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18 SP ORTS. iite Manager Criticised for Letting Miller Bat@ml . With Mays on Second in N nth—Ruth | Plays on Nerve. BY DENMAN EW YORK, October 10—Wit N ~abbath struggle that marked the THOMPSON. h Douglas having obtained revenge over Mays for the defeat he suffered in the inaugural battle by hurling the Giants to victory over the Yankees, 4 to, 2. in the fourth round of the joust for base all’s highest prized gonfalon. the rival teams of McGraw gnd Huggins ow are squared away at two victories apiecce. Three more wins for one or the other are necessary before the conquerors can be crowned, but al- hough the contestants are an cqual distance from the common goal, lieir chances for ultimate triumph are by no means cven, for the National ntage that is accurately reflected in them favorites by odds of 10 to 7. |and delivered with Peckinpaugh and i Ruth, the latter with a home run In his system, coming up, ean only be conjectured. | “A7single in the third Ly MeNaly, who promptly was flagged stoalink, land « blow of similar dimensions in | the fourth by Ruth, who was left | when Bob Meusel whiffed, was the | extent of the damage done to the | delivery of Douglas by the Yanks un- | til_round five, when Wally Schang | took the leading role in registering | the initial tally of the pastime. Pipp | started with u crack to left, his first world series safety. He moved to !second on Ward's clever sacrifice, ! Douglas to Kelly, but when McNally | bounded to Frisch the Yankee firat- | sacker was trapped on the lines, | Frisch getting the put out after toss- ing to Rawlings and running his vie- tim back toward second. Here it was Schang made his pres- cnce felt. The turn-about backstop, hitting left handed against Douglas’ orthodox delivery, connected with a ball high and outside on the end of his bat and sent it sailing toward the left fleld bleachers. It appeared the tall was destined to land among the overcoated patrons in the sunless sun seats, but it fell a little short and, striking near the top of the barri- cade, bounded back into the fleld. ; McNally scoring, while Schang slid into third before the pellet could be retrieved. He was left there when Mays sent a soft roller to Rawlings. Peck Fumbles Ball. Getting a life on Peck’s fumble in the third, Snyder reached the midway on Douglas’ "death and was left by Burns, while the latter's safety in tue sixth was unsupported and Kelly hit into a double play, following Young's single in the seventh, but in the following frame the Giants hop- ped aboard the underhanded shoots ! of Mays and belabored him for three on a triple, double and two s, as though Don Carlos were er instead of a boxman ted McGraw's men to no runs and scven 1 n sixteen con- secutive innings, Irish Meusel lighted the fuse to the fireworks by walloping to left cen- guers possess a strategical adval the betting quotations, which make Having made good thelr threat to Ive the puzzling underhanded shoots of Carl Mays on the occasion ¢ their second meeting, the Giants \ave disposed of {he mos: formidable : Huggins' hurlers and have the iomentum_accruing from two con- cutive triumphs to aid them in re- rsing the verdict against Hovt, shen Nehf opposes him for the sec- oud time in tne fifth contest of the t this afternoon. Even should they fail to cop toda. e Giants still will rule as no les han even money choices, cason that they have in Barnes, a .hird pitcher, whose strong finish’ in (he first Giant victory last Friday ntitles him to a rating far ahead of Marry Harper, the only remaining hat Shawkey, Quinn and Collins all have been exploded, and they also possess Fred Tomey, who, although ae met the same fate as Shawkey, showed stuff enough to warrant the belfef he may come through if started again. b 5 In addition, Babe Ruth, the Yankee's strongest factor on attack, is in very poor shape physically and may be lorced to the sidelines at any time. Judged by his accomplishments of vesterday, when he kept fa(thvwllh a capacity throng at the Polo Grounds in producing one of his copyrighted specials in addition to comnecting for a single in four trips to the platter. it might be supposed there is little the miatter with Ruth, but the fact of the matter is that his infected elbow is causing him excruciating pain and few athletes in his condition would have attempted to play. Ruth Plays on Nerve. Only the great courage of the slugger enabled him to carry on through nine grueling innings.” He was playing on his nerve solel nd complications which may ¢nsue as a result of disregarding the advice of his physicians, may cause his out- raged constitution to call a hait re- sardless of the willingness of the Spirit. It was apparent all through the game that Ruth was suffer severcly and the fact that he pros Juced in a measurc as high as reas ably could be expected of him normal condition is a remarkable tribute to his gameness. Ruth grounded to Kelly on his first appearance, singled to center on his second and whiffed the third time up with Peck on base ahead of him. It was in .the ninth that clouting Colossus demonstrated the wherefore of his chief claim to fame. Alling arm and all, Ruth connected solidly with one of Douglas’ twisters and sent it hurtling through the air, the ball striking the cornice of the boxes at the extreme end in the upper tier{ of the grandstand, carroming over and on into the right field bleachers. Jt happened the bases were unoc- cupied at the time. Had they by any chance been filled this clout would have won for the Yankees right there. Schang Almost Gets Homer. From the manner in which the bat- tle progressed over the first half of the route, those who anticipated with pleasure a repetition of the old-fash- joned pitching duel produced by the first clash between Mays and Douglas had cauge for congratulating them- selves. Schang’s triple which, by the way, missed by a matter only of inches of landing in the left-fleld bleachers for a home run. following 2 single by Pipp, had netted the Yan- kees a tally in the fifth inning, and when at the end of the seventh round me Giants had only a pair of singles how for their efforts on attack, eemed Mays was due to repeat his of blanking tke Giants. The National Leaguers exploded this supposition in the eighth, when they got the range on May's subma- rine shoots and battered their way to a trio of tallies. Until this fateful frame the work of Douglas was only a_little_less effective than that of Mays. McGraw's moist-ball manipu- Jator had been in danger of being scored on in only one round, the fiftk, when the Yanks made good their threat. In the fag end of the eighth, with the Giants two runs to the good, the Yankees were afforded an opening that the second guessers today are saying Huggins plainly muffed when, with Mays on second base, the mite manager permitted Miller to bat, in- stead of inserting a pinch hitter for kim. The Yank gardener already had whiffed once, as had half a dozen of his teammates, and on two other oc- ‘casions he had failed to get a ball out of the infield. Frank Baker, a left-handed hitter, was on the bench—Home Run Baker, whose marathon wallops won two world _series in other years—and Chick Fewster was available for duty in_the outfield, but Miller was per- mitted to take his regular at bat and again struck out. What might for the soxman in the Huggins stable, now | ter for three b and. unlike hi big brother under similar circum- st in the first fracas, he neg- d to tag none of the sacks. 1 Rawlings, & suppose® weak batsman, who has belied this reputation in the series to date, promptly shot a single to right that tied the score. Mays’ Fall Is Costly. Then came the “break of the game.” It was a bunt shoved.down the first base line by Snyder, on which Mays stumbled and fell in his effort to field, both rumners being safe on the scratch hit. Douglas advanced them with a neat sacrifice and Burns proved to be the cashing medium when he hammered safely to left cen- ter, stretching it to a double by beat- ing Miller's peg to Ward at second. Bancroft and Frisch both died aerial- Iy, the latter on a little foul toj Schang, but the damage had been done. Kelly registered a_superfiuous run in the ninth, when his first bingle of the set, a double to left, was followed by Irish Meusel's second safety of: pastime, a swat to the same territory.? Irish was erased stealing through| splendid work on the part of Peck in handling a bad throw from Schang,; which rendered another hit by Rawl- ings valueless. ! After registering the initial tally of the battle in round 5, the Yanks were able to accomplish little against | Douglas until the final frame when Ruth evelved his first world series ]mp_\— of the specialty which has made ! him famous. A rap to Bancroft which was beaten out by Peck, who then died stealing, developed in the sixth inning. After the fanning of McNally in the eighth Schang got credit for a single on his perfectly placed bunt down the first base line, and when he was forced by Mays the latter lumbered on to second Wwhen_Bancroft fired wide of Kelly in an_effort to register a dual killing. Miller then also was victimized on strikes. DOUGLAS MAKES MORE DELIVERIES THAN MAYS In winning his game yesterday, Phil Douglas pitched five more balls’ than Carl Mays. Fe hurled 103 balls at the batter, of which 30 were called balls, 27 resulted in strikes, 14 foul strikes. $ fouls, 16 infleld outs, an outfield out and 7 hits. Mays pitched 98 times for 31 balls, |22 strikes, 11 foul strikes, 20 infleld ,outs, 4 outfield outs, 9 hits and 1 base ion_error. Neither pitcher gave a base | on i Peck’paugh, sx. THE EVE Composite Score of First Four Games. G., gas at bat; R., runs; H., hits; TB.. total dases; ®b. e : 3b., thrao-base Tita; HR.» hass Fus: BE.. buses on bails; BO., struck out; BE., stolon baves; Bes. Ave., batting average; PO., puteuts; A., assists; E., errors; TC., total ehances; Fldg, Ave., elding averages. v £ NEW YORK GIANTS. Bat. Fudg. Player. G.AB, R. H.TB. 2b. 3, HR. BB. 50. 8B. Ave. PO, A.E. TC, Ave. o P TR B R RN R RS e ancroft, k 20 .90 - Frisch, 3b 414 3 7 01 0 3 0 2 .00 7 k ] ch. 3 tu g 7ee1eaoz me i 1l 34l|Ruth Sets Record Wit 1b. a1 o3 1 1 0 0 3 4 0 067 44 4 047 1000 E. Meusel, If. 4 14 3 6 1 1 0 1 0 1 .37 2 1 0 3 1000 .’ 85! 414 1 6 0 0 0 0 1 0 49 9 16 0 28 1.000 & 318 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 417 3¢ B 0 29 1000 24 00 © 0 0 0 0 O 000 1 1 1 8 .08 Do 3409 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 6 0 6 1.000 5 8 3 0 0 0 0 0 O 400 1 1 0 2 1000 12 00 0 0 0 1 1 0 000 0 8 1 4 .70 L1000 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 6 1 0-1 1000 T R e e we was to having a holocaus! e § e second inning, shuffling Phil ¥ % Bat. cracking Ward square on the egg. A Plager. . HR. BB. 50. SB. Ave PO. A.E, 70, Ak’ 8 3 Miller, of 0’1 4 0 0 4 1000 Reckinpaugh, o8 1 0 . 139 966 Reonupe 16 B 2 34 7 o 7 100 x [RLE ECRC ] S 3 ;3| to the scribes in their weakened con o 8 1 0 o83 e 0 60 1000| As it was, the only casualty of the S daa B 2 3 10%8|day was Carl Mays, who the Glants 0 0 0 0 000 1 © 1 1000|finally got to in the elghth innings 0 3 3 0 .33 8 8 18 100 and when they got to him they done 0 0 1 0 167 0 0 '8 1000|a man size job of it. Before the game LA BT RS0 ol S 9 2 1000ICarl was a good bet to shut them out R kI S 9 3% .again like he done the other day, as 2% 0 % % o e 3 10%[the 100 times you bat against 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 1 1000 him s supposed to be the hardest 0 0 0 0 .000 O o 0 .00 'fid this Xmfls r:mly the Gln;:u lecgnd — e - —— - == o—|chance. n or seven innings today 115 23 5 216108 1im | he held them to two clean hits and a *Pinch hitter. scratch single by Snyder which 1 call AP R a -ctn’:cg Ibu?!“i the officlal scorfira New York Giants 0 —17 | scratched it off the records. But be- New York Yankee DT 0 4 13 1 0 8 1= | foro they waya man outin the elghth, @ on—Glants, 2; Yankees, 2. Pltchers’ record—Games won, Barnes, 1; Douglas, 1; | the tail-end of McGraw's batting Mays, I Hor 1. engise. 1 Nebe) 1 Quina, 1: ey, 1. 08 ey 1 order had earned the run that tied| 3 ers, 3, in 1-3; off Douglas, , s pon 'x'?oa ‘Doug] ; off Nehf, 7; off Toney, 8; off Bors Hit by pitche 'ys (Rawlirgs), | Wallops and a safe bunt in this frame by Barnes_(MoNally). Wild pitch—Barnes. Passed hite—Young (8), Pock- [and in the ninth his defeat was iapaugh, Pipp (2), Hohang, Ward, Dquglas. Bacrifice fiy—Baaaroft, Double pla: to | turned into a disgrace, for three more Eawlings to Kelly, Frisch to Rawlings, Rawlings to Kelly to Smith, Peoklapaugh g;‘z“‘ guys plastered him and one of these Plrp, ally fo Ward to Pipp, Ward to P.lx Quinn to Peckiipaugh to Pipp, % | wus George Kelly. Pecklrpaugh to Firp. Left on bases—Giants, 23; Yankees, 19. oy SIDELIGHTS NEW YORK, October 10.—National League adherents are freely predict- ing that Hoyt will meet the same fate as Mays in his second appearance. The control of both Mays and Douglas yesterday was perfect, nei er issuing a pass. The Giant —— ballist struck out eight of the including Ruth, while Burns, or first time up, was the only McGrawit similarly victimized by Mays. i MeNally and Peck, the only Yanks to essay thefts on Snvder, both were | turned back. Peck's attempt was of | the delayed variety, but found the Giants' defense alert. Pipp and Kelly both finally broke into the hit column after three lean days. Peck turned in a sparkling bit of work in the ninth when, with Irish Meusel astealing bent, he grabhed | Schang's wide peg With one mitt and | tagged the ambitious Giant with th same motion. trock and Albertus | tertained the thron In addition t TUnele Schacht g prior t motion picture camera, Schacht doing the directing. A midnight show and banquet Sat- urday night for the scribes at the Hotel Commodore, official press head- quarters for the world series, turned out to be a love feast, Ban Johnson. Harry Frazee, Garry Herrmann and other prominent belligerents in_the | well ermembered base ball war fra 4 <] National. Burny, cf. Buncroft; ss.. Frisch, 3b. You f. Kelly, 1b.... E. Meausel, If. Rawlings, 2b. Snyder, c. meocuE MCOmMAS ccooome = H ola\um ~ls Totals American. Miller, ef. . = Ruth, If. R. Meusel, rf. RING LARDNER SEZ: NG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, -1921 Giants Have Better of Yankees in Pitching Angle and Now Are Favorites to Take Series 11cGRAW HAS STRONGER RESERVE THAN HUGGINS ** h Useless Home Run. Giants’ Infield Plays Carefully for Babe, but \__Young Fails to Cover Right Field Seats. EW YORK, October 10—The fans may be dont realize how close t at this pastime yesterday. In the pitched a sour one that just missed n inch lower and the athlete’s brains would of come hurtling into the press coop, which was already over- crowded with same. You can imagine what the congestion would of did ON SERIES resented by his secretary, George B. Christian, jr. There was nothing Vol- steadian about the festivities. Appearance on the field prior to the game of Babe Ruth in uniform ellcit- ed a resounding cheer from the crowd, and when the Bambino took his place in the garden at the start he was given a tremendous ovation, but it was as nothing to the thunder of applause that greeted his initial | appearance at bat. Frank Frisch, the Fordhamite, who has flashed so brilliantly in_ the series to date and who laced Mays for three singles and a triple in the opening game, received a fine hand when he came to bat in the opening scssion, but the best the youngster could produce was an easy fly to Mil- ler. Frisch's .700 batting average took a mighty tumble as a result of four fruitless trips to the platter. A liner that Bancroft had to leap for in the second inning was the closest Pipp had yet come to mak- ing a hit in the es. Wally mad good on his next trip, in the fifth, 2 blow to left. and it proved the wering wedge for the first run ef the game. fallure to ficld @ Snyder's bat in three was the Peckinpaugh's mean hopper from deep short in round first error charged against the Yankees in the series. It was a diffi cult chance and might well have been scored as a hit. To MeNally fell the distinction of registering the first hit of the game when he plunked a clean single to right at the start of the third inning. Minoka Mike was on the bases but a short time, however, as he died steal. ing on the third ball pitched Schang. Peck make a fine play in tossing out Baneroft in the fourth after McNally isred Dave's roller in a futile dive McNally gave the throng a genuine thrill in the eixth, when he leaped to enear a tervific liner from the bat of Snyder with his gloved hand. Mike's f.ut prevented a Giant score, for after Douglas was disposed of Burns came through with the first safety off Mays, a single to center. Hundreds of fane who have attend- ed_every game of the serles, hoping (Continued on page 19.) to| | Instead of taking his place in the world serles Hall of Fame along with Ed Walsh, Christy Mathewson, Chief Bender and Red Faber, Carl's name will now go down in history as the pitcher who Bill Lange's grandson got a base hit off of in the series of 5862 New York time. Saturday's rain was supposed to be soup for Carl 48 it gave him an unexpected day of % ooks npw like he ought to of took another e, ¢ * ok ok % The real heroes of the battle was Emil Meusel, who the Yankee nuts speak of as that brother of Bob Meu- sels, and Johnny Rawlings, the weak dition. the ninth and took it home to the wife and kiddles If any. In this in- fleld arrangement Dave Bancroft Is the ‘one that 18 taking the chance. as he stands right whero Babe pickles his line drives. One of theso days George Burns will sce two balls com- ing at him at once, and one of them will be Bancroft's head. For somc reason another, the Yankees has quit stealing home. [Two of them made efforts to steal second yesterday, but they will go down In history as efforts. Roger Peckinpaugh's attempt was « delaved steal In the sixth Innings. Th Aotmuch delay that Roger ain't yet. ¢ wal there * Kk % ¥ One thing I would like to call at- tention to and have Judge Landls do something about It befor: the serles is namely the p ing the band play the & Banner just before every game. Gents like myself and George Moriarity and Fred Toney is as patriotic as an; | body else, but the exposure 1s terrib |If we have got to keep doing it, why |at least make the women do it, too. | They ought not to be barred when they have already win the right to smoke cigarettes, drink gin and pick their teeth. next * ok koK That is about all I have got to say except that I was woke up this morning to receive a seventy-six-word telegram from Nick Altrock, the main slster of the series according to the boys that play the games a few d. ahead of the athletes. An explana- tion of Emil's conduct may be found in the fact that he was with the Phil- les up to two months ago and never knew they was one big league let alone that Carl Mays was the star pitcher of the other one. Rawling has been a busher, too, but you' think he had been around long enough to hear of Carl. Rawlings' work 8o far can't be explained in no legitimate way and it seems to me like they ought to keep men like he out of an important series. he does is make a sucker out of the law and the prophets. * ok ok | People that thronged the Polo Grounds yesterday went there with- out mo cxpectations of seeing Babc Ruth, as the Babe was alleged to be |maybe for the whole serles on account of & poisoned arm. But the Babe fool- ed everybody and got in the game after telling his doctor to go to a ercrowded with the medical pro- fession. Babe played with his souper all bound round,” and it seemed to bother him in throwing. But he grab- bed himself off another single and made a new world record by hitting the most useless home run in the his- tory of organized Lase ball. The Glant infleld played for Rutk pretty near the same way that National League inflelds play for Cy Willlams of the Phillies. Bancroft moved over to the right field side of second base, Raw- lings camped in short right field and Kelly hugged the foul line. The whole left side of the infleld was left to Frankie Frisch. * ok ok * Babe's first effort was a roller that went right wkere Kelly was playing. His second was a single to right field, which, by the way, George Burns, the center flelder, was set just right to stop. When he come up the third time he whiffed, and as luck would have it Snyder was playing right where he could catch the third strike. And If Ross Young had only been setting up in the right field seats he ould of catched the one Babe hit in - ol enmns nun tionals, 4; Americans, 3. Struck out— By Douglas, 8; by Mays, 1. Umpires— At plate, Chill; first base, Rigler; sec- ond base, Moriarty; third base, Quig- ley. Time of game—1 hour and 3§ minutes. i A WONDER VALUE OLDFIELD $9 : 99 TIRES, CHAS. E. MILLER, Inc. 30x3Y% in. XTREMELY popular among the many sizes of El Producto is the big 15 cent Corona shape, that comes packed in the blue tin of fifty. Like every El Producto, the Corona shape is the last word in smooth, even smoking quality, with the distinctive character that can be found only in El Producto’s uncopyable blend. out of it for this game at least. and | place wrich is said to be already | 605-607 7th. St. | i i | | and designs, which will match | EISEMAN’S Make Use of Your Odd Coats Match Your Odd Coats With Our Special TROUSERS 4.65 We have hundreds of fine Trousers, in many, Plain or fancy blues, grays, browns, greens, etc,, in all materials, such as flannels, worsteds, serges, SPORTS. ‘'WARD, HELD “DOUBTFUL,” IS PLAYING GREAT BALL N three” and other institutions of learning, but the New York Ameri cans are strong for it. For Ouachita produced Aaron Ward, the keen- brained, snappy Yankee second baseman. Ward has upset the early predic- put oute he has made nine tions of the base ball experts, who |41 error. | 1 pointed to him as the possible weak | 1000 ~Yesterday he accepted seven asnists, the highest number made in point in the Yankee lineup. His an- the game by any one player, and swer is a batting mark of .208 thus|added two put-outs to his string. far in the world serles and a perfect Ward Is one of the least talkat fielding average, with more ussists|of all the Yankees. than any other player on elther of | win the serie; the contending clubs. } He has made twenty-four assists,| all without a misplay, seven more|Ward is a reader in the senate of than his rival, Rawlings, the Giants’|the Arkunsas legislature. He won't second sacke His flelding has been |be at this job this winter, though. re, steady, even spectacular at|as his home state law makers do not imes. He has figured in almost every | meet ugain until next year. He lives louble performed by his team. In'in Forth Smith WHITE SOX NEED LONE GAME T0 GAIN TITLE CHICAGO, October 10.—The Cicar: Americans made it four in a row fr ational League rivals vester winning 3 to 2 in the nine- game series to decide the city cham- Plonship. * Shovel Hodge of the White Sox on posed Grover Alexander, the Cubs’ ce, on the mound. and the veteri: suffered his second defeat, while th White § was credited w his second win. Hodge outpitched his veteran rit permitting only six hits to Alexa der's nine. The attendance yesterday 28,381, and the gross receipts § The players' share was $12,954, ¢ share $8.636, and the commi share $3.510. e ———————Te——— EW YORK, October 10.—Ouachita College, out in Arkadelphiz, ithout . his fielding average bein, “I'm sure we'll ' was the total fruit of an interview with him. When he Isn't with the Yankees It a idear of which was that I hadnt men- tioned him and his partner, Al Schacht, in none of these articles. So here is vour name, Nick, and dont send me no more telegrams and I would of give you a write up only if 4 man starts mentloning the names of different comedians in this series, they's no place to draw the line. might even haif to include the bo: score, x FINAL TO MANHATTAN NINE. Manhattan Athletic Club ended its base ball season yesterday Wwith a 9-to-1 victory over Lacey's All-Stars, | Hutchinson held the losers to three hits. Ford and Swann made homers for the vict 3 —_— WINS BASE BALL TITLE. COLUMBUS, Ohio, October 10.—The |, Beaver Falls, Pa., team yesterday won the national triple A semi-profes- sional base ball championship by de- feating the KFrancis Dry Cleaners of Columbus, 6 to 0. Each team had pre- viously won one of {wo games played in Beaver Falls. Bet. F & G Sts. DOBBS CANTERBUR™ SEVEN DOLLARS HAT’S in a man’s head determines the hat that goes on top of it. 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