The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, March 10, 1922, Image 1

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Official Paper of Box Butte County
TWICE A WEEK TUESDAY AND FRIDAY
Official Taper of the City of AUianctf
VOLUME XXIX
(Ten Tages) ALLIANCE, BOX BUTTE COUNTY, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1922.
No. 30
ROSETTASPAY
COSTS AND WILL
LEAVE THE CITY
TWO CASES IN DISTRICT COURT
ARK DISMISSED
Rooming House to Go Ir'
Hands, and Former Prok
Headed for Minnesot.,
. Mher
V
from Alliance, unless all signs".
The debonaire Harry, who blew u,
onaire Harry, who blew u.
a year or so ago to man,
lised bride, Minnie,' heralded
an Ana tf tka thii-foon ctirviv-
Alliance
his promi
himself as one of the thirteen surviv-l
wJoliMT "rf'
jrot a bit of newspaper publicity, and.
then settled down to a quiet life as
manager or porter for his wife's
rooming house. But not for long.. Am
bition stirred him, and he engaged in
the landscaoe irardeninir game.
The landscape barbering was highly
effective for a while. There were a'
few contracts signed or about to be
signed, when something happened.
Handsome Harry, while he made beau
tiful water color sketches, got no op
portunity to make Alliance front yards
look like the private grounds of John
D's estate at Pocantico Hills. Just
what it was that made the landscaping
unprofitable is not known, although
there were rumors of one sort and an
other afloat at the time.
Then, unfortunately, the Rosetta
rooming house began to be suspected
by the police. There was a hazy sus
picion that there was moonshine to be
had in those plastered halls, During
last year's race meet, Mrs. R. was ar
rested and paid a fine of $100 and
costs on a charge of illegal sale of in
toxicating liquor.
And then, a few months ago, a state
booze hound in disguise stopped at
-the Rosetta rooming house. He pur
chased some prime moonshine at bar
pain prices, testifying in court that
jiosetta and his wife had both sold the
.stuff to him. He said that Harry had
told him of having forty gallons of
stuff laid away against the Big Drouth
nd that it was concealed on his larce,
spacious and imaginary ranch near the
city.
'Nfv ,A
At any rate. Judge Tash found the
evidence sufficient to justify a fine of -the AlUance HoteK. Dr. Bauman took
flOO and costs fc'M'ftJ;for his subject, "Send theWhole Child
ixty.lay jail sentence for hi wife, to ft C0Ur8e of hJa
this being hersecond explained the importance of the con-
wti.ITT-SPSSS $.0o of human sight, the preval
but they never came to ta' ence of defective vision and the
17?y" w-?? E2i n t reasons for it, the relation between
of the public anc I their client, 'f. eye-strain and efficiency and diseases,
for dismissing the cases prov ing flg numl f . dj
WSHyfro.ilffrtA?SS tion3 of defective vision. Following
up stakes and the city. A buyer w uk D j p Weyrens contributed
V??. Shklf!nrLLtw a brief discussion of certain diseases
their rooming house, but apparenUy th t h . under hii observation
the Rosettas have left with the prop-itnat nad come under 1,13 ob.serva"on
city unsold. I Dr. Bauman said, in part:
At any rate, yesterday costs in the, ... u
. j .u:l u
two cases, and a third, that against
Mrs. Hassemne, an . inmate the
rXM StfS
were paid over to District Court Clerk
Bill Mounts and County Judge lash.
Ihe costs amounted to $118. Ihe at
tornev for the Rosettas exclaimed long
and l0V"it'-ot the li.st. Indeed, we would hlrdly
Lincoln, to Albance and return, but it blessinj? In ans4r to thia ap.
was paid. ,. sj preciation of vision, there has come
Yesterday a former resident of exisience a gat army of con.
Chadron was in the city. His memory if. 6 ... J
is pretty good, and he recalled thatj868 of h"man eighL
Posetta, or a man closely resembling "There are two groups the medicnl
that gentleman, in the early days was 'ana the non-medical sight specialist
a hypnotist, who showed at Chadron , The medical eye specialist is known rs
ence. He drew a thrilling picture of a I an opthalmologist or more commonly
woman asleep in a drug store window as an oculist. He treats diseases of
for three days and an equal number, the eyes, performs operations n t.iem
of nights; of a hidden watch, and and in some cases adapts glasses to
Handsome Harry discovering the hid- the needs of his patients, although
! HiinHfiiHAri uHth nothing to many of the leading oculists prefer to
iruide him but the touch on his wrist!
OI me IWO ieiiows who iuiu muueu vuo
jewelry. It was a fine sight, the former
Chadron man said, to see the blind
folded man driving horses down the
street at a gallop, looking for that
vatch.
Mr. Rosetta may have been a hyp
notist at one time, but his eye must
have lost its power. It had absolutely
no effect when he gazed into Judge
Tash's eyes.
Accoruinif n tun em, icjwua, me,
Rosetta trunks were packed last nighv I
. if i.- . n th.
.and their effects all ready for shipment
to St. Joe, Minn. j
Peter W. CollinsT
K. of C. Lecturer
Is 111 at Casper
The anti-radicalism lecture sched
uled for the Imperial theater on March
20, to be given by Peter W. Collins,
u-ni-ld famous authority on labor and
other economic problems, has been in
definitely postponed, due to the illness
of the lecturer, who is now confined
in a hospital at Casper, Wyo. It is
possible that a later date may be set,
or arrangements made for another
speaker to take his place, but in any
event the talk will not be given until
tome time later than the date origi
nally set.
The E. G. Laing clothing store was
clo.-d early Thursday morning, the
report being that the owner had de
cided to eo into voluntary bankruptcy.
Beport places the liabilities at f 16,000
and the assets, inciucung siock on
hand, at $2,000 less than that amount.
Couple May Think
They Are Married
But Judge Doesn't
Julge Taph in his yesterday mail re
ceived a portion of a wedding licen.-e
rtt iimprl fivm snirm Smith llnlrnln
I town, presumably Ardmoie, and in his
' nnininn tVioip ia n rnnnla t-hf lol vo
themselves wedded, but who have prob
ably mixed up the records to that no
court would believe them.'
Michael DeBano and Mrs. Cather
ine J. Shock applied for a license some
days ago, and started out to find the
minister of their church. The bride
doubted whether he would perform the
eremony, inasmuch as she had been
'orced, although she stated that her
v
K
I x .
is Sand had died since she had re-
that document. Judge lash
no more about it until he re
part of the license stating that
'. J. Hoey, pastor of St James.
hat. united them in holy wedlock,
A ., thtk ArA'nrt nrpi
Annarentlv. the Ardmore Drencher
used the Nebraska license to perform
the ceremony, and if so, it isn't at all
legal. The state of Nebraska has a
statute legalizing weddings performed
by a justice of the peace out of his
own bailiwick, but there isn't any way
that a Box Butte county, Nebraska,
license will legalize a wedding in
South Dakota. The judge accepts the
situation philosophically. "I did my
best for them," he said. "I pointed
out the church they wanted to find.''
Ray Wisner, editor of the Bayard
Transcript, was a caller at the Herald
office Friday noon.
URGESlEliNG
WHOLE CHILDREN
TO OUR SCHOOLS
DR. B. G. BAUMAN SPEAKER AT
THE LIONS CLUB THURSDAY.
Eye-Strain Has Definite Relation to
Inefficiency and Disease Regu-
lar Examinations Advocated.
Dr. B. G. Bauman, optometrist, was
tne speaker at the Thursday dinner of
! iu . ,u. oi r
A9 nc iuvc wine w Buuicvmiv i ai
,.f itself , f ya, h ,
come to realize the value of those
thing, that make life .worth living.
wnen we make a catalogue or these
things that make life fine, and beau
tiful and rich, we must place this func-
i i"1 'J "TJJ X'' UI
confine their practice to diseases of
the eyes, leaving the refractive work
to the non-medical specialist known as
an optometrist. This is a perfectly
good word, coming from the 43 reek,
and meaning 'eye-measurer" a new
word for an old and honorable calling
that of the optician, a word now v.red
to designate the mechanical man v. ho
grinds lenses for cameras, magnifiers
or sDectacles. There are some twenty
thousand optometrists in Americi to
finv vinnr. oi me tju'e mac toiksi
i TV .
appreciate their eyes and have come to
realize the. importance of taking cure
of them.
"Three people ou tof ten are wear
ing glasses in America today and dy
actual survey it has been found '.hat
seven out of every ten should be wear
ing them. The almost universal lieed
for glasses in modern civilized . ife is
due to the constant use of the eyes at
close range, and the almost con-scant
exposure to glare from sidewalks,
streets or buildings, or high power
electric liehts. It is the constant use
of the eyes for close work that has
made scientific glass-fitting a great
basic human need.
The strain of civilized life falls
most heavily upon the eyes, the most
delicate and the hardest worked of any
of the organs of the body. This is
especially true of school children, be
cause a child's eyes are immature.
They are baby eyes until he has
leached the age of from ten to twelve
jears, and too freouently he is required
to do work which would mean a full
load for mature eyes.
"There are twenty-five million young
people in the schools of America to
day and we have found by actual sur
vey that five million of them have
(Continued on Page 4)
SUGGEST A GYM
AND CLUB ROOfi
FOR DOY SCOOTS
ADVISORY COUNCIL TO CONS1D
ER PERMANENT QUARTERS.
Believe That Way Can Be Found to
Furnish Amusement, Recreation
and Training for Youths.
The local advisory council for the
Boy Scouts is now considering the es
tablishing of a permanent headquar
ters for the city's four scout troops,
and several locations have been sug
gested, among them the room in the
Masonic Temple building, recently
vacated by the American Railway ex
press company. The project is in a
somewhat tentative shape, as there are
several points to be settled before any
definite action is taken, among them
the important matter of financing the
plans, but Scoutmaster B. W. Reach
and others with whom he has discussed
the plan are exceedingly enthusiastic
over the prospect
During the summer time, the boys
are not greatly in need of a place for
holding their drills, as this can be done
out of doors, at the camp at Belmont
or the club house at Broncho lake.
But there is always need for a central
meeting place. The idea is to fit up
some downtown location as a club
room and gymnasium, with reading
room, a place to write letters and the
scouts' wireless apparatus.
"This will solve the problem of in
teresting boys up to the age of eigh
teen years," Mr. Keach says. "When
we get a place where they can be at
home, and where we are equipped to
take care of them, there will not be
any problem of keeping boys off the
streets. If we can get our wireless
apparatus erected in some uptown lo
cation, where there is plenty of room,
there'll be a crowd of interested boys
there until the lights are turned out.
With a gymnasium and other things
to interest them the Boy Scouts will
make real progress in Alliance."
, The Scouts have had rather a diffi
cult time in getting organized the last
time. The chief difficulty is the mat
ter of holding their regular drills.
They used the city armory for a time
but discovered that it was sometimes
given to other meetings or entertain
ments when they had not been notified.
They now have one evening a week.
Lowry & Henry have come to the
Scouts' rescue with the Roof Garden,
which has been placed at their dis
posal, and it is the only building in the I
cny wnicn can care ior me memDers
of all four troops at the same time.
This building can still be used when
it is desired to have a general assembly
of the scouts, but the downtown quar
ters would provide facilities for in
dividual troop drills, and a schedule
could be arranged whereby every one
of the troops could be provided for on
definite nights, and the work of train
ing can proceed on a regular schedule,
without interruption.
It is believed that the advisory
council will have little difficulty in
financing a project of this kind. Alli
ance has no Y. M. C. A., and there is
no place where boys from the age of
twelve to eighteen are free to enjoy
themselves, unless it is on the streets.
The reading room and gymnasium
fetaures could also be available to the
DeMolay boys, and if the Scout board
decides to go ahead with the project,
it is thought that there will be plenty
of support from business men and
others to put it over.
Fashion Shop
Announcing Seventh
Annual Opening
Saturday, March 11, is set as the
date for the seventh annual opening of
the Fashion Shop. It so happens that
this date is the exact anniversary of
this business. Six years ago, on March
11, A. G. Isaacson opened the Fashion
Shop, and each year has found it
growing in prominence, with a patron
age from a larger territory. About a
year ago the entire building was re
modeled and a set of fixtures and fur
nishings installed which have no equal
in western Nebraska and are com
parable to those found in the exclusive
shops of the lartrcr cities.
The Fashion Shop has builded its
prestiee on the quality of its merchan
dise and the authenticity of its styles,
as well as the exceptional selections
which its patrons are afforded. The
new 1922 spring styles, which will be
displayed to the public Saturday, in
clude the latest creations in ladies
suits, dresses and coats for spring
wear. The showing will include the
new fabrics and colors in garments for
street and home, sport models, and a
splendid selection of the latest modes
in undergarments.
Special attention of visitors is called
to a large shipment of spring millinery
just received, which will be one of the
i ttractions for the oneninf. There will
be dozens of models, direct from the
fashion centers of the east.
Special music will be furnished from
? to 5 p. m, on Saturday, the opening
day.
A. E. Fisher of Bridgeport stopped
er in Alliance Thursday for a few
iifta am . V. : . ,
over
hours en route to
his ranch,
noar
Crawford.
FINAL TRIBUTE IS
PAID BY FRIENDS
OF E. L . KIBBLE
FUNERAL SERVICES WERE HELD
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.
Business Houses Cloned During the
Services in Honor of Memory
of Real Estate Man.
Funeral services for Ephraim T.
Kibble, sixty years of age, who died at
his home in Alliance Sunday evening,
were held from the First Methodist
church in this city at 2:30 Wednesday,
with Rev. Mearl C. Smith, pastor, in
charge. Interment was made in Green
wood cemetery, the Elks and Eagles
lodges taking part in the services at
the grave. Mr. Smith took for the text
for the sermon the first verse of the
fourteenth chapter of John, the same
text having been used for the services
for bis father and graidfather.
A large concourse of friends gath
ered ot the church, completely filling
it. The business houses of the city
were closed from 2:30 to 3 p. m. in
memory of Mr. Kibble.
Lloyd C. Thomas, as a part of the
service at the church, read the follow
ing tribute to his friend:
My friends and brothers, we have
gathered here today to participate in
the last sad rites in honor of one who
to us was both a friend and a brother,
a father and husband. Death, who
knocks with equal hand at the door of
the cottage arid the palace gate, has
been busy at his appointed work.
With us it is a time-honored custom
that amid the turmoil of this life we
pause on such an occasion as this to
note the departure of one of our
brothers upon that vast and silent
journey to the undiscovered country
from which no traveler has ever re
turned.
Tribute to the Dead
"It is proper and fitting that we so
honor our dead. It brings before our
mental vision the uncertainty of life,
and the fact that for mortal man there
is no escape from the call of death.
Death is no respecter of persons. .The
same cold hand that touches with dead
ly chill the heartstrings of the poor
and Ftitls the vibrations, clutches with
a deadly, unrelenting grasp the great
and mighty of the earth and produces
the same dread and suffering.
' ' (Continued on Page 5) '
, i .... ,
Marcus Frankle '
Talks to Members
of the Rotary Club
Rotarian Marcus Frankle was the
speaker at the Wednesday evening din
ner of the Alliance Rotary club, held
at the Palm Room of the Alliance'
Hotel. Mr. -Frankle took for his sub
ject, "Fabrics," and said he had been
collecting material for that talk during
thirty-five years of business !ife. Mr.
frankle spoke for almost an hour on
the various grades of cloth that are In
every-day use, exhibiting samples of
each and telling of their peculiarities.
Among the features, Mr. Frankle
gave a home test by which cotton and
wool could be distinguished, as wel as
silk and cotton. He alio showed how
mixtures of the two could be discov
ered by the aid of an ordinary match.
The cotton thread burns with a flash,
whereas silk and wool will char and
smolder. "A number of people have
the idea that clothing inetvha;.t3 are
keeping this test a trade secret," Mr.
t rankle said, but we re not. 1 hese
days the reliable merchant is perfect
ly i rank as regards the m Venn's in
his wares."
Another interesting point br i ght
out was in regard to the use if the
term "shoddy." As mojt Americans
use this word, the speaker Mid, they
intend to refer to any inferior J.ranJ
of goods. As a matter of fact, he
continued, shoddy is usually very good
quality for the price it is sold at, and
the use to which it is put. "It has one
virtue," he declared. "It v.J look as
bad in six weeks as it will after six
months' wear." Shoddy, Yf e?.pl lined,
is made of second-hand clothini; i.t up
and rewoven, with usually r. facing of
new material.
Mr. Frankle had with him samples
of the various kinds of cloth, w hich he
explained and passed around tor the
inspection of his hearers. He wove
into his discourse some interesting
facts in regard to the history of silk,
wool and cotton, and pointed f it how,
in the early days of history, various
emperors were anxious to confine the
industry to one country, but how any
worthy industry had always nvJKiged
to become distributed over the world.
He brought out the point, also, that at
any time the effort had been nvide to
regulate the price to be charged for
silk or wool, the industry had lan
guished until the restrictions v re re
moved. An interesting exhibit showed the
process of making wool cloth, from the
; raw wool to the finished product The
raw wool is first washed, then combed
and carded, then dyed and then woven,
aftr which it is shrunk.
The facts concerning :ilk and the
acts concerning win ana t:te
various samples or suk mixtures, were, tes&eu aat.jr ,iio.v.v s1 .
.,.,n,. isctin Mr r.anWllat a nenitentiary ball game, and Kel-
,hs.n tt.Q nu.arii
as well as the process of manufactur -
ing imitation silk, first from he wood
. m . , , i . i i .
nuin f t.h muihorrv tre. an 1 later
' f rem other woods.
THE WEATHER
Forecast for Nebraska: . Fair to
night and Saturday, except unsettled
with possibly ruin or snow extreme
southeast portion tonight Somewhat
warmer pouthea.st portion Saturday.
Band Concert
Monday Evening
At Imperial
The next concert of the Alliance
band, will be given Monday evening at
the Imperial theatre. This concert
will start at 8:00 instead of 9:00
o'clock, as formerly, as only short sub
jects will be run before the concert,
rather than a long film. It was found
thatf a picture made the program too
long to be really enjoyable, and hence
the change has been made. These con
certs are for the purpose of raising
money to support the band next sum
mer, when there will undoubtedly be
need for one. The band, which is
un dr the direction of J. P. Mann, is a
credit to any town, and has greatly
pleased those who have heard it.
The program will be:
"Fruhlingslied", March IOssy
"Cupids Charms", Serenade Miller
"Joy to the World ", Sacred
..Barnhouse
"Rosemary", Cuban Dance Jewel
"Somewhere a Cow is Bawling"
(Trombone Symfunny) r isk
"Land of Dreams" Barnhouse
"Hosts of Freedom", March King
FRIENDSSEE1C
A PAROLE FOR
REISENWEAVER
iitiii irnv th n vv i inruTV np l'neup within a short time. And then;
WILL, IKY 111 Utl UBt.Ul I ur.Miofi. YVn Vlran uor,t i. K.,1
YOUNG MURDERER
County Attorney Basye
Announces
He Will Oppose Efforts in Behalf
of Johnson's Slayer
Mrs. Laura Kerr of Sheridan, Wyo., tumbled down the stairs. '
formerly Miss Laura Austin of Hem- The big scrap will be a bantam
ingford, was in Alliance yesterday and weight competition between Chuck
interviewed a number of people In re- Roach of Denver, champion of th
gard to their sentiments on the matter Rocky Mountain states, and Bud Ham
of a parole for young Walter Reisen- ilton of Tulsa, Okl. The boys will
weavrr-lhe youth, who murdered weigh in at 118 and are already In th
Charles A.- Johnson, in charge of the pink of condition and ready to male
commissary department of the Burl- the gloves fairly hum when they swing
Ington, in March 1918. Mrs. Kerr through the air.
was armed with a number of letters Roach has been scrapping for th
in favor of the parole, from various pRt few years in Denver, Laramie and
people around Sheridan, where Reisen- other points In Colorado and Wyoming,
weaver's home and parents are lo- --orH. wl"Vh has been approved
cated, and had also a letter of intro- by the state boxing commission, la
duction from the governor of Wyo- eludes some twenty scraps in 1921, and
minjr - of this number Roach lost not a en. "
Just what success Mrs. Kerr met The list includes a draw or two and ft
with is problematical, but at least she long string of victories. At the Den
did not prevail upon County Attorney ver athletic club tournament. Roach,
le Basye, who quite frankly told her was awarded the amateur bantam
that he would do his best to prevent a weight title when he defeated, on
parole for the young murderer. He after another, sixteen aspirants loathe
told Mrs. Kerr that she knew Reisen- honor. His most recent scraps hav
weaver as a child, and possibly did not been at Denver where, en February 13
understand the nature of the crime he he won from Frankie Dayton, and oi
had committeed, or his subsequent rcc- March 1, when he took the hope out of
ord. "He should have been sent to Willie Hope. ...
the chair," Mr. Basye said, "and would Bud Hamilton of Tulsa is regarded
have gone there had he not pleaded as the coming bantam champion of th
guilty to second degree murder. It was world by his friends, w-ho say that
a brutal murder, done simply for the there isn't anything much faster thin
i.. ti mir hit mnnpv jnnnsnn
carried, and he was very well treated
1 ..v..j w
when ne was aiioweu me imprison
ment instead of the heavier penalty "
At the time of Johnson's murder,
Reisenweaver was only sixteen or sev
enteen years old. He had been em-
i ... . u iu.lrtu wla l.'Vi or. -T r, Vi n -
ix.oyeu ."I
son maintainea a store unu resmujoiiu
He admitted that Johnson had been
kind to him and had trusted him for
iood and other things when he was
hrnkA. He had seen Johnson cash
checks for other employes, and knew
that he carried considerable money on
his person. He took an axe, hid him
self back of one of the stockyard
gates, and when Johmon came by.
struck him in the back of the head
with the axe. The body was thrown
down on the railroad tracks, so that
a freight train or switching crew
might run over it and destroy traces
of the murderous blow. The axe was
tossed away. Later it was found and
in the blood was discovered telltale
fingerprints of the murderer, even to a
scar on one of the fingers. Reisen
weaver, who had professed innocence
all along, promptly admitted his guilt
when shown the fingerprints. The
: mnnev ua never recovered, the mur
derer claiming that he had secreted
omi thnt it hml disanueared.
'ileisenweaver was not suspected of
the murder, until the axe was tiiscov
cred, although he had contessed to a
sriia of thefts in freiirht cars, way
cars and the commissary store itself.
Hi ovtreme vouth wo nior him per
mission to plead guilty to second de
cree murder. His extreme composure,
even when faced with the body of his
victim, stamped him as a dangerous
ninn. the countv attorney said.
Since going to the penitentiary,
Reisenweaver has committed a mur
derous assault on a fellow prisoner, for
u ieu.ui
no reason than the fact that he pos-
Kpnweaver suddenly decided that ne
l wanted to bat, although it wasnt his
turn. When the rightful batter remon-
...... Mil, 11., P.icAitit'ftavpv ctmlr
strated muuiy, Keisenweaver sirucn
1 him across the head with the bat.
A CHANGE IN
PROGRAM FOR
BOXING BOUT
WOP FLYNN HAS ANNEXED A
BROKEN WRIST,
Young Billy Papke of Denver Will
Go With Mel Wyland in the
Semi-Windup.
George Madscn, official boxing pro
moter for Alliance post No. 7 of th
American ' Legion, nas been having
quite a bit of grief in getting the prin
cipals lined up for the first of the
post's boxing bouts, which will b
staged at the Roof Garden on Satur
day evening, March 18. At last, how
ever, after a ten-day stretch of bad
luck, Mr.-Madsen is able to present a
complete card, which will, burring
providence and accidents, stand hitched
until the sponge is tossed into th
Roof Garden ring.
The first two scrappers procured for
the event were- Omaha pugs, who
cheerfully agreed to come to Alliance
for a certain price. Once the agree
ment was made and announcement
displayed, the Omaha boys decided
that they d shake down the post for s
bit more kale. They set their mark
out of all reason, and as a result will
be dining on thin air, by the 18th, if
the promoter's wishes come true. In
cidentally, it's interesting in this con
nection to note that the state boxing
board is considering an investigation
of a so-called ring trust in Omaha.
And so Madscn cast his eyes about
for another likely pair. In the old
days before he went into the army.
Madsen was fairly well acquainted
with the ring game around Denver, and
he got in touch with some pugs in th
Colorado metropolis, and got a full
He got Into a boxing match and brok
his wrist. This necessitated a chanire
of lineup for the semi-windup.
. But at last the jinx has been driven
off, and there is now a complete pro
gram that will, it is hoped, stand until
the show is over and the last fan has
nun wnen lie kcu iiiw uu.
- . .
hen ncranDine in Colorado and Okla
homa since 1920 and is distinctly re
garded as a comer. His record for th
past year shows twelve battles, with
one loss, a draw or two, an exhibition
match and seven victor.es. ine roam
, " warded as one of th best
. ficht fan- hnv had an
-
opportunity to see in months, and It U
expected these two boys will put up ft
real struggle,
Younsr Billy Papke of Denver, who I
substituting for the Wop with th
broken wrist, has been screwing rirht
along. He will tangle with Mel Wy
land, local talent, in the semi-windup,
' .... . 4 j r U..& Vlt
His weignt is given as iu, uui iu
orobsblv train oft a few pounds befor
he climbs into the ring. He is fully as
good a man as Wop r lynn, as Known
by the fact that in December 17 last
he fought Flynn to a draw at th
Denver Athletic club. He has anrwed
a prettv fair string of victories o fr
and will give wyiano. pieniy ui iptwi
tunity to do his best.
As a preliminary, Flonne and O'
Connor, both of Alliance, will weigh in
at 133 pounds and will put on a fast
four-round exhiDition.
Tickets are now on sale ior me event.
at four Alliance business places
Thiele'n. Holten's, William King &
Co. and Joe Smith's and a strong ad
vance sale of tickets is reported,
Prices are down to pre-war levels.
Annual Banquet of
Chamber of Commerce
Is Again Postponed
The annual banquet of the Alliance
chamber of commerce, which has been
announced for. next Tuesday evening
at the Methodist church, has been
postponed until Thursday evening,
March 23, at the same fb.re. The
change in date was necessitated be
cause the floor of the church annex is
now being varnished, and it was feared
that it would be impossible to have the
building in readiness for the earlier
date.