Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1925 — Page 28

28

BIG FIELD IN KENTUCKY CLASSIC—INDIANS DISPLAY FIGHTING SPIRIT

ATHLETES TO HAVE BUSY^DAY College and High School Tracksters in Important Events Saturday. Saturday will be a big day for college and high school track athletes in this State. At Richmond the Indiana Collegiate Conference holds its annual tourney which ex eludes Notre Dame, Purdue and Indiana.. Butler, Wabash, De Pauw. Hanover, Earlham, Indiana Central, State Normal, Rose Poly, Central Normal, Franklin and Ooakland City will be represented. The high school sectional meets will take place at fifteen different centers as follows: Connersville. Elkhart, Elwood, Evansville, Salem, Scottsburg, Ft. Wayne,' Gary, Terre Haute, Kentland, Kokomo, Logansport, Plymouth, Vincennes and 'lndianapolis (Tech field). There is much rivalry between the local high schools in the sectional at Technical. Tech is thought to have the edge. Ten teams will compete. They are Acton, Danville, Greenfield, Greenwood, Martinsville, Masonic home of Franklin, Warren Central, Technical, Manual and Shortridge. One thirty-three athletes have been entered in the lqgal sectional with Tech leading the way. Twentyseven will wear the Green and White.

Bounces Chair on Smith irate Fan Tests Out Pittsburgh Catcher’s Head After Fight—Near Riot in Elite Boston.

Bp Times Special BOSTON, May 15. —The royal red raspberry, as applied by the red hot baseball fan, sent Earl Smith, scrappy catcher of the Pittsburgh Pirates, into a box after an unusually vociferous paid admission in the seventh inning of the Pirates-Braves game Thursday, and ultimately resulted in a skirmish that threatened to grow into a riot. The hurling of the raspberry occurred after Smith had accidentally stepped on First Baseman Burrus. The disturbance took place several minutes later when Smith sprinted to a box behind his team’s dugout and Bwung once at a booing fan. Players and umpires dragged the enraged catcher to the field, and Started him on his way to the clubhon"p.„ As he was entering the passage to the clubhouse, however, another hostile fan reopened the argument by hurling a chair that found its mark against Smith’s head. ,ui ceu uni me grand stand, but this time was stopped by Empire Peter McLaughlin. Tie Pirate catcher, unhurt, was escorted from the field by c half-dozen officers, and the game was finished without further trouble. ALL-STAR CARD MAY 28 Three Wrestling Bouts Arranged; Niclu.ls, Mullendore Win. „ Hugh Nichols tossed Kauffman two out. of three falls on Thursday night in the main bout of the Broadway wrestling show. He took the first ar.d third falls. Mullendore threw Kid Bennett and then came back and defeated Harry Rooa in two straight falls. There will be no show next week. An all-star card will be put on May 28. The bouts scheduled: Reynolds vs. Matsuda, Maddock vs. Carpenter, Fishbaugh vs. Horan. GOLF PRO RESIGNS JOB Ward, of Pleasant Run Course, to Leave on June 1. Alfred Ward, professional at Pleasant Run golf course. has turned in. his resignation to R. Walter Jarvis, superintendent of parks. The resignation -is to take effect June 1. Jarvis will appoint a successor, but has no one In mind at present. Three-Cushion Winner Tn the weekly rapid-fire threecushion billiard tournPy at Harry Coolers’ Walter Brewer was returned victor by defeating Harry Rubens in the final gam®, 15 to 14.

Independent Baseball

The East Enders. last year s winners of The Times baseball tourney, are again In the field and want games with last State elube. For games address Manager. 1336 E. Washington St., or call Circle 6140 between 2 and 6 p. m. The Edwards All-Stars will play at Ellettsville Sunday. A game is wanted for May 24. Address Rov Edwards. 2307 Columbia Ave. or call Kenwood 3643. The Indianapolis T*gers and the Green House Growers Association club will decii-<-at;siK new park on Sunday three miles south on the Bluff Rd. 0. Powers and G. Bova are asked to call Diexel 7773. Due to a cancellation the Meldon nine is without a game for Sunday, and would like to arrange a contest with some fast State team. Call Drexel 3721-R. or address L. J. Stehlin. 918 Olive £t. The Christdmore A. C.s will play the Jackson Reds at Riverside No. 10, 3 p. m. Sunday. The fol owing players are asked to report for practice Saturday at Riverside N6. 6 at 12:30. Patterson. Jenkins, Whiffing. Good. Jesse. Turner. O'Neal. Kinmy. Haze.wood. Cohen. Breene and Echey. 1 The Yellow Cabs will play at Camby Sunday. All players are requested to be at the garage at 12:46 sharp. Flagler. Ellis, Nichois. McNelius. Keers. Fitzgerald. Bavne. Murrihv. R.iv and Sauters take iAtice. Any teams desiring real call Lineo.n 3333 and ask for Knbbin^^A The Marion Cardinals have on again and are ready to Mav 31 and all Sundays In Cad Ed at Drexel 13634-W. -r,. 11)12 WoodlawnaßßiOah.^

Plenty of Horses to Put Your Coin on Saturday Sande May Ride Flying Ebony. Bu Times Special LOUISVILLE, Ky., May 15.—With weather conditions,of a favorable nature it is likely a fast track will prevail here Saturday when the SSO 000 Kentucky Derby is decided. There now is a possibility that 18 or 20 will go to the post.

Quatrain still rules favorite at 4 to 1. Flying Ebony got a little extra notice when it was announced that Jockey Earl Sande probably would ride the eastern entry. Emotional Climax Louisville is swiftly rising to an emotional climax over the fifty-first Derby Saturday afternoon, which, like every other Derby, will be the greatest ever run. It would be blasphemous, almost, to suggest that this Kentucky Derby w ill he only a horse race after all, but 'there are a few cynics evil enough to say, confidingly, (hat Jhe gleaming * young animals which stand silently in their flyproof stalls, munching hand-sifted hay, the pick of the breed at the age of 3 years, could stand a bit more class. It would take a horse-trainer, however, ttj, justify or dispute this claim and another one to give him an argument. These horsemen who now crowd the public places of Louisville are technical whose debate would baffle the person whose conception of a horse is a critter with a leg on each corner, a head forward and a tail aft. Xalapa Horses Work Prince of Bourbon, owned by the Xalapa Farm stables, did the best work in the Thursday morning work-out over a track which is nowdry and fast covering a mile and one-eighth in 1:55 1-5. Sweeping)' Aw-ay worked with him and took 1:56 2-5. Prince of Bourbon seemed a trifle sore after the run but his trainers and masseurs thought he would walk out of it, as they say, when he had cooled out. Robert Livingston’s horse, Voltaic, a member of the eastern horse colony in the stables, took his find w r ork-out since his arrival, and with Frank Coltilleti aboard turned in vc fast run that revealed no impairment due to the train ride from the East, Gifford Cochran’s Flying Ebony took a mile hike in 1:42 without trying and Captain Hal went six furlongs. The St. loniis horse, Chief I’ncas, also went on the track for a pipe opener and Almadel. a neglected horse in the predictions, did a mile in 1:43, breezing in. Menifee showed sparkling speed, doing threeeights in 34 2-5. Supremus went five furlongs. Every horse among the more prominent group, whose members are regarded as the real combatants for the $50,000 stake, the honor, the glory and the cup. appears to be in superb condition.

Down Through the Years

KENTUCKY DERBY WINNERS OF DAYS GONE BY Note—Three-year-olds, IVi miles. 1875-1895: 1% miles. 1806 and since. Year Winner Weight Time Value }§7£ Arlst'des 100 2:37% $ 2.850 1870 Vagrant ; 97 2:38 % 2,950 1877 Baden Baden 100 2:38 3.300 1878 Day Star 100 2:37% 4,050 1879 Lord Murphy 100 2:37 3.550 1880 Fonso 105 2:37% 3.800 1881 Hindoo 105 2:40 4 410 1882 Apollo 102 2:40% 4.500 1883 Loon a tils 105 2:43 3.700 1884 Buchanan 110 2:40% 3.900 1885 Joe Cotton 110 3:37% 4 030 1880 Bon Ali . 118 2:36% 4.890 1887 Montrose 118 2:30% 4,200 1888 Macßeth II 115 2:38% 4,740 iB6O Spokane V... 118 2:34% 4,970 1800 Riley 118 2:45 5.400 1891 Kingman 122 2:52% 4.080 1802 Azra 122 2:41 % 4.230 1803 Lookout 122 2:39% 4.000 1894 Chart 122 2:41 4.020 1805 Halms. 122 2:37% 2,970 1890 Ben Brush 117 2:07% 4.850 1897 Typhoon II 117 2:12% 4.850 1898 Pi .audit 117 3:09 4.850 1899 Mamie] 117 2.12 4,850 1900 Lieut. Gibson 117 2:00% 4.850 1901 His Eminence 117 2:07% 4.850 1902 Allan-a-Dale 117 2:08% 4,850 1903 Jedge Himes 117 2:09 4.850 1904 El wood H 7 2:08% 4.850 1905 Agile 122 2:10% 4.850 1906 Sir Huron ... 117 2:08 4-5 4 850 1907 P’nk Star 117 2:12 3-6 4,850 1908 S*one Street 117 2:15 1-5 4.850 1999 Wintergreen 117 2:08 1-5 4.850 1010 Donau 117 2:00 2-5 4.850 1911 Meridan , 117 2:05 4.850 1912 Worth H 7 2:09 2-5 4,850 1913 Doneral 117 2:04 4-5 5.475 1914 Old Rosebud 114 2:03 2-5 9,125 1915 Regret 112 2:05 2-5 11.450 1910 George Smith 117 2:04 9,750 1917 Omar Khavyam 117 2:04 3-5 16,000 1018 Exterminator 114 2:10 4-5 14,700 1919 Sir Barton 112 ’A 2:09 4-5 20,825 1920 Paul Jones 120 2:09 30.375 1021 Behave Yourself 120 2:04 1-5 38,450 1932 Morvleh 120 2:04 3-5 40.775 Zcv 120 2:05 2-5 53 035 1924 Black G ild 120 2:05 1-5 52.775 •Derby record.

FORT BOXING N v X Three Bouts Announced for Harrison Fistic Opening. Joe Packo and Larry Sobjeck in the main go, Gene La Rue and Happy Atherton in the semi-windup and Tommy O'Laughlin and Ted White In a six-rounder. That’s part of the all-star boxing card announced by Lieutenant Porter for the opening show at Ft. Harrison Tuesday night, May 26, and with high-class prelimfl being arranged, the program should be attractive to the local boxing followers. The army matchmaker also announced today that George Grammel, veteran referee of Terre Haute, will be the third man In the ring at the Fort shows this summer. GrammeM Is an old hand at the profession as a boxing official and has a reputation for maoking the boxs mix it. JOCKEY IS UNCONSCIOUS Marinelli Remains In Coma at New York Hoslptal. Bu United Prem NEW YORK. May 15.—Benny Marlnelli. New York -jockey. Injured in a spill a week ago at the Jamaica race track, is still unconscious, it was reported today at the hospital. kHe has been resting comfortably, attendants said, but there is only a Bight chance_for his recovery

Italian Speed Ace and His Fiat Mount

: • >s

A. B. C. GAMES Dismukes Coming With His Memphis Red Sox. Saturday is scheduled to be a gala day for colored fano out at Washington Park when the Memphis Red Sox. led by one of the best-known colored baseball players in the country. William Dismukes. former manager of the A.s, hitch up with the A. B. C.s in the first of a series. The two clubs are now tied for third place honors, each having won four games and lost four. The w-inner of this series will have to play great ball as both clubs are playing in mid season form. Dismukes has in the Memphis Red Sox one of the best clubs in the league and boasts of a strong pitching staff, while the A.s are relying on the great hitting strength of their club 10 win the .series. Sunday will he “Tennessee day" and a record attendance is expected. The clubs will play Saturday, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Week day games will be called at 3 p. m. Negro I,cagin' Standing Won. Lout. Pet. Chicago 0 M .750 Detroit 4 2 .667 St. Louis 4 2 .607 INDIANAPOLIS 4 4 .560 Memphis 4 4 800 Birmingham .1 7 .300 Cubans 3 7 .300 Kansas City 2 0 .260

Derby Field

(Probably 18 or 20 of the following will face the barrier) Horse and Owner./ Jockey. Quatrain—Frederick Johnson..B. Brtienlng Chantey—Greentree Stable I. Parke Backbone—H. P. Whitney . . . ,L. McAtee Reminder—H. P. Whitney G. Fields Prince of Bourbon—Xalapa Farm. . . A. Schuttlnger Sweeping Away—Xalapa Farm „ C. Robinson Captain Hal—A. A. Kaiser .... J. Heupel Almadel—H. P. Headley.... L. McDermott Son of John—D. W. Scott C. Turner Single Foo*—J. E. ’ Grilfln . . . .A. Johnson Flying Eboay—G. A. Cochran „ Sande (probably) Lee O. Co* ler —R. W. ColJlns...W. Fronk Swope—Bi and Fisher E. Legere Kentucky Cardinal—G. F. Croissant. • M. Gamer Reputation—Williams Bros. .J. A. Mooney Chief t ribas—A. A. Busch...W. McCleary Broadway Jones-i—ldle How Farm... - H. Mever Needle Gun—W. J. Ziegler Jr..(Uncertain 1 Borderland-VW. J. Ziegler Jr. . . .C. Ponce Step Aling—F. M. Grabner E. Pool Supremus—H. P. Headley. . .W. W. Taylor Elector—La Brae Stable.... J. D. Moonev King Nadi—J. J. Troxler (Unnamed) Boon Companion—S. A. Cowan.... E. Ambrose Voltaic—R. L. Gerry F. Coltilettl TENNIS TEAM IS BUSY Short ridge Stars to Meet Culver Squad on Saturday. Shortridge High School tennis team defeated the Butler freshmen Thursday, five matches to one. Wilson was the only Butler- player to win, defeating Elrod, 6-2, 7-5. The ncrth elders were to meet Boys’ Prep School today and will clash with Culver at Havfohom on Saturday.

1 lilJ X X ..A .Si)

RAY NOT TO RACE FINN Joie Declines Invitation to Meet Nurmi in East. Bu United Press CHICAGO, May 15.—Because Paavo Nurmi "broke his contract” to race Joie Ray here May 31, Charles A. Dean, piloting the Illinois Athletic Club track team with which Joie runs, will not permit the star to accept an invitation received to meet Nurmi at Harvard stadium, May 22, it was announced.

EIETRO BORD1NO; most daring of European race pilots, is at the I ldianapolis Motor Speedway tui.icg up his sturdy Fiat car for the 500-mile race May 30. He is lU.'y’s best in the speed sport and the railbirds at the local track have taken

Picked Up at Speedway ” By Blythe Q. Hendricks -1

SHE Speedway Is Itself again. Race cars arriving; others stymied on sidetracks in various parts of town; drivers und mechanic* rushing around running down clews and rumors as to the location of missing mounts; suuads of painters putting anew coat of white on the pit wall; an occasional airplane swooping down for a brief visit, and a constantly increasing number of fans are combining to give the Speedway something of its old-time air of pre-rai-e activity By the first of the week the practice and tuning UP season will be in lu.l swing. Indianapolis got its first glimpse Thursday of what drivers, mecl antes and mere spectators frankly admitted to be the most beautiful, artistic, delict.,ely finished bit of automotive eugineerit g ever proo .iceu. It was none other tha: the new frontdrive Miller, the late-c. creation of that master motor desi rned, Harry Miller of Lo-> Angeles. Benny Hill, who is driving through from Kansas C ty. and was cue late today, will pilot tic car in the big race. So perfect 4 s ti e new model that it seems a crime tJ load it up with gasoline and oil and get it all ‘•dirtied up. It looks as if it should bo framed and hung in an art gallery. There is not a speck of paint on it. The body has been sanded and nickeled with a dull aluminumlike finish. The r--st of the car is in nickel ud copper. As pretty and finelytooled as appeared the front drr'e ear to be driven by Dave Lewis, the first of the kind produce! by Miller, it looks clumsy and ungainly beside thj new flyer. The seat is so low the driver ran touch the track with h!s hands. The tread is standard tnurlnr car width. 50 inches, as a;tne* 52, Uie usual race-oar treed. REVERSION to the old tiller steer au of two decades ago is seen iu tbs arrangement for L. - cranki; g. This is done from the side as was done in the almost pro-historic days of motoring Miller plainly % proud of his new <r and justly so. With his usual friendly food nature, he displayed Its novel feaures to the Infield crowd and explained engineering points. Beyond a doubt it is the most perfect piece of work ever seen at a race track. Tommy Milton gave the local fans Ihe first real speed thrill of the season Thursday and incidentally got a thrill himself. He trotted out his old “183-incher" to test out some tires. Winding up the old bus. he peeled off a lap In 1.22 3-5 unofficial time, or about 109 miles an hour. On the next lap he got a flat tire and did a fancy slide all over the northeast turn, but he held the car on the track.

Nut Cracker

Br— | AN JOHNSON SAYS THE INTENTIONAL PASS IS ABSURD....HAVING HAD AN EXPERIENCE WITH MR. ZIEGFELD WE WILL SAY IT IS IMPOSSIBLE. • • • Lawmakers in Tennessee have decided humans did not spring from monkeys'... .This is a splendid social triumph for the monkeys. • • * You never know just what to expect these days when your hostess sends the hired girl down in the basement to bring up some corn. • • • r=TIHEN OLD MAN GREGG VX/ GETS THROUGH PITCH- _ V J ING FOR THE SENATORS WE SUPPOSE THEY WILL STUFF HIM AND PUT HIM IN THE NATIONAL MUSEUM ALONG WITH THE OTHER FOSSILS. * • • Nurmi has been exonerated by the A. A. U We don’t suppose it would be wholly discreet to ask if the A. A. U. lias been exonerated. • • • There is nothing nourishing for American League pitchers in the news that the Babe is now able to sit up and take nourishment. • • • rrra e are not surprised to \U HEAR THAT BOMBARDIER WELLS HAS TAKEN UP GOLF. ... A GOLF BALt, IS NOT SUPPOSED TO STRIKE BACK. Excursion Sunday, May 17 CINCINNATI.. $2.75 Shelbyville .65 Greensburg . , l?J 1.10 Batesville 1.50 and return. Special train will leave Indianano|ig 1 a. in.; returning leave Cincinnati 7:15 p. m.. Central Time. City Ticket Office, 24 West Ohio St., and Union Station. BIG FOUR ROUTE

Tribe Shows Gameness in Series Wind-Up With Brewers and Wins Out in Eleven Innings. Timid far.s who were beginning to lose faith in the Indians ■perked ,up today and told their friends how proud they were of Ownie Bush’s Hoosiers. That game at Milwaukee Thursday convinced everybody that when it comes to battling to the last ditch like the college hero, the Tribesmen have got the old

a liking to him. Bordino uses a heavy foot and presses his machine for all he can get out of it. He knows very little English, but he knows how to smile and burn up Speedway bricks and that's what pleases followers of the "roaring way."

Thr pit walls which have borne the old car name-, ami numbers for the past year, now -re all white again, wailing to lip dolled up with the names of this year’s contestant*. ,n. JuIeR Whaghoe is going to drive some- • lung just what e'en Jules dries not knowr. According to gossip he was to replace Jerry W onderlich at the wheel of a Miller However, he may drive the ear Benny Hill has been piloting as Benny will handle the new front-drive Miller. mHERE was a lot of nervousness in the tadpole hatchery in the subbsL und ’T ‘, he „,\ rapk near the Judges stand Thursday. The subway has been full of water for months and a big electric pump was put to work " '* ral " “ out Tad poles and young frogs were getting disturbed a the ssn to diminish. Water " ° f the,r hom ” *+ sti&ZSSS't&SUt. ra It .s a beauty tyw!

SCHWARTZ PROFIT AND YOURS ARE ENOUGH PROFITS

1 11/HEN you buy a Schwartz Quality Suit or Topcoat at r $25, Schwartz makes a legitimate, just profit. It’s relatively small, for Schwartz operates on the principle of all quantity production: “Small profit on each sale, and many sales." And the quantity production, meaning large-scale buying of materials, large-scale manufacturing and large-scale retailing, is made the Schwartz famous FACTORY-TO-WEARER policy. Factory'-to-wearer * TAKES AWAY THE MIDDLEMAN'S PROFIT and gives it to you. Only Schwartz and you profit. That's enough. SEPARATE OR EXTRA ~ TROUSERS T f O MATCH SUIT > ' • $6

SoimQtMUTYCIOIIIES® Occidental Bldg., S. Illinois, Near Washington St. STORE OPEN SATURDAY UNTIL 9 P. M.

punch. It was the flrtale series in Milwaukee and the Indians won in eleven innnings, 9 to 7. It was some thriller go-around! The Tribe took a 2 to 0 lead for eight innings, when the Brewers scored one run. In the ninth Ernie Krueger belted the ball out of the park and the score was 3 to 1. Thereupon the Home Brews uncovered a kick and Mellilo smacked one over the fence with one mate aboard. That made the count even, 3 and 3. A Tenth The contest was thrown into extra innings and the Hoosiers stepped out and rallied for four runs in the tenth. Pug Alien laced out a homer In that session. Not to be outdone, the Brewers rallied in their half of the tenth and chased four men over the plate, and once more the score was knotted, at 7 and 7. But the Hoosiers had another kick left in their attack, and they walloped the ball for two runs in the eleventh and won the game, 9 to 7. It is said Brewer fans were in a state of collapse as a result of the wild finish. Ernie Maun was driven from the Tribe mound in the tenth and Carmen Hill rusb“d to the rescue. Milwaukee used three pitchers, Eddelman, Lindstrom and Lingrel. Two “Off” Days The Indians were idle today, and on Saturday they also will "loaf." Today was an off-day on the schedule and the Saturday game at Louisville will be played as part of a double-header in Derbytown Sunday. m Manager Bush and a number of his athletes went direct from Milwaukee to Louisville in order to make arrangements to see the Kentucky turf classic Saturday. A few of the players stopped off here and they will not go to the Colonel city until Saturday night or Sunday morning. Asa result of winning in Milwaukee Thursday, the Indians got an even break on their western trip and closed the first half of their long swing in third place In the A. A. gallop. SIGN PRELIM BOl’T Bu United Press CHICAGO, May 15.—Don Davis, 126-pounder from the Pacific coast, will fight Johnny Drew of New York in one of the preliminaries of the Rosenberg-Smlth boxing program at East Chicago next Friday. Rosenberg, bantamweight champion, is hard at work here in preparation for Harold Smith, stockyards scrapper.

Extra-Inning Victory

INDIANAPOLIS AB R H O A E Chrlstenbury, rs. <j I 1 2 0 0 Yoter. 2b 5 1 2 4 6 0 Hodapp. 3b ... 5 1 2 1 4 0 Allen, of fl 2 2 3 0 0 Rehg. If 5 2 3 1 0 0 Krueger, c .... 4 l 1 3 0 0 Sehreiber. ss . . . 6 0 2 4 6 I Sehmandt. lb .. 6 0 0 15 0 0 Maun, and 4 0 1 0 4 0 Hill, and 1 .1 1 0 1 0 Totals 46 1 Ts si 19 1 MILWAUKEE AB H H 0 A B Riehbourg. of . 5 0 4 2 0 1 M. Carthy. 3b-ss. 5 10 0 6 0 Griffin, lb 4 1 0 20 0 0 Brief If 4 1 1 2 0 0 Skiff \o 6 0 1 3 1 0 Luoe. cf 4 2 1 2 0 0 Mellilo. 2b 5 2 33 3 1 Connali.v. ss .. . 2 0 0 0 4 0 Eddelman. p . . . 2 0 0 0 6 0 Armstrong 3b . 3 0 1 0 0 0 Lindstrom. p .. J 0 0 0 1 0 Gearin 1 0 O 0 0 0 Lingrel. p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Total# 42 “ U 33 20 2 Gearin batted for Eddelman in eighth. Indianapolis - 000 200 001 42—9 Milwaukee 000 000 012 40—7 Two-base hits—Rehg '2. Yoter, Brief, Christenhurv. Three base hit—Sehreiber. Home-runs—Krueger. Mellilo Allen. Stqlen baaes—Riehbourg 2. Allen. Saerifiees— Yoter Hodapp. Double plays—Sehreiber to Yoter to S'hm.indt; Mel'ilo to Griffn: Sehreiber to Sehniandt Left on bases— Milwaukee 7: Indianapolis 7. Bases on bal's—Off Maun. 4: off Lindstrom. 1. Struck out—By Maun. 3: by Eddelman. 1: bv Lindstrom. 1 Hits—Off Eddelman. 7 in 8 innings: off Lindstrom. 6 in 1 % innings: off Lingrel. 3 in I*4 innings: off Hill 3 in l'-L, innings: off Maun, 8 in 9% Innings. Hit by pitcher—By Maun i l.ucc). Losing pitcher—Lingrel. Winning pitcher—Maun. Umpires—Chill and Hayes.

BASEBALL STANDINGS

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won. Lost. Pet. Minneapolis 18 11 .621 Milwaukee 14 11 .560 INDIANAPOLIS 15 13 .556 Louisv'lle 14 18 .510 St. Paul 13 13 500 Toledo . 13 14 .481 Columbus 11 15 .423 Kansas City 9 18 .333 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct.l W. L. Pet. Phila. .18 5 .7831S Louis 12 16 .431) Wash. .16 8 .667!N York. 7 16 .304 Clive. .15 8 .6521 Boston... 7 17 .202 Chi. ...17 10 .6301 Detroit.. 8 20 .286 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct.l W. L. Pci. N York 17 6 ,7391Ch1. ...1112 .478 Brook .12 12 ,500IBoston .11 13 .458 Ctncy .11 11 .500 Pitts .. .10 12 .455 Phila. .12 13 4ROISt Louis 914 .391 Games Today AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Milwaukee at Kansas City. Minneapolis at St. Paul. (No other games scheduled.) AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at St. Louis. New York at Chicago. Philadelphia at Detroit. Boston at Cleveland. NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis at Brooklyn. Pittsburgh at Boston. Cincinnati at New York. Chicago at Philadelphia. BUTLER IN TWO GAMES State Normal was the opponent of Butler this afternoon at Irwin field diamond. The locals defeated the teachers in a previous game at Terre Haute. On Saturday the Irvington nine goes to Hanover to meet the Hilltoppers.

HOOSIER COLLEGES COLLIDE Indiana vs. Purdue on Diamond and Track—ThreeGame Baseball Series. Bu Times Hperial BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 15. Indiana and Purdue Universities, ancient rivals, clash today and Saturday in tw’o branches of sport. The Boilermaker baseball team w f as to play I. U. here today in a game advanced one day in order not to conflict with the dual track meet at Lafayette on Saturday. It is the first contest in a three-game oeries. The Crimson had strong hopes of subduing the Purdue nine. Woodward. who allowed lowa only one hit last Monday, was to pitch for I. U. Indiana’s track team, which has been showing steady improvement under Coach Hayes' tutelage, will meet a severe test against Purdue on Saturday.

Yesterday’s Results AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Louisville ...... 300 300 000 —fl 7 0 Kansas City 020 010 000—.1 0 3 Cullop. Meyer: Messenger, Wilkinson. Shtnault. Columbus 000 002 000—3 10 1 Minneapolis 100 020 ol—4 9 1 Northrop, Bird: Hamilton. Ainsmlth. Toledo 000 010 110—3 9 O St. Paul 000 000 000—fl 4 2 Canavan. Schulte: Kolp. Collins. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 000 000 000—0 9 0 Chicago 000 001 o*—l 4 1 Pcnnock, Schang; Lyons. Schalk. Washington 001 030 010—5 fl 1 St. Louis 200 000 010—3 ft 0 Coveleskle. Ru*’: Wlngard, Danforth. Severeid. Philadelphia ... 102 100 000—4 11 0 Detroit 011 000 000—2 fl O Rommell, Cochrane: Doyle. Johnson. Bassler. Boston . 010 000 020—3 10 0 Cleveland 000 020 002—4 7 I Huffing, Plcinieh: Karr. Myatt. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh 022 100 002—7 11 1 Boston 100 000 000—1 5 0 Morrison. Gooch; Barnes. Kump, Batchelder. Gibson. Chicago 001 000 300—4 11 3 Philadelphia 000 002 000—2 7 I Alexander. Hartnett: Mitchell. Henllne. (12 innings ) Cincinnati .. 100 010 011 000—4 10 2 New York . 001 000 003 001—5 8 l Luque, Wingo; McQuillan, Greenfield, Huntzlnger, Snyder. Hartley. Gowdy. St. Louie 300 102 100—8 9 3 Brooklyn 010 020 100—4 8 n Sothoron. Schmidt: Grimes. Oeschgcr. Taylor. Deberry. liTINOIS NETTERS WIN Bu United Press CHICAGO, May 15.—Tennis stars of the University of Illinois defeated Chicago in a Big Ten match, 4 to 2.1

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