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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, ) [ THREAT OF “SOUTHPAW-ING RED SOX TO DEATH” AND HIPPO VAUGHN, IN GREAT COMEBACK MAKES BOSTON PLAYERS |- LOCHER AND PASKERT ALSO STAR—TEAMS STRIKE FOR MORE MONEY AND HOLD UP GAME MORE THAN ONE HOUR 3 == = a2 ? . T T T = = <~ — - ByBeigs| COMPOSITE BOX SCORE OF FIVE WORLD'S SERIES TILTS bl TS SUCH A SATISFACTION 5 S ~- ———— Vo T wrow [HAT You ("” S mmrv\ Yes 1 ExPECT | ARE In PERFFCT TAS! 6 ow Tou © SAIL mosT | 1T PUTS ONE SO MUCH ere ANY DAY nlows ‘[ DAt field MORE AT EASE 7 — Tre AR'-YJ Ve BEEW o | ab. r. bh.tb. bb.hp. s0. sh. sb. ave. po. a. e. ave I Hendrix 01 1 0 0 0 0 0 1000 0 0 0 .000 | Pick SR ] 400 9 10 0 1000 Tyler, ; 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 .333 2 6 0 1000 | Merxie, 10 G T I B O ST 6 10 6) < | Mann, If ARSI 7 & B 0 01 B0 5 0 0 1000 | Flack rf 1 4 4 1 1 0 0 13 0 1000 i Hollocher s P die N IO 1R 5 ] 236 1 1 .961 H Paskert, ¢f o &8 0o 2 0 0 21111 0 0 1000 | Deal 3b O3 B8 3 NG AN O 158 10 02 0 O SINE A 1 0 6 > | ®ilifer, ¢ 2 32 0 0 0 0 .13324 4 0 1000 | Yaughn, p 0O 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 .000 611 0 1000 | O'Farrell 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 06 0 0 1000 ~ Tder an R EEGRE GR GI 6 10 0 1 2 B8 /110,00 | Wortman, 2b ... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 1 0 0 1000 | Douglas, p .... O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 1 .000 MeCabe Py n 1 [ 0 {00 e R | 000 0 0o 0 000 i ) 7 O R0 (8 o O I ) 8 () 000 0 0 0 .000 | 149 9 34 41 16 1 13 4 3 .985 i CHICAGO. . TERING | field | ab. r. bh. tb. bb.hp. so. sh. sh. e. ave 2 Ul - | Schang ¢ S 0 0 0 1 0 1000 fuE BEEN GASSED vE BEEMN THRoOuGH H Whiteman If .. o I TR SR SR S i R 1 .938 BuD 'm BACK on | '; l~°"5€: S:EVLL | McInnis, 1b ... 10675 SR S R THR TR 1 () 0 1000 2 ‘L (RE- SLIGHTLY | Shean, 2b 1EINT SRR B0/ 0 1000 ;U(_,G;OWEUEAIC%( WS O (S | Hooper, rf SN0l d s SR 2 S B 0 1000 CEEATE I | Ruth, p SOl S ) T 0 1000 i e Thomas, 2b TS i o 2o G ) 0 0 0 1000 ZL oS Strank, of 1 5 0 0 10 s 0 1000 t}ji," | Scott, ss by 0 ) 10 8 0 1000 = Agnew, ¢ ORRROIIS 0/ 0B O RO T 8 O 000 12 6 0 1000 H Jush, p 3 O 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 .000 0 3 0 1000 ~ { Dubue 0 o 0 o [ 1 0o 0 000 0 0 0 1000 | Aays, p i 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 2 0 1000 ! Jones, p . SO TR 0B 1y B 7 )G Ol 0 B (1.0 B | 0 1000 | Miller USRI B 0 0 B 0 I ) BT 1010 Totals 119 5 3 .186132 70 1 .995 | o = e - & — N | 5 T OFFICIAL BOX SCORE 78 3 FIFTH GAME OF THE WORLD'S SERIES, PLAYED AT FENWAY| PR the 3 | PARK. BOSTON, ON SEPTEMBER, 10, 1918, | et (:‘1:3]“, ,:‘p S,:'(')'T | = ! CHICAGO NATIONALS. BOSTON AMERICANS B o e ab. . h. po. a. e ab. r. h. po. a. e did not strike it until = {| Flack, rt.... LA 0RO 580 ng'01::> O RO o Miefer was half way to the dugout | i i Naociati || Hollocher, ss.. 3 2 3 2 5 0 S SRS e —_— r“‘a\_ fnic v, i Copyright,, 1918, by The Tribune Association (New York Trihnnas e T DR AW Strunk. cf CROS TS (0D 3 | | - = Whiteman, If.. 3 0 1 1 2 0 Hollocher a Star. i ~ L ~ g ] || Paskert, of.... G o S RO MoTii it e CD g Hollocher, with a sensational de- | e Il Merkie, 1b B ob bt st Scott, ss. B 00 1 4ol layed steal of second; Les Mann with | matter, but scented trouble when four | Thomas singied for Boston in the f #—— el e Lo Sl Plck, ...4 0 1 4 3 0 | Thomas 3b R0 IS T & wallop immediately afterward, and | mounted policemen galloped on to the | fifth with one out, but was eradicated | | | “‘ Deal 4 0 0 0 0 o0 | Asnew c...... £ 008 10w Paskert with a woful double with two | grounds and took positions in front of | by a Hollocher-Pick-Merkle double. 000 S BIG ||| STANDING OF CLUBS i S 5 " Scheng, et L 0 0.1 0.0 men on in the eight, were the indi- | the centre field bleachers. As a matter | In the sixth Whitman saved at least SERIES GAME IN BOSTON ||| IN WORLD'S SE i R G CRURU R OSRO WToned i ot .1 0 0 B30l viduals who made the three runs pos- | of fact while the band was playing | one run and no one will ever know || iy Il iy (1| vausnn, p L0 S0 08 B0 *Miller .1 0 o0gs0®w0 o om. Holloeher and Flack | “Tessie” and “Keep the Home Fires | how many more. Hallocher singled.|| Boston, Sept. 11.—Today’s crowd | | | Beec | — = — — - 1 defensively, although in jus St - Cubs l.w;m Red Sox P .\\r‘u‘\ln. filed_out and Lyl-;w:m\ \\;\n\m(y at the fifth game of the world’s ||| IBoston (A. L. = 2 .600 | Totals .30 8 12 0 Total .. 284 0 27 43 O tice to the other Cubs it must be s telling the National Commission that | Merkle came up with two on anc serics at Fenway Park was more | Chica 3 ¥ # . . . 1t entire team plaved a wonder- | they would not play unless they were | singled sharply tolaft. Hollocher was || than 2,000 better than yesterday’s | | | DizesoR( 2400 “ __ *Batted for Jones in the ninth inning N r spurkling game, | given a larger share of the receipts. | rounding third as Whiteman got the|! turnout. The crowd of 21,634 was | | 3 || Chicago 0RO S L O/ SRR O O £ her, with three hits and a | Crippled Soldiers Cheered. ball on the bouad. The Cub short-|| the best the serics has drawn so | | Eostonfiil i dha iy 2 G OINE0 IE R L OE RO B OH O G Ve Wil in four fimes at bat, was casily | Meanwhile a number of crippled | stap, Who can run faster than a bull- || far, with the exception of last Sat- Two base hits—Mann, Paskert, Strunk | (e offensive star of both teams, and | soldier boys came into the grand |dog, slid inte the plate, but White- | [ urday’s crowd in Chicago. This | [ Was just some smart stuff of Holloch- | Stolen bases—Hollocher. e e e e an dounle. pinvs | stand. Pale and maimed, leaning on | man's perfect throw beat him to it|| was the first game of the series in | | €IS and it went through. L 5 : i that bl 4 and swept away every | companions for support, they hob- |and he was distressed to behold Hank | which the players did not figure. | | - | teublo poge W aniBEIC o chiex, o N o be R EICE S nd BT ie nea the Red Sox had of pushing | bled down to the front row. The great | O’Day’s thumb extended toward the After the National Commission || _Georse Hildebrand will work behing |[ (2)i Whiteman and Shoan. - 3 nan around the bags. | mass of people became strangely distant horizon .took its levy of 10 per cent Harry the bat today. The games playved have | Teft on ""'““‘;' Chicago, 6; Irfls(On,r‘j s s BeatintEicIa | Then moved by a common impulsse | There were still two men on. Pick|| Frazee and Charley Weeghman | | been well handled., Very little serious L‘fl“‘:' 0"(‘*4'-[{ ;f”'z"s“\"?"“;;v“- ”f';';':m'* 5 o e | they rose to th feet d from 2 h/\\. f"“_mlvv ";‘\:L"'l \j'_ VEMEIR G split the rest, each club owner get- kicking has been observed. ! }fr“:i‘n:“ ..-y:;\- Vm?\n?r‘l ”’w» ‘j"w‘v ‘l-h‘mt‘h’__mfl A fary E e s R D SID L ed 1000] chents IDUiRE wiirontion welomer ibackiafibecont, but Struak, by sprint- || ing $13.981.0, A o ol : e R Jmpires—0'Day, the plate; 2 2 s lem a 5 & | It sweled, a mighty chorus, and |ing thirty-five vards in nothing flai| | Chicago Americans and the New The manager of the Herald basebail ond, and Owens, at third base. T Setlan s s gIVoIL birth. Of course | [} 0 1 over the streets and away. | caught the ball. For a moment York Nationals received $18,- | |team today denied that he will chal-, Time of game—1 hour and 42 minutes. the Red Sox's chanees in the besin- | $OPC0 A% G (0070 forever, for | Mitchell looked as if he were going to [ | 231,35, . lenge the winner of the world's series. | e "”‘”]‘ oo ed ;‘“‘““ as {5 dame from the, warm heart of | suffer a ‘“‘““”""‘“\k’l' “fl the “r“'"‘} but The official attendance and re- T = i - g right as those of a man trying to | 4, opjca, and more than all clse, it | he recovered, and the doctor put back | | ceipts of the fifth game of the ser 7 mnvy a ton of coal \\'\L(h seven \‘sl'}wls i \\‘:‘\ B e the hypodermic of sweet oil which he i“'l .,hm“ff“ :L ,‘,"_ Pt "‘I:mp E FIFTH GAME DELAYED {gremed by a mingling of boos and Carlson .. J& Russlan uuoney i levertheloss the was but a few minutes later that | had been preparing to inject the 1917 series, played at Comisk- /! P ’ cheers. Altman n not given up, particularly m‘l»' e “‘,]‘_w,,i “The Star Spangled| In Boston's part of the sixth, which | oy park, l'hh-ug-‘». {‘,I‘,',,“": mik BY PLAYERS’ STRIKE | “"TiY cource of the strike may be Seo ... SO e W Tl W R O e 0 ol i Gt skl e s L TOSGET ST il e 1015, i | traced back to last winter when the 1y Hosevortas Tones had beoh hitting. | peaded. “Theball playexrs nu\nt-rn\h‘i*;\ B e aiah dn ‘"f‘ ot e Total paid attendance. . 24,691 | " ;I»\Il!l(m‘u_l c:»mm‘n.lutxv{x ,Ofi?”:]"l. a new T CEOR T iy N i R e | eV st b L o | e M ST Hiineisaarani|i imotalirceints e 103 008 Boston, Sept. 11.—A new chapter | SugEestion of o ‘y“-“?p e Sitharen snd @ worthylmmied Hank || Sh0 e el Diyergiotic Ieama e S i b e eacclupiehn 2080581} vl t Sx¥nolpbrta e cleaintaco ) | ERCRESES BRI S on D el 3 e e e B | el el mneibEnarETano SRS R e s v tionalRComm Esionis yesterday, when for more than two | &lon plavers wou d foa Toie, ) Hank has a good sound to it, probably | P1are out the anthem as is cu\'tmna!'_,;"_“"_ S e L share i . 3,106.90 | | hours at Fenway park the Red Sox | -\f‘v“‘i"“ i ‘;al ‘ifi’:;‘?i] - u;: S hecause it ealls to mind a viston of | It Plaved it softly, and in the presence | 53" ove thrown it through some- ; 1oL f{[[endtnaiCubsistruclt forja blgser share |FN8LSHET BREH S o8 SH ARt flank Gowdy, far famed haramering | of those boy heroes who Bave ghven | PO LR E 2= | 1 paid attendance of the receipts. A crowd of :lhouL\:j"‘- £ str :]‘; _‘;-‘_ K¢ i"‘le‘c'\‘“‘i “9‘1 A iRt ottt Brive o % | their lives over to blight and disease | "RV S FHL IR S N 10 root In unison Ttal receipts | ,000 sat out in the New England | .\”\1:(‘\’«‘»"”\‘ i v‘:”'l‘”m:“ 'A\“““" ?m\‘ 0"‘, harpooning Huns in the outflelds of | [oF their country, it seemed like the | o'y \yn in the lucky sevanth. Two machiclubihahnnsf siizatisallf subshinclanaivond sredf mhathitiisllls Des o DRt i e | e ¢ benediction of prayer | o2 Gires narmless but agile nuts || Yntional Commission’s all about, rending the air from time | the Mones. = A il mank T looked Aanvoront Well, before the players made up | BEpanl wouin=iin nhiono e enE T N e 6,940.00 | | to time with cries of “Play ball!” 1S me\l'v( ‘m g‘“:w ]m ‘Ih"( -mr:m; Vaughn worked cantiously and finally | their minds to call the strike off. |, "iycering, and soon about 24,920 Digures oL diivoncammesion 1015 18 R e oo e e R et e e R T e e ey NG Re e e 0 i e et ol ||| SCot Bphid Battcnd oy 11324501} afisen SInfoTl Gy erlesl competitlon | thdithe i ek inna| 5 & < % & | phone. strode majestically on to the P 5 Total receipts. . .......$159,824.00 | | and ended, as have most baseball in- | With the series ualess e i) Smelaybailtne thwolllaRHEvalinecr¥al (BATRS SLC SG E8 S8 i 6 S et hanaBling esman oot peichiythmBand i ha 69.527.70 | | surrections of the past, In summary | Were suaranteed $1,500 each and the i r 3 h = Het i | losers $1,000 each. This practically | screeching like demons. Apparently || | Vaughn was deaf to it all. At least strike if Hank had suffered it to live He hit it an awful welt. The ball ch club’s sl 37,156.95 raut of the playvers. Thair demands el were thrown overboard by the na. | Would have eliminated the sum set ational Commission’s | | | | Quixote never bore himself with more | dignity. 1t was former Mayor Honey | Fitz, sweet singer of “Sweet Adeline.” | | soared for the left field fence and he appeared to Belnolonee e o Al 15.082.40 | | tional commission. The players were | @8ide for the other teams | R . der it. His |, o Gith the gsame, not because they | Lo o0 M e 5 = = # | pleted it would be called off, and the| Taking the plavers' share of 1 hances looked as dim as the oil lamp i roostook ¢ nty money taken in at the first four games | which amounted to $152,888.58, had given in to the commission, but )~ i & o lucky soven was as full of | —— 3 The lucl nth wa fuil or} wauld be divided between the Boston | criterion, the national commission because they wanted to give the crowd | .o P e e aisdvare dcal feond Joriineifolffie e Sor hand g0 club owners after 10 per | cided last winter to give flat sums of | 5 it lection will be a myvstery up to game | cent. had been donated to the Red | $2,000 to each member of the world's | Breaks the Strike. ! Whiteman got a hit with one down,|(me. A third stari for Tyler is & pos- “himney in the smoking car of the Revere Beach Rallroad, bhut Mann was full of ambition Mays or Bush today. The Chicago se- | and Chic: Fhe b bega dro e rapid Hoope : SdhU B el oahh ! t MecInnis bi e el oss and another 10 per cent. award- | championship team and $140 to each oward the mound sloping down from Harry Hooper was the man who | but cInnis ‘“' "”“l i e ‘h" ’ "‘i‘- sibility and Hendrix and “Speced’ Mar- [ ed to the national commission. member of the vanquished team The he fence. Mann tried to scoot up tho | suggested that sportsmanlike pro- | Via the ropur and ek travelled | tin have been mentioned Playcrs Issue Statement, rest was to be divided among the other route. Hollocher-Pick-Merkle. 2 T . first division players e The players, losing their demand for | However {he players: share, which He fell with his face toward the sky The howr's delay didn’t seem to hurt | WORLD'S SERTES PICKUPS, Should Phil Douglass be chosen for | More maney, agreed to continue the | amaunts to 60 per cent, of the re- He didn’t have time to zet np, so ne | anybody's feelings except a chap who - 4 a5 bax work today, he will wear two Series oniy on the promise that their e o e 3 2 : | The players showed they were hon- g - e il o . ceipts he fi sitched himself along the ground and | had wiven a taxi robber $3 to drive| . Paivsitof f=ox Mol nantyltcomMiDix el SiteIn SalRmaMLd WDe wnad el public BITEHE d o wrlita ig 60 saught the ball in his lap | nim three-quarters of a mile so he| pays hunches strong jwas given aut by the Red Sox cap-|peen in vears { s | mound, but forgot to shift gears or | cedure, and it makes him a bigger something and stumbled. Tut listen. y man in the heart of every rveal fan. | e t four games, was 0, the Jowest it has The commission there- Sonid reach the S tain, Harry Hooper, who acted as| ¢, e announced the wianers would get On the very next play Hooper hit a ame in time. J 2 - - 3 : Jim Vaughn had his courage with spokesms : high one back of third. Hollocher From the very beginning it was ap-! pih to come back T o Rded Rolale ey e «11 pokesman "’l‘]' 'oth teams. Hooper's | g1 900 apiece and the lwosers $800, saug 8 g i s Y 7: P v 5 ko Dt o statement follow i i aught the thing with his arms out- | parent that Vaughn would win In B the game were given a great ovation g S P _| which started all the rumpus stretched while sprinting at full | the first inning Flack, the first man up| The playing field was “no man's | by the crowd | Ve il pidy o b ecause W esthinkc S A plaversiiconmittee; iconsisting of weed. Those catches may not have | walked on four pitched balls. Hollo-| jand” between 2:30 and 3:15 3 e we are getting a fair deal, because we | yoopor and Charley Wagner of the saved the game, but they certainly | cher singled Mann sacrificed. Pas- i e are not. But we “,‘” ;vl:ll\ ffl‘l the sake Red Sox and Leslie Mann and Bill 1idn’t take anvthing away from it. | kert lined to Whiteman, who made a B Mayar Fiio e caid e the frst Bill Carrigan saw the game and |Of the same, f"l' the sake of the pub- | ijigar of the Cubs, waited on Garry Jones Pitches Good Ball. great running catch and shot the ball | hit of the day at 3:05 mat his former charges. Jim McDon- lic, which has always glven us its loyal | gerrmann of the national commission 3 I gl b erorel Hollbohan b eonla il augh came up from Lewiston and Joe | SuPport, and for the wounded soldi=rs | i the morning, asking that the play- Ser . dgncs '“""',1" for the Red | . . " rrangements to return. Hoover| How tim chomms! In ihe fvsp|Bumns and Helale Wagner completed) 200 sallors who afe In the grand stand | oret purse be split as in former vears | S0 He was good except when he | Mak b ow 1es change n the first] e e e 1 Bal e se be s as ears, % E n he | ingled in Boston’s half, but died of | world's series, in® 1884, th layers | & Pusting fine quartet. Conaie Russell | Waiting for u | 60 per cent. to the winners and 40 to should have been better. Scott again | m g, 884, the players) ,;jq not leave Lewiston beca ! The game was more than an hour | verformed miracles. In the third in- | mainutrition. ‘The second was devoid | were glad to divide up less than 2,000 St e s “;”“ S e cain ine started. . In fact oor!lthe losers. Herrmann promised the e mirac 1 the thire B e ] ) was watching vecount in a contest for | late gett started. act bl e snder a decis yefore the | ting Vaushn smashed w burning | ©F 40 w.h‘\; “\ e bl bu W | wame tie. 2030, Stuty Melnnis, the )yyl‘l:‘:*r to render o decision before ti srounder to the right of Scott. Just | AUEE VRS An BaC Iked four T — | Bostan first baseman, was the only | jrewever ferrinaimithlEresiod X8 the i ball’ reached the Fiooster il |Htie it HDLOCHEL VA KECROR It was the largest crowd ever gath | player on the field i1 uniform. Thal qert g tes of dhe A e " | stright balls. He took « long lead|ercd to see what premised (o he tablos ok v ¢ [ dent Johnson of the Amercan leagu ook @ wicked bound to the right, but | ' b . Among notubles present were Unit- | pu was ubsolutely in ignorance of | 3 ¢ : \ off frst and at the very instant Jones|strike. New baseball record States Senator W | nd Secretary Bruce of the national he Deacon simply stuck out his glove asebi ed States Senator Weeks and Ex-Mayor | what was going on in the uational! | | let go the ball to calch him he dashed 4 Noat il A1 commilssion, Herrmann said he would jicked the ball out of the air aud = o o Lo [Nt - Hatleld of Newton. Buaseball celebri- | commission’s box, and there were | ler his decision after the game. iatladlit ovarito firstiIn timeito gep (/00 secBud. WGl SrODAlly woula have|| olloclier, the Clicago shortsiop [ ties lucluded Clarénce Rowland, Pat|grave fears of @ riot among the big | ognder his deelsion afie L e Seuator Heury Cubot Lodge, of Musk Vaughn, who returned to his hench | 108de it anyway, a: B 1 a Afying l.\'m- Into his own yesterday. Thres | Moran and Patsy Donovan, The lutter | crowd ir the gamns were called o [l DI el ¢ it o e Uit Y | sechusetts, has been elected chajrman vk of Inospressible. diaguat | StEIL but Stuffy hud to go down un | Bits, @ base ou bulls and 1w runs fsat in o box with the national “eom- | The police were prepared o hundle | by ot % S ke 101 of the Republican conference In thef i itase his kuee toastop the throw and had no” He v Iso there in the Held B ahi J0n Gofineyi ex fownar of hel| (holLithe tion, ih acverall Wasandigaas| Pau oumtnsic unitonms BTGV Rth ) (EGnatetwitho utioppokition Mhim rreld WHan tiiefane begen s ‘4. to hurry the ball along. Mann, | e Bravos| andl stte vl Tohn i Mociel ot “ s 2 o el ““‘:' | that the players dellvercd their ultl-| that Senator Lodge is the n‘,,nm’l}, sen the fans began pouring in | SRARCE t0 BUCTE T0S BT S i Shelt | Braves _ oole of | of reserves were rushed oul o the | ;niiun i) 0 s ublicg \roufa 2 GIUI0RE ey wevs Baaearts || Whol elst Datledniane fof Chicess sl DU W ence aTibe ad Box mallief theational lessue were dlso prasont | packiiwiille a lsaUd( 6F nicunite [ leader in the Senate, succeeding th : | runs vesterday, doubled, and tlollo- | to know how the national commis- Sport Hermun of Chice el £ lel R late Senutor Gallinger, of New Hz ee the diamond deserted, and when 1 and e pol ago, secre- | lice picketed the outtleld in front ger, of New Hamps I ana COTEC vhil itelicll's wce | slon expects fello o live o 3 rer of the ‘R F Berlin Construction Match, shire § hat 3 L4 lib Manaaior the Thewmdile bt on Ih r : r ,‘~ whi Mitchell ! ) -,E <Y1 H‘ fell “( lr st o ,]”‘, | tary treusurer of the Red Sox, was on | the centre and left field bleachers, ‘ i : shire in that otlice he left field fence indicated that 2:30 | Peamed with joy : il eet ol of (e Srorldie inand Sympathies Bvenly Divided. (L | = = 3 series when they chavge 20 cents for | 3 | Tmitl . | aad come there was no one in either | strunk Doubles in Fourth s “-““ £ 'i'y'* o Sl N The players consented to go on with | 'I. Smith . B 8= Germany Learning jugout hut a bat boy sitting discon- | Nothing further developed until the = oo,y fEiieon o & S e Mays and !“"I“ warmed up during | the game at 3 o'clock, When it was Sanford 84 84 (Rochester Herald.) olately on the iron rail fronting the | last of the ourth, when Strunk oL ’ . "r" l‘l' F e v;» EJ‘IM d;u H--‘[H‘\ was down in | announced by megaphone that the |Michaels i (LY 1t relps some when German news :ed Sox bhench and no one on tf e Tad i Whiteran nopped T half o the bullpen for the Cubs | zame would get started in anout ;3 |.J. Smith . (L 8 papers make the discovery that Ger yiamond but a cluster of camera men, | up a flv as miess as a soft rubbe: e e oS ] | minutes Hickes $0 6 1 many is now fighting for its existence RS e e divide | torpedo, and Merkle caught MeINnis' | o lot depende on the game todas |\ ment Hollasher as ating tolsacc| imha cropd deemadito be fuirly even = ' Tt would he more fo the purpose 48 fores cigarettes amone six gentlemen. | wicked liner 2nd relayed it to Hollo = ,"“" in “ e e Vh«“ Red Sox | Iy divided in its sympathies for when | 106 394 437 they conld realize that Gerjnany g The fans didn't know what was the | cher for 2 dovble play. R | plaverg Eo G MENERITY L MTho BATEE | fne players theaded bysths iGubs, ifinal Drawing Room fighting for the existence of the Hpg 3 =23 at he worlk | gacker doss No TVe any blame. It)ly put in an appearavce, they were| Quay ...... a7 9~_>41 henzollerns, G