Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 79, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1923 — Page 6

6

Strong Field of State Golfers Swings Into Action on Links at Muncie Club

FORMER CHAMPIONS THERE TO BOOST CLASS OF MEET Eddie Zimmer, Present Titleholder, Sure to Receive Hard • * ' Fight in Defense of Indiatia Crown, < * By Time Special MUNCIE* Ind., Aug. 13.—Qualifying play in the annual State iamateur golf tournament started today on the links of the difficult Delaware Country Club links and followers of the putt-and-drive sport are convinced this week’s event is going to see the classiest meet of Hoosier golf history.

More than 160 club swingers were present for the opening action and among the number are five former State tltleholders. Dave Baxter, Will Diddel, Bob liesenor, John Simpson and Burr Swezty are the "ex'" men present and they promise to make things lively for Eddie Zimmer of Indianapolis, present State champion, who is here to defend his title. „ The local course is what is called a “long shooter’s playground," and it takes some mighty wallops to register a low score. John Ferree of Indianapolis tried to get more distance to a drive Sunday and his steel shaft club cracked in two parts. H. Shideler. W. Fox, J. N. Nlehaus and W. B. Patton, all of Indianapolis, were the first golfers away today. Many golfers from Indianapolis are here and they are boasting that the tourney honors will be retained by their city. - Among the star players Hfere are Pete Schaffer, runner-up last year; the Sparks Brothers of Terre Haute; Dan Brpwn, LaFayette; Dan Sanders, South Bend; Harry Elmore and Charles Taylor. Taylor was last year's medalist at French Lick.

BASEBALL STANDING ’ ■ AND ■■ : CALENDAR

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won. Lost. Pet. Kansas City ’. ... 68 37 .648 St. Paul 65 40 .619 Louisville 62 50 .554 Columbus 52 52 .600 INDIANAPOLIS 63 57 .482 Miuwaukee j 6ft 59 .450 Minneapolis 63 63 .405 Toledo 37 „ 72 .339 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet | W. L. Pet. N York 70 36 .00(> ! Chicago . 49 54 .476 Cleve. . . 69 49 .456, Wash. . . 47 55 .461 St Louis 63 51 610, Paila 45 58 .437 Detroit . 50 51 .495! Boston. . 4'l 61 .408 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L Pet.l W.* L. Pet. N York 71 38 .652 Brooklyn 65 52 .514 Cincin... 62 45 ,579|St. Louis 55 55 .500 Pittlb. . 62 45 .579; Fhila.. . . 36 71 326 Chicago. 57 51 .528, Boston. . 32 73 .305 Games Today AMUR. ASS*.—Kit-. at K. C. Minn, at SL P, iNo other games.) AMUR LEAGUE—CIevi at Phila games). (No other game;.) NATL. LEAGUE—Pittsb. at Brklyn. (No other games.) Yesterday’s Results AMEBIC AX ASSOCIATION (First Garnet Milwaukee 000 100 021—4 8 2 Kansas Cit.v 00 000 12* —5 9 3 Keefe. Shinault; S'-hupp. McCarty. (Second Game) Milwaukee 000 100 012—4 13 1 Kansas City 003 110 10*—6 9 1 Lingrel. Shinault; Zinn. Skiff. St. Paul 000 010 OOO—I 6 1 Minneapolis 000 100 01*—2 7 2 Merritt. Allen: Morrisette, Grabowski. Toledo .' 110 001 010—4 6 2 Columbus 202 000 01*—6 14 2 Alhbrose. Sanders. Elliott; Finneran, Bedient, Anderson. AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 100 102 001—5 8 0 New York 100 000 001—2 8 1 Johnson. Bassler; Bush. Schang. Chicago 000 303 OOiV-6 9 2 Washington 000 002 61*-—9 9 4 Cvengros, Robertson. Schalk; Zahniser, Mitchell. Russell. Johnson. Ruel. Boston 000 202 022—8 14 0 Cleveland 010 200 000—3 11 1 Piercy, Devormer: Uhle, Morton, O'Neill. Philadelphia and St. Louis not scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston and Cincinnati, postponed, wet grounds. (First Game) Pitaburgh ..... 100 100 000— 2 8 2 Brooklyn 220 000 25*—11 15 1 Hamilton. Steineder. Gooch: Vance, Deberry. (Second Game) Pittsburgh 000 000 000—0 3 1 Brooklyn 220 000 20*—6 8 1 Morrison. Bagby. Schmidt: Grimes. Taylor. New York £OO 000 000—2 6 1 St. Louis ......... 102 002 00*—5 9 2 Gearin, Snyder; Haines, Amsmith. Philadelphia 000 004 120—7 15 2 Chicago 000 102 110—5 10 1 Ring, Glazner. Wilson: Kaufmann, Fuseell. Osborne. Dumovich, Hartnett. • SATURDAY’S RESULTS AMER. ASS’N—Louisv., 13-7; Ind.. 3-2 (first game called In eighth, account of heat). K. C.. 8: Mllw.. 7. St. P . 6. Minne.. 5. Columbus. 3-3; Tol., 0-4. AMER. LEAGUE—N. Y.. 10-0: Det.. 4-8. Cleve., 9-10: Phila.. 5-2. Bos.. 4: St. L„ 3. Chi.. .10-2: Wash.. 7-2. (Second game called; darkness.) NAVI, LEAGUE—N. Y. 6-6: St. L„ 4-2. Brklyn. 7; Pittsb.. 6 Cin.. 10-0: Bos . 6-3. Chi., 5-0: Phila.. 4-8. DE PALMA HURT IN RACE Dirt Event Sees Four Injured—Wilcox One of Winners.

Bu Timet Special CHICAGO, Aug. 13.—Ralph De Palma, famous motor race driver, Is In a hospital here following an accident on the Hawthorne dirt track Sunday. De Palma and three spectators were hurt when the car driven by Louis Chevrolet smashed into De Palma's machine on the back stretch of the mile track. De Palma’s car went through the fence. Previously De Palma had set anew record for the track In a five-mile event by averaging seventy miles an hour. Howdy Wilcox of Indianapolis won the twenty-fivefinile race in which De Palma was injured. His time was 23:44.4. De Palma won the fifteen-mile race In 1^:07. 2 and Leon Duray took the ten-mile event in 9:18. Dade Park Changes Hands Btf Timet Special EVANSVILLE, Ind., Aug. 13. Milefe Mattingly of Owensboro, Ky.. secretary of the Western Kentucky Athletic and Racing Association, has. obtain a lease on Dade Park here

SARATOGA RACES' UNCOVER POSSIBLE TURF SURPRISES Zev's Position Endangered by Wilderness' Return to Speed Form. By United Financial _ SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y„ Aug. 13 —With the racing season here half finished, the present meeting looks better than It did at the opening day. The best events ftre still to come and the first half has aided materially In the development of top-notch racers. St. James’, for Instance, almost unknown before the Saratoga meeting, now looks like the class of the two-year-old division. This promising youngster, after winning first place in the United States, repeated Saturday irt Saratoga Special. Asa result he Is slated to pick up 126 pounds, top weight, in Wednesday's running of the Grab-Bag. Zev’s position as the best of the three-year-olds is in grave danger. Wilderness. R. T. Wilson's best bet, has returned to form after his disastrous let-down in the spring. Up to the t*me he was withdrawn from the races he looked like the leading threeyear old. Zev did not appear as champion until after Wilderness was withdrawn from the races. Now with Wilderness again in shape and Zev almost ready to return to the races, ’some snappy competition for leadership of the 3-year-olds is assured. The Greentree stable's Rialto and the Salubria stable’s My Own are working better than they have at ; any time this year.

’Twas a Blushing Crowd That Greeted Tirabocchi at End of Channel Swim

Bn United Fetes DOVER, England. Aug. 13.—Enrique Tirabocchi, the Argentinian swimmer who crossed the channel under his own steam Sunday, emerged from the water into a most embarrassing situation. A large crowd was on the water front to watch the finish and all believed Tirabocchi would be wearing his skin-tight silk swimming suit. Astonishment was the least of the crowd’s sensations, then, when Tirabocchi waded ashore accoutered only in a few drops of salt water. A bathrobe obviated a call for the police. He said he slipped off the swimming suit en voyage because it hampered his movements. Tirabocchi not only swam the English channel, but swam the “wrong way” and made the coast-to-coast crawl in far better time than the historic record of Captain Webb. Tirabocchi took off from Calais on the French cooast and breasted the treacherous currents which ‘many brave swimmers in the past had feared to attempt, believing the channel could only be crossed from west to east. / Tirabochi insisted that the currents were the same whether he swam from France to England or England to France. The Argentinian is the second man to cross the channel this sumrYier, Henry Sullivan, of Boston, having a large purse by swimming from the Dover side last week. His time was sixteen hours,*- thirty minutes. He was given hot coffee and eggs three times while in the water.

INDEPENDENT AND AMATEUR BALL *

In the two Time* tourney games Sunday the Riverside* and Eagle Independent* emerged victorious. The Riverside* defeated the I. t\ By. nine, 18 to 3, In seven innings, the contest being cut short Uo Innings b> agreement. Maltern umpired. Bader and Barnhart hit homers. Reynolds. Bader, Schmutte and Bowman formed the Riverside battery and Ross, Gilbert and Blssell worked for the I. 17.8. The Eagle In-H'-oendents won by forfeit, !) to 0, from the Lincoln A. A.t. Umpire Murphy awarded me l.<ilie to the Engle* when the Lincolns failed to take the field. A meeting of the tourney managers will be held at the Y. M. C. A. tonight at 7 o’clock. Sixteen teams remain In the event. Managers are urged to be on hand early this evening. The Marion Cardinals downed the Fountain Square A. A. Sunday. 8-3. Miller, Cardinal pitcher, connected for a . circut dirve The Cardinals claim a forfeit same from the Triangle A. C. The Indianapolis Giants defeated the Ytjdianapolis Monarchs at Douglas Park Sunday. 17 to 7. The Giants featured with heavy hitting and fast base running The Giants want a ga&e with a State club next Sunday. Address Gus Fleming. Thirteenth andJYandes Sts., or call Webster 3171. The Favorite A. C.s of Indianapolis defeated the Goldsmith A. C.s at Goldsmith, Ind.. Sunday. 7 to 6. The Prest-O-Lite nine defeated Clremont Sunday, 12 to 0. at Clermont. L. Snyder allowed only three hits. Haynes and H. Snyder poled home-runs Hopkins got four hits out of five times up. Greenfield and Ladora are requested to get in touch with J. A. MacCrea at Belmont 3000 in regard to a game. "Munk" Net Title* By Timet Special ST. LOUIS, Aug. 13.—Cranston Holeman of San Francisco holds the national municipal tennis champion ship title today as the result of his victory over Karl Kammann, S:. la>u>B, Sunday. Ted Huerman and JSrnier Schwartz, St. Louis, won thQ

BABE RUTH TOPS BARRY HEILMANN IN BITTING RACE \ Bambino's Three Safeties Sunday Put Him Out in Front by Fraction. By United Fetes NEW YORK, Aug. 13.—Babe Ruth now is not only tied for the home-run leadership of the leagues, but Is out In front of Harry Heilmann of the Tigers, and leading the American League in batting. Ruth's homer in the first inning of the Yankee-Tigers game at the Yarw kee stadium Sunday was his twentyninth. That brought him even with his hardest rival in that department, Cy Williams of the Phillies. In four times at bat Ruth made three hits, which brought his season's average to .3839. Mathematicians figured out the averages and found that lleilmann’B mark was .3938. Heilmann did not play Sunday owing to a minor hurt. MAJOR HOMERS YESTERDAY Babe Ruth. Yanks. 1—29; Harris. Red Sox. 1—10; Deberry. Robins, 1—1; Fournier. Robins. 1—16; Neis. Robbins. I—3.

—But Don’t Go Near the Water!

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THESE CHICAGO BUSINESS GIRLS HAVE LEFT THE NOISY LOOP FOR A SKIRMISH WITH THE WAVES AT FOREST BEACH. MICH. THEY ARE A FEW OF THE 200 G IRLS SPENDING THEIR VACATIONS AT THE CAMP RESORT UNDER AUSPICES OF THE Y. W. C. A.

LOCAL NETIER IS I STATE JUNIOR KING ' ! Sagalowsky Wins Singles and Also Shares in Doubles, By Timet Special CULVER, Ind., Aug. 13.—The Junior singles championship of the Indiana State tennis tournament held at Culver was taken to Indianapolis by Julius Sagalowsky. Sagalowsky won the final match from T. Frank O’Connell of Chicago Sunday, 6-2, 6-3, 6-3. The steady playing of the winner offset the more flashy playing of the loser. Tommy Wilson of Indianapolis lost in the finals of the boys’ singles to Joe Smith of St. Louis, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4. Joe Smith and George Holloway of Glencoe won the boys' doubles from Bud Markey and Charles Retmeier of Indianapolis, 6-1, 6-4. Sagalowsky also starred In two titles by winning the junior doubles Saturday with Frank Donovan of Detroit. They won from Phil Mohler of Kokomo and J. E. Taylor of Terre Haute, 6-2, 7-6, 1-6, 6-3. SEATS ADDED FOR FIRPO RING SHOW HERE FRIDAY Postponed Heavy Match Expected to Attract Capacity Crowd. Additional seats have been installed at the Hoosler Motor Speedway for the Joe Downey-Luls Flrpo boxing exhibition there Froday night. This event, postponed from last week, is expected to attract a huge throng. Matchmaker Druley is searching for a lightweight to meet Alex Novecky In one of the prelims. Jackie Barnhart was Injured in training and requested another boxer be substituted. Joe Downey is due to reach the city Tuesday from Columbus, Ohio, and Firpo is due here Wednesday. Firpo boxes Charlie Welnert in Philadelphia tonight.

Colored Show Tonight

Jack Leslie, Indianapolis, vs. Tut Jackson, Washington Court House, 0., heavyweights, ten rounds. Hiawatha Gay, Indianapolis, vs. George Smith, Indianapolis, welterweights, ten rounds. Kid Jacobs, Indianapolis, vs. Kid Bell, Indianapolis, lightweights, ten rounds. 9 At Tomlinson Hall, 8:30.

A CI7 , Tuesday, August 14 na ii The New York Yankees K A I ,1 * Babe Ruth Day

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Little Whippets Cut Loose Wish Speed

THEY'RE OFF! LOOK AT ’EM GO! THEY’RE THE FLEETEST CREATURES ON FOUR FEET—THESE FLASHY LITTLE WHIPPETS. THIS IS THE START OF A RACE AT THE MIDWICK CLUB IN PASADENA, CAL.

AUSSIES TO PLAY FRENCH NEXT Japs Easily Eliminated in Davis Cup Competition. By United Fetes CHICAGO, Aug. 13.—Australia won the finals In the American zone Davis cup play Sunday, when J. O. Anderson, captain of the Antipodean tennis stars, defeated Capt. Zenzu Shimidz3

AMERICAN WOMEN HOLD EDGE ON BRITISH STARS Yankee Sisters Need Only One More Match to Win- Honors. By United Press FOREST HILLS, N. Y.. Aug. 13 The deciding matches between the American women and the British women tennis teams were to be played here today in the new concrete stadium of the West Side Tennis Club. The American women have won three matches and need to win only one more out of four to be played today, three singles and one doubles. Miss Goss was to play Mrs. Geraldine Beamish today, Miss Wills was to meet Mrs. Clayton and Mrs. Mallory was to oppose Miss McKane. In the doubles Mrs. Mallory and Miss Wills were to team against Mrs. Beamish and Mrs. Clayton. A.S PILE UP VICTORIES IxK-als Down Cleveland Star* Three Out of Four. The A. B. C.s are taking the meas ure of the fast Cleveland a.club of colored veterans. The A s have won three games of the four-game series here. The final game was ached uled today at Washington Park. The double-header Sunday resulted in 9 to 2 and 3 to 2 victories. The Saturday game was 5 to 2. The "House of David” baseball club of Benton Harbor, Mich., is to make its appearanace at Washington Park next Sunday at 3 p. m.

Ted Lewis*and His Band

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of the Japs in straight sets, 6 0, 6-3, 6-3. The Australians will now meet the French team in inter zone finals at Boston next week. The first two singles matches here Thursday were split, but Australia took the doubles match Saturday and needed but one more match for the zone championship. J. B. Hawkes, Australia, later made it four out of five matches for the zone champs by defeating Masanosuke Fukuda. also in straight sets, 6-3, 6 4, 6 3.

Sunday at Louisville

First Game INDIANAPOLIS AB R H O A E Chris ten bury, rs . 5 1 0 1 0 0 Sicking, 2b 4 2 0 5 2 I Rohg. If 5 0 33 0 0 Brown, cf 33 2 3 1 0 Kirke. lb 4 2 2 11 1 0 Whelan, ss 4 0 2 2 4 0 Campbell. 3b .... 3 0 2 1 4 0 •Yerkes, 3b 1 0 0 0 2 0 Dixon, e 4 0 0 1 0 0 Petty, p 6 0 1 0 0 1 Totals 38 10 *l2 27 14 2 LOUISVILLE AB R H O A E Mayer, lb 5 0 1 10 0 0 BeUel, 2b 6 1 1 1 7 0 Mars-ans. rs 5 0 1 2 0 0 Combs, If 5 1 2 4 0 0 Shannon. ss 5 1 1 0 2 0 Ballenger, cf .... 2 0 l 0 0 1 Schepner, 3b .... 3 0 2 1 0 0 Meyer, c 3 0 1 3 0 0 Tineup. p 3 0 1 0 4 0 Koob, p 0 0 0 0 0 0 tßrottem 1 0 0 0 0 0 Blgbee. p 0 0 If 0 0 0 Totals 35 3 11 27 13 1 •Batted for Campbell in fourth. t Batted for Koob In eighth Indianapolis 013 022 002—10 Louisville . . . ~ 100 200 000— 3 Two-base hits—Retsei. Rehg Petty. Whelan. Sacrifices—Brown. TKeyer Double plays—Whelan to Sicking to Kirke. Brown to Kirke to Campbell. Lett on bases— Louisville, 9; Indianapolis. 9. Bases on balls—Off Tineup, 2: off Petty, 3: off Big* bee. 3. Struck out —By Tineup. 2; by Petty. 1: by Blgbee 1. Pits—Off Tineup. 10 In 6 innings: off Koob. 0 in 2 innings: off Bigbee. 2 in l inning. Hit by pitcher—. By Tineup (Whelanl. Losing pitcher—Tineup Umpire*—Chill and Mullen. Time — 2:30. Second Game INDIANAPOLIS AH R H O A E Christesibiiry. rs . 2 2 2 5 0 ft Sicking 2b 1 0 0 O 0 0 Rehr, If 3 1 1 2 0 0 Brown, cf S 0 1 0 0 0 Kirke lb 3 0 1 3> 0 0 Whelan, ss 3 0 0 0 0 1 Yerkes. 8b 2 1 2 1 0 0 Dixon, c 2 0 1 4 1 0 Hill, p 3 0 0 0 2 1 Totals 21 4 8 15 3 2 LOUISVILLE AB R H O A E Mayer lb 3 0 0 0 0 0 Beue! 2b 2 1 1 0 1 0 Mu-sana, rs 3 0 1 2 0 0 Combs. If 2 0 2 I 0 0 Shannon, ss 3 0 0 0 1 0 Ballenger, cf 3 0 0 3 O 0 Schepner ,3b .... 2 0 0 0 1 0 Brottem, o 2 0 2 3 2 0 Koob. p 1 0 0 0 1 0 •Tineup 1 0 1 0 0 0 Retell, p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 22 1 7 16 6 0 •Batted for Koob In fourth. Indianapolis 201 10—4 Louisvlllo 001 00—1 (Called in fifth account darkness.) Two-base hits—Yerkes, Brown. Threebase hit—Rehg. Sacrlfleee—Sicking. 2 Double plays—Hill to Dixon to Kirke. Left on bases—Louisville. 8; Indianapolis. 5. Bases on ball*- —Off Hill. 2. Struck out—. By Koob. 2 Hits—Off Koob. 7 in 4 innings: off Estell. 1 fti 1 inning. Hit by pitcher—By Koob (Chrtstenbury). Losing pitcher—Koob. Umpires—Mullen and Chill. Time—l :10. Superb pitching of francis, who struck out twelve and allowed only one hit. was the leal feature of the Spades' 6-to-0 victory over the Y. M. S at Garfield Park Sunday. The Spades arc to play the Washington A. i C next Sunday.

Take Sleeping Car for Chicago Boulevard Station REST and SLEEP where it is Cool and Quiet Sleeper on track for occupancy at 9:00 P. M. for the Midnight Train to Chicago Other Monon Sleepers for Chicago are set at Union Station 9:00 P. M. as usual CHICAGO, INDIANAPOLIS A LOUISVILLE RY. TICKET OFFICES: Bctyilevard Station, Telephone Washington 0820 Union Station .... Telephone Main 4507 City Ticket Office: 114 Monument Place, English Hotel Bill Telephone Circle 4600

FIVE SCRAPS AT FORT RING SHOW Glick and Lavelle in Main Glove Thriller Tuesday, Fistic fans of the city are assured of plenty of action at the Ft. Benjamin Harrison open air arena Tuesday- night. Captain Wilson, supervisor of boxing at the Army post, said today he believes he has lined up a card that will abound in thrills, with Sidney Glick of Indianapolis and Louie Lavelle of Anderson appearing In the mam thriller. They are rival lightweights and they believe in action. Bobbie Bridges of Indianapolis will perform in the semi wind-up against Rapid Waters of Ft. Thomas. Ky., over the eight-round route. Waters is a soldier scrapper of southpaw tendencies. The three four-round preliminaries start with Dizzy Baird and Eddie Engfollowed by Fleshman and Dennis. and Hub Newkirk and Breezer Knox.

Far in Front

- ■ LT-

MILLER HUGGINS

Maintaining a strong pace, the New York Yankees, under the leadership of Miller Huggins, have a firm grip on first place In the American League race, and they look as though they mean to keep the big lead until the finish. Huggins and his Champions, featuring Babe Ruth, of course, will be in Indianapolis Tuesday for an exhlnltion game with the Indians.

Major Homer Leaders

American League Ruth, New York 2ft Ken Williams, St. Louis 21 Heilmann, Detroit 13 National League Cy Williams, Philadelphia 29 Fournier, Brooklyn 16 Miller, Chicago j 15 Hornsby, St. Louis 14 Meusel, New York 13 greqibayWs CUTTER LAURELS AT CULVER MEET Indianapolis Grabs Off a Third Place in Naval Reserve Race Regatta. By Times Special CULVER. Ind., Aug. 13.—Green Bay. Wls.. is cutter racing champion of the Naval Reserve of the Ninth Naval District. The Badger crew won in the Culver summer school regatta, held Saturday on Lake Maxinkuckee. Minneapolis was second, Indianapolis third, Chicago fourth and St. Louis fifth. The winning time was 8:10 for the mile course. The Great Lakes Training Station took two victories from the Culver Naval School crews in mile pulls in ten-oared cutters, the sailors from Lake Michigan winning both the light and heavy crew events. The Great Lakes heavy crew rowed the mile in 7:43, within two seconds of the fastest time ever made on this course. The time for the crew was 8:07. The naval camp on White River, at Indianapolis, was represented by a crew in the light event, but did not show to advantage. The loss by the Culver lights crew was its first defeat •n the history of the academy. For eighteen years it had gone without meeting a conqueror. HOOSIER A. C. AQUATIC EVENT HOTLY CONTESTED Beatty and Others Win Cups at Broad Ripple Pool. James Beatty, 15: King Laughridge and Celest Coryn are possessors of silver loving cups today because of their ability in the water. These three won the plaudits of the crowd in spectacular finishes and graceful fancy diving in the interclub swimming meet of the Hoosier Athletic Club at Broad Ripple Saturday. Beatty won the 100-yard free style event, boys, by nosing out Robert Langsenkemp and John White. Laughridge won by a fast finish over Frank Arens and W. E. Orr. Coryn won the men’s fancy di-dng by a narrow margin over Willis Green and James Quinn.

AMUSEMENTS

Mat*. ij| II DAT Wed.. Thur mUnHI 500 seat, and Sat. at 25c. The STUART WALKER COMPANY First Time Tonight In the Comedy Suecces ‘The Bad Man’ One of the Ten Beat Play* of 1921, and Firt Time Here.

PALACE 1:00 to 11:00 P. M. , HARRY L. COOPER and Company “BLUNDERS” NAN LEE TRAVELIXE ROSE A Songstress & With KATHERYN Personality MOON ■ IX BERT “AN SLOAN ARRANGEMENT’ HAZARDOUS WITH WIRE ART STEPPING SORENSON 808 AL WARD BROS. As Bertie and Archie IN “PENNY ANTE" PHOTOPLAY Katherine in MacDonald “Refuge"

I VDIf “ LI Kit ” s “The Speeders” A Comedy of Auto-Errors With Jack Mundy and an OCTETTE OF BEAUTIES Joe Herbert & Cos. —lN—“Honeymoon Ship” C&stelton & Mack Taxie Smith, Lane & Marks Morgan & Ray Extra! Special Attraction “OUR PRESIDENT” Motion Pictures of the Na. tlon’s New Chief Executive Dancing in the Lyric Ballroom \ Afternoon and gvenlng

MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1923

INDIANS RETURN AFTER DIVIDING WIMLONELS Tribe All Set Now to Take on B, Ruth and Company Here Tuesday. Jack Hendricks’ Indians were the_ surprise boys over the week-end. They went to Louisville Saturday and dropped a double-header, and great was the rejoicing in the camp of the Colonels. * But on Sunday it was something else again. A second twin bill was staged and the- Indians braced and grabbed both ends of the day’s pastiming. The Sabbath scores were 10 to 3 and 4 to 1, the second tilt’ being five innings only because o£ darkness. Jess and Carmen Do It Petty and Hill were the Tribe Hurlers who turned the Colonels back Sunday. They were po.son to the Louisville batsmen in the pinches. The Ind.ans were back in Indianapolis today and they spent the aft--ernoon golfing and swimming. There was no A. A. game scheduled at the 1 ball yard and the A. B. C.s had the diamond. Tuesday is "Babe Ruth day” at Washington Park and admirers of the great swatter are expected to turn out in big numbers. Other New York Yankee regulars will be in the exhibition contest here. Everett Scott, famous Hoosier shortstop, will perform and delegations from the north-,-ern part of the State have made reservations for the game. Scott is a hero in northern Hoosierdom. He’s a Better Babe Babe Ruth Sunday tied Cy Williams for the major league home run lead and he also passed Haxrv Heilmann for the batting lead of the American . League. He is a greater Babe than ever. * Ruth today accepted an invitation to be a guest at the noon luncheon of the Indianapolis Rotary Club Tuesday. There was a heavy demand for tickets today and Tribe club officials believe a crowd of about 5.000 will attend the Yankee-Ifidian exhibition. Spud Campbell of the Indians, who received a bruised hand in one of the Louisville games Sunday, expects to be back in the lineiip for the New York exhibition. Golf Wizards in Exhibition By Times Special NASHVILLE. Aug. 13.—Bobby* Jones, open golf champion, and Perry Adair won Sunday in the last half., of a sevofnty-two-hole exhibition I match from Jock Hutchison and;. Frank Gorchaux on the Belle Meade course here, 6 and 5. Jones made these venty-two holes in 140.

MOTION PICTURES

RIALTO SHOWING D. W. GRIFFITH’S AMERICAN INSTITUTION THE BIRTH OF A NATION

APOLLO Now! LON CHANEY “The Shock” Reginald Denny in “Round 6“ Third “L*ther Pusher's Serlea Extra Attraction “OUR PRESIDENT” Motion Pictures of the Nation’s New Chief Executive.

THIS WEEK MILDRED HARRIS LOUISE FAZENDA CULLEN LANDIS RALPH LEWIS DAVID BUTLER and Others In N “THE FOG” INTERNATIONAL NEWS HALLROOM BOYS COMEDT MIAMI LUCKY 7 Coming 1/ IQ I Mind Reader Week Crystal Gaser Also Betty Blythe In “TRUTH ABOUT WIVES”

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nc, atr A Stirring Melodrama “BRIGHT LIGHTS OF BROADWAY” OVERTURE “SE.VIIRAMIDE" By ROSSINI MODEST ALTSCHULER, MUSICAL DIRECTOR. COMEDT “THE BUSHER” ORGAN SOLO -MISS DESS A BYRD Playing “DRIFTING BACK TO DREAMLAND" SUNDAY^ 5 * “THE SPOILERS” . All New Production J.