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NGK TAYLOR MUST SHOW SPEED TOGONQUER JAPANESE CHAMPION Prospects of Rough Interest to’ Match Scheduled for Tonight; . Miyaka in Superb Condition, Claim Jack Taylor, the idol of Casper wrestling fans, will have to show more speed and wrestling class than he has ever ‘and Spectacular Bout Draws}! before exhibited here if he is to win his match from Tero Miyaka tonight. The Jap is recognized as the ‘peer of the Nipponese wrestlers, and with a record to back up this recog- nition, he is confident that Taylor will be but another of the INTERSCHOLASTIC TRACK MEET IS SCHEDULED FOR DOUGLAS big men to fall victim to jiu-jitsu. ‘With absolute certainty that the match will be one of the roughest and ost spectacular mat battles ever Priagee here, there is a section-wide in- terest in the event. : Miyaka arrived here yesterday for his battle. He has no hesitancy in stating that he knows he has reither the strength or ability to beat Taylor if they were meeting under catches catoh-tan rules. Taylor wiil have a weight advantage over Miyaitg, but accomling to the statement of the son of Nippon, a weight handicap is ooth- ing in jiu-jitsu wrestlips. Strength in the arms and legs and a scientific knowlédgs of the law of levers on the Buman body is what the Jap is @ past master of. This knowl- edge, he believes, will offset any other advantage that ‘Taylor has tirough his greater weight and strength. For the first time.since the match was s¢heduied here it became known that Jack Taylor is not a novice at the Jap style of wrestling. He claims to have met and defeated many good fuen by the sole use of jiu jitsu In a/@ition to the knowledge he al- ready had he has trained strenuously with George McLeod, who possibly \nows moro about the Japanese style than Any other American. McLeod ‘learned the game, as he believes from top to bottom when he ba nm two year tour of the orient under the orders of Farmer Burns to find out all he could about the Japanese art. Upon his return to this country McLeod undertook to introduce many of the holds into the American game, Many of the holds which Burns is credited with origin- ating were suggested and shown to him by MeLeod upon his return from Asia, Ahother effort in whieh Taylor has congentrated for this match ts speed. He knows that ho will have to stay out of the way of the wily Jap from the start. of the contest, and it is probable that in this phase of the match Taylor will appear at his best. Miyaka however, is recognised as the peer of all {iu jitsu ‘wrestlers in this country. With the ability that it remuifes to put him on such a ped. estal the only prediction that eculd he mace before the match is that the Jan will win. There is an impression that Tay- lors weight and strength will do: feat the Jap. This impression is wrong for Miyaka has beaten bieger men and men just as strong as Toy- lor. . If the Wyoming farmer wins to- night’® matoh he will have to hare more than just weight and stren? and he will have to show a rent ability to weoure and hold puntanine hola than ho has ever shown Jn any of his appearances in Caxpor. The prelininary numbers niso sre indtentive of the class of Ml which George Meteor the promoter bas ar: ranged, Chan Devle an ott favorite i of Gasper fans wil! defend hie honors against Jack De Vorera a newcomer from the Pacific const. Kid Ross who has wppeared in several roes here will also demonstrate his class in a struggle with Andy Stewart. At the opening of business this morning Bill Reeves proprietor of the Lite Brick on institution where the advance ticket salé Was handled, stated that there were only a few cholee reserved seats left and that if today's sale held up in compari- son with the rest of the time that on of the largest crowds that ever at- ended a match here would be on hand. Casper high school in all proba-” 4bility will be represented at a cen- interscholastic tral Wyoming ‘track meet to be held at Donglas on May 10, Determination to hed the meet was reached at Laramie when ath- letes entered in the state cage tour- ney held a conference. Under tentative rules adopted for the track and entries in one event. ¥ Lusk, Manvime, Casper, Torrington, Wheatland and Glenrock are men- jioned as probably contestants and the following events will be staged: 220 yard dash. 1 mile race. 44 mile relay race. 220. yard low hurdle. 12-pound shot put, Running high jump. Running broad jump. Pole vault. Casper high has excellent material for a track team and athletic inter est from now until the end of the schol year, probably will be divided GREYBULL SEES GREAT SEAGON ‘ Bluejacket, Regan, Moore Nagle to Hold Down Berths on Rival Ciub — GREYBULL, Wyo, March 38.—The: Greybull team/of the Midwest league 1s. working out at the Midwest Indi trial park these days, and those have seen’ the boys in action are of the opinion that Greybull is to have some ball club this season. A forve of workmen is at work on the grounds getting them in condition for play, and while the outfleld is pretty soft now, it will, undoubtedly ibe in pretty good shape for the gar- |deners to chase fies before many days. | Jim Bluejacket, the noble Red man pitcher, arrived last Sunday from | Nowata} Oxla,, bringing his wife and |two children with him, and will settle down here for, the baseball season, and maybo longer. Jim was with the Midwest team last summer and has} announced that he thinks it time to} take oq the false: whiskers and play ball under his own name this year. He was a member of the great Smith family last year. The team as it is now constituted ~~ es consists of Jack Halla, the old Denver Herman Merritt,* Stoops, shortstop; Bristow, third base, Bristow has always been an outfielder, on Mofch 30. last year, pA ASS NOTICE Reiger) be wae erry ap eta, evening, at 7:45, at the library, given under the auspices of the ladies of ,|the Christian church. B-28-3t penache itaah sandee Mesa Women fll all the public offices in the town of Bath, N. G, MONDAY, MARCH 28, 1921 ¢ \ Che Casper Daily Cribune SPORTS--LOCAL, STATE, NATIONAL SPRING GRID PRACTICE OPENED AT HARVARD CAMBRIDGB, Mass,, March 28,— Head Coach Robert Fisher surveyed the prospect for the Harvard football eleven of next fall when spring prac- tice for the gridiron squad began , He found a Jikely backfield in the making, but @ Jine full of holes. Of the fifty men who reported for t! three weeks drill most were candi- dates for line positions and Fisher said he would devote much of his time to them. The Crimson spring season this year is starting later and will be shorter than usual. peek Ad Say tae Johnny Mendelsohn, Milwaukee lightweight, has signed to meet Clonie ‘Tait, Candian champion, in Milwaukee between this branch of athletics and baseball, which will be undertaken for the first time this year, THREE DIV%sI0NS OF STATE SCHOOLS . Wyoming was divised into three interscolastic scetions for the pur- pose of establishing for the future a basis on which high school meets can be worked ovt with the least tapense aud permit Cefinite trials to establish the state cxcumpionship in all classes of high school sport. Ewanston, | Kemmerer, Rock Springs and Rawlins will comprise division No. 1; Cheyenne, Laramie, Wheatland and Casper will be divi sion No. 2; Sheridan, Cowley, Ne castle and Worland will make up division No,/3. Each division will play for tts ehamplonship and the ploy the winners in tho visions to establish the state ianship. “This plan was by the University of Wyoming as 4n aftermath to the recent inter scholastic contests which were stug: ed at Laramie. own looks like Crawkord may ha hard time taking the job away from him. “Dutch” Nagle is playing the same old reliable ganio in the outfield. Paddy Rean went to Billinga Mon- day to be initiated into the Elk lodge and he will hardly play for a few days Decause of the wear and tear on his organization. Capt. Bill Moore fs catching them ‘and| in the samo old peerless style, and is just ks fast as ever, He informs The that he has signed Askland, catcher ‘of the Mitchell club of the South Dakota league last cde Mad le is Standard will report for duty April 1. ‘employed dt Butte now. Askland was the best catcher in that leaguo last Year, and it Was understood that Joe Cantillon had grabbed him for his old men’s home at Minneapolis. Askiand is a young fellow ,and maybe he con- cluded he wotndn’t ft in well with the bunch of whiskered vets on Je’s pay- roll, 80 hé is coming down here. ‘With the arrival of! Bluejacket, the pitching staff seems to be pretty well rounded out. This gives five good men—Dddleman, Bluejacket, Hunt. Brown and Kelly, Of course, every: body knows Joe Eddleman and “Big Jim.” Hunt was with Casper at the ‘time they won the Denver Post tour- nament. Kelly was with Soottsbbluft last season, and has a good record, but Is a stranger here. Brown was with Billings and {ts a good pitcher. He worked in a couple of games here but has been playing the hot corner until the arrival of Ross Crawford from* Nagadoches, Texas, who will third base ‘for the Greybull:team this year. From the way Bristow has been seooping them up around that bag and whipping tifem across the diamond, it SPORT FLASHES HOT OFF WIRE || ‘The Washington Americans’ regular thelr spring training grounds at Hot| Lininient hand squad, twenty-five strong, arrived at Daytonn,, Florida, today to play their first exhibition game of the season against the local club of the Florida state league. The regular squad will join the second team at Jacksonville later in ghe week and will begin a barnstorming trip to Washington thru Alabama, Tennessez and Virginia, § Carl of Cleveland and Jabez Write of , bantam- weights, meet in a 10-round bout at Detroit ‘The National Amateur three-cushion billiard va lonship Resear ope opened it today with eight cue - Wiliam Huey ‘The compet'tion is to con- tinue thru the week with five matches each Gay leading to the finals Satur- day night. The world Cleveland 1 wotivities at Dallas tomorrow ‘Wednesday on a barnstorm- t fl E 4 Goldie Rapp, star infieldér of the New York Nationals, is in a New Or- leans ‘hospital suffering from a slight attack of pneumonia, it was reported today. £4 will not be able to join the team for several days. Davy Bancroft, the Giant's short- stop, also is at New Orleans for an , operation. His tonsils will be removed. [ecstien amateur i@ With WESLEY BARRY Springs, Ark., beginning a trip thru ; Which they -will meet various minor league teams in exhibition games. —————> + 506-YARD SWIMMING RACE WON BY DETROIT WOMAN DETROIT, March 28, — Margaret Woodbridge, Detroit Athletic club, won the A. A. U. 600-yard free style swimming championship for women, Saturday night, in @ close contest with Charlotte Boyle of Brooklyn. The time was 7:33 4.5. Th a@ special match race at 220- yards, Norman Ross, Chicago, won from George Vernot, Montreal. Ross’ COMING 1 “DINTY” It is a Marshal Neilan jicture. You remember Get It”? WHEN RHEUMATISM HITS YOU HARD! Sloan's Liniment should be kept handy for ctiaa' and paine ‘HY wait for a severe sciatica, or lumbago to make i ‘work, when you BbScue thave Sloan's indy to help curb it and Keep you. ctive,and fit,and onthe job? - Without rubbing, for it penetrates, apply abit today to the afflicted part, ‘otethe gratifying, clean, prompt relief ‘8 Chick Evans, i , that follows, Sl Idn't champion, has consented 0 Become a | {sep its mnay thousands of friends the waren team which Lid world over if it didn't make pods his summer in treat had = That's worth = gicts—three sizes: et ists Bocieconorsical, 35e, 100,140" © What About Your Door and Window Screens. Get them now before; therush. All kinds of repair and cabinet work Wm. M. Harris Builder Phone 740 PAGE FIVE |fairest sport in thd worla.”’ Leaning back in a swivel chair in his office high up in the tower of {Madison Square garden, Tex Rickart j was talking recently about sport in general. “I always did think the, American was willing to give the other fellow a fitty-fiftty break, but I became con- vineed of it the night the last six-day bike rate started. “We had two Germans entered— Rutt and Lorenz. There must have been at least 3,000 ex-doughboys in the house and the field of riders included French Belgian and Italians. “Just a few days before the race the doughboys had become aroused by a meeting in the len protesting By HENRY L. FARFNLL against the ‘Horrors onthe Rhine’ and (United Press Staff Correspondent.) {1 must admit that I was nervous be- NEW, YORK, March 28.—'They/fore the race started. may not agree with me every piace.| “Rutt, on top of all this, was named but. I’m thinking the American is the! in a rumor as the ‘Phan! BIKE FANS GAVE GERMAN RIDERS FAIR SHOW IN REGENT AAGEAICKARD German aviator that did a lot of aam-| age to the allies during the war. the track we expected most anything. But instead of the expected hisses jand boos they were courteously cheered as they rode around the track. Later when they went out and tole a Jap "they drew applause as much as rice Brocco ever gots and he's the most popular rider in the game. “f considered that sportsmanship. The American ts always Willing to let bygones be bygones and to give every- one a fair chance. Rutt and Lorenz appreciated that if anyone did. It's no Wonder then that both of them are going to take out their papers.” Rutt was not a flyer during the war. He saw service from the start in his special liné as a dispatch rider, He} was a bit nervous hima. | “When he and his partner came on) Hé Claims that sport of all kinds is/ flyer,’ a|on the boom in Germany and that box-'and singles on Thursday afternoon. ing especially {8 becoming popular. Bxperience in the war taught the Ger. mans that bageball, football and box- ing are better developers than gym- nastics and massed e.-¢<cises. ‘BOWLERS ON LAST LAP IN BUFFALO TOURNEY BUFFALO, N. Y., March 28—With only three more nights of five-man team bowling and four days for doubles and singles, the American Bowling cofgress tournament, which has been in ptogress here since Feb- ruary 28, is now on the final lap. The last five-man games will be roll- ed on Wednesday night, the tourna- ment coming tO a close with doubles iS in, an ache, a theumatic twlage’fol- lowing exposure, a sore muscle, that's A leaf blend Kentucky Burley heart-leaf gives that good old tobacco taste; aroma. Golden. Virginia —gives “life” and sparkle. And from the old Potomac section comes some b| rimped * A great invention in cigarette making—a cigarette Macedonian leaf that romatice fined ded Soot ne bal ni acco man’s the cool-burning Maryland leaf. It’s made without paste. A patented machine crimps the paper-edges—and as a result, Spurs burn slower and more evenly, Consistent roiliig by the Lincoln Life Insurance company team of Port Wayne, Ind., last night gave them a total of 2836 pins and third place in the five-man event, their score fall- ing 26 pins short of tying the Flem- ing Furniture company team of Cleve- land in second place. The tournament leaders are: Five-man: A. H.' Arnold and broth- ers, Chicago, Twoman: Kollusch and Schieman, Rochester. Individual: Fred Smith, Detroit. All events. A, Schieman, Roches- ter, a NOTICE ‘The little tea shop around the corn- er will be open Haster Sunday after- noon. Commenting Monday the 28th, lunch at noon. Try our home cook- ing. 3-26-29 Oo Subscribe for The Tribune