Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 299, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1930 — Page 19
APRIL 25, 1930.
ABSENCE OF STAND-OUT TURNS DERBY INTO OPEN RACE
Five Sons of Man o’War in Training High Foot, Desert Light and Dedicate Are Early Favorites. BY WILLIAM BROUCHER NEA Service Spert* Editor CLEVELAND, 0., April 25. A grocer from Maine will lean over a white wooden rail next month and talk things over seriously with a shoe maker from Tennessee. The date will be May 17, the place will be Colonel Matt Winn’s race course at Churchill Downs and the subject before them will be the Kentucky Derby. Down at Lexington and Louisville, in the meantime, the colts and geldings and fillies that will entertain 100,000 frenzied folk on the big day are going through the killing grind that is necessary to bring up a horse to the condition he needs to go that grueling mile and a quarter in the Derby. There will be a big field for there is no Reigh Count in there this year, nor a Bubbling Over, nor a Black Gold. A great many horses have a chance. A long shot can win this year and upset all the dope and pocketbooks just as easily as not. Five of the sons of Man of War are listed among the 149 on the Derby list. They are Full Dress,
wners, New Buyers, Prospects The greatest appeal of the New Essex Challenger is dollar-for-dollar value. That is the verdict of owners, new buyers and prospects, in the widest campaign of personal demonstration ever conducted for any automobile. I What Men Say: is eas y to drive and the most comfortable 44 1 bought Essex because it stands out in car cvct owne^' its field with absolute’distinction of value , We invite you to drive the Nevv Esscx chalappearance and pet formance. lenger. And we invite you especially to examine fee the fine quality way it is built —its rich uphol- _ , . , , _ stery, its individual fittings and hardware, its **l want a car to be proud of—and Essex ts \ , ... A ;1 r . _ , , . ...... careful workmanship in every detail. Lor even it. It ts the master in get-away, roadability . . . , and hill-climbing. Its economy is wonder- r £ hose who bou S ht 11 cb ' efly for su P re u me ful. Its appearance as smart as any money formance, are capnvated by its notable beauty of can buy ” design, its luxurious appointment and well- * dressed distinction. It is the crowning value of \\ hat Women Say: this dollar-for-dollar value. **My car must be as much a matter of pride as my clothes, my appearance or my home. .. coupe (zvith rumble seat s7 so)yr y . „ , ; . ... ~ Coach 5765-Standard Sedan SB2S Essex satisfies that requirement with the J 1 W -Touring Sedan SB7S - Brougham smartest of looks and performance. For J[ /% / sß9s —Sunsedan $995 Essen me there is no Other choice Commercial Chassis S44S. Prices f. o. b. Detroit, Factory f r f Included in Standard Equipment: Four two-way **Just as proud of my New Essex Chal - shock absorbers-Starter on dash-Radiator shutters lenger as of a 53,000 car I also bought. -Electrolock— Electric fuel and oil gauge on dash. It has every performance requirement. It a wide choice of colors at no extra cost "E S S E Xh4 allmger J at a price all can afford RV T A *l7 UATAn r l ** DISTRIBUTORS Riley 9567 9 T § RjA W JMLA" A Utl 1219*1225 North Meridian St. Oakley Motor Sales Indianapolis dealers P. B. Smith Auto Cos. 1665 Sooth Meridian Street DRexel 4743 __ _ ___ _ 2441 Central Avenue HEmlock 3524 H.J. Walker Motor Sales Grover Witlings Cos. 660 East Thirty-eighth Street. WAshington 5542 O. W. Schaub Motor Cos. UfM Eart Washington Street Riley 3598 2128 West Washington Street BE Imont 4400 DEALERS IN ADJACENT TERRITORY wßOWNSßUßG—Brownsburg Hudson-Essex Sales GREENFIELD—Night & Allen Motor Cos. MOORESVILLE—H. &T. Garage ./ANVILLE—E. J. Roberts GREENWOOD—BeaI's Hudson-Essex Sales MORRISTOWN—Unger Sales Company EDINBURG—W. R, Dunavent KNIGHTSTOWN—W. H. Hiatt ZIONSVILLE—Zionsrille Motor Sales
England Trails in Cup Games LONDON," April 25.—Great Brit- ! ain today faced a difficult uphill fight in its effort to avenge a 1929 1 defeat by Germany and reach the I inter-zone finals of Davis Cup comj petition. Henry W. (Bunny) Austin. England's greatest singles player, dropped a five-set battle to Dr. Heinz Landmann of Germany Thursday. 6-3, 8-6, 5-7, 4-6. 6-4, and Harold G. N. Lee, England's new' international player, was trailing Dr. Daniel Prenn of Germany, 6-4, 7-9, 6-3, when their match was called because of darkness. War Flag, Battleship. Broadway Limited, and Quarter Deck. You may remember a few years back when Flying Ebony gave Earl j Sande a nice ride through the rain and dropped down in front ahead of the others. Two of Flying Ebony’s sons are napied for the Louisville I classic this year. Flying Heels and Flying Pal. The men who make the books have been placing the legend, 10 to 1, opposite the names of High Foot and Desert Light, two entries well liked by the people who read the racing forms. High Foot is a son of Prince Pal. of whom you doubtless have heard, and Desert Light is a classy chestnut colt whose daddy w r as Wildair. Only one filly, Regret, ever won a Derby, but this year may be another of those years. At any rate, there Ls a pretty fair field of gals ready to face the barrier It is bad form to bet on a filly to win. The Belair stud has a nice little frail in there named Hying Gal. Alciblades is a filly and no-
-Baseball Calendar-
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. U Pet. St. Paul 5 2 .711 Toledo 3 2 .714 Louisville 6 3 .667 Kansas City 33 ..WO Milwaukee 3 5 .375 Columbus 3 5 .375 INDIANAPOLIS 2 4 .333 Minneapolis 3 6 .333 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet, W. L. Pet. Phllade!.. 4 1 ,800 Clevland... 33 .500 Chicago ..3 1 .750 Boston ... 3 4 .429 Wash. ... 5 2 .714 Detroit ..3 6 .333 St. Louis 4 3 .571 New York. 0 5 .000 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct.i W. L. Pet. New* York 4 0 1.000 Boston .. 2 2 .500 Pittsburgh 5 1 .833 St. Louis.. 4 5 .444 Chicago... 5 5 .500 Cincinnati 2 5 .286 Philaael... 33 500 Brooklyn. 1 5 .167 Yesterday’s Results AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kansas City 000 000 100— 1 2 3 Toledo 101 203 llx — 914 0 Thomas. Murray and Peters: Heimach and Devormer. Milwaukee 230 010 000— 6 7 2 Columbus 010 042 70x—14 13 1 Buvid. Mclntire. Block and Young; Wysong. Wykoff and Devine. Dixon. Minneapolis 100 000 000— 17 1 Louisville .......... 101 024 OOx— 812 0 Brillheart. Dumont and McMullen, FolVogt: Weinert and Thompson. body’s monkey, either. Lucile is a filly out of Sw*eep, and is one you may very well watch. H. P. Whitney has named the little lady Niato, swift daughter of Chantey. Her Grace will be carrying the colors of Ral Parr. Star Lassie and Sunstroke are fillies, and you never can tell about a filly, at that. You can get terrific odds on any of these lady runners right now. Quite a few' people have been going to Dedicate lately as the likely winner. John Ward, a Kentuckian, has been training the son of DodgeOn Time down at Lexington. Chicago will give him a good play as Fred Burton, from the Windy City, is his owner.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis 000 013 500— 9 11 5 Chicago 001 010 000— 2 9 1 Johnson and J. Wilson: BUke, Moss, Osborne. Nelson and Taylor. Chicago at Cleveland, cold. Boston at Washington, cold. Philadelphia at New -York, cold. AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 100 030 000— 4 6 0 St. Louis 000 107 04x—12 14 2 Hogsett. Carroll. Sullivan. Page and Hayworth: Holshauser, Kimsey and Manion. Ferrell. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, cold. New York at Boston, cold. Brooklyn at Philadelphia, cold. Today’s Games AMERICAN ASSOCIATION St. Paul at INDINAPOLIS. Minneapolis at Louisville. Kensas City at Toledo. Milwaukee at Columbus. AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at St. Louis. Detroit at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Washington. Boston at New York. NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn at Boston. New York at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Pittsburgh. Cincinnati at Chicago. ROGERS MEETS BAKER Coast Heavyweight Opposes Local Star on Mat Bill. Joe Rogers, veteran Pacific coast heavyweight and newcomer to this city, will match grips wdth Ed Baker, local boy, for one fall or thirtyminute time limit in the semi-final bout of the weekly wrestling card at Tomlinson hall Monday. One other bout is being arranged to support the Cowboy Jones-Henry Stoeff bout, which will be for the two best of three falls with catch-as-catch-can rules.
Allison and Van Ryn Lpset Lott and Hunter in Singles Thrilling Five-Set Matches Between Stars Mark SemiFinals of Mason-Dixon Tourney.
Bv United Press WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS. W. Va., April 25.—Upsets which have shaken the tennis world in spring tournaments continued here Thursday when Wilmer Allison, young Texan, defeated George Lott, Chicago star, and John Van Ryn, New Jersey youngster, eliminated the veteran Francis T. Hunter to gain the finals of the annual Mason and Dixon singles championships. Both matches went five sets. The Hunter-Van Ryn contest was filled with drama. The youth took the first set in short order, 6-2, but lost the second, 4-6. He came back and captured the third, 6-2. Hunter displayed his old-time speed and skill to take the fourth, 6-2. He gave his best in this set, however, and was no match for the youth in the deciding set, losing 4-6. Lott got away to an early start, taking the first two sets, 6-4, 8-6, and losing the third, 6-3. Allison
W/ Entertainment £or Everyone! '1 Ilf/ You can depend on the Apollo and Lyric for superior shows \f|| Ml Every Week in the year, and always at the same reasonable xm ml prices. A glance at these programs below will convince you \|| Wj that the Apollo and Lyric are presenting Indianapolis’ great- \W 1/ est show bills. See them. \* ANJ NOW—The Amorous Adventures of a Bay Caballero | IMBflTin I The I “Such Men Are 1 OU’Il go crazy about thla BI 1 _ 7ft lovabla “Bad Man,” who >sl I Dangerous f won m* gin. wuh w. SO ft c , Jr voice and whipped the men , r® 8 ® of WARNER M with his breakneck daring. e ® Stars BAXTER WHAT A LOVERt FRANK :x( gor WHAT A LIAR! FAY II like mm. A a loZW t 0 1 k| MYRYA aU N U £ I%^ A Trv A C Mrfk m 1 JQk “raquel*" p BPFf *, . TORRES unoM y o u may pay more, hut you’ll never 1 Jm ® 1 F cSJ a better show than at the Lyric I g§ 4 1 WEEK DAYS EVERY NIGHT m—lr si' 8r 11 *° 4 c Sunday and All_Seats Holiday Mat. I AT THIS GREAT 1 : 00 to 6:00 . r „. LUUI\ PROGRAM Main Floor. .{.lc Mair rloor r,oc Balcony, 25 c Balcony, 35e "T - ynt Children Always Welcome, 15c SMASHING STAGE SHOW—Booked Especially for Actors’ National Jubilee Week! TJhe Popular Motion Picture Comedienne VIOLA DANA and HOLLYWOOD COMPANY (IN PERSON) Presenting the New One-Act Playlet “THE INKWELL,” by Anita Loos You’ve seen this lovable star in many screen hits, now you'll love her even more—in person. Other RKO Vaudeville Acts I FOUR KENNEDYS “Whitey” Thomas—Gertrude—Kenneth and O b © ft S “IN‘THEIR OWN CREATIONS” ••L*nh ALICE MACK & FAY Town.' “Syncopation Supreme” Just loofc at the cast in this stupendous ALLTALKING PICTURE! LUPE VELEZ— MONTE BLUE GRANT WITHERS—TULLY MAR4lnf/ SHALL—GASTON GLASS—H. B. AHJA WARNER—BULL MONTANA AND RIN-TIN-TIN. Ml r. Pulsating romance and blood tingling drama in a WBM iW natural setting of scenic beauty of the great Cana|Hn ffip X dian Northwest. IH“TIGER ROSE” FINAL TODAY—JOHN STEEL and EASTEB WEEK VAUDEVILLE BILL. “THE PARKING MELODY MAN.” Film Special. For Lyric Patrons j
came back in the fourth and won easily, 6-3. The last set was a bitter one, going to Allison, 6-4. MACK DEFEATS HOLTZER DENVER, Colo., April 25.—Eddie Mack, Denver lightweight, defeated Maurice Holtzer, France in ten rounds here Thursday.
AMUSEMENTS
CIIPI IOUPO Tonite tNhLIonO Sat.Nite Popular Matinee Tomorrow BROCK PEMBERTON Presents The Biggest Comedy Hit of the Tear “STRICTLY DISHONORABLE” By Preston Sturges Staged by Antoinette Perry and Mr. Pemberton Eves.. BOc to s2.3o—Sat. Mat., BOc to f*
Immanuel Lutheran Children’s Chorus of Hamilton, Ohio In Concert MANUAL AUDITORIUM, May 8, 8:15 P. M. Tickets at Carlin Music Cos., or Mrs. Edw. Rothkopf, DRexel 2393 ADULTS. 50tf AND 75<fr CHILDREN. 25<* PUBLIC IS INVITED Under Auspices of Emmaus Walther League.
MOTION PICTURES
FROEBEL IS FAVORITE Gary School Heavy First Place Choice at Madison. Bv United Press MADISON, Wis., April 25.—Five hundred track and field stars from twenty-eight high schools flocked into Madison today for the University of Wisconsin's eleventh annual midwest interscholastic relays, Saturday. Unless unexpected events occur. Froebel high of Gary, Ind., winners of the Northwestern interscholastic
AMUSEMENTS
Jdaimce I EVERY NIGHT—B:3O TO 11:80 I FREE TO LYRIC PATRONS WALTZ NIGHTS MON., WED. AND FRL LOOK! ■8 IF YOU’VE SEEN OUB SHOW B*3 AND WISH ONLY TO ENJOY H A FEW HOIKS OF REAL E3| DANCING, TAKE ADVAN- ■ TAGE OF THESE SPECIAL BALLROOM PRICES: LADIES GEN CLEMEN 1 15c i 25c H FREE DANCE INSTRUCTION Hi Tues. and Thurs., 7:45 to 8:45 I LYRIC | BALLROOM
f H B TOMORROW! •xA iTfr, J/ * Mrmo-dotovwN-MAVtn L > V^CRAWFORCt News LAUREL and HARDY / IffS TALKING COMEDY Am ‘W LAST TIMES TODAY f “FREE AND EASY” A RIOT OF, FUNS AND LAUGHTER ~TR . WITH AN ALL-STAR CAST HBB | Invariably, the wise amusement-lover will tell you I I the same thing, . . . “If it’s a good show you want, go I | to a Skouras-Publix theatre. . , . They always have I | the best in town!” | I D,xiei Dn *f an strips film colony of RJUg I JI C'Mon, let’s give him a rous- lUf ffH SW-ii oj' ‘ h ® Fanv! a\ Saying Good-Bye to the // tlivifl I HBH IE I) AV IS ini ||g|p^|
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relays, should walk away with first honors. CRANE TO MISSISSIPPI Bv United Press CHAMPAIGN, 111., April 25.—Russell Crane, star guard and captain on the University of Illinois football team last fall, today accepted a position as line coach at Mississippi A. & M. college at Starkville, Miss., for next season. Crane also will coach boxing and wrestling.
Four Hdlln> Sprnkcrs tm Ihe Same Platform at the All-Star FORUM Clarence Darrow •‘WHY I AM AN AGNOSTIC” Rabbi Feuerlicht “WHY I AM A JEW” Bishop Hughes “WHY I AM A PROTESTANT” Quin O’Brien -WHY I AM A CATHOLIC* INDIANA ARMORY Wed. *;& April 30. Tirket* e!llng nt Clark * Cada’a Clay pool Hotrl Drug Store. $2.00, $1.50, SI.OO. Mall order* filled aa *- reived.
MOTION PICTURES
BANDBOX OPPOSITE TRACTION TERMINAL The All-Talking Picture BANNED BY WILL HAYES “White Cargo” From the Stage Sensation
