Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 178, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 7, 1925 Page: 2 of 8
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VIASEITA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1925 __________------------------------------------------------Tt
DARTMOUTH- CORNELL PROVIDE BIG-GAME OF EASTERN GRID
NNER SATURDAY WILL BE 1
EAST’S GREATEST ELEVEN,.
MANY AUTHORITIES BELIEVE
Interesting and Important Games on Saturday Programs
Jre NEW YORK, Nov. 7. (AP)—The mythical eastern championship
• in the view of many football followers depends on the outcome of a
11 game at Hanover, N. H., Saturday, gi
The teams are Dartmouth, the home eleven, and Cornell, the jug-
gernaut of Gloomy GU Dobie. They are among the highest scoring
teams of the country and have won all their games. a
Dartmouth ruled a favorite at 2 to 1. It has a brilliant back-
field and line. For two seasons it hss gone along without a reverse.
. Cornell, caught under the big green avalanche a year ago, 27 to 14,
was one of the few victims to score against Dartmouth.
% The annual struggle between Princeton and Harvard at Prince-
Fston is the first of the year’s classics involving Harvard, Princeton and
Yale. Princeton was the favorite because of a better record. ■
* Many Easy Games *
AS Penn State and Notre Dame, meet-
" ing at State's field, head the list of
.... intersectional battles. Maryland
, and Yale meet at New Haven. Ohio
Wesleyan takes on undefeated Syra-
' cuse. * ‘
, Several of the most powerful elev-
the ens of the past expect to give many
e of their regulars a rest, Saturday, as
rivthey meet teams from which the op-
S.position is not expected to be keen.
- The Army, Navy, Pennsylvania and
Colgate ars among these teams,
ait Annual fixtures bring together
wsw. ■* J. and Pittsburgh, West Vir-
Drginia and Beaten College, Lehigh
! and Georgetown, Williams and Wes-
Rieyan, Rutgers an d LaFayette,
teColumbia and New York University
and Holy Cross and Fordham.
The eyes of the football world are
""on the experiment in Providence, K.
75.. where the stop watch will be
abandoned while Brown and Hooten
— University Inaugurate the 40-play
" period idea.
Cowboys Wallop
Denton Mentors
in Muddy Clash
Touchdown and Field Goal Are
Sufficient to Keep Simmons’
Slate Clean for Season
ABILENE, Texas, Nov. 7. ()-
Simmons University defeated the
North Texas State Teacher. College
on Paramoor field at Simmons Fri-
day afternoon, !• to 0, in slush and
rain. Simmons scored flrot in the
M’CALLUM GOES TO AUSTIN TO PRESS HIS
CHARGES AGAINST ELECTRA TIGER ELEVEN
Coach Bud McCallum of Wich-
ita Falls High School departed
Friday afternoon for Austin,
where he is to appear before the
University of Texas Interscholas-
tie League and press his chargee
against Electra High School in
the present muddle of high school
football affaire in the east half
of District No. 1.
Vernon and Wichita Falla al.
ready have been victims of for-
feited games by decree of the
league powers and McCallum
hoped to present evidence at the
Saturday mooting that would
eliminate Electra from the cham-
pionchip race. It was believed
that Vernon also would be repro,
sented at the meeting to protest
against Electra and that Electra
would be on hand to offer a de-
tense.----:----22000 ...
McCallum’s protect le based on
the use of Ralph Turner, Tiger
end, in Electra’s games against
Wichita, Falla. Vernonand Quan-
ah. Turner played' with the Ti-
gers in 1921, 1922, /1923 and this
season, and McCallum hopes to
prove that he also took part in
one game In 1924, which would
make the player ineligible under
the four- year rule.---
The Coyote coach’s chief bit of
evidence was a newspaper story
of the game between Electra and
Iowa Park on September It. 1924,
in which Turner is listed aa a
starting end.
The Coyotes’ game for Satur-
day with Quanah at Quanah was
postponed Saturday because of
bad weather and the protest mud.
' die that has turned district affairs
upside down.
BIG. THREE COMPETITION
UNDER WAY WITH PRINCETON
BATTUNG HARVARD CRIMSON
GEORGIA TECH AND VANDERBILT PROVIDE-
ONE OF SOUTH’S FEATURE GAMES
By HENRY L. FARRELL • -
United Press Sports Editor..
NEW YORK, Nov. 7,—With the start of theBig Threeseries, the
1925 football season turns into ths final quarter Saturday with a num-
bes ********* 52W talk about this season, but the
fact remains that the battles between Yale, Harvard and Princeton
still have their tradition behind them and they still command national
inte"p,tneeton and Harvard, neither of which will be entitled to any
national ranking at the close of the season, open the aeries at Prince
ton-, has been . dismal year for Harvard, but the militant old arnd;
will shout less loud for ths scalps and hides of the coaches 1 the Har-
vard teem ie able to defeet Princeton or, Yale. .. . ... , ..
Princeton also has hed more successful 1 seasons that the one jug
closing, but the teem has been brought along slowly and profited
somie204, wef ence like a Princeton victory.
• T(
thsTigers vs. Crimson------1
" PRINCETON, N. J., Nov. 7. ()-
An aroused Harvard eleven swooped
“into the Tigers' lair Saturday for
tho year’s opening classic of the
—Harvard - Yale - Princeton triology.
> Weather conditions were excellent.
The 55,000 seats were sold long
2Pprineeton was the favorite, having
been beaten once and tied onoe,
““while Harvard had been defeated
... twice. Early season records, how.
over, are not always good forecast,
for the meeting of these tradition-
at rivals. .
4 The Tiger’ line outweighed Har-
vard nine pounds to a man Har.
yard had the'heavier backfield, but
“prineeton's backs havs shown more
Uizpeed. The probable lineup:
PRINCETON Position HARVARD
.........* * * **"
Gates.....Ea *******
L Crigo .................... Kilgour
* Left Guard. .. -
..-acMillan ............... Macomber
Center.
Davis.............***, TAPP
tsotoenorinidie.... UMser
^^MT preatora
----------
...............Crosby
Left Haitback. ..,
.."— “Wat itaidde" "'
-WuitK.r— cendr
second period when Wright place-
kicked goal from the 26-yard line.
The Simmons touchdown came on
the first play in the fourth quar--
tsr when Walker went off his right
tackle for two yards. Dillingham
place-kicked goal. The ball had
boon placed In scoring position by
Walker’s 40-yard gain on an inter-
cepted pass from Black, placing the
ball on Dentons’ 35 yard line. Estes
ripped off- 20 through the line.
Walker backed alx yards and Comp-
tea made four. Walker bucked to
the two-yard line as the third quar-
ter. ended. A.
Slack and Sportsman were con-
tinue! threats with their end runs .
ning and pass receiving but were
never able to get away for long
gains. ' Denton opened up in the last
period with a flock of passes, com-
pleting several for substantial
gains.
For Simmons the punting and
tackling of Bounds, Estes' returns
of punts and broken field running
and the line plunging of Walker
featured.
West, Eagle end. made some of =
the prettiest tackles seen here thia
season.
The victory gave Simmons four
"MT I, A. A." wins without a loss.
The Cowboys moot Trinity, Beat
Texas and Howard Payne before the
season closes.
o.Irlah Favored
Notre Dame returns for its second
visit to the East with a game
against Penn State at State College.
The defeat suffered on the earlier
’ trip at the hands of the Army did
a lot of good to the green Notre
Dame youngsters, as they proved
when they came back and walloped
Minnesota.
Penn State isn’t up to the stand-
ard of pact years and Notre Dame
haa been coming along so well that
Knute Rockne’s kids ought to win.
[v . , nlini-va Maroon
well URBANA, III-. Nov. I.tPi—"Can
I ..Stare beat Grange?” was the ques-
tion for debate with the undefeated
a a Chicago Maroons upholding the af-
I anfirmative and Illinois, riding the
- high tide of its gridiron oareer. eup-
—-borting an emphatic negative
Watching the issue were 70,000
L . Persons who came in special trains.
I".. Airplane, afoot, by purring motor
and asthmatic flivver. Both teams
towers recruited to full fighting
strength. The probable lineup:
K TurNoI ■ Position CHICAGO
Lift End ‘
F.Marriner ........ Henderson (e)
Left Tackle. Ln
I en Cooledge *-******** * Hibben
Some ......%..... ****
"‘her.....nitana xobmenetd
(Ambrosio-**.... Teleley
1 prang, o : 21.....Drain
See —a. minask K""”,n
L^*. "Xih iaifsmekcrry Marte
whnaugherty ....... McCarty
8. Fullback
HOUSTON WRESTLER IN
DRAW WITH ED LEWIS
nousTON, Texas, Nov. 7. (—
F‛2 Paul Jones, 200-pound Houston
CA-orentler, and Ed “Strangler" Lewis,
], world’s heavyweight championship
claimant, wrestled one hour there
L. Friday night with neither man able
“is to obtain a fall. -
6S. Jones was declared winner ot the
match by referee Sam Avey, the
champion having agreed te throw
I the Houston man twice in one hour.
Jones was the aggressor from the
etart and only the tact that the
i champion, nearly 30 pounds heavier,
1 was able to crawl into the ropes,
saved him a tail on two occasions.
Even then he was unable to breek
Jones’ hook scissors, which was
causing him much pain.
Lewis secured hair a down head-
"locks on Jones during the match,
but was unable to hold any or them
A more than a tew seconds. When
" Jones broke the last ot these head-
redecks, just before time was up, he
at" hurled the champion clear of the
“Aropes into the audience.
INCLELLAN, cisox
INFIELDER, IS DEAD
she CYNTHIANA. Ky. Nov. 7. m—
. J. Harvey McClellan, 1L termer short.
’ "atop of the Chicago White Sox, died
" Tat a hospital hose Friday after an
tsiness of five months
McClellan started hie baseball cas
reer on the small boy nines ot Har-
(““son county and later performed
Jauwith I the Cynthiana team of the
Blue Grass League, and In the
Western League before joining the
White Sox. He was slated for the
we-gregular shortstop job this year, but
7." fliness prevented him from report-
yasingp but when the Chicago city
areperies was played, his teammates
"sent him his share of the gate re-
Two Big Games
- Feature Card
tn Southwest
Pace Setting Aggies Encounter
Frogs, With Longhorns Matched
Against Bears
DALLAS, Texas, Nov. 1. VD—Sat-
urday’s Southwestern Conference
schedule engages the conference
leader, Texas Aggies, with Texas
Christian University Horned Frogs,
Fort Worth, while Texas University
Longhorns, runnersup. play Baylor
Bears at Austin. Arkansas Razor-
backs, now in the cellar position,
but believed to be a possible dark
horse la the conference race for su-
premacy, will meet Southern - Meth-
odist University, also on a lower
rung of the scoring ladder.
The Rice Owls will be out of the
state and conference schedule, meet-
ing Louisiana State University at
Baton Rouge. The team. It strong,
arrived la the Louisiana city Friday.
The Aggies and Longhorns both
will play with mainstays missing
from their lineups. Three Texas
regulars are ineligible and Berry,
quarterback, will be out of the Ag-
gie lineup.
The Razorback-Mustang contest
at Dallas will be hard fought if In-
dications do not fall. Both teams
are determined to fight their way
out of the cellar environment and
their ability to do so is clearly
abown by the recent string of Ra-
zorback victories, climaxed by a
win over the strong Louisiana State
University team and the Mustangs'
brilliant game last week against
the Longhorns.
Although well in the lead with
two conference games tucked away,
Texas Aggies may receive a Bet-
back In the T. C. U. game, aa. they
enter the fray with several bruised
or otherwise slightly injured play-
ers.
The conference leaders will have
two games to play after Saturday's
contest, with Rice and Texas
«MIUL JR Dus
COUTH BEND, Ind. Nov. 7. ()-
James Powers, 1*, of Chicago le at
St. Joseph's hospital here with ” a
broken neck suffered In a football
scrimmage at Notre Dame, Powers,
a member of -the freshman team,
was injured when he tackled Per-
rilli, one of the star varsity backs.
HIGH-OLNEY
GAME IS POSTPONED
, van Junior Hieh School
*9
*.2*21o0E
Ause of the postponement.
, probably, wilt be plazed
BABE MUTH STARTS
T PLANS FOR WINTER
OF FLORIDA GOLF
• NEW Yonx, Nov. T. mn—Prep-
aratiens by Babe Ruth te spend
the winter months on the links
in Florida were explained Friday
as due to a conviction on the
part et the erstwhile home run
king that volt wur better condi-
tion him for regaining his lest
diamond laurels than any other
form of exercise.
The illness which overtook
Ruth fact spring aimest as soon
in ba reached the septhern eamp
of the New York Yankees, after
the big outfielder had pat in the
winter on his farm la Sedbury,
Ma , convinced, the Amer: om
leureer th the sheaid de his -
season conditioning la a warmer
elit Me. Ruth claims he in me
fonder of t»K than he is of
shooting big game, but he has
airady taken a hunting trip tote
th.) north and s expected shortly
to leave for the south to begin a
new battle against excess weight
nd weak "BA
Home Run Kings
Two drives for the circuit in ths
world series of 1*11 caused Frank
Baker of the Athletics to be
heralded aa the “home run king" of
the universe, the mosttalked-
about man of ths year.
Those two four-sackers were made
at the expense of the late Christy
Mathewson and Rube Marquard, fa-
mous southpaw. Both of them made
possible victory for the Aathletics.
In the 1925 series between Pitta-
burgh and Washington, played 15
years later, Goose Goslin Of the
Senators made three home runs, yet
hia super-swatting received little
more than passing attention.
The reason, Baker made his in the
days of the old bell, while Goslin's,
In a sense, were due to the lively
ball and the trick stands, hastily
constructed to make room for addi-
tional fans.
—It was almost a fares to allow a
home run on some of the drives that
went in on the fly but to permit the
batsman to make the circuit on a
ball that bounded into the atanda
took away much of the glory from
a real clout, such as Joe Harris
made in one of the games at Wash.
Ington.
Twelve home runs in a seven-
game world series tend to make a
joke out of-the-fall-elassion-An-ordie
nary fly ball can at any time spoil
a well pitched ball game by drop-
ping Inta the short stands for a
home run.
Excellent Idese
At least one good seems certain
to come out of the late lamented
series. Every one ie agreed that the
regular season should end sooner to
pave the way for an earlier series
start.
The terrible weather encountered
at Pittaburgh get a strong rise out
of all the scribes as well as the
“powers-that-be” In baseball.
The final game was played Under
conditions that would have been re-
garded aa poor for even, football and
that game can be played in most
any kind of weather.
— it-is probably—just—as well that
the game was staged, for every day
since has been about aa bad Th the
Pittsburgh section of the U. ■. A.
The teams might have been loafing
yet.
A world series to start not later
than October 1 is the battle cry of
fandom. The series should bs ended
before the feature football games
start. This year it overlapped into
many of them.
Another change should bs a 1:3*
start instead of 2 p. m. It looked
as It a couple of the 1925 games
might end in a tie. Had such been
the case it would have been diffi-
cult to play 10 innings, certainly not
over 11. >
Tie games are to be frowned upon
in the series. Every effort should
be made to determine a winner. An
extra 30 minutes means about two
more innings can be played in case
of a tie.
President Bob Quinn- of the Bos-
ton Red Sox is sponsor for the 1
above and just the fellow to but
over a mighty good thought.
Disputed Decisions
Sport decisions will always bs
disputed. 'There never will be a
baseball umpire, fight referee or
foothall official so capable that his
every ruling will meet with ap-
proval
I am inclined to think that the
perfect referee or umpire would
tend to take much of the kick out
of sporting events for certain peo-
ple. ______
There are a lot of folks who like
to wend their way homeward after
-secing their favorite beaten, feeling,
that It would havs been different
If the officiating had been anything
other than rotten.
In New York the fight game has
suffered much of late because of
decisions thet have failed to please.
This, despite the feet two judges
work with the referee In raching
an agreement. It-seems there 1
much mors kicking than in the old
days when the referee had all the
say.
Recently the New York Commis-
sion rendered a decision on a much
disputed point, that isinterestingr
also very fair. It relates to a boxer
being knocked out of the ring.
—AllNew York referees have been
instructed that hereafter when any
boxer fails, out it the ring for any
reason and le assisted back by any
rone—ie shall lose the decision----
Had such a ruling been in effect
when Dempsey fought Firpo, the
champion would have lost his title
to the South American. Several
scribes chaperoned Jack back into
the ring after Firpo had knocked
him out.4 ,
chsmn -****
Left to Rights Guard, Godwin;
halfback, Barron, an d Captain
Wrceft; lower inset: End, Merkel.
Here are four stars: or Georgia
Tech's great team. Moot prominent
is Captain Wyeoft, one of the boot
backs in the country. The Tech
team Saturday encounters its old
rival, Vanderbilt.
Illini Tangle
With Maroon in
Colorful Game
\ X -------
Red Grange Plays Last Game On
Gridiron That Started Him
Toward Fame
CHICAGO, Nov. 7. (n—Illinois, ths
team which wrecked Pennsylvania’s
dream of a national football cham-
Princeton Leads
Harvard in Past
Big Three Games
Tigers Have Won 15 Times
Against Nine Defeats la Clashes
- With Crimson
■ PRINCETON, N. 3., Nov. 7. in-
Harvard, crushed by three Prince-
ton football teams and held to ties
by two other* In the last six years,
faces what might well be termed a
crisis when again it encounters the
Tiger In Palmer Stadium Saturday,
the first game of the Eastern "Big-
Three" series of 1925.
Despite the fact that Harvard has
suffered heart-breaking reverses at
the hand, of Holy Cross and Dart-
mouth, while Princeton has been
compelled to bow to the prowess of
Colgate’s remarkable Eddie Tryon,
Palmer Stadium will be thronged
-for the contest, for It is a rivalry
that cannot be forgotten. Harvard
points for Princeton and Yale:
Princeton points for Harvard and
Yale.
TECH MATADORS PILE
UP SCORE OF 115-0
—
LUBBOCK, Texas Nov. 6—
Plunging, passing, circling the ends
and working fake plays occasional-
ly, the Texas Technological College
Matadors ran rough shod over the
Wayland Jack Rabbits of Plainview
when the final count ran up in
three figures with all the Tech
squad playing a part of the con-
test. The final score, 115 to 0, was
the count of 17 touchdowns and 13
field goals.
“ The visitors were played com-
pletely off their feet from the start
and never threatened the Matadors
except one time when the ball was
kieked over the goal from the kick
off and one of the Matadors ran
it out coming near to being tackled
for a safety but advancing to the
five-yard line before Veins stopped.
. COLLEGE GRID
RESULTS
Southwest Texas Teachers 18; St.
Edwards 6.
Simmons 10, North Texas Teachs
Clarendon College 0: Abilene
FISH HATCHERY TO BE
LOCATED NEAR TYLER
AUSTIN, Texas, Nov. 7. (--Loca-
tion of a fish, hatchery at Green-
brier, near Tyler, Texas, and ap-
point me nt of Joe Dixon of Caddo
Lake as supervisor, was announced
Friday by Turner 1. Hubby, oyster,
fish and wame commissioner. It le
the second hatchery to be located in
northeast Texas, and consists of 25
acres of land donated by citizens of
Tyler to the state of Texas
Crimson colors have arisen
against the Orange and Black 27
time*. In which it conquests have
gone to. Princeton, with only nine
for Harvard. Three games have
been deadlocked. The present score
in r system came into use in 1883
and since that time Princeton has
won 11, Harvard six and t wo have
been tied:
The complete record since 1883
follows:
1883—Princeton 26, Harvard I.
1884—Princeton 34, Harvard 6.
1385—No game
1886—Princeton 12, Harvard •.
:1887—Harvard 12, Princeton •.
1888—Princeton 18, Harvard 6.
1889—Princeton 11. Harvard It.
1890-1894—No games.
1895—Princeton-12, Harvard 4. . .
1896—Princeton 12, Harvard 0. ,
1897-1910—No games"*".
1*11—Princeton 3. Harvard 6. _.
1*11—Harvard ‘16, Princeton 6.
1913—Harvard 3, Princeton 0.
1914—Harvard 20, Princeton •.
Hit—Harvard 1*. Princeton 6.
1916—Hanvard 3, Princeton 0.
1917—No game.
1918—No game, is
1919—Princeton 1*. Harvard 10..
1920—Princeton 14, Harvard 14.
■ 1921—Princeton 1*. Harvard 1.
1922—Princeton 10, Harvard 3.
1923—1 Harvard S. Princeton 0.
” 1924—Princeton 34, Harvard *.
---------------------------------
DISTRICT CHAMPS w.
■ ROBSTOWN, Texas, Nov, T. (M)-
The Robstown High School football
team annexed the championship of
the sixteenth district, interscholas-
tie league, Friday afternoon by de-
featiog Velasco high, 49 to it. The
local team fought every minute of
play, mixing line bucka with end
runs, % 1
pionship, and Chicago, undefeated
in the western conference race, meet
in Champaign Saturday in the out-
standing contest of the middle west.
A record breaking crowd of 69,000
to 70,000 spectator* .will pack tha
$2,000,000 Illinois memorial studium
to payt tribute to "Red" Grange, who
playa his last conference game on
the gridiron which three year* ago
gave him his start to fame.
Illinois, beaten by Iowa and
Michigan- and also Nebraska, has
one of the most formidable teams in
the country, which it definitely
proved last Saturday when .it
swamped Pennsylvania, the team
which humbled the Maroons a week
previous.
In addition to the Maroon-Illinois
battle, the Western Conference has
three other games up for decision,
the results of which will figure in
determining the 1925 championship.
Michigan, undefeated and with its
goal uncrossed, comes to Chicago to
play Northwestern on Soldiers'
Field in Grant Park. Three con-
ference victories have eel the Wol-
verines on their way to the cham-
pionship and Northwestern will be
satisfied It- It is able to score against
Coach "Hurry Up" Yost’s powerful
warriors.
Town’s championshin.aspirations.
will receive a severe teat, mealing
Wisconsin nt Iowa City tomorrow.
The Hawkeyes are strong favorites
and hold a decided edge over the
Badgers, but the Wisconsin crew la
given an outside chance of pulling
an upset. S J-------------------
. Indiana travels to Columbus to
meet Ohio State in a game which
hae no bearing—on the .champion-
ship racs, but one which should pro.
vide victory for the Buckeyes with-
out serious opposition.
Purdue will play Franklin at- La-
fayette, while Minnesota will clash
with Butler at Minneapolis. The
Boilermakers and Gophers will en-
ter the games favorites.
---e—u_
Pennsylvania, after playing
Brown, Yale, Chicago and Illinois,
in a row, one of ths hardsst jobs
ever tackled by sny team, gets a
slight rest in a gams with Haver-
ford. Lou Young, however, may
keep his Penn regular# in th* game
to keep them on edge for the two
remaining games with Pittsburgh
and Cornell.
One of the most important games
in ths East—one with a bearing on
the final ranking, will be played At
Hanover between Dartmouth and
Cornell.: 1
The game will mean much to the
winner. Dartmouth, with one of the
finest teams of the year, is out for
the eastern championship and a vic-
tory over Cornell will be one more
impressive name on the list of vic-
time.
Illint vs. Maroon. A.
Cornell cannot hope to make any
claims’ on her schedule but will
mean something If Cornell-can say-
"We beat Dartmouth! What else
do you want?” •
Illinois and Chicago wlU have the
place of honor on the Western Con-
ference MIL Indiana plays Ohio
State. Michigan meets Northwestern
and Iowa opposes Wisconsin.
The two service academies, which
are pointing to their annual battle,
ought not have much trouble in two
comparatively easy games.
The Army, with one of the most
powerful teams in the East, engages
Davis-Elkins la an inter-sectional
battle at West Point and the Navy
entertains Western Maryland at
Annapolis.
In another inter-sectional game,
Syracuse meets Ohio Wesleyan, one
of the big teams of the Ohio confer-
ence. at Syracuse.
Pittsburgh and Washington and
Jefferson is an Important Pennsyl-
vania game. There is nothing vital
at stake, but there tea lot of tradi-
tional rivalry between the two col-
leges.
Tech vs. Vandy
eight men and the names have been
put on a tablet
' NEW YORK:Yale students have
voted decisively against compulsory ,
chapel in balloting conducted by the
college paper.
NEW YoRK.—Princens Asaka has
climbed Mount Woolworth. —
HONOLULU.—A white man and
25 natives, marooned for a year, are
in distress on Hull Island.
----—----Father's Son -
- “Late again, O'Malley,'* roarer the
boss. "How do you account for this
persistent tardiness?” •
""Tie inherited, sir,” answered
O’Malley. "He father was the late
Michael O‘Malley."—Good Hardware.
Stumped -
Employer: “What are Mr. Firp’s
Initials?
. Stenographer: “C. L F., Jr."
Employer: “Idon't want Junior’s
finitials—I want Senior’s."
Steno: "I don’t know hla."—Lite.
--------------------------
T. B. Hale is now in charge of the
C. IL Foley Filling Station, Tenth
and Indiana. Will appreciate your
patronage.—Adv.
fininirxiop-prenoniriiner
RAILROAD TIME TABLE J
=
N2Te2"n Far, st.
Louis. Kansas Cits,
Re 2
ton ................. Tue a, M
Ne. 11—"Tease Special” St.
Louis. Kansas City .. .
v. is-“4 votnis 2o2u * * =
% 402
BOC
2#
No. 31
Tele, getting ready for the
Princeton game next week, Mae a
breather with Maryland, but too
much cannot be made out of any
breathing games. It might be bet-
ter for Tale, perhaps, if a harder
game could have been arranged, as
the Yale squad ne.de plenty of work
in competition.
Alabama and Kentucky meet in
one of the important game, of the
South and Georgia Tech plays Van-
derblit in another interesting same,
while Georgia"and Auburn get to-
gether at Columbus.
In the Missouri Valley conference.
Kansas plays Oklahoma: Missouri
meet. Washington; and Nebraska
opposes Drake.
Stanford and Washington top the
Bur on the Pacific Coast. Callfor-
nia play. Washington State and
Southern California opposes Santa
Clara.
22=2=5
*.*---it"s *
intermediate poletss
***
=====
*"RE-# -
—AA-*,**, 10 • •
MET CE
ante "NEW-
Altus 1:00 E. SR
Flashes of Life
(By The Associated Press).
MONTCLAIR, N. J.—A fiery cross
hae bees burned in the yard of Wil-
liam E. Jackson, negro contractor
and former Columbia football play-
er. who le engaged to marry Miss
Helen Burns, white.
CHICAGO.—Andrew J. Volstead
has been induced to pose for a pic-
ture by reference to the portion cf
the Bible describing the appearance
of dry land after the invocation
“let there be light."
LONDON—It took the king and
SAL
HIGH SCHOOL
s RESULTS '
the queen an hour to view the gifts
which the Prince of Wales has
brought back from South Africa
and South America. 7
Slaton 4; post 12.
Texarkana, Tex., 31; Atlanta,
Tex. O."
Hope, Ark., 0: Texarkana, Ark.,
Forest (Dallas) *; Oak Cliff (Dal.
las) 0. .
Memphis 13:Nami •.
Galveston 7: Port Arthur 7.
Humble 20: Texas City 0.
Waco-Temple game postpined, in-
cement wewner. Scheduled for next
BOBCATS PROVE GOOD
. MUDDERS TO WIN GAME
SAN MARCOS, Texas, Nov. 7. (P)-
A muddy A gridiron, that football
equalizer, proved to be just made
for Lyons McCall, sturdy fullback
of the San Marcos Bobcats, here
Friday, McCall leading his eleven
to an 18 to 6 victory over the St.
“wards Saints. It was the flrat
T. U A. A. victory out of four atarta
for Coach Oscar Strahan’s mud-
horses.
Both teams fumbled many times
during the heetie melee, but three
such fumbles, always a bugaboo to
pigskin handler, of a muddy grid-
iron, w are directly the cause of del
feat for Jack Mearher’s
CHICAGO. — Rudy Valentino
want* children. So unless the Mrs.
gives up her Pekinese dogs and
settles down she had better get a
divorc., ha says,
LONDON.—The girls are now ear--
rying dolls dressed like themselves.
NEW YORK.—Sheridon Russen,
an English cellist, spent just one
night In the U. S. A. He arrived
on a boat yesterday, gave a per-
formance, then started for a return
steamer.
LONDON.—King George d. a poll-
atelist. He has hastened to buy a
new eight-cent stamp for $20. The
stamp is in demand because of
faults. 17
NEW YORK.—Dancing the
Charleeton at a wedding has cost
the landlord $200. The plaster fell
and injured a tenant on the -floor
below. ”
LONDON.—How the government
can provide alcoholic content bever-
age and at the same time prevent
its undue use la giving the govern,
meat great concern, Home Secre-
tary Joynson Hick, has Informed
the ladies of the Cartion Club.
squad
NEW YORK.—Skilled workman-
ship of overallied building trades is
being recognized. For the best
Saint craftsmanship in making a ware-
house awards have been given to
d.a RW. - D. 0. ar.
Me. ^Ooeven Amarillo. _
==*
I: snumenthie test
wo.cvenn - ***
intermediate pointe...10:0 p. m.
A"I"Y*h worn. Dales —
L anganl intermediate uL
No. 1—bieve, ana intern: * **
me 7 WOO and wi 20 L E
intermediate points .. $.00 a. m.
No. 1—Amarillo, Denver .... 8:05 p m.
No. 3—Dallas, Fort Worth
and all Intermediate
... Prieto ..............1:0 p. m.
. WICHITA VALLEY
Arrivals from-
No. 8-Abilene and interme
"1^ «_¥?f^ ®*^*3a' •—•—- 1N3 R m
No. ——-Abilene and interme-
diate points ........ 1:8 a. m.
N^OTJTeea tumms
, Male points ...7.5.1200a. **.
No. 1—-Abilene and interme-
MAuF-AW * %
Arrivals from-e --------
No. *— Waurika, Byers. Pe-
- .___trolls and Dean ..... 6:00 p. a.
R2W"D5 Ferens me.
and Weurike ....... 9200 % *
AMITALBLn a ROUTHE
% “-omertee to
persrele sane ........."* A •
Vo. —Olsen Granam
*
AMERICAN HOTEL
Comfortable close in rooms for
the winter. Hot and cold water
in every room. Special rates by
The week. Tenth and Indiana.
Over Miller-Ferguson Co.
CHAS. D. HUGHES
—5444—Phone—=5444
Practical Plumbing and
Heating Contractor
. 15% Discounts
On All Sittings
Until November 15th
Inclusive .
1010 Tenth . Phone 6970
OUT
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Wichita Daily Times (Wichita Falls, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 178, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 7, 1925, newspaper, November 7, 1925; Wichita Falls, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1651458/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.