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WHITE SOX KANSAS LOSES BOUT TO BERNSTEIN — PANCHO VILLA GETS REFEREE'S DECISION — STENGEL'S FEAT IS NEW RECORD FOR BIG SERIES — 3 'S FEAT GREATER WESLEVANSTARTO NURPHY STARTS ;%fvflmm SINCE RUTH | PLAYHERE SUNDAY e QUARTER FOR Y Nowball Wil Be ot Pullck 1 ' Stves, Pood and Nalry . IS A STAR, llwerOT CASAT e ot e o~ Bkl A G Bambino Is Expected to!CUBs ARE STOPPED IN SR LT T T ; oo Maven, Oct 11.—The husk Scintillate, But Little OMd| SERIES BY.RED FABER | 20w siti, s wewnan tormer yl 7 / Sperteg 6 wiva he. Yok saued 8 Mi ri Misfit Is the Real | Wesleyan backfeld star in fullback -0 t-mi:;‘blc ‘l”;l:.l. up:e:u‘v‘:m new o Spithall R of 1917 World Serivs, POSItion, will clash with the All.-New | ! 5 men °th' :.,,, - m,.“w“ Noi Si He's .I il - }nmnlm tomorrow at § p. m. At Hoft. . u'fln.nc’t':: l':o“‘;. ..:” Fric o 1 | B e o] =% e s wiar e | P e s | use Dewey Carpenter at fullbae! Nobody Who Now 'l‘ Win, 4 to 3, | place of Tickey, who did not report Nlt'o\ ‘wggua.o lhol"‘u:‘:l‘ :'u bg: | Oet. 18.—Urban FFaber,|for practice. Hammil will (take eale an arn Ar Somebody. nzh::v‘va ;‘l"he‘r -.Mr ;llf" _‘('.h.':quuru.- and the rest of the lineup ) l'l_“:; ;imup'* i 1917 World Sories, huried the Amari- | W11} be he ARmE A8 8 week ago. \ ) < Bheeish By The Amsociated Prem, [can lesgue team to lts firet victory pl’,‘o"lf and. \Ir\hh.n"‘ left tackle, | i ¥ ) Hulman ..., \ Butler P over the National leaguers in the city | Py o oo BX by ' . . ; Left/End New York, Oct. 13.—1f often hap- | . "0 "o ierday, Faher downsd | Cooper; left guard, White; center, QT i i DI on the stage ':::l :: P‘;:;“:’;""i'm Cubs, 4 to 2, being afforded fine " support and displaying the old ecun- :‘ oo .-M IAkSy 8 otars fook l|ko‘"l“ whieh marked him as the lead- "é::; Stengel, of Missouri a w”(h"lu piteher of the league in former er-beaten old veteran, of the diamond, [ ¥**"™ !ll;::';iu 5 e Clibe kicked and cuffed from bush to bush, w, Captain Sullivan; right guard, Tur- k ¥ 58 T"-‘kl' ieep Taylor | pin; right tackle, Pardella; ri end, | 't Tackle é} e Harper: left halfback, Chamberiain Eokart vovviovins ‘ rayson and Shea; right halfback, J. Bullivan; \ g Left Guar | fullback Newhall and Griftin, ; ‘ SOVRIDY. s it s s The All-New Britaing will play the ll-‘ .| Army-Navy team coached by Spud b “Diller m' & A Joselove holsted by the fates to the sight : Drew, of Trinity, & week from tomor- { y :(u.vohn McGraw, baseball's master AT row on the home grounds and on 1 Milstead ...o00iiis l!e|nmlt (Cap.t) mind and givén a job, & small part to October 28 will journey to Providence 38 . Right Tackle Ay play in a great dram to play the Steam Rollers. : % . LuUman «..ovaiae o chardson After a long run, a successful sea- —— , 3 " 3 A A Right En il son the Glants won glory and entered N ! 4 Murphy .....00 ru-rhutk +vevs Moore GETTING ANY HOME RUNS v v Lo Yt e and was kept on. In the first day, the |\ i, "y first game of the world series with the [Kamm, g . e Mallory, (Capt.) . .vv.. Nelson Yankces' Sluggér Walks Twice and £ Fullback Glants Casey won fame. He made a | McClellan, . game. And Casey was talked about. B B 1 : : o the bright| Total ...........t o N . OfMcials:—Umpire V. A, Echwartz; ‘!;!'l:umme appeared in the brigl o . Fans Once in Three Other bW ‘ 4 / b i el AT e g Trips to Plate, § % b2 ¢ G. E. Bankart; field judge, I. R, Glll A ¥y linder, “New York, Oct, 13.—George Her- man Ruth, the bousting Bambino who ) ‘ o STENGEL;S HOME RUN ls w_on l!\e second game of ;Xhe curyren,: ;"n(:irllxz:m s‘::rnhe'lt(’lrx;hc'heckeyzlur::y 5 s NEw REGORD FOR SERIES by the puzzling pitching of Arthur N ! s it Nenf, Giant southpaw, In the two op- R { ; horne, p. . ortunities he had to hit. BROWN 7 & s ¢ (Upper) MAYL Giant Voteran is First Player to ‘Win contest between two great pitchers. [ g P . ; A A taighey i . Jones of the Yankees and Neht of the 5 PR IT Ruth went to the plate four times, ; Vol (Lower) MILLER Two Games With Circuit Glants and Nehf, thanks to Casey,| x—Batted for Fussell In the seventh in-|but was credited with only two “times o) . s Clouts. W, '\;'Hu o Y mn-a,M, ha1|. as ll;e “nt’k::e n’:l"thle ;th:: s Pl smeam o , _ HUTCHISON WINS. 'f\ew York, Oc(} )13 Titcb“ ):@: The series now stands two games|cups . 2 001 100 0002 | Occasions. o800, d ng! C 1’ F tball. 3 ity World Series already has eatabiis for the Glants, one for the Yanks.| Two base hits, Stats, Crouse and Fri-|in the first, that gave him an average 0 ege 00 ly 3 HE R almost an entirely new record for Babe Ruth having won the second |heré: home iun Fribers; stolen bhase |of 500 for the day. He struck out on d y Chptires, VS %l;f"k Title and | pome.run hitters in the classic, AmA, - seorificer, - Odlling,” Teen, . Faber |y ginep. teip, sets New Mark. | Casey Stengel's circnit clout yes- game for the American league team A H ; double play, Collins, McClel- P, mes 4 : h With his brace of home runs. But Ruth |1an and Sheely; loft an_ bases, White Sox| His batting récord for the day: atur ay s Ga CROWLEY {5 Memphis, CiTenii,L (Ut 28, 0GK, torday made Rim. the drstunan o wii 7, Cubs 4; bases on balls, off Faber 1, off First Inning—Two down. After tak- - Hutchison of Chicago added anothertwe games in one Warld Series with laurcl to his wreath of golfing fame |home runs. J. Franklin Baker, when is a great star. His name has long | i 3 ik % Ieen 3. ot Otborne 2 struck out, ' hy ing two balls Ruth swung twice but st South Bend, Ind., Oct, 13.—Gipp— Ea yesterday when, playing one of the|with the Philadelphia Athletics, won greatest games of his career, he won|two games with homers, but not in been on the boards and his perform- < s 2 Faber 4, by Keen 1, by Fusssll 2; hits, off ( u (0% 0T O eted with the feliie il the 28rd annual Western open tham- |the same series. ance, while great, is dwarfed by that|Keen 6 in 41-3 innings, off Fussell 1 in|N of Stengel, the unknown, the new star. | 232-3 innings, offt Oshorne 1 in 2 innings; fifth ball and drove it to center for a Middlebury at Harvard. During the last three years of | plonship on the links of the Colonial Babe Ruth's two drives Thursday Country club. Hutchison ran away|were the first a world series bhatter P ) ires, 4 V| si i ame Battle of Pitchers w:],:,m:‘";:umi:,!,:I“o,,,‘,'::f,'::1,,' ?:'l,',l‘:’, ;“““"'- He died on first, as Meusel| ~pates at Tufts. football campajgn Notre Damec has ed out. Georgia at Yale, always presented one of the big stars from the field of 66 contestants and|ever made in successive trips to the wrested the championship from Mike Btrunk, of, Barratt, sezaar Crouse, ¢ ... great hit, a home run that won the | o {ocn & ©0 cness | ~losssssssssas =1 4 w3 Duplicates Feat Btatr, el .in. On the second day Casey's small|Ada A part was played by another player. il Those who went to see, shouted for |G eenberg, Casey, but it was not Casey's day.|Miler, If. Casey was back on the job yesterday |Heathcote, and he made his great hit again, another homer that won the game for . the Glants. It was the only run of a|Grigsby x BosomssuouusR lsccomnnn vlecsssscohosas [e] Until the cue for Casey to take his |k time of game, 2 hours and 5 min- Yourtt, Inni Biek st A it lace on the stage was given, the ourth Inning-—Dugan, first man o of the game as the pivot point of its W1 ramib dF fhe deciss had bead up, doubled to right and. Ruth was RHB'dL'I“l‘ ":""t‘“;“‘;‘l‘ e team. Gipp, Mohardt and Castner a magnificent strugglé between the 5 - g i e walked on four wide pitches, but both ode Island at N. ‘H. State, were grouped in advance. Opponents e, : vuch;, . the “marvelous WORLD SERIES FIGURES died when Meusel hit into a double| Lowell Textile at Trinity. Jearned to prepare - for the Notre Brady, the Oakland Hills professional. Ruth or Stengel gets an- control 'nnd the queer floaters and | Yesterday's Game play. Norwich at Bowdoin. Dame star. % | Hutchison made the final round |other four-bagger he will have estab- tadeaways of Jones, the Yankee and |*Attendance ..... } 62,430 [ Sixth Inning—Two down. Ruth| Maine at Connecticut Aggies. This year the Irish squad:faces the | Yesterday In 87, the course record he|lished. a mark for the most - hame, the fast-breaking curves of Nehf, the | *Receipts .. % +..$201,072.00 | watched a ball float by, then swung Georgetown at Princeton. greatest season. Army, Princeton, | established two ycars ago in exhibi- | runs by a player in-one series. Which- Players' share 102,516.72 [and missed. Néhf's third pitch was a Notre Dame vs. West Point at Georgia Tech, Purdue, Nebraska, thn play anrll_‘ \}'h)ch he cquall:d ever does, it wiil have mhadc his team Clubs' share ..... 68,366.48 | ball, but the fourth Babe nicked for a | Brooklyn. Butler and Carnegie Toch will be | Thursday. ar for [h'(" course s 71.|the maker of the most home runs|n (Continued on Following Page) Commipsioners’ share 30,160.90 |foul. After watehing a third ball sail Brown at Washington and Jefferson | o 0aq on m“s”m,g‘.c Saturdays. !zfla total scorT for lhe,';;; holes ol the |a serleis: u.? l\):u\ t]enmsmalrp:.gy t’;\ '; . by Ruth overlooked what Umpire ‘Williams at Cornell. Needing a Gipp, Mohardt or Cast-|tournament play was 281. i three, Emil Meusel making the jd 62,430 Paid Record Sum First Three Games Nallin called a strike. Thinking it was| Wesleyan at Columbia, Hr 2 R ttiae i before, Coach mJnel K;"k‘?,'w}?x Linhl S X?rk,i Len | for ;hp l?"“‘"" B A WAty e Of $201,0 : Attendance ............. 155139 |a ball he started to jog down to first| Amherst at Unfon. Rockne is avithout 4 man whe looms | Diegel of Washington, professional, |the Yankees. ,072 at 3rd Game s " Swarthmore at Penn ; : Bobby Cruikshank of Westfield, N, J.,| Ruth has equaled the record Lid F L R (AL DU aNd Wiien fuined ook oft HiSjoap Al supérler to the rest of the backfeld. | 4 <w 1 Hagen ot New York 134 | home .rune In & game, alo held S g [1 3 Alabama at Syracuse. N PR % Standing. Players' share 276,155.80 | scratched his head, but said nothing. Jimmy Crowley, Dutch Bergman, for ¢he runner-up position with cards| Benny Kauff, Harry Hooper and Inning—Hofmann failed G’eflylbur: at Penn State. Max Houser and Elmer Layden are| ©F (% Baghanty Witt singled, [ West Virginia at Pittsburg. the candidates for the triple-threat |°f 287 ougherty. West Virginia Wesleyan at Navy. | poqtion. Crowley, Bergman and W. L. PG |Clubs share .. 184,106.90 | Eighth Giants .., ciree @ p .667 | Commissioners’ share .... 81,222.40 | pinch-hitting fér Jones. Yankees ........... 1 2 .333 i but was trapped at second on a fleld- X First game—Giants, 5; Yankees, 4. SN Caie DAy xoar | er's choice. With Dugan of firat, Ryth | Franklin and Marshall at Lafayete. | yoyser are working out at the left . Attendance ... 37,620 | was walked against his will. -After| Rennsselaer Poly. at N. Y. U. balt, whieh Gipp and Mohardt made | Sécond game—VYankees, 4; Giants, 2. e . { Third game—Giants, 1; Yankes, 0. |Regeipts .... +.$122,354.00 | three balls had been called hé swung| L¢high at Rutgers. famous. Layden stepped into Cast- |8 Third Game. Players' share . «. 62,400.54 | at the fourth, also wide and fouled it, Vilianeva at T.ebanon Valley. ner's place at fullback when the lat- | & ; Attendance (paid) ... . 62,430 [ Clubs' share .... 41,600.36 | but the next pltch was beyond his 8t. Lawrence at Hobart. Fah was hust i6st season, Recelpts ......... .$201,072.00 | Commissloners’ share .... 18,853.10 |reach. Both he and Dugan died when g:"“(”"]’l" "“ sf::;“::;‘:‘:';m Crowley is the man of the quartet | Advisory Council's share. 30,160.80 Meusel flied out. RIS R b most fragrant with poesibilities, In Each club’s share ....... 84,182,24| First Three Games Last Year ; 8t. Stephen's at C. C. N. Y. the early season games of last year's Headquarters For Total paid attendance for Attendance .. o 111,154 8t. Miehael's at Clarkson, campaign he gave promise of being Players' share vvee 102,546.72 | Receipts ..... . $351,944.00 ) one of the big flashes of the season. ‘ GUNS — COATS — AMMUNITION 123 BALLS BY NEHF West Ead Bouth His work retarded as teams began to | 3 games .. .. 158,139 | Playera’ share +. 128,108.90 Total receipts .. ....$541,482,00 | Clubs’ share ... o 82,072.60 Colgate at Qhio State. lay for him, but against Nebraska |8 Advisory Council’s share Commissioners’ share .... 36,208.60 | . o Northwestern at Indiana. and Carnegie Tech he performed ', — (three games) ........ $71,222.30| *The attendance and receipts of | NCehf Tosses Five More Than Did| pyrque at Towa, [ with hisold-time brilliancy. He kicks ° Each club's share (three vesterday's game at the Yankee Sta-| joneq and Bush in Frida; v's Game a Clemson at Centre. and passes well. ¢ games) ................ $02,0561.95|dium broke all records for world | i i Y| Wiimington at Detroit. Layden is a smooth man with a |§ 38 Main St. “The Sporti“g Goods Store” Players’ share (3 games).$270,155.82 series baseball. J Stadium, Florida at Georgia Tech. i 3 Nandolph-Macon at Catholic U. (Continued on Following Page) G PR TR . 5 2 Two hundred and forty-ene pitched SHORT FORWARD PASS TO OUTSIDE moundsmens in (he hird gume of the The Days of Real Sport Giants-Yankees' world's series at the HALFBACK OFTEN UPSETS DEFENSE | S suiicn sonces e vin er than in Wednesday's game, and two o ek - o somnacmuns : O S ——— fewer than in Thursday's engagement. l Ye OH | NENER »._.m-._.‘.-\..,..;_.,...\.. .—‘;r:DE & - t e {& ’ i | You cAN LEARN To WELL DOGGOMNIT Q (o3 : NOW Tuen- KEEP O I ik b e b | Of the 241, the Giants' pitchers de- PLAY GOLE Th' SAme | COULD Come OUT HERrE JUST KNOW /| § Tuase HANDS To- | HePE No=~! livered 128, while the Y. { . i livered 123, whilo the Yankee pitchers gl sl ol IN THE BACK YarD h_ ! €AN T RETARR MR LeET Ol T 4 GIVE You A Faw AND VLL SHOW You PEAFNI? JAi‘EléJ’“‘ Analysis show 94 of the 241 were | SUGGESTIONS AND AND wf&ns‘!gy : - | called balls by Umpire Bob Nallin; 50 i \ were called strikes; 23 were foul Jou ehm R 1t h | strikes; 15 were fouls; 33 resulted in |infleld outs, and 10 were hit safely. | The individual records of the three | pitchers who worked during the en- | gagement, follows: | Art Nent of the Giants served up 1123 pitched balls in nire innings. ;P'Ilty of that number were calied | balls; 28 were called strikes; 8 full 4 strikes; 8, fouls; 10 infleld oute; 4, = \ outtield outs, and 6 went for safe hits. / % : ; | Sam Jonés of the Yankees tossed 5 R C 3 ; ! | 110 pitched balle In the eight innings | Y 2 ; o Wil | he occupied the mound. Forty-one were called balls; 22 strikes; 15, tull | strikes; 7, fouls; 12, infleld outs; 9, | outfield outs, and 4 safe hitg, | | Jee Bush of the Yankees delivered 5 G | but eight pitched balls in the inning g | he faced the Giants, Three were I Now Tuis 18 JusT IT SECMS . called balls; 2 were foul strikes; 2, To GE&T THE SWING = |55 SiLLY Keeer way' -~ JE""“&“D"?;;?SQVS By ROBERT C. ZUPPKE portant that the forward pass and |oooaiel 10 10f6ld outs, and 1 in an) Come ghci SLowLy /'Fom me : EME- pPFE JACS% TASE e t . T Fer M o Take ; » ~ T To TakE UP| Pootball Coach, University of Illinois, | running playe be constructed in such Author of “Tootball Technique a way that the defense cannot detect, | e and Tactics” from the formation or the stance, | FOOTBALL RESULTS, Ad few succéssfully executed for- which of the two to éxpect Colleges, ward passes at a critical time in a | This play should appear like No. 1| conime o very tense or tight gamec may de- | for the first three steps ‘n:,::‘;,,s\f,m:f";}:d,‘-"',,,,Mm 0 moralize the best 'Iv-m: f; defense ‘;m:] The pass is thrown quickly, after Holy Cross 32, Providence 0, for a few moments detract its indivi- |only five or six steps have been Idaho 40, Montana 0, duls from their specific and appoint- taken by ti passer. The ball is Penn College 3, 1 Wesle 0 ed duties and make them act iike a | thrown fairly snappy to the outside o s B el b leaderiess mobh. These forward pass of the halfback and should lead him plays are apt to make the forwards' |so that he takes it on the dead run.| Greenfield 7, Tech o, fear of what may happen interferc The right cnd runs across the path | Central 32, M. A, C. Two-Year 0. with their concentrated attention to isive et balf, interfering | West Springfield 7, Rosary 0. the restricted territory in front; there | with his attampt to break np the play. g s always that danger of a catch and r backs and guards pro- HARVARD WINS, run on the pari of n receiver of the | te and as sqon as the| Belmont, Oct. 13.-~Harvard de- pass in that much larger territory | bail i . protect the pass. feated Middiebury college, 17 to 38, bhack of them vords, 1 Ky veriet execution of this pass lin a dual cross-country meet here | socfes of is quite ABicait, and therefore needs | yesterday over a fve amd one half riay dsive the defe anc R practice o perfect, |mile cotirse. The first four men to| ther the success ios t ut stacsisned is very difficuit |finish were Harvard men. Byron R ordina: he [to stop withisul considerable gain Cutohesn of Long Braneh, N. J., was Bard running playe. In order to ac- Monday we will take up play No.|[the iniividual winner. His time was| @emplich this resully, it is very im- |2, a fullback plunge. ‘u minutes, 25 seconds. St school,