Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 3, 1920, Page 5

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3 1 b edliend SS A AE Pete Hertnals Willing to leet Him in | — By EDDIE GAHAN. Offered $20,000' to meet Jimmy ; vilde, the British flyweight ¢hampion, | Mt rz decision bout in London, Pete | Herman, a world, declares he will accept provid- i n American referee will be the | official for the @ecasion. Herman is | willing to coneede any other terms, and will make 118 pounds ringside )2/ o'clock the afternooh of the proposed } pout, but a Yank must be the third / man in the arena, * Herman propably-is right in his at- titude. We don’t Want to be knockers in this instanee and therefore will not refer to some which have oc-| cured in English fight’ rings where | Americans have been inyolyed. How- ever, we don’t blame Herman a wee | bit for the stand he has’ taken in the matter. When Wilde first came to America, | he stood on the housetops yelling for | 1 bout in this country with Herman, but when the tion the bout be staged in Wilde's nativé land was first made, he quickly discontinued his demands for a bout oyer here, and has | gone so far since then to refuse to’ meet Herman in America. According | to Tommy Walsh,, Wilde can't he! coaxed into the same ring with Pal Moore in this country, but is willing. to; eyes ee Pl en al ST PUY Sa Se — ————— = ; Cue Casper Daily Cribune NEWS OF THE SPORT WORLD U3, TO CLEANUP” IN OLYMPICS, OATS GOAGH ROBERTSON, OLD STAR | Pennsylvanian Who May Train American Teami for} Local Boxer Antwerp Believes Yankee Athletes Will Take Mest Events in International Classic By LAWSON ROBERTSON ‘ Former Olympic Trainer and Ceach of University of Pgnnsylvania (Written for the United Press.—(Copyrighted, 1920, by United Press.) Altho the date of the Olympic games to be held in Antwerp is still; six months off, athletes in every branch of amateur ics in this) champion bantamweight of Country are preparing themselves with a view of “making” the team.| , { | The United States should have no difficulty in winning the ma-| iority of the individual events. There is to be no Olympic team cham-| pionship on account of the war, the Olympic council has announced. | The war Has _¥o depleted the athletic) —-with\ a new ‘crop’ of -aprintérs, that} strength) and athletic training fagilities) are in uo way inferior to the Stock:| of Europe that we may look forward} holm finalists, we look forward to such| to a rather easy time of it. The Scan: men as Scholz of Missouri, Haymond| dinavians; who remained intdct during ior ‘Utah, Piiddock of California, Hayes | the. war should, however, be counted} or Notre Dame and Williams of Bpo-| on to make a formidable showing. j kane to outdash any Buropean prod-| Britain and her colonies, ordinarily uct. Qur middle distance prospects are | biggest athletic rivals, will most lik Eby and Maxam of Pennsylvania, Dris-| ly have to be contented with’ third hon-| soll of Boston, Shea of Pittsburgh. May. | ors to the Swedes, who at least have]; of Cornell, Curtiss and Speer of} an organized system. | Chicago, Baker and O'Hrien of New! During the lapse between the Stock-! York are considered. holm Olympiad and the coming games,| In the 1500-meter run our prospective | but very f:w of the 1912 winners will] fepresentatives altho not by any means? be a-aliable for either this or the oth-|as collectively strong as in 1912, ap=! er , countries. bear to be centered around Joie Ray! of Chicago and aided by several sec-' jond stringers’ in Devanney of New| | York, MeCosh and Stout of Chicago,} hammer thre; Kelly, the high hurdle; C'"wford or | Lafayette, O'Connell of winner, and Tichards, who took the| Harvard, Windnagle of Washington and | honors in the running high jump. The| Connolly of Georgetown. | available veteran champions of other _ The long distinco running races at} nations are Taipale of Finland, winner 5-999 and 10,000 meters and”cross .coun- | Amongst the most fcans of these are McDonald, first in the shot Dyk PeGmath: winner .of the prominent Amer- TALBERT LOSES DEN. | WOMAN “TOOK NAP” SEVEN Desemasilending to olf business of R. L. Skelton of Therma (ID ROSS Takes Punch at Ref-| eree as End to Fiasco in Lusk Ring LUSK, Wyo., March 3.— Falbert Was defeated by the reféree's decision here last night when he sprung on the sai referee while he was trying to sep- Arate the two boxers. Kid Ross was given the decision when the referee Il called the fight as a result of the blow | inflicted by ‘Talbert: The audience made such pwl that Ross returned to the ring with his man- ager and offered to finish the fight. Talbert, it is calimed, refused to re enter the ring. All bets were called off by the referee. Ross, following the warding of the decision, made a speech to the gath €d throng in which he boasted of his ability to beat Talbert. The first round of the Talbert-Ross well taken care of by Johnson of Mich igan and Butler of Dubuat as for this first | place contenders, altho this is a rather | uncertain event and upsets are fre: | affair was a pretty exhibition of skill blox with few blows being struck. ,A hard right to Talbert’s jaw had sent} between started while Talbert was falling. The first real mix-up in the secona | Talbert to his knees, again brot to attention the fact that} Ross may have struck a foul blow as he did in the opinion of many fans at Casper last week. To some spectators here it looked as tho Ross sent a left hook to Talbert’s jaw while Talbert was on his “knees but other claim the Talbert rolled over on his side and took the count of nine,- getting to his feet only to be rushed by Ross. The gone ended the round with Talbert on his feet but groggy. Kid Ross rusbed to Talbert’s corner to star the third, the two mixing When Renewed Fi of Simple Nuxated Iron Run-down People in Two and women | broken in health and stea downward to ph; sical and” menta} ® decay while others at 50 are stron, active, alert and seemingly growing younger every year. One class withers and dies ! quent. Second string jumpers Gountry are problematical. ‘The standing jumps-will miss the serv: | ices of the Adams brothers who scored heavily at Stockholm but William Tay- lor of Ohio, ‘the winner in the int allied games, should: fill the vacancy. Pole vaulting is almost strict American event and our inter-colleg winners of this year together with Foss, the new record holder, ought to bring our colors to the top of the Antwerp stadium. Then comes the weight throwers. Here is where we may run against it. In the hammer throw and 56-pound box the Memphis Freak in England. jot both disefs events; Niklander of the; ‘TY may have as competitors, Faller! Weight our chances are ‘rosy with such Wilde evidently dikes British decisions better than real Yankee Doodle ones. a x FRANK CHANCE NOT ~- COMING DAC INTO GAME. Rumors that Frank Chance, once | the Peerless Leader of the famous ‘old Chicago Cubs, was planning to get back into baseball as a club owner, are set aside by I. E. Sanborn, of The Chicago ‘Tribune, who. is’ visiting | Chance at the latter's nome in Glendora, | just out of Los Angeles, Cal, Twenty-one acres’ of fertile soil, with | oranges growing everywhere, have con-| vinced Chance that his baseball days are over. He admits that he made more in 1919 from his grove than he ever did in one season while in base- ball, Altho dt was a bad year for orange growers out on the coast, | Chance managed to eke ont a tidy sum of 312,000, more than enough to keep a guy in eigarettes for a week. Memories of the famous ‘old Chicago machine, made famous by the great Tinker-tovers-to-Chance combination, remain with "the veteran pilot and he is in no manner bashful about littering up his home with mementoes of the goo =old days. His vast grove is: known as “The Cub Ranch,’’ named} after that onee-powerful buseball ma- chine. DOBIE WILL GET CHANCE TO SHOW HIS ABILITY. The release of Gilmour Dobie from his position as football coach at) the United States Naval Academy hardly mes as ® surprise. “Dobie has been discontented for some time and it was altogether likely that he would haye quit the, naval © squad even’tho he handn’t landed the Job as mantor at Cornell, 5 Dobie was never satisfied with the manner athletics are conducted at the ul academy. He contended once c in Philadelphia that too many strings were attached to the sport sit- whi uation at the Annapolis instituion and} that a coach eouldn’t ~ get all he wanted too out of the material on hand. ' Now Dobie will get the chance to prove his ability, Several stars on the team wanted a Cornell man for the. job, Dut they were voted down. Dobie mes from Minnesota. If be cun over- come the feeling among the men and sive Cornell a winning eleven, he will sel the “miracle man" title after his name. ‘olwell, deposed ‘coach at the ity of Pennsylvania, bas been suggested as Dobie's sucerssér at Annapolis. If Bob is given the job he should be given a free hand and he Will produce the goods. GOLF DUE FOR. A GREAT LOOM THIS YEAR. In every nook and cranny of the country where it is possible to lay out a course, golf will be*played this ‘pring and summer. ‘Those who have followed the anciént Scottish pastime tor yeurs declare that the game is to y its” most. sutecessful year in ‘America, “Numérous foreign invasions; have been -planiéd and these interna- ‘onal events 4yill do much to stimulate Diterest in the ‘sport. Y $ Vrom St. Louis and Ghicugo comes Teports of additional municipal links. ‘The same is true of Los Angeles and San Braneiseo. “The Atlantic “coast ciles are Pepping up for a great sear on, big improvements having _bebn Planned on" inks in New York, vorthern New Jersey, Philadelphis, Bos} ton aun timore. New Mnks Wil also | 4 coated 4 ot thw a rom New Acer cy ive ¢ pended its and seo New oneis to. ’ sibly Goulding, the Canadian, who won 4! five-mile champion, and Simmons of| the 10,000-meter walk. jeerecune: Judging from the results of last year's! | Tt : by { ghampionghip) contests in foreign coun-{®8 &00d as our previous entrants in trie: } recent performances, the United States! D&Ds two or three additional men may should score first and second piaces in} 2 @eveloped before the final try-outs | about exactly the same ¢yents in whieh |4re held. | we. We successful in: 1912 | Our usual od crop of hurdlers | pa a Rt aataa ed ele —| should manage to show the way to most! of the - In Johnson of Michi- nant, but if an award was made at! gan, . Of Missouri, Lgrron of this time for’the team with the most \ppiladelphia, Smith and Watt. of’ Cor- giants on its pitchifig* staff, the ye), of Princéton and Kelly elongated Mr. McGillicuddy would be in running. Of the thir of New {choose fron. The running high jamp should have} a fine field to hurlers taken to southern training fields, Mack is carry-/ the following men trying for .a plac ing seven men over six feet in their! os the team: Richards of Utab, Whalen holeproofs. The biggest; bird. in the of toston, Mur vf Notre Tame, outfit is a: 22-yeur-ola kid name Har- pandon of Vile, ckson ‘ot r ris, who hus spread upward to the and Larsen Of Vial: Al ef the above: extend of Six feet And some Six inches: have cleared the har at Six fect- three! Bob. Hasty is three inches oyer the; inches or bette performance | six-foot mark, while) Naylor, Gibson, | would almost c eed that of} Rommell and Kinney at six feet, two/any from abroad, as far as up to date | inches, Scott Perry. is an even half) records show. dozen feet. The midget of the squad,} The running broad jump should be Keefe is five feet, ten inches, which is considerable size. t Another . noticeable’ feature about Mack’s hurling squad ‘is the age of the pitchers. With the exception of Naylor and Perry, both of whom have celebrated 27 birthdays, not a pitcher has reached his 24th birthday. Out of this array of baby elephants, how- ever, the lean Tiogan expects to mould right sm ‘ing squi es DENVER MEDICAL INSTITUTE eos Opposite Entrance te New Postoffice . , COME AND BE CURED fected = wi! either acute entonis aigsane, table. oF complica qu can come to us knowing t we fave treated and pured SRas\Agler case exer tur disense 18 yet curable, WE a id yo! may be sure thay ‘wilt be na General D: Weak Nerves, In- Its of exposure, overwork | + evioin of Nature's AT YOUR SERVICE Phone 18 COME IN AND (ALE IT OVER FREE—Consultation, Examination—FREE Charges so low as to be within the reach of evan the poorest, anf payments arransed, to Sut 70H, COMEMICRSS ginaava 10 oan DenverMedical Institutes The ‘Palace Ice Cream Parlor 146 South Center ICECREAM SOFT DRINKS FRUITS PASTRY We Also Handle Cut Flowers S Y formances as McGrath, the present | same country, runner up in both dis-/0f Dorchester, Mass., American 10-mile, Per’ ¢ rae naianee Duk potty ‘also a yin (champion; Dresser, ex-Cornell former! Champion, and Ryan, the record hold- \who won the javelin throw, and pos-|itercollegiate champion; Pores, nation-| er. Also we have the veteran McDon- ald in the shot put, but it seems that Finland has gome excellent performers | It is doubtful if the above are quite jn. Niklander, who was third in Stock- | holm ,and Tajpale. Both of thes men as compared with our own mpst|Ol¥mpic long distance contests, but per-| have improved and McDonald will have | to be in his 1912 form to be returned a SUnrurmamncanensenes ee SE SS like ‘leaves in au tumn while the other by keeping } up a strong power of resistance | against disease may Pass the three scor, and ten mark wil surprising health, strength and yigor, But you cannot expect to look and | feel young and vigorous unless you women, “Many a man and woman Sime vim and energy that Notiresbx Brodie Rubber Co. GOODYEAR TIRES AND TUBES 119 East First Street Phone 1203 _ How Signs Of Old IRON IS THE RED BLOOD That Ss the Ni R at Fes ster ages ag haye plenty or iron in your blood, 7 and physicians explain below why they prescribe organic iron—Nux- ated Iron—to supply the iron de- | ficiency in the weak, nervous, and tun-down so as to build them up into stronger, healthier men and by feeding them on metallic iron. who ought Hill to be young in feeling is losirig the old makes life worth Age Cr ‘Over With Vim FOO W: Body. ns into thousands of men joying the springtime and have allowed worry, over- d into y simply because their blood eving for want of iron,” says poh Francis Sulliva nfo mre! sician of Bellevue Lor (Wutdoor Dept). New and the Westchester County Hospital.” “Thousands are ageing | and breaking dowh at a time when they should enjoyi fect ‘ause anaemia clack of “roa. dm the blood cha, fastened étip on ‘them and ¢ sanping, their strength, vitality and energy. But in my opinion you can't make strong, keen, force ful men and healthy rosy-cheeked women ne e old forms of metallic iron must go through & digestive process to transform them into organic iron—Nuxated Iron—before they are ready to be taken tp and assimilated by. the Gunman sy swongly advise The Smaller Cars—and the World’s Most Popular Tires All that this company’s experience and methods have accomplished in these tires is available to you now at the nearest Goodyear Service Station. Go to this Service Station Dealer for these ; tires and for Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes, He has them. : Goodye: Cc Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes are thick, strong tubes that Peon? Rie tee $2008 reinforce casings ly, Why risk nh casing witha cheap tube? dyear He urist Tu 30x3%% Goodyear Single-Cure than tubes of fess it. 30x3%, size Fab Agee Tres $1788 Fee pag oF ie met p Into Your System The Iron In Your Blood Runs Low "ly ae Be ay te ed Mh RD fans Kapiain Why ‘Admistegots c ’ cians y ministration ten Increases the Strength and Endurance ecks’ Time. Old age has already sunk its talons in: Ho ought still to be en. summer of life simply because they work, nervous strain, dissipation and occupational Poisons to sap the iron from their blood and thereby | destroy its power to change! foo living tissue, muscle and braia. You will find plenty of people’ at 40 who are dily, going ing the Goodyearname, not even the famous Goodyear Cords which equip the world’s highest-priced cars, embody a higher relative value than do Goodyear Tires in the 30x3-, 30x31%-, and 31x4-inch sizes. In these tires owners of Ford, Chevrolet, Dort, Maxwell, and other cars taking these sizes, are aftorded a measure of performance and seryice such as only the world’s largest tire factory devoted to these sizes can supply. | Palbert’s corner. The them facing Talbert. at this point that Talbert went wrong and swung on the referee, the~ bisw landing on his nose. referee stepped It was NOTICE, ATTENTION MOOSE Election of officers and lodge phy- Sician, Thursday, March 4. J. N. KRAUSS, Secy. py Giving of Delicate, YOU ARB AGEING you are wearied by the activities of your daily life if you don’t want to go to this trouble then ~ purchase : Nuxated Tron “in ita original packages and see that. this pa: sticular name (Nuxated Iron) appears. o: the package. If you have taken preps tions such as Nux and Iron and other Similar, iron products and failed to get re- sults, temember that 2h products bet different thing from Nuxated ron, x Dr. George H. 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