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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1924 Che Casper Daily Cribune World Results ANNAPOLIS AND SENSATIONS OF BILLY MISKE LOSES HIS BATTLE WITH DEATH; PASSING MOURNED GREAT BATTLE py Ring FANS OF COUNTRY 2 Miske, St. Paul ueavyweight boxer,| Mission will attend the funeral in a dena Game Is Most Was mourned toauy by followers ot} body. BIG YEAR ENJOYED BY WYOMING HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETICS, 1923 More Schools Participating; Outstanding UKHO! Mis! he 29 years old, = = Sosctacnlar. BE CE SRage home gi raerag oy ad Poon geben Pagel pelt Events of the Year Are Reviewed. pectacular Ever dotences came from all parts of the) pated in 114 fights. Of this number famil he 34 by wl ockout: Played There.. Socal: Rater oie sai oh sor! wai carded tne ackalees Enea Athletics in the Wyoming high schools has grown battle of his career—that for his lite fas sonane tape erawes her past rapidly in popularity in the last three years and especially i —in a Minneapolis hospital yesterday | in 63 no decision contests and three}; fe i ; oo Ti i PASADENA, Calif., Jan.|72* jong. illness with, brights| exhibitions, was knocked out onee,|i 1923. This is true in nearly every line of high school 2.—The football teams of] disease. and lost one ten-round decision go. |sports that has been introduced. More teams participated United States naval academy| Funeral services for Miske wil! be Jack Dempsey, world’s heavy-}in 1923 in football, esl, heres ree and the a ii - | held at 10 a. m., Friday at St. Adel-| weight champion, was the only box-| qi. ia: i i n: eced- mud tie University, Of Waalis| rs can nis cae ton raoteesloe ee knock out Miske. In 1920| divisions of ane rath ears kes ae ington, participants in the] yich mass will be chanted. ‘The| Dempsey put him out in the third) N& year, says the Wyoming Staie inter-sectional gridiron bat-| ceteprant of the mass will be Rev.|round at Berton Harbor, Michigan. oki eacieong pieetl highschool at: tle here yesterday, were today pre-| Peter A. Roy, pastor of the church.| Miske often had attributed his| {he Strention Bien Rie” Be Ne td paring for the return trip home, | Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery] ability to take punches without tak- ye 2 att shoes every one of the each team perhaps a little bitter | here. c Ing the count to a unique exercise. | 1S f Tesi tet in the state ts against fate for intervening and| Expressions of tribute to Miske|This consisted of hitting himself fooed with a. well qualified ath- Preventing. a decisive victory, in-| came from Jack Reddy, of St. Paul,| hard on the jaw about ten times in was training staff. stead of & tie score, 14 to 14. his manager; Tex Rickard, Leo P.| his daily training for each bout. He] le\t> training stat as ‘The game, from the viewpoint of | Flynn, Jack Kearns, Paddy Mullins,| maintained that those self-inflicted = Reathe atbletica Tandy fener critical spectators was the most] Floyd Fitzsimons, Tommy Gtbbons,| blows loosened up his jaw and at| 2” titions. . Further resulta ‘rere pectacular ever played here in the} Fred Fulton, Mike O'Dowd and| the same time made it more or less Aba, Fosce D tuna’ were L@atesOeRen eres of, cast versus west contests. | others, all connected with the fight|insensible to smashes landed there| [har more “fan weit Seve ere Coach Bob Folwell's embryo ad-| game as promoters, managers or‘ by his opponents. MAA anooatnaed: thes respective mirals played a wide open game : hich school athletics, and. better || Distance, 39 feet 6 inches. throughout. Except in punting, the / ete a nai Wea povided . 100-yard dash—W. Thompson, honors were with the Navy. It was |@@ ” Rete herstofore, have de-|| Themopolis, Time, :10. the welght of the Husktes’ line, ECOMO HNO i nete eon 120-yard high hurdles — R. red to see only baseball games and with thelr ability to tighten their . z ed in the|| Thompson, Thermopolis. ‘Time, defense, that saved Washington siany not caver /{ntateey 17 2-10. national pastime, now attend high ec -=;| ABLE TO PLAY FOR Sees | ~~ 5209 3-5. the second period by two touch- Basketball was quick to grasp HIGH SCHOOL CHAMPIONS Basketball— Laramie High school. ’ otball—Sheridan High school. Track and field—Thermopolis High school. 50-yard dash—W. Thompson Thermopolis. Time, 5:25. Pole vault—Cover, Thermopolis. Height, 10 feet. Shotput — Barbour, Sheridan. Discus—Rhone, Cheyenne. Dis- the interest of the Wyoming peo- downs. one by McKeo and the other ne Tae eaves ings incseatisoat tance, 95 210 fect, Ae 5 ae Eien d This was not true of football.|| _,820vard dash—W. ‘Thompson, 3 oe ed goal in Ine kaiser. rie n of the game ermopolls. ime, 22 2-5. The second and fourth periods were utilized by Washington for their scoring. A 35-yard pass from is at the time of the year when High jump—Haith, Pine Bluffs. Height, 5 feet 6 inches, weather conditions are uncertain cot oy BY HENRY L. FARRELL “Miss Helen Wills and Mlle Su-| and in 1923 there was widespread Javelin—W. Thompson, Ther- mopolis. Distance, 140 1-10 feet. 440-yard dash—Coleman, Lan- der. Time, 55 4-5. Half mile run—Smith, Grey- bull. Time, 2:13. Broad jump—W. Thompson, Distance, 20 feet 220-yard low hurdles — i. Thompson, Thermopolis. Timo, Half mile relay—Thermopolis. Time, 1:39 3-5, Ten men and women players are to be sent with the tennis section of the big American Olympic team. The players are to be selected by the Davis Cup committee of the United States Lawn Tennis associa- tion, a committee that handles all the association's international az- In raising funds to pay the ex- penses of the tennis players, the tennis association struck upon the good idea of asking the members of every club affiliated with the as- sociation to contribute 50 cents or more to the fund, Members of every amateur ath- ‘etic club and every social or fra- 0 714] fair: Scoring: Annapolis—Touchdown: Buried with a: lot et: eww commit. Cullen, McKee. Point from tr¥|tee reports made public recently by | ternal organization in the country after touchdown—McKee, 2. {the American Olympic committee} Could get 50 cents per capita out Washington — Touchdowns, Wil-! was the following interesting dope. | of its membership and a good cause gon, Bryan. Point from try after!" “juien §. Myrick, chairman vor | Would be helped without reducing HONOLULU—The University of Hawaii football team defeated the University of Oregon 7 to 0. (United Presa Sports Editor) | zanne Lenglen meet todiy,” will get| interest, however, remedied. More Abel to Dubois and a 23-yard run Ww RK, Ji (United the whole world on its toes if it is ; ‘ i by George Wilson accounted for the] p> NEWYORK, Jan. 2 wed rid on teams entered upon the state grid Wimbledon champion of 1923, and|and no doubt such a meeting will] ported to be much greater than verting. Their opportunity to tie tennis| transpire. bo the final score came in the last |On® Of the greatest of all tennis ever before. pany the American team that is to| brook may find it possible to repre- represented by football elevens. received a pas# from Abel and Olympic: t|sent the United States in the 2 dashed over the line. Sherman |P° Sent to the Paris Olymples nex The number grew to 28 the next 4 Johnston gave up six months| world’s champ'ons are unable, to! cra teams were in competition on McKee, Shipley and Brachett fea- to play| make the trip, America will be rep-| tne tured in the Navy offense. Captain | ‘T™ bis business last year to play P. P-| the gridirons over the state. spare half of next year to compete | team, which won the military cham- that have high schools. A few have fensive work 7 1 fonship of the world last sum- 5 ‘Abel and Wilson gained most con-|%t Wimbledon, Paris, and in the| pionship only. senil-high ‘bchools. championships in ‘this country, The best track and field athletes} tournament in Laramie there were Racoe Enoch pact made jo | America.is rich in tennis, but.the |1n the world wil!-be-there: America's} 44 Laskethall team competing. In al ‘effort to-win-the game in the | wealth of the country is represented | star swimmers, the record holders the tourney a year before that there glosing minutes when he substituted | a\most entirely in Bill Tilden and|of every important distance and 1 Johnston. They are stars extraor- 1 w an increase of 15 kick but Ziel's kick from the 38-yard | ainary, standing above all others.|and rifle’ shooters, soccer and rugby actrees line went far wide of the posts. players, boxers and wrestlers, fenc-| "py." nary. ers, gymnasts and cyclers will be Taye area Dubo!s |“ Bill Tilden will have an awful load team through against competition| has ever been arranged with such| ‘phe sheridan high school for the peer ats that will be formidable, at least. continulty and class as will be pro-|iast three consecutive football sea- lastic grid title. In each of the Nate Goldman Bests years 1921, 1922 and’ 1923, this . Veteran in Ten duced an eleven of extraordinary merit. popular in the high schools. Several excellent teams, overe, Sevooved.|. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 3.—Lenw Dougivs and. Thermopolis were | Tendler, for several years a leading among the best. pionship, yesterday suffered the mic took the state honor. ‘The five | Worst defeat of his long ring carcer fouchdown—Sherman (substitute for tne Olympic tennis team commit. |a7¥one to want, ja ielleayggioeaet Sh nn oy 9 Beta aa fellow Philadeiphian and until 're =o VRE aR Recta and strenuous competition in the | cently unknown cider Oo en": eam Crowell, Swarthmore. Head lines-|vonresent America, trom the tollow | 1923 state cage tourney, Cheyenne. | vce last summer by his defeat of man—Bartlett, Oregon. Field judge " il Pinkey Mitchell, handed Tendler —Holienbach, Pennsylvania. Time | ! aan T. Tilden, Richard and the champions remained to set- of periods—15 minutes each. ne ams, “Vincent Richards; | ¥» Cietebe Hanrels UAT Ame won tie te tecnants thestitle holder, dla . Hunter.” Powell. in 27 rounds during two meetings fo] td 1e formation for the first time that Bill had noti- lastic track and field meet, piling} ‘he mat for the count of nine, and fied the committee, positively and up 26 points of the score of 56 by | tive with. either hand, he did it once to get away from his business. Toledo, Ohio, defeated Columbia] classed all other entrants. Thomp-| With his right and again with his Fi Continuing with the tennis report,| University preparatory school at! gon's individual score of 12 points AEWA teat cteee. pati managed to “The ladies team will be selected] : wccond, Casper, which annexed only | Weave his way into close quarters from: NEWARK—Young Stribling, Geor- Leek ary hermopotis score, | Bearings. Only his ring gencralship n making e 2, e lory, Miss Eleanor Goss, Mrs. George] Dave Rosenberg of Brooklyn, in| w. ‘Thompsoa captured five firsts | S2¥ed him from a knockout, in the Buys Jar at Drugstore |W. Wightman, Mrs. Thomas C. Bun-| twelve rounds. ryazpiieg Tettan: Wicaon eere ae soaks Baseball is not played sufficiently St Pi ‘slie Bancroft, » foe Lyne! nocked out/in the state high schools to justify I} Mention of Mrs. Mallory’s name| Jimmy Murphy of St. Louis in the| rangter ins “ eee en oe supremacy. The reason for such ki M t he committee is stil hopeful that it. little interest in this sport is that M the international body will suspend 2 tk tant on a Summer vacation early in June. American champion to compete, al-| weight champion of the world, won| ‘This is about the time in the year though she is rot eligible. judges decision over Tony Norman, for the season. Lewis, world’s heavyweight wrest- team, even if she cannot play in the ling champlon, defeated Taro Miyaki,| i mixed match in which the American! and in other European classics. Soldier King of Grand Rapids, fought and Japanese styles of wrestling] America’s tennis invasion of the]ten rolinds to a draw, according to tensive, as teams from Yale, Har- vard, Princeton and Stanford, are|state boxing commission refused to eight cham- pion, defeated Herman Koch of players will try to enter the Wimble- 2.— | match. be used as substitutes on the “var-| Minneapolis, knocked out George| Moorcroft High school has been suc- sity” Olympic team. ress) —"Littl Johnston, | flashed the cab’es from Paris, 4 “erst touchdown, with Sherman con-|Pres®)—“Little Bill ata on the: im. iron, Attendance at games was re- vers, wil! be able to accom-| The “Big Four” from Meadow- 2 2 period and was grasped when Bryan | >l@¥ers. wil! not be able to accom ie In 1921 sixteen high schools were Sexes groan: summer. Olympic polo matches, and if those] season and during the last year 35 resented by the United States Army Carney was outstanding in the de- | ‘ennis. and he feels that he cannot y ¥] ‘There are 57 towns in Wyoming th mer. sistently for the Huskies. Davis _Cup matches and national At the 1923 state interscholastic Ziel for Abel for an attempted place Slaser the oathnen, ‘tap rerolwer| were. 30. sroup contestants. The ingto Other American: players: are. ordi- The 1923 track and field meet at Annapolis (14) Washington (4) | vary eo RiSo Stein meee cessful in the history of such state No competition in general Carney, —-2-.s-lgol., Bryan'|{0, ITY the burden of! the) whole El ae competitions. vided ‘next: summer in) Paris, sons has won the state interscho- northern Wyoming school has pro- Football throughout the state was Round Figh : Casper, Laramie, Cheyenne, Powell, contender for the lightweight cham- In the basketball division Lara- at the hands of Nate Goldman, a te att working combination, After long Referee—Varnel, Chicago. Umpire | Grcided te coe ee een Practically Goldman, who gained some promin Rock Springs, Powell, Evanston more punishment in ten rounds than Watson Washburn and Francis T. crown in a gruelling battle with for the championship. won the 1923 Wyoming interscho- to show that he was equally effec- finally, that he would not be able PORTLAND—Scott high school of} which the Thermopolis team out- left. Both times Tendler staggered Myrick was quoted in his report: football, 20 to 17. was greater than the team placing and hold on until he regained his Millions Use It—- Few Cents | Miss Helen Wills, Mrs. Molla Mal-| gia. school boy boxer, outpointed ini the and a third. prantanieg chee Miss Lil'lan Scharman and Miss competition for the state diamond 4s a probable selection indicates that | third round of a scheduled 12-round high school students go on their the rules and allow the former| PITTSBURGH—Pancho Villa, fly- when baseball clubs are preparing CHICAGO, Jan. 2.—Ed “Strangler”| Mrs. Mallory will be sent with the| Pittsburgh, in ten rounds. PL ty RY 4 Olympic games, because the entire GRAND RAPIDS—Joe Lohman, Japanese champion, Jiu Jitsu, in al team is to be entered at Wimbledon| light heavyweight, of Toledo, and MOOR ms were employed. old country wi'l be even more ex-|newspaper men. King was sub- Stanislaus Zbyszko, Polish cham- stituted for Battling Siki, when the pion, defeated Joe Zickman. Romano, Italian heav Soing to England. Many of the| allow Siki to fight Lohman. os Portland, Oregon, in a one fall aon tournament, and they also can] PORTLAND—Fred Fulton, of|_ MOORCROFT, Wyo. Jan. 2.— Lamson of Omaha in the second of| cessful in four pre-schedule games a scheduled ten-round bout. with Sundance, Hulet, Cambria and em to Suggestions that Mrs. Hazel Mineo ce Rozet. The boys are in fine condi- D Dp sey Hotchkiss Wightman and Mrs. May tion for the season and are one of . Sutton Bundy may be named on the the fastest teams of the northeast Train E arly Olympic team 4s the happlest of all. S port Calendar section of the state. The girls’ team i Nothing ee i” oe nes credit to Nite the Kpoienitne? of a bogie e country and nothing could add last year. ‘rom ie style o! a more prestige and class to the squad they are now playing they will be NEW YORK, Jan, 2.—Jack Demp- WASHINGTON TIE, 14. than the presence of those two won- Racing: contenders for the honors this year. | sey, wor'd’s heavyweight champion, Eyen stubborn, unruly o | | derful players. Meeting of Business Men's As-|It is predicted by many who have | left New York Tuesday for Florida, | pooed hair stays combed It is the first time that either|sociation, at New Orleans. followed the game for years that| where he will established training eer ‘| Mrs. Wightman or Mrs. Bund: af 5 ‘Hai, be undy fer ibainataeresnitice ‘on have had a chance to wear the of-|Club, at Havana. them in this corner of the state. companied by Teddy Hayes, his sivpe taht Hetural votes fictal colors of the United States and} Meeting of Tiajuana Jockey club,| ‘The coaches are working hard | secretary, they will stop at Jackson-| frosmed Sotiet to: SCcamre no one can wear them with more |at Tlajuana, with their teams to perfect them in | ville only long enough to decide upon Anathtouen ste jgood grace or beauty. Skiing every detail before their regular |a suitable place for pitching a tem buaiiess® ahd -on6o United States Olympic trials, at| schedule opens which is January 8.| porary camp. “Hair Groom" {sg Imagine what turmoil there wil! | Minneapolis. Among the teams which are to play | The prospect of a bout in the early helps grow thick, be in Paris next summer when the Bench Show Moorcroft “are Sundance, Buffalo, | spring was said to be the impelling hair. Beware off big games are swinging ahead in] Show of Wyoming Valley Kenno!| Sheridan, Gillette and Newcastle and | motive in Dempsey’s decision to go full stride! Club, at Wilkes-Barre, ireturn games, south ie Meeting of Cuba-American Jockey|there is no team that can defeat | quarters for an indefinite period. Ac-| "Sytasettve|*| THE TRIBUNE'S PAGE OF SPORTING NEWS CAGE TEAMS PLAY TONIGHT ATH. S. GYM Popularity Grows in Every Line of Sport With Play will be resumed this evening in the City Basketball league at the high school gymnasium when the Texas mects the Red Crowns and the Polarines line up against the American Legion. Tomorrow even- ing the second doubleheader of the week will be played at the same place, The last set of games brought out the biggest crowd of the season and showed the increased interest in the league. Tonight's games should be close and full of high class basket- ball. SPORT GOSSIP be the host of the annua! tourna. ment for the western squash ten- nis championships, to be he'd at the end of Januar. 3,000 runs and an equal record ctf credit, Patsy Hendren is England's year. é The National Sporting club of, London is now staging a series of heavyweight novices’ competitions heavyweight champion who will be worthy of the name. ice sports. the competitions. tine'’s Day. Harry Kaskey, the speedy Chicago skater who will be one of the Amert- can contenders in the Olympic cham- pionships at Chamonix, is only 19 years old. The new recreation palace in Cleveland, where the Ohio state bow!l- ing championship will be staged in February, has forty alleys available for the tournament. “One by one the minor baseball leagues are discarding the split- season plan. The Piedmont league is the latest organization to an- nounce its intention to return to the one-lap race. Whether the United States will be represented by a soccer team in the Olympic games depends upon success of efforts now making soccer governing body to raise a $12 400 found to cover expenses. Riding to hounds on a bicycle was the accomplishment of a titled wom. an member of an English hunt club some years ago. She was thrown several times, surmounted six stiles, was in at the death, and was present- ed with the. brush. Connie Hack, manager of the Philadelphia American league club and the oldest of the majur league pilots, celebrates his fortieth anni- versary in professional baseball this year. It was in 1884 that he Started his career with the Meriden, Conn., club. The approaching celebration of the 50th anniversary of the National league serves to recall the fact that of the twenty-two different cities in which the parent league has had clubs, only Chicago and Boston have been continuously represented from the first season of the organization. Sine So How to Stop Sour Stomach Chronic With ert’s Dy: ny People—Stu- epsin Tablets Bring Quick Comfort—sw a Stop Acid, Sour and 8: When the fact is considered that even careful people those who fol- low diet rules, get attacks of indi- gestion, no argument is needed to recommend the best means of relief. 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Be fortified, Get a_60- cent box of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab- lets at ug store and arm indigestion.—Ad- SEND IT TO THE PEARL WHIT® LAUNDRY PHONE 1702 ALL, C STRIBLING WIN ANOTHER FIGHT iszsrszas Bests Dave Rosenberg In 12 Rounds at with a combi i The St. Louis Racquet Club. is to With a season's aggregate of over thirteen threefigure innings to his champion .cricket batsman of the OAKLAND, Calif., Jan. 2.—Jimmy| and Rev. Duffy outpointed Marty Cross in a} special New Year's Day boxing card at the Oakland auditorium, They are welterweights. Willie Meehan, veteran heavy- weight, and Sam Baker, negro, were ordered out of the ring in the fourth round when the referee decided that they were not putting enough ac- tion into their work. Bud Hamilton won from Johnny Farr in a feather. welght event. with a view to producing a British The Swedish people are among the greatest sportsmen in the world, water and Ice sports, of course, pre- dominating. For yachting and row- ing, Sweden is the first country in Europe, and natura'ly leads in its Entries for the sixteenth annual tournament of the International Bowling association, which is to be held in St. Paul February 8-18, now number more than 100 from outside the Twin cities. Points as far dis- tant as Kansas City, St, Louls and Asheville, the new member of the South Atlantic loop, is getting to- gethe- a ipation of its debut in the Sally league next spring. First in News Of All Events ON GRIDIRON Former Casper fa! hold and the second’ in tion leg a New York Arizona Polo ° New rorK, Jan 2—yoms| Leam Victor Stribling, Georgia school boy boxer, has climbed another notch in the pugilistic Indder, Making his de’ N before 2 metropolitan fight crowd | The University of Arizona polo team yesterday at the First Regiment | Won the intercollegiate event of the armory in Newark. the 19-seaneld |Z San Antonio mid-winter Georgia youth decisively whipped | ‘tournament by defeating Oklahoma Dave Rosenberg, Brooklyn middie.) University in the final game sched- it | SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Jan. weight, and demonstrated that he is| Wed in the event, 2 to 1 a factor to be reckoned in fistic a Be =eKe ranks. Critics, who gave Stribling | BUD TAYLOR WINS their unanimous verdict after a| NEW YORK, Jan. 2.—Bud Taylor, slashing, mauling 12 round match,| Chicago bantamweight easily agreed that the southerner showed Athletic club, NEW YEAR HANDICAP NEW ORLEANS, Jan. r’ WuFFY BEATS CROSS sixteenth, enge third. 617 East Second street. Te Lee aE Inquire at A. E. Chandler Filling Station promising team in antic- Indianapolis will be represented in The winter golf season in Texas will get under way with the State open champlonship tournament, | starting at San Antonio on St. Valen SAY “BAYER” when you buy-Gonmune Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism ,. Accept only “Bayer” package frrsmne— which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. 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Westbouna > > 29 620 a m Wrestler Wins Jan. 2.—Jack Taylor, heavyweight wrestling charn- pion of Canada, took two straight from Reginald Siki, Abyssinian. Taylor won the first in 35 minutes, 16 seconds, with a headlock and body minutes arm hold. feated Sammy Nable, of New York, exceptional promise, though hia|!n a 12-round bout at the Pioneer fighting equipment ‘till in its < 3 velopment stage, had some flaws, |Ut the entire bout. Nable was hang. Stribling has youthful vigor and ing_on to avoid punishment in the stamina, speed, alertness and az-|/#tter part of the fight. gressiveness in his favor, but} against Rosenberg, he did not show | Gccmve hitting powers. — And, > though his defense seemed capable, | WO? the $5,000 New Ye it showed the lack of experienc ye Nabiac ele lor lead through- —Delante handicap, the feature event of the opening card yesterday at the fair grounds. The distance was a mile and one Barracuda was second Store room 20x60 with full basement in Chandler building, j a 1 D