightweight champion to meet him, Leonard says he wants | | to fight again and is in condition to do so but has no immediate in;| tention of reentering the arena. Leonard said he thought the light. weights of today were of good call. bre but, lacked experiencee. He indicated that if he returned to the ring he would do so as a lightweight in spite of the general belief that he had outgrown this division. 6 | QUESTION | BOX If you have some question tc ask about baseball, footbell. box ing or any other emateur or pro fessional} ») Write to John B. paseball. Lawrence Perry, on amateur "| sports. and Fair Play on boxing and other professional sports, All are spe cla! correspondents of the Casper Tribune, 814 World Building, New York. Enclose a stamped, selfad- dressed envelope for your reply. Q.—Suppose there is a runner on first base who has started for second Just as the catcher has dropped the third strike on the batter. Does that not make the first base unoceupled? A—It does not. Yirst base {s always occupied by the man in pos- Foster, on session of st yntil that man has legally touched segond base, | - 4+ Q.—There is considerable argu. ment in this section over the option of the winner of the toss. Some say winner of toss may make two choices such as choosing a goal and also electing to receive. What is the rule? A.—The winner of the toss can Select one of three options but only one Q.—How are times out charged to | teams? An officials’ conference at Lincoln, Neb., rules that the first four substitutions made by each side during each half are to be charged as tle outs, A-~Each captain may ask for | four times out In each half. But the entrance of m substitute fs not held as time out against a team. | Q—Do the New York Giants prac- ce every morning during the sea- son? A.—They do not. Q.—Where did the Cincinnati “OMA Reds get Roush? j A.—From the New York Giants | the way to do ft! 5. 8. | tal. is pure~ | You like to eat | EMEMBER how you used to come in from play hungry as bear? Bet you could hardly wait until Dad filled your plate! And didn’t éverything taste go6d! Seemed like you never would get enough. Didn't you feel good those da: Yes, they were the red blood- ed days, . Why isn’t your appetite like that row? Why don’t you like to eat dist the same as you did in those fays? Here's the reason—your sys- tem is simply starving for the lack of rich, red blood! You've lost your appetite because you've lost your rad blood power. No red blood nourishment for the tissues of your body. Build up your blood to where it is pure and red and rich and watch (hat appetite come back! S. 5S. 8 is | helps Na- ture build red-blood-cells — builds them by the millions! | You'll get hungry and you'll en- foy eating when 8. S. 8. helps Na- ture build pure red cells in that weak blood of yours. And you'll look better—your skin will be clear ond unblemished—your flesh will become firm and solid— strength sad power will come to your flabby mus- cles—you'll be your pif In. §. 5. 8. will bring pick the joy of eat- tig--the joy of living. {’s done it for thousands for gener. stions. It's going to do it for you, SPORT tor in the intercollegiate cross-coun- Many Factors Led to|~ Willard Tibbetts of Harvard, If vie- The vogue of the “huddle” system 1 , First in News EWS 4" Rub the Spine Of All Events of most of your more’ people ds you believe the spine is the seat physical ills, and are thinking so every just give it a gentle massage try chgmpionship, and his team mate might with Jolnt-Ease ae os 2 b the helpful results prea bald done veoplo: \arel ae it daily from ‘They were on ipeny. ¢ Kimball Drug ; 1 pharmaciat ne sik g the Harvatd nd othe od pharmaciats. the sidelines during the Hai ; ind other good, pharmactats. Yale game when Harvard's need of |The name 1s ole bse ot etift. “running backfield” was all too| swollen, inflamed joints—and a tube apparent. for only 60 cents.—Ad\ everything else that was bad, should go into the list of reasons why Yale, a top-heavy the same stumbling, big-footed game against Harvard that it had played Ned Grange } football spect at Mlinols, number have played to 738,555 in his three years nd many times that t eyes upon him, | Leave Casper, Town 8 a, m. and | p. m Leave Salt Creek 8 a. m., 1 p. m and © p. m. Express Bus Leaves 9:30 Daily 2 n, Fordham football nimself on record elopment of star play: foo. Get 8. 8. S. at your druggist. dhe larger bottle is more econom- bouts with New York professionals; The ‘rrit last night a gained a draw in one. against Pennsylvania and against suet 80 they may || Salt Creek Transportation Co, } Princeton, only this time it was more| {tao in their football reputations |} BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS stumbling and more big footed than] (or money TELEPHONE 144 j x cree | i p Mad See ae ra Jimmy De St’s “correspon- nell at quarter seemed to havelaence school” boxers won six of ten| ‘Tell the Advertiser—"I saw {t In worked out beautifully for Yale in| )cuce Soi00! | Tell the Advertiser—"t" saw ; ne," i You rarely see a Webster smoker who is not a judge of good cigars. And the longer a man smokes Websters, the stronger is his preference for the quality* that has created Webster's age-old popularity. ROTHENBERG AND SCHLOSS CIGAR CO. Denver Colo. Distributors . TEN TO TWENTY FIVE CENTS Casper-Buffalo-Sheridan LEAVES CASPER AND SHERIDAN DAILY 8:00 AM. (No Transfer or Layovers) Casper-Sheridan Daily Auto Service Saves 18 Hours—Good Equipment—Careful Drivers HEADQUARTERS HENNING HOTEL, CASPER, PHONE 616 CRESCENT HOTEL, SHERIDAN , Westbound Arrive: Eastbound r Departs No. 622 J... ~ 6:45 p, m. 6:00 p. m. No Sundoy trains west of Casper uN CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY bastbound i No. 80 -8:00 p.m ae - 8:80 p.m. Departs 6:50 a, m. 4:00 p, m. 9:65 p. m. 7:10 0. m. +ask him why he \ | smokes a Webster TRAIN SCHEDULES CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN choicest tobaccos fi the finest pla "| No secret blend—bw: =| tar Stage ‘