Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 117, 17 May 1922 — Page 12

VAGE TWELVE

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1922.

EXPECT TRACK, FIELD ATHLETES TO ARRIVE AT EARLHAM FRIDAY

Many of the 20O high school athletes who will compete in the annual track and field meet of the Indiana High School Athletic association, will arrive Friday noon at Earlham college. Those who arrive at this hour are expected to be from long distances, who wish to jest up before the big meet, which will follow on the next day. Coach R. B. Mowe, of Earlham college, who has been pushing preparations for the big annual classic, states that everything is practically in readiness for the first events, trials of which will be started at 10 o'clock

Saturday morning. i A nrinted nroeram of all the events I

of the meet, will be available at the. field. Admission to the meet will be 50 cents to everybody. Medals will be awarded to the first three places in each event, a cup to the winning team and a placque to the winning relay team. None other than the participants will be allowed inside the field of competition. This rule will be strictly ' enforced throughout the entire meet.

THE EYES THAT PICK THE RIGHT ONES AND-

e '''' I

1 "

THE BAT THAT SLAMS 'EM OUT

X v. 3r 1S6, 4 is.

A close-up of Babe Ruth's lamps and his big Dludgeon.

DOPES BEAT BANKERS IN OVERTIME GAME Seven innings were required to decide a winner in the Commercial

league game between the Bankers and the Schroeders Drugs at Exhibition park, Tuesday afternoon, which the latter turned into a victory by the score of 6 to 5. Boyd, hurling for the Bankers, although touched hard, kept his hits well scattered and the 10 hits garnered by the Dojies failed to produce many runs. The winners were slow in getting started and failed to score until the third when they pushed one run over the pan. They scored one in the

fourth and fifth and two in the sixth j

and put the final run over the pan with two down. The Bankers staged a big batting rally in the fourth that netted them four runs. They failed to hold their lead and Boyd was touched each Inning for at least one run from then on. Dingley hurled a good game for the winners, ffaving only one bad round. Errors paved the way for the runners to cross the plate. Dingley allowed the Bankers only six hits. Wednesday evening the Bakers will play the Kiwanis and Thursday evening the Item will play the Himes Dairy. The score: Bankers . . . . . . :,. .100 400 05 6 4 Schroeders ........001 112 16 10 4 Boyd, Mason and Kiser; Dingley and Metz.

The suspension of Babe Ruth, world's greatest home-run hitter, will be lifted May 20, if the Babe respectfully applies for reinstatement on that date and Commissioner Landis decides the Big Bambino has been repentant enough and has suffered enough.

And when Ruth steps into action again the eyes of the baseball world will be turned upon him. "Will he start right in at his old tricks of slamming out homers at the rate of fifty-nine a season?" "Have his eyes slipped during the days of his enforced

idleness?" "Has he still the old wallop in his arms and shoulders and the perfect timing : . his swing that enabled him to drive the ball undreamed of distances

last season?" These are the

questions the fans

answered.

want to Bee

driving home, with a comfortable mar-

FOUR YANKS WIN SPEEDWAY CLASSIC INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 17 Five drivers born on alien soil have won the Indianapolis 500 mile classic, arid

four Yankees have conned the world's of tho purse; and DePalma and Wil

t:ux aie luuiug up on me iracK every day. Thus far no driver has been able to repeat a 500-mile victory, but the dope may be upset in 1922, as a year ago Louis Chevrolet had the honor-to

QUAKERS LOSE FAST CONTEST TO BUTLER In a baseball battle which was fast throughout Earlham lost to Butler 10

! to 6 Tuesday afternoon on Reid field. . The encounter was the last of the seaI son on the home grounds for the Ma

roon and White nine. A return game will be staged with the Page men at

Indianapolis on May 26 which will

wind up the season. Earlham got away to a fast start and aided by Butler errors touched Staton, the star Bulldog twirler for one (ally in the first and two in the third. The fourth was the destructive session for the loca team when a timely error gave the visitors a chance to come across with live runs. In the sixth Buck Ewing, the Quaker first

saeker connected for a long one and circled the bases on the hit with two men scoring ahead of him. It was the classiest hit of the day. The Butler infield played ragged ball at the start of the fray but settled down later and demonstrated some airtight fielding. The pitching honors were evenly divided between Goar of the Mowemen and Jake Staton. the Butler ace. Newell Eider, star

i center fielder for Earlham is the only

senior in yesterday's game and played his last lor the Quakers on Reid Field. The score: R. H. E. Earlham 102 003 000 6 7 5 Butler 000 530 00210 9 3 Goar and Stafford; Staton and Hungate. Earlham played a fine game of ball Tuesday, and had the Butler gang rather worried in the early rounds of the

game. Goar .was going good ana iney could not connect with his slants, but

JRACK ATHLETE IS STAR AS SCHOLAR

!

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BOXING RESULTS vfw vfiPk' Mov 17 Rill Tirennan

, , i j ".i t.- m a few prrnrs in the later inninzs Daved

tie nuie uievious winners. u'"Bi auuin.ru um jiw - V!.i.

Gaston Chevrolet is the only driver! of Australia, in the eighth round of jne way ior ii uowuitu. u.u not living. Ray Harroun, Joe Dawson' their scheduled 10 round contest here ne weaKenea. .

and Dario Resta have retired. Tommy i Tuesday night. Brennan caugat 1 raMilton, last year's winner, is an entry, I cey in a corner and showered him with but has not yet arrived at the track. rights and lefts until he dropped for Goux has come across the Atlantic to ! the count.

battle for the $20,000, the winner's end

Gus Desch ready for the gun in a sprint. Gus Desch is called the ideal college man by Notre Dame officials. His activities in track and football, at which sports he has on fame, haven't prevented him from ranking well in his studies and taking an active part in other branches of college life. He is president of the iunior class and can be a toddle hound with the rest of them at the roms.

ATLAS TOO STRONG FOR HARVESTERS

The Atlas Underwear team. In the Industrial Soft Ball league had little trouble winning from the International Harvesters running up a 14 to 4 count.

on the Atlas diamond Tuesday nigut. The Harvesters got men on the bases

but failed to produce the necessary punch to put them over the plate.

The score:

Atlas 421 041 10114

H. C 010 200 100 4 The schedule for the next months

in the league is as follows:

May 18 Vulcan Spring vs. Wayne

Works, 5:45.

May 22 Jones vs. Atlas, 5:30. May 23 Penna. vs. I, H. C, 5:30. May 251. H. C. vs. Wayne Works,

5:45.

May 31 Vulcan Spring vs. I. H. C.

5:30.

June 1 Jones vs. Wayne Works.

5:45.

June 2 Penna. vs. Vulcan SDrina.

5:30.

June 5 Jones vs. I. H. C, 5:30. June 6 Atlas vs. Vulcan Spring 5:30 June 7 Penna, vs. Wayne Works.

5:45.

June

5:45.

June

5:30.

12 Atlas vs. Wayne Works, 13 Jones vs. Vulcan Spring,

According to General De Castelnau.

chairman of the army commission.

France must have three soldiers to one for Germany as a standing army when the zero hour sounds again.

In a mine in the United States, a j half mile deep, the temperature is 139 ! degrees. J

FOOTWEAR "Better for Less" FIVEUS SHOE STORE 533 Main

leading speed event. If an American pilot can win the tenth annual 500 mile race on May 30, the score will be evened. The first two years the Yanks had it their own way, Ray Harroun being the 1911 victor and Joe Dawson slipping across the wire first in 1912. Then Europe cut in and Jules Goux, a Frenchman, grabbed the big prize in 1913. Rene Thomas, his countryman, copped in 1914; Ralph DePalma, a naturalized American, but Italian born, gathered in the title in 1915. Dario Resta, born in Italy, and reared in England, took first honors in 1916. Howard Wilcox, a Crawfordsville, Ind., lad was first across the wire in 1919. but France came back in 1920 when the late Gaston Chevrolet, breezed home after DePalma faltered. Last year Tommy Milton, world's speed king, and speedway champion, made it four for America, the St. Paul lad

be the first .engineer to design and build a winner, copping in both 1920 and 1921.

FIVE LEADING HITTERS IN EACH MAJOR LEAGUE American League.

G AB R Sisler. St. L 30 126 34

16 12 f-r I.) 25

ATLANTA, Ga., May 17. Pal Moore, the Memphis, Tenn., bantamweight, won a referee's decision over Tim O'Dowd in a 10 round contest here, Tuesday night.

84

Witt, N. Y 23

Cobb. Detroit 21 75 O'Neil, Cleve 23 66 Miller, Phila 26 103

National League. G AB R

Toporcer. St. L.. .21 59 Griffith. Brooklvn 20 69 Bigbee, Pitts 27 110 Hornsbv, St. L...27 100 Kelly, N. Y 28 106

15 10 19 25 18

H Pet. 56 .444 35 .417 30 .400 26 .394 40 .388 H Pet. 24 .407 26 .377 41 .373 j 37 .370 38 .358 1

PEORIA. 111.. May 17. Pinkey

Mitchell, of Milwaukee, knocked out!

third round of their bout here Tuesday night. Welch was outclassed throughout.

The famous cloister built by Herod and described by Josephus has been discovered during recent excavations at Askelon.

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MILK Is a Food Himes Bros. Dairv

H Phone 1850

NO WAR TAX

Effective? May 8, 1922, the excise tax cn United States Tires for passenger cars both casings and tubes, is, absorbed by the makers and is not added to the selling price. United States Rubber Company.

lb tlie Pmirclias

x3J&

HEN the'Usco" Tire announced its new price of $10.90itcar-

ried this understood contract with the buyer A price reduction made in good faith using all the U. S. advanced art of tire making, not only to get the price down, but to keep the quality up. Now let us say this to you as a tire user: Today $10.90 is notthe uncommon price it was last November. But the "Usco" tire is still the uncommon tire value it always has been.

United States Tires are Good Tires

Copyright 1922 U.S.TirCo

A quality tire with defi nite performance stand' ards to live up to. Better if anything than when it was sold at higher prices. Because in carrying out the "Usco" price reduction in good faith, we

learned something about raising tlie quality, too.

1 A

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:wy mm

r Whm i United States Tires i United States Rubber Company WMMM'S X Tytv-tfiTft n Old,t and Larvnt Two hundred and SS&L y'J'.? jZS&l?'&J A f actoru-m nuibtr Organization ti A World thirty-Jiv Branch V 2 '"'tS&Y j&f A

To spread extra engine troubles in front of you, say, "Give me a quart of oiL" To put extra engine troubles behind you, ask for a 5-gallon can of Gargoyle MobiloiL

TOR the transmission and differential of your car use Gargoyle Mobiloil "C" or as specified in the Chart.

VACUUM OIL OMPANY

Where You Can Buy US,Tires:

henoweth Auto Co, Frank E. Gish A. J. Miller & Sons Webb-Coleman Co. Steve Worley .

Frank C Hale, Abington, Ind. The Boston Garage, Boston, Ind. Roscoe Helms, Centerville, Ind. G. T. Bowen & Sons, Chester, Ind. J. R. Carroll, Fountain City, Ind.

R. H. Hiatt, Greensfork, Ind. W. L. Henry Jr. & Co., Whitewater, Ind. C L. Pitts, Williamsburg, Ind.

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3 Interest on Your Savings Accounts I American Trust Company I Main and 9th Sts.

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FORD LENSES Passed with high record Hfi per pair lUL

WEBB-COLEMAN CO. Opp. Postofflce Phones 1616-1694

DR. J. F. WILSON DENTIST Formerly came here on Thursdays from Indianapolis. Office Over Starr Piano Store

I.

BOSTON STORE Quality Always

MEN'S SUITS Spring and Summer Weight Convenient Credit UNION STORE, 830 Main

Men's Work Straw Hats 25c each Rapp's Cut Price Co.