Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, February 4, 1923, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE EIGHT CHARLES PADDOCK MAPS COAST SPRINTER AFTER RECORDS DESPITE. CRITICS Trojan Speed King | Comes Out of Retire- ment. | By WALTER ECKERSALL Charley Paddock of the University of Southern Cali-| fornia and Joie Ray of the Il- linois A. C., two of the great- 2st runners of modern time have mapped out campaign t r in their ir spec: of world’s records made on the coast la ‘Although = many Paddock year have not been recog d by t redit , despite competen Paddock « n received judges in all sections of the country Reenters University Acting on the advice of friends. Paddoc come out of r ent He has reentered the University of Southern California so that ho will be ible to compete in the Ka relays in middlewest and games in the far east. In both s of games he will meet the fastest men of the sections Not content with such a campaign, arley will go a Mttle fur Casper Sunday Borning Cribune UT A CAMPAIGN SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1923. THEY’RE GOING IN FOR TRACK ATHLETICS NOW Left to right they are: jest girl afoot, Here are three of the girls who competed in the fifty yard dash at the I. A. C. indoor games last week at Broadway armory, Chicago, the first open indoor track competition for women ever held in the middle west. Caroline Hamer, Lillian Segal,and Helen Filkey, the winner. At the extreme right is Miss Marion McCartie of Newark, N. J., whose recent track performances have stamped her the speed- ONLY ELITE TQ BEALLOWED IN TENNIS TOURNEY New Rule Shuts Off Champion- three of t of my gun April 7—Wolverines amp below, carrying things. Ate part of my bear ed the old 30.30 out sh. Eyes ng shells. Can't see the working on way my n pants. into the worse a, 1 the don’t even sta snow, April 10—Wolverines at my bed ang in, also eatin one snow shoe tting shaky in the legs. A five mile walk a big day's work, April 12—Saw a fox track today. Birds are coming north. Fine weath er. isa The next entry in the diary a t is coming. Although ning of wh (EARNS ASSURES DEMPSEY 15 TO BATTLE WILLS Public Wants Bout and It Will JOIE RAY WINNER OF FIUNTER MILE BOSTON, Feb. 3.—Joie Ray, the country’s greatest miler, romped away with the Hunter mile tonight, the feature of the Boston Athletic As- sociation meet in the remarkable time of four minutes and nineteen seconds, clipping one minute and two fifths HAGEN WILL DEFEND HS TITLE WW BRITISH ISLES NEXT SUMMER HE SSS TO SHOW HIS SPEED MAKING WEIGHT WAS HANDICAP TO TITLE FOR BUD ANDERSON Coast Boxer Faded from View After Knockout by Leach Cross, Who Pulled His Fanious “‘Groggy” Act with Telling Effect During Bout in 1913. BY SIDNEY SUTHERLAND Twenty thousand fight fans beneath a frying sun mopped their faces and necks, trying to shield their eyes under news- paper visors thrust into their straw hats. Two things com- forted them on this torrid Fourth of July afternoon in 1913— white-coated boys with baskets of iced beer and the ap- proach down opposite aisles of Leach Cross and Bud Anderson. | Since its favorite boxer was in San | Farneisco fighting Champion Wille) Ritchie, Los Angeles, was content! with the second best card of the year, a twenty round contest between New| York's master lightweight and the} Vancouver, Wash., figher whose | knockout of thirty opponents in forty-| seven starts included such men as| Sammy ‘Trott, George Memsic,| “Knockout” Brown, and Joe Mandot.| Anderson Physically Perfect. } Accompanied by their seconds, the | men entered the ring. The wily Leach | proceeded to his corner, nodding to| acquaintances at ringside. Bud doffed | his light bathrobe an stood in the| glaring sunshine, a statue of physical beauty. ‘The eyes of knowing fans| traveled from his great shoulders down his powerful arms and rested} admiringly on his huge hands, #0 massively knuckled in tape bandages that they resembled sixteen pound sledgehammers. Probably no boxer of recent times had a greater pair of fighting weapons. The gong sent them away. It was the eastern veteran’s brain against the westerner’s brawn; and for eleven rounds they fought it out along those lines. From the start it was apparent that Leach’s campaign consisted of efforts his meat ax right drive. Leach’a head snapped back, his body arching as his heels left the canvas, and ho shot backward twelve feet across the ring and on to the ropes. “There he goes!” the thousands screamed, jerked to their feet. Bud paused only to draw his fore- arm and glove tip across his b!ood- drenched eyes, and then leaped to tho xin. Leach had bounded off, the ropes, stumbled to his knees, taken a count of five, and arisen, a pitiful sight. Bent almost double, his mouth wide open, his hands dangling at his knees, he was tottering to and fro. Bud Falls for Trick. And here came Anderson, youth: fully eager to put all the strength cf his great torso into a blow that would avenge the eleven rounds of punish: ment he had suffered. Leaning for- ward, his jaw thrust out, his rignt poised, he raced across to the reeling man. And suddenly a sharp cry aroso from Anderson's friends clutching the edge of the platform and looking up into Leach's hidden face. “Stay back, Bud! Stay back! God's sake, keep away! Too Inte. As fast as a striking rattlesnake, and with all the leverage of his straightening body, Leach whipped a right uppercut from h's For will invade the cast ag : 6 has been in desperate straits all 1d thi : , to avold Bud's piledriver right by|knee to the point of the chin four compete in the eastern outdoor inter ship to All Players 4 to winter, although his food has been Be Held this Summer, Cham- | seconds from his time last year. LOS ANGELES, Feb. 3.—(By Unit-| slicing him to pleces. Long slashing| feet away. ; collegiate and on his way home wil Be Selected. scarce and the winter hard, he has pion’s Manager Says. STANFORD U. FIVE ed Press,.)—Walter Hagen, British| lefts and knifelike, glancing right] There was a snap, as of a crack, take in the western conference g: been able to keep going through it Ps 7 = open golf champion, will defend his|chops were repeated round after|ing tree limb, and the crowd groaned at Ann Arbor. He will ir But the next entry in his diary BEATS 8. OF ©.) tite next summer in England and|round, until the crowd realized that} as Bud's head was knocked back be- the middle west for the na col NEW YORK, 3. — (Unitea] shows how weak his body has become TENRY L. FARRELL, FORD UNIVERSITY, Calif.,] will also make another effort to win| only a knockout would save Anderson] tween his shoulder blades. Then, legia d ficld meet t 1 3.) the pe tennis} 25 @ result of this fight memb« Press Staff Correspondent. lic nialiraree Frese }—Stanford| the American open title, he an.| from blindness and defeat. carried by his own momentum, ae Cee cae toerk ld will be allowed to compete in| %° h@s been living without salt or! NEW YORK, Feb. 3—‘Jack Demp-| ning tthe Ueiceniy od ns Oe Out In Twelfth. pps era berber ane greg eet iar June, Before coming east for the en ey will Ziont Gtkeee Wile toe th he University of] After competing in the big Ameri-| “¥e'll never land it!” cried exultant| left Jaw bone splintered in twain. outdoor affairs Ch expects to national championship tourna-| April 15—Tho no salt diet ts h So Hate chaiininnanoranin” Petre ries rm ‘fornia quintet, 23 to 12.|can classics he said he would return| backers of the Hebrew. Carried from Ring. demon e his s ority on in the re by the pr pretty hard. My eyes are getting | tho public wants the bout, th sal ae cHose, Stanford forward,|to Los Angeles and establich a resi-| “He'll sink the ship yet! responded] A large, purpling protuberance coast by winning the dashes in on new passed at the an-| ‘i Dusk anos OF thel Goan nwo west ic cad Ache loos ban, Of Stanford's 23 points. It} dence here. He has several movie| partisans of the knockout artist. under his left cheekbone—Bud’s driva Pacific coast conference gam nual meeting United Lawn| t held if I have to promoto it myself.”| 17. £ Seas, Recond victory over) contracts under consideration and is] And in the twelfth it came. Break-| had hit a trifle high—and whis black Following the national colle . Tennis as eH ee this after {3 n yesterday and to ‘This ‘teom Jack Kedens, who badd successive evenings. | alr booked for some film work. ing from a clinch, Bud connected with (Continued oun Page Nine.) mest, © dock wil return ie aes n ea i. ri the field to 64 se-j « fed soiree handles the business affairs for oho ste ste stetocte Mota Mo ctects FP . i Potostecte training again for the National A In the the nationa! champion 1 the 17th to the 19th, but| Sex! dahoadoawariommlaor Ot ee eS ind “2 U. outdoor championships to be held] ships have heen free for all affairs|#pparentiy he has been growing! pear as if he were acting in defiance |g % ip Chicago the latter August.Jand last year the entry list reache1| Weaker and weaker, beeauuse on the of authorities, but he said h \% Mr B bt M d E G d Ci be f ( ‘as er It is in this set of games ad © recorc’ number of 128 players. 20th of April, with spring at hand adinine-beonvrive | ot I y t: Pp dock will receive the test. He will be| The new rule also provides that only h birds coming from the south pee pee enn s na * usiness an an ve 00 <i izen O : y pitted against the cream of the spr-nt-| eight American and eight forelgn| lend and heralding the approach of in ‘New Yor Terao, |e — ing world. Murchison, McAllister ana] stars should be “seeded” in the fu-|!0ng hours of sunshine, of new life in eave othee pied v Re : & Scholz are only a few of the filers} ture competitions. the northiand, V. 8., game to the last| get as much money if we do not ctase | gk : Who will be bent on dethroning the} ‘The association also sought: to| and conscious of h's fate and what|tne Lout in the center of a Lie Ds ‘ eG present king of the cinder path, raw closer the lines on amateurs} he was doing, makes this last entry|jation, but under the conditions we |% Unbeatable at 100.220 Yards. irbing the literary efforts of the| in the diary. Gatiitwet nay amoney in Naw Tork oc Rs If Paddock runs in his usual form players and by requesting an| April 20—Finest weather continues | New ‘Seraes s Teoaens 1a rk or ¥ and there is every reason to believe zed expense account on the| again. Cooking my last grub. Got| The champion’s manager went on|%? he will, it 4s doubtful if there is «| “barnstorming trips” that some lead-| to stay in the bunk most of the time.| (5 gay that Ne had been qafhed by ihe oe college or university sprinter who can| ing players have been taking. It was won't carry me very far. My|poxing commission to acccpt 1 4 aN Yeat him over the 100 and sa some charges for gasoline s for hunting, the rest of| challenge of Harry Will Siler’ & y August 1 to August 5; 1923 - distances, standard events had been made on nse accounts body also useles. I believe my| threat of nuspension and that. be|% tercollegiates. In fact, mar Confirming the Cb a6 » has come. My belongings, every.| (nrent of suspension an at be | * to be faster for thaw “lint vinited rece thing L own, I give to J. P.—of D: Minat U sred me |e e » canutry, He is te | wand conferred with the membei and if he {s not alive, to Paul erga peal ee 4 break r, a feature of 1 tional ‘Tennis. Federa-| S—. v — pe Pe ee ee 2 which has handicapped him in ssocia adopted a ne ———. _- Pea aael eae : le * dashes. code of ru‘es which conforms wit! re were me Pape ibe Utd RG It will not be surprising if Paddock | the International core, } irr Las ine copie Nelo pub oe 4 engages in some match races after a few min such as ‘ Seki che Gale ae rf ° ¥ the National A. A. U. meet in Chi of the t , were nec S are -Willardte toocia.l Wild West Frontier Days Show ° cago. Charley has been hurt by c : Bes ae Se > tes for the national oa °e champion marks hurled at him oi Gibbons is too ight, Johnson is too | ane cen, Wills ts too black—nothing but racers in the east and he next summer were also set and . °? + them at the Chicago meet proved as follows < tenlarty: pi | . a he told the writer on the coast durir Men's singles+-September EE: aie articularly peevel| ‘ the holld: he intends to challenge | (Germantown Cricket club, ube ie ne ae De mpsey could | .3 , y ‘ not anyone pecause D: “too i some of tho fliers who a cel ett ide ciiscauiett rn te Oe Do you know that the Jand has been purchased and that the grounds are now being he was afraid to come out of the w Vol singles lou! y a _- er edm 1 ; ee : as ACFHId to conse out Of the West) | ome e ane the ‘sveat Blas Tai|. cersreutnmm AVC? es, Amis rey cannot accuse us of commer | prepared for the GREATEST EVENT Casper or Wyoming has ever known? to ru: nig elab: ‘New TENNE, Wyo., Feb. 3.—(Spe-| cialism when we haven't asked for | @@ ¢ far east. Med’a acu Veterans, boys, | °%! to The Tribune.)\—Casper high] thing and we haven't made any kind | Strange as it may seem, Paddock jeri ain doshas andnon— RGaust school cagers won the second consecu-| of a demand for mone I think it is = It I Th Mil F S hi feats bet onc sprinter, and that ie|Junlors, father and son—Augunt 245.| ‘vy victory” of thee aouthers Wie | cit eae tea ee one s Three Miles West From Center Street on the : Paulu, who represented Grinnell song Me round, the Davis cup|™s tour tonight when they defeat-| titled to.a share of what he attr 2, year. The Trojan athlete belleves he] | Challenge, r se siseptember —3,| “2 Cheyenne high school, 38 to 29.| Dempsey wants to work on a > 4 ° Ze asa aise nine conto, | maichen-—"Ateon ”aseptember 2+ hoe tating atte ms a te a | Dome ae 9 wenn econ. | Yellowstone Highway $ but he considers the Grinnell star the est Side Tennis clu mie h only wants to, but he is going to work best furlong runner tn the country yenne led, 13 to 9, when the|on a s of the: receipts : Sd ; ; : i Fete ioc Levad atatarier Meee first hale ended but the locals proved | opt ndvent nay hind of oe mus knvan |e The race track is being completed now and we will soon commence the construction 2 rchiso! c © Scholz, 28 ctive: a _ : not -BcoeP! bs o puarantee. shoes : : the fact Murchison Me Allister, Scholz less effective in breaking up the bril ey have made mo million doi-|g Of the grandstand and exhibition buildings. : or Leconney «~ lable to run 100 Nant attack of the Casper five in the] ar offers but the doors were open for > \ ee ae ee yards any tim 209 4-5. cond half. the reporters to here it and the men| @ The coast runner does not belleve The Casper quintet will Journey to] who talked of millions didn't have a | 9 the trip across the country will affect z Laramie from here for games with| hundred ieir pockets o his-speed. He asserted it did not hin A Tragedy of the Northland. Paramte high school Ghd the cade] eee isle ‘Dockets or at! ehelr | der the University of California ath a : preps on Monday and Tuesday nights.| “Benny as hee a 7 hts. y Leonard, T am told, gets | % Fy : letes last when they won the} synoposia of the preceding two tn iol ger Contr the pecsinia eee te ame Because the old Fair Grounds are to be converted into City Lots, and Casper must nd stopped off eastern in stallments: V a trapper, comes * defends a Ughtweight champlonship Alaska, an isolate have a permanent playground! uy home to win BAPTIST BOYS ROMP ON oeteaiodteeieetesiodte atoetoet one « st how ood Paddock | jies off the route of steamers between lead thaw 60 aac cente 1 alr denenae We ask for no donations. Our officers are putting up their own money and working is, b e present he must be] Juneau and Yakutat bay his re TS on the size of the arena selected. » 4 i i acknowledged the country’s premier| jion, which is act in the great tee yee eine oO the are ted. {ae Without salaries. dash m F feld known as the Malaspino glacter atowe ald “aeageanolt ‘$1,000,000 ne strat Wace es Wt te da tag ie i thatin eae. 'ste|g “The Casper Chamber of Commerce Is For Us, Are You? 0 n i 3 empsey Carpentier ‘igh was al@@ ance runner of r He has] smaller ammals: = romance; the Dempsey-Wills affair Rs 4 ee dae deo ty neeat rhe eur Fant cage game in the Baptist gy: . eras 4 < Seed i en er aia | wer copes neta une Seternyaeermee tenes "Utes Ta ware meee We Want You to Help Us! $ ne a (ae lige. votigated tor ive ‘atmos ass of the Baptists and a prvi a earsag rag debe laps . = ‘ " rm % te MRE, RECOE Le args oad uci aoa ete imtiar nization from the Metho- | Places where td er, rine a + A personal letter is being mailed to you. Our representatives will also call on you. RODEO literature 2 fact, there dogs not appear {o be aj made from the skins of animals, weak} USt# resulted in the Baptists running| Fiona where James Coffroth is op. | &Nd stationery will be furnished you free of charge. Call at the Rodeo office for it, Room 11, Smith Block, b3 runner {n this country who can beat| and fll from lack of nourishing food ba topes oe tie Giana deere erating a race track icine o phone1303. ' , ‘ D4 any distance from one to| make set of this| Gibson wa ier yer on eet : a6 miles. ; ‘ ' és : : oo the coast Sut tind aH hi MThonpson aan Lesten of the + We ask that you tell your friends in all personal letters out of town. There. will be excursions here from & i Fee uiectee thera jap oper Metanainte divided the tour points i + parte of the country. This will be Your RODEO, BOOST FOR IT. This will be a national affair as well as oN. wa 1 at date . |e es road yer tn ae ell CITY LEAGUE es Buy Your Season Tickets Now! + h u ar 4 Lester, rf.t » j jati well. ne m | Apel 5 Good for Every Event Given by the Rodeo Associations for the 1923 eSason on the 4 t sc e KIVIAT RUNS GOOD TRIAL wi Noe 7 none > 4 Rodeo Grounds 3 eine 1 h HALF MILE IN COMEBACK | standard No. 3-222. 7 858 | i Bete CD ACK | Standard No. 3... 7 9 1 .868/ °° And We Donate Grandstand Seats Free of Charge for the 5 Big Days 534 . ch , ead Fevers ip ¢ ’ Say BH : ¢ nt. | ‘ ; > s 5 * : 3 ; howin'g ths a: ; ais 6 a an0 | Season Tickets Are $5.50—Only 2,000 Season Tickets Will Be Sold yy painder of ing {the |trapai¢ iat five alles |e po after a rocord Iny.| Texan O 6 3 ) 4 > ¢ interest. Both have expressed tho:r| April 3—Still snowing. Cooking my| pion and the present holder of the} American aprene.. 7 5 é, > 4 intentions and it remains to be seen|last grub. No elt, No tea world's record for 1,600 meters went | Ohio ON ---.. 17 8 » BS # they will be successful, April 4—Shot one gout, using alllaiong without great eftort in 292 1-5.| Presbyterians 71 6 Hpegeateage-hoate-dhoegeaoctoete-sfe-dhocte-ste-sfoate afedte-ate-ste-tie sip sop spe acoaie die dlo tie ste ace sie ste see sie die sho dSe sao ste ste seoate seo ste ane ao sho foe, oy

Other pages from this issue: