Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 21, 1921, Page 4

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Pr e3 SM | OOOO OOC SOOT OOOO OOO OOee Te 2d) oem | DOYLE SIGNED FOR 6 ROUNDS Will Meet Ogden Lad in Semi-/ Windup Monday; Kid Ross Is Also Matched Preliminaries ti match next Mond: smashing bou' ing present and 7 s of fans. Charlie] n fast showing class as a| headliner on boxing cards, has been signed for six rounds with Red Hol- land of Ogden, Uwh, and Kid Ross, ght will see two the “Batt ‘op” of Lusk, hag re- turned to per to measure gloves to Andy §' t of Omaha in a four- round ir. Doyle is said to be matched with as good or better than he is and a lively bout is as- sured Kid Ross will bring several months’ experience in the east into play in punches with the Oma ned here from s and short pug.” Ross meal tic! cording to the story af his ring affairs of recent months. He admits having been matched against some that were tougher than himsel: in all the be r tr Umit ri MEMO Pkt SHERIDAN COUNTY MAY BOND FOR HIGHWAYS UNDER NEW STATE LAW SHERIDAN, WW: March 21.— Sheridan county may be the first to take advantage of an act of the recent legislature permitting counties to bond to obtain funds for highway construe- tion. The county commissioners have under consideration submission of a Proposal to issue $556,000 of county highway bonds, this proposal to be passed on by the voters of the county at the special election May 10, when & proposal to issue $1,800,000 of state highway bonds will be submitted. Un- der the federal aid provision of $4 of federal money for each dollar of coun- ty money expended on roads construc- tion, Sheridan county, should the county highway bond issue be author- ized, would be ablo to finance road im- provements costing $2,880,000, the county contributing $556,000 of this amount and the federal government $2,224,000. sage AS Wedding Principals Step Over Line To Avoid Loose Knot BORDER, Wyo., March 21.—“Just step over into Wyoming and we will Proceed with the festivities,” said Justice of tne Peace Henry J. Som- sen, when all was ready at the home of George Kibby for the marriage of his daughter, Miss Cleo, to George there- three Tyler. The wedding party upon proceeded to a point rods east of the Kibby re: and there the nuptial ceremo performed by the Wyoming justice under the Wyoming s ‘The open- air wedding was necessary because the Kibby house is in Idaho, the state line bisecting the lawn in front of the residence, and in the house the Wyoming marriage license se- cured for the occasion would have been without effect, and the Wyo- ming justice would have been devoid of authorit After the ceremony the w pa stepped back into Id PAYMENT ig GRIING FEES 19. POSTPONED DENVER, Ma —Septemiber 1 fs set asthe lat te for the ment of fees for ns on the N fonal Forests, 1 tion just given | out by the Dis ‘orester at Den ver, Colorado, nat this post poneme le by ‘an amendme gricultural Bill recent! h 1 is the usual date for payment of most of the fees This six months extension will afford the stoc considerable relief un: der the t economic condition The amendment was passed at the general request of stock interests throughout the t. PADEREWSKI IN CHICAGO. CHICAGO, March 21.—Ignace Pade rewski, former premier of Poland, ar- rived here today on the way to the Pacific coast. He refused to sce re. porters, retiring immediately to his room, d he probably would ts- sue a ement on the Upper Silesia plebisc e toni WE’RE ALL GOING TO “THE DEVIL” TOMORROW EXPERT LAWN BUILDING P. A. Racine Phone 257 hard kicks and} {Last Year’s Champs of Interscholastic * Laramie in Last Day’s Play M ee Clean Sweep Tournament at Worland won the state basketball title in interscholastic play at Laramie for the second time Saturday, when it elimi- vated all other contestants in the tournament staged under the auspices of the University of Wyoming at Laramie. The upstate cagers, it is understood, the Taylor-Miyake| without meeting defeat a single time, whereas two defeats were required for elimination. town cagers play. | The championship rested between | Worland, Laramie and Rock Springs |when the finals were reached Satur | series of three games, the first of/t | which was won by Worland Rock Springs by a score of 10 to 14 Iaramie then put Rock Springs ou of the running by a defeat of 18 to 9} and wonthe pennant over Laramie, The tournament day and the title was played off in a|ports brought back to Casper, was| Yorkers don't fall for one six-day race in a game which made (he university ule. went through the tournament *he da. smites in fi In the third game, however, Worland nosed out a 16 to 14 victory according to re- he most successful ever staged in from| Wyoming, and marked by the keen- est interest, ing been increased over last year. the list of entries hay- No aterrard incidents marred the sched- NEW arch 19.—Plans for the most ambitious rowing season ever | undertaken by eastern college vrews| have been virtually completed and the} next three months will witness an un- precedented number of such contests. | The ¢etails for the dual and triangu-| lar regattas so far as dates and dis-| tances are concerned, have been well) worked out, but the Intercollegiate} Regatta, scheduled for Poughkeepsie, | is still subject to possible changes. The season will open with a race! between the Universities of California) and Washington on the Oakland Estu ary on April 9, and while this con- test is far outside the domain of east- ern collegiate rowing, the result will be watched with interest. It is gener-| ally understood that the winning ‘var- sity eight will journey east to com- pete and the advent of Pacific Coast} crews in eastern waters always adds} a touch of the picturesque, giving| intersectional flavor and snap to the Hudson River regatta. In the past, Washington, Califor- nia and Stanford have met annually | at Oakland in coast championship. This year Stan- ford dropped crew work on account of the heavy expense. Rowing is not among the recognized sports at the other western colleges. nia shells this year will have about half their seats filled by veterans. Washington reports tha return to school of four of last year’s eight, Captain Charles Logg, No. 7; Clarence Magnusson, bow, Russel Nagler, cox- swain and Louis Nederlee, No. 2. At ifornia, four, men, including! Cap- ain John Rogers, will be available, that the winner of the Pacific coast championship race will stop off at Madison, enroute east, for a short dis- tance race against Wisconsin. Should California be the far coast representa- tive, a dual race with Princeton, pre- yious to the Hudson regatta, is also tentatively scheduled. { Both Cornell university and the| intercollegiate Rowing association | have extended invitations to the win-| ner of the Oxford and Cambridge re-| gatta, to be held on the Thames, Eng-} land, on March 30, for either eight REGATTA SEASON TO BE RECORD-BREAKER, PLANS FOR EVENTS COMPLETED Columbia are certain Poughkeepsie for the ziercollegiate championship course, and Wisconsin are being tentatively counted There is also a chance that tne Navy} may enter ‘varsity, which is likely to become a certainty should one of the English crews, decidie to row on the Iudson. giate Regatta, Cornell, Columbia, Syracuse. Tace between Cornell and one of the English eights would bean extremely interesting staged at Ithaca. of the English ‘varsity regatta be per- suaded to compete at Poughkeepsie, the Hudson River races on world-wide importance. international —_ contest, Could the winner would’ take Cornell, Pennsylvania, Syracuse and to compete at over the three-mile A Pacific Coast college crew upon as additional entries its world championsaip An intercollegiate regatta with such a far flung entry list would be a fitting climax to the coming season with its schedule of more than a dozen dual and triangular regattas ending with the Harvard-Yale classic at New London late ‘in June. events as arranged at present, fol- a race for the Pacific} lows: The list of April 9, Oakland, Calif.—California vs. Stanford. April 16, Derby, Conn.—Yale vs. Penn. April 30, Derby, Conn.—Yale vs Co- Both the Washington and Califor-|jumbia. April 30, Annapolis, Md—Navy vs, Penn, May 14, New York—Columbia, Penn. and Princeton (Childs cup). May 14, Derby, Conn—Vale va. Mass. Tech (Yale junior crew). May 21, Annapolis, Md.—Navy vs. Syracuse. May 21, Ithaca—Cornell, Yale and it is thought. Prtaceton. In the middle west ‘Wisconsin has! May 28, Philadelphia—American rsumed rowing after a six-year lapse| Henley. in inter-'varsity sport and should the! May 28, Boston—Harvard vs. Cor- material warrant, may enter an eight! nell, at Poughkeepsie, It is not unlikely] June 4, Princeton—Princeton ys. California crew (tentative). June 22, Poughkeepste—Intercolle- Pennsylvania, June 24, New London—Yale-Har- vard regatta. sensi WATER PROJECT APPROVED WASHINGTON, March 19.—Secre- tary Fall today approved the Orchard Mesa irrigation project in Colorndo to irrigate ten thousand acres mostly in fruit trees, as a unit of the $5,000,000 to cross the Atlantic and row here. Al Grand valley project. j i SIX-DAY RAGE FAD SPREADING Scandal Riieodl tao in Sport Circles Over Increase in Popu- larity By HENRY FARRELL NEW YORK, March 21.—They used to say uncomplimentary things about New York because the big town fell for a six-day bike race. Things have changed though. New now—they fall for four of ‘em, Three of the long grinds have al- ready been staged this winter and a fourth is in the making, As it is a puzzle to the popwlation of those “slow districts” outside of the “world's greatest city,” so it is to a great many foreigners who wonder (What there is in the American to jmake such a sport popular. Victor Breyer, prominent French ‘sport authority, writing in “Sporting Life" (London) recently commented on. this pecullarity and also gave some interesting “inside stuff” about a six- ead race in Brussels, which apparent- was not a six-day affair. “Ever since the Americans origin- ated the six-day craze," he writes “with their famous Madison Square cyole race, the success of these events *|not only across the ‘herring pond,’ but in most Buropean countries has been @ source of wonder to the average sporting mind. As one who has wit- nessed many of these so-called com- petitions, I am utterly unable to un- derstand why crowds flock to attend them whether in New York, Paris, Brussels or Berlin. “Be that as it may, six-day races |had so far been free of that sort of complaints which marked the event just concluded a week ago in Brus- sels and which are nothing short of scandalous. “Every morning at about seven the hall was cleared of spectators in or- “| der to have the building cleaned. Orly a few privileged persons were allowed to remain, outside of the competitors, “It turn out that when the crowd had gone, the riders followed suit. The race was stopped each morning for a period varying between one bour and two hours, during which the contest- ants did as they pleased. Sore left the buflding to go into town and make visits, “In the meantime Paris is in turn ‘threatened’ with a six-day affair which is advertised to take place at the winter cycle track the last week of March. It remains to be seen whether the disclosurcs reported in connection with the Brussels event will affect the tremendous gate which all precedents lead the Parisian pro- moters to expect.” oo Poker Winner Is - Loser When . Big Check Comes Back EVANSTON, Wyo,,. March 21.— here with an abundance of pep but % deficiency of details in regard to a reported session at poker at the conclusion of which “a well knewn perfectly zood at the time it was payment on the check, thereby (eediorniog the poker table gd into in’ pa acess —— ALSO —— LAST TIMES TODAY SESSUE HAYAKAWA “THE FIRST BORN” ‘Acclaimed by those who saw it yesterday to be one of the finest pictures ever made by this gifted Japanese actor It takes us to the banks of the Hoang-Ho in far away China. Then to San Francisco’s Chinatown. A story that strikes hard at the human heart. “DINING ROOM, KITCHEN AND SINK” A Two-Part Comedy with FAY TINCHER AND EDDY BARRY CURRENT EVENTS TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY GEORGE ARLISS In the Screen Version of His Great Stage Success “THE DEVIL” ADMISSION 40¢ AT THE GIANTS TRAINING CAMP San Antonio. Some of the bes: handball players of the country are among the 38 con- testants for the A. A. U. titie, play for which begac at the Detroit Ath- letie club today. Carl Tremaine of Cleveland and Young Montreal uf Providence, R. 5, meet tonight at Tcledo in a 12-round no-decis'on boxing Bout, ‘Thvy are to weigh 112 pounds at 3 o'clock. ok sues peri Louisiana, returned ' today ie team won all five of its exhibition games on a week’s tour through) P’ Shreveport training camp. Alfred Goullet, six-day bicycle rider who conducted “outlaw” races at New Yerk and Chicago, hes been placed in good standing by the Cycle Racing as- sociation, it was announced today. Edouard ‘Hoormans,:.the Belgian billiard champion, arrived in New York today from the west to begin his 4,800-point 18.2 balkline match with Jake Schaefer, who defeated him in. their last meeting. The Scottish professional soccer team will play four games in the United States during its forthcoming tour, it. was announced today. The dates of the team’s American ap, ances are July 6, 19, 13 and 12) ponents were not named. ues Rocky Kansas of Buffalo and Willie Prestcd of New York, aspirants for Op- Burkett, Manager John J. McGraw, and Hughey Jennings, assistant to McGraw, looking over the squgd of Giant regulars and rookies at the training camp at A Beautiful O. Henry mee exe A, Read LYRIC CONTINUOUS 1 TO 11 O'CLOCK TODAY “The Garter A Beautiful Romance of Stage Life NEXT A Classy Western Feature “The Timber Wolves” PATHE NEWS: ——FoMoRow MAY ALLISON In the Best Picture of : Her Career “EXTRAVAGANCE” Coming “HALF A CHANGE’ a — Left to right, Coach Jess the world's lightwelght boxing title, will meet in Madison Square Garden, New York, tonight in a 15-round bout. The winner of the match will chal- Ienge Benny Leonard to a bout for the championship. The Pennsylvania State college won the intercollegiate wrestling champion- ships held at Princeton Saturday with 24 points. Cornell finished second with 13 points, and Princeton third with 11 points. The others finished as follows: pa eid 10;, Lehigh and “University of ennsylvania, 5; Columbia, 4, Dr. Emanuel Lasker and Jove R. Capablanca will rest tonight prepara- ‘tory to resuming tomorrow night the third game of their world champion- ship chess tournament at Havana, which | wy pciourned at the PRICES.—Nights, Lower Floor... . their belief that erent game result in a draw as did the first {wo Games of the tournament, NEGRO CONVICTED OF Lago ante March 21,— Wil- MAN HELD FOR SALE OF VALUABLES HE FOUND DOUGLAS, Wyo., March 21.—Appli- cation of the law of quasi-contract in t {ts bearing upon. duties of a finder as a voluntary bailee will be involved in the prosecution of George Matthews, | who was arrested on a charge of lar- ceny as baflee. It is alleged that Matthews found several hundred wo! ercising over them and the proceeds from th)\'~ sale the dominion of owner- ship. WAGE CUT DISCUSSED | CHICAGO, March 21.—The Illinois Central railroad will confere with rep- resontatives of its unskilled employes: here March 28 and 29 over a proposal that wages be reduced approximately | = per cent, it was announced today, eoeeooeccoocecorevocooesocs: = MEARE MURDER T0 GET LIFE — ‘Ayay From Home in pee Md., March 21.—One of the first acts of Secretary of the Navy Denby in connection with the academy was to give to the superin- |tendent of the academy definite au- thority to permit teams in each prin- cipal sport to engage in one contest a season away frorh Annapolis. This, it has been learned, is in addition to | the game in yarious sports against | the military academy and the annual entry of the crews in the American Henley,” The first exercise of this general authority by Superintendent Scales will be to permit teams of midship- men to enter the relay games of the University of Pennsylvania at Phil- adelphia on April 29. noes: jguksao-aa0 Midwest Ottiee phone 1548, partments, phone Bie Moose Dance Tonite 10c Dance SCHEMBECK’S WINTER GARDEN You Kan Kum THLETIC ls 7S napolis Givad' Pe Permit for One | ome at.bas Se LRIB NN) tip REICHENBACH his removal to ery Residence 8-15-i2t DEVIL” TOMORROW. NOW ON TRIUMPHAL TOUR FOLLOWING TWO YEARS PLUS WOO Y <\a sci. F vip'siPianwis and $1.50 Matinee, eee Sere ++. :$1.50 | WAR Balcony . : ---.$1,00 | TAX CURTAIN AT 8:20 TWO NIGHTS STARTING ’ TONIGHT "SPECIAL MATINEE TUESDAY AT 2:30 P. M.

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