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YANKEES PREPARED TO MEET GIANTS York, Oct. 4 (By the A. P.)— years of waiting to meet the Giants and the world's series, the Yankees, winners of their respec- ill battle on the tomorrow after series best five which is expected record-breaking ic. Led by John Mc- the Giants kees will scamper out on the A shortly after noon. of baseball neither the Gi- Polo Grounds Yankees of playing machines that made ear- world series history, such as the 1910-11-13 under Connie 1go Cubs of 1906- Chance lead and smoothest working in- s the history » two local teams posess and personality for a 1 and thrilling series. e question of indi- mechanical nd the Chi York's participation in world s before have the 1ing the first clash an extra tie »d measure and the se mes to one. d financial icting record bres predictions. Re- to pay a pre-| tes leading to is not the lar- should the se- | the | H which has| vigil came prepared to 1 two weeks, Ims]wrublc a night.as possible MARKET WAS STRONG Kiami Copper . Dssourt K & T:... o K &Tm. 0 3% been so steady and insistent that ve- ry few tickets have found their way to the speculators. It is generally conceded among the wagering fraternity that the Giants and the Yankees are about evenly matc] ed, advantage at a certain point for one team being offset by greater pow- er or strength in another section of attack or defense of the rival combi- nation. As a result, what betting is being done is at even money or the very slightest of odds. One enthusiastic admirer of the Gi- ants may offer 10 to 9 on the chances of the Nationals, winning, while a few blocks away some Yankee rooter may think that the buldgeon of Babe Ruth warrants odds of 6 to 5 on the American chances, Attempts by the experts to analyize the chances of the two teams general- ly results in about the same situa- tion of uncertainty and doubt. Not in entered in the world’s series with less appar- ent advantage one way or the other. In attack, close an dimpartial fol- ed to give the Yankees a slight margin of advantage. With their heavy hitting ability, which may be unleashed at any moment, they are extremely dan- until the final out. recent years have two team lowers of the game are inc gerous contender: Defensively the team is not alway as tsaedy as admirers would wish fo! s several incidents bhave demonstrated th also doubtful if the Yz Giants have shown at times this y Much will depend upon the at of the pitchers to hold the opposin batters in check. This is particula true in the case of such cl ters as Ruth, Kell ers, In e steal and the base lines, which may or have an important be: final outcome the Giants ly thought to have a slight edg 1te; may e. So far as the physical conditions of the players is concerned both teams | will enter the fray one hundred per| cent strong. The Yankees had the Po- lo Grounds exclusiely for work during the forenoon and put in a two- | hour session und. the watchful eye of Manager Huggi the Giants indulged in | bering up, in which ‘assistant ms gh Jennings d Although the fore ected operation st for the oper hint of autumn in the for | air tonight and the early arrival took their places in line before { bleacher gates for the usual all ni with FINANCIAL AND COMMERGIAL | Missouri Pacific N Y Centra] -Y.NNHE&H .. Tenn per . Tobacco - Prog Union Pac 1 Rubber o ] Wes W v W New York middling 20 U S Lib 4th 4%s 91.50 9108 dprect C 91.04 91.04 Victory 90,44 do reg ..... 99.26 2 Viet 4 99.44 9940 99,40 uoted *n dollars and cen hond. per $100 Foreign T erling— Demand Cables Francs Guilders Marks Lire Swiss francs . Pesetas & elgian francs Argéntina 73.90 $3.90 CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET Chicago, O« decided tumble in scoring upturns duri the board of trade pressure from the n with absence of export busine to do with weakening the marke closed heavy with December 1.17 ue today 1-4 to 115 1-2 and May 1.19 3-4 to 1.20. Corn lost 1-4 to 5-8 and oats 3-8 to 1-2. The finish in provisions was unchanged to 12 cents low- er. An opinien by a leading member of the board who has just returned from a four-months’ trip to Europe that there was but little unsold wheat across ‘the Atlantic and that there would be no world surplus of wheat this year was mora or less responsible for the mitial upward swing of the market Bears in the corn market contended that the corn crop was benefited by last already matured. Oats were governed by the night's frost, as the crop had action of corn. Provisions declined at the last in sympa- thy with grain but for the greater part of the day had previously been upheld by iher quotations on hogs. Chbicago Grain Market. Hizn oW, . Close ..o 120% 115 RreveR. .latek.fin% % % % May 125 11 Corn— Dec. 50% 49% 493 May 56 54% Oats— Dee. 26 May 1014 May 40% =D The largest selling cigar in America Army & Navy Surplus Co. 35 BROADWAY 35 BROADWAY OVERSEAS TOBACCOS SWEATERS CIGARETTES Tuxedo Smcking Tobac- Slip-On Sweaters .... 95¢c Riversidg Brand, packsd co, 13-4 oz. can 2 for 25¢ | Coat Swaaters ....... 95c| 50 Cigare }f’-s to the Velvet Tobacco, 1 7-8 0z. | Coat Sweaters ..... $1.45 ::‘:; including as *:‘wc CANS 1 s et s niostnd OC VeryHeavyAll-Wnol .:....‘.......' Prince Albert, 2 oz. cans Sweaters ....... $5.45 Co"stfi_’gmé. B: _il'f:]: Pa;-fl- 2 cans for ........ 25¢c | All-Wool Sport Coats t;zCA“er axagc.i( :;:s, or Bull Durham, 158 oz $4.50.$5.75 0 el e e SHOES & fl\ C.q_t\_]:o ; Planter’s Pride, 3-4 oz. 3 anila Cig; ndres sacks, 3 sacksfor ... 5¢ Worlk Shoes ...... $2.35 Shape, 2 for & aid of blankets, stools and the regular accessories which go | ’ : gor pair 35¢ ... 3 to make up the camping equipment of {§ HEAR WORLD'S SERIES All-Wool Oxfords, Gray Officers Barka S_!p rabid baseball i midnight the sandwich and hot cof- X . or fee venders were doing a profitable|§ As customary, all details of the 84, weight 4 lbs. . .$5.95 SHIRTS Feather Pillows business and the lines of men and |} World's Series baseball games will be 5 T s were growing in length as they | [ announced by megaphone from The Double Hospital Blan- stretched away into the darkness. The || Bulletin office window each afternoon. TR Blankets, size 55x75, 95c | Officers’ Drass . . ... $5.25 | Cashmere Ar Long before and occurrences season. It is nkees play with the same team co-ordination that the Peckingpaugh ss an-up hit- the Meusel broth- on not ng upon the are general- Rawlings 2b McNally 3b Nehf or Ton- Mays or Shaw- Umpires—Charles Rigler and Ern-jcord for the mile that had stood for and | cleven years was broken at the Brockton for | fair here today when Single G paced to a DM | new mark in each of three heats in the OVERALLS BREECHES the Americans Time of game standard time. WOMAN’S GOLF TITLE MAY oty St BE CAPTURED BY ENGLISH |Of the three heats, Dan Hedgewood beat- % 3 2 35 | Cordur eq e e ing her out i s Lare SR O Lvetlce s 96 spital Steel ¢ Deal, N, 3, Out. 4By the & Py | 8 her out in the'thira. Single &'s time |l Khaki Unionalls $ y $6.75 | Hospital C The danger of the woman" of the United an English today when three repres After Tuncheon similar lim- The old ager golf “h‘:r“‘é eeord set by Little oy m 1910, was 206, | § Dungarees ........ $1.50 % | ing day of play called for fair weather | tions of | there was Hollywood Golf Club. land, France and Canada, won by eight | national three-cushion billiard champion- and seven, eliminating Hammer of New York. The greatest upset of the day was| Denton’s high run was five, while that Collett of |of Cannefax was six. Providence, who had tried for the qual-| Charles Otis, of New York, defeated | e Leitch, | Hugh Neal of Toledo, 30 to 56 in 78 in- three | nings. Otis won by plaving an uphill The b putting | game. High runs for Otis were five;|was nine percentage points behind! he poj to| Neal three. o H. | ship tod: the British champion, into a ditch 1e closest match was that between Latham Hall : : 2 2 seve of England, who| Charles Weston of Pittsburgh. Maupome | White Sox, while Detroit was a close qualifying, ' Dk hich went to 20 holes. Mrs. Hall won result of Mrs. G in unthinkin { with her cl W haefer of Chicago won from Alfredo De [ Washington finishing close together. her footprints in a bunker | Oro, of Havana, fifty to twenty-eight in | Last year race was dec d Bach made four in high runs.{ in the last h Cleveland, Chi- played out.| 38 inning this in the qualifying d and it cost her two strokes. To- it meant the match as ding hole under the rules. Alexa Stirling, of Atlanta, de- . p e of 1908, when in the closing week of champion, had mo troudie jn| LOrPedo and American Chain teams of she lost the Mildred Caverl. of Philadelp: v, defeating Me., of Portland, shot out of a hair at the 18th possib i she was one up after playing the seven- Georgianna New York, HELEN DILLO KENTUCKY FUTURITY STAKE |Fordham, and Herbey Johnson, Wal. | With Jehn B. I Ax- ure of races here oday when Driver Serrill e had finished the favorite, won the this morning and was beaten only by a head in the third heat. after finishing third to J. Direct in the fir 1] tween the Louis 70... 88Lib3 % 33 7S Lib 2nd 4s 91.00 TS Lib Ist 1%s 91.50 Y TS Lib 2d 4%s 91.10 a1.0n do reg . . 90.60 90.60 U S Lib 34 4%s 84 40 Rankin was much alnut Hall Cup, a 2.08 trotting $2,000, taking the race in straight 5 trot, a purse race of 3 t shed after Lightsome Watts captured the first two heats. Sur i the Kentucky Futurity fair Pierette) (Serrill) Edith Worthy, bf. by Guy 4 , Collateral, King Eta- rl also started. Time "Second race 2in 3, purse | slightly off his game. The score was | Wanna May, . m., by Ashland ‘Wheat underwent a after 2 | Country club. some of them carr; (Prince Gray) ight, b. g., (Legg) . hwest tpgether s had much Prices t 2 4 to 3 3-4 net lower > Walnut Hall Cup, purse $3,000. Jeanette Rankin, ch. m., Bmma Harvester, b. Harvester (Cane) IRilo Watts, Colorado, b. h, by Colorado (H. Fleming) e Jane the Great, Frisco and Dorothy Day Time 2.04 1 Fourth race, 2. ished) purse $1,000. me Watts, b. m., by General ut started. trot, 3 heats, (unfin- Trumpator, b. g, by San Frnacisc 312:04, Third heat Klio, b. m., by Peter the Great, (Pit- atts, b, m., by Gen- Marie Cecile eral Watts, a5 Lena Moko, b. m., (Whitehead) Jolly, b. g., (Burrows) Betsy Chandler, br. g (Brusie} Harvest, b. h., : Jay Lee Ophir Creek, Quie Sait al Defeated Mitchell and Duncan can, Dritish professionals, in a 36 hole on the card at Lancaster, N, K. Elkskin Leather SOCK ¢ BLANKETS Shoes ......... $2.95 Sl l Imported 20% Wool |NavyBlack ....... $5.45 | Assoried Colo GAMES BY MEGAPHONE with Border, size 64x perste oLl L ST 95 MISCELL/ 0. D. Pure Wool Serge, Cartri s kets . smee SO95 . The games will come play by play elsp el double elbow, lined r all parks to Bulletin, g i F {1(:\“ fil‘;m}; Pl e Officers’ 0. D. ... $5.95 front e ciereess 3D e UNDERWEAR Work Shirts ........ 85¢ ARMY AND NAVY Khaki Shirts ........ 95¢ golf match over the Westchester Bilt- e Regulation Navy .... 65¢ RAINCOATS BROKE TRACK RECORD Balbr_xggan Unien Long Oil Skins 2.50 AT BROCKTON FAIR Smisit 91N Ofl‘lb ’ Belted e b i Brockton, Mass., Oct. 4—A track re- |l Jean Drawers ....... 65¢c R Gmln S e e e fined =t - $6.95 mporie Clack. i Imported free-ofr-all chamb f Co e Kke. -~ 3 1= 3 -3 The race was woreh s3000 - |}l Overalls ........... 95c|Kheki ... $1.95 and $3.25 | Imported Margaret Dillon finished second in two |l Qverall Jumpers ..... 95c | Moleskin ......... $4.50 and small .. was 2.05 1-4; 2. 5 1-4; 2.04 . $1.75| 26-lb. Cot Ma 4 Khaki Pants .... in-| PENTON WON FIRST survived style| MATCH IN r;mu.mns = T = - T ittsburgh, Oct. 4.—Tiff enton, of T on the Thames embankmer d ma ed | AMENDMI TO ARTICLE 16 Miss Cecil Leitch, champion of Eng-|Kansas City, won his first match in the SPCRTING NO1ES. t E Finding that closed | OF THE LEAGUE COVEN! The pennant races in both lcagues| defeating Bob Cannefax, | were close in 1916. In the National, e Brooklyn won, Philadelphia was se ond, Boston third and the Giants| fourth. Philadelphia was beaten b points in the percentage and York, though in fourth place, was en games behind the leaders. B d to Hyde made den va, Oct. 4 yde Park ied 10 e lden excer days, owing to interference were pre; | the demonstration. bu: ed about the squa crowd threw bottl of the po! Philadelphia. Boston won the Ameri- The best game of the night's play was | can League flag with only between Pierre Maupome, of Mexico, and | centage points advantage over the on of port was m ved a spectacular game, defeating | third. Weston fifty to thirty in 54 innings. High| In 1918, the American League race runs for both were five. August Ki close, Boston, Cleveland and cago and New York bunched. ¥ FOOTBALL CHLLENGE The greatest pennant race the | S istory of organized baseball v The Stratford A. C. Football eleven, | PiStory of orsanized baseb: i composed mainly of stars on the Laps|in the National League in the season last season, is going to open its Of| the campaign Chicago, New York, and g p N | pittsburgh all were in an ace of taking on Sunday, October 9, with the strong | FittsPureh ail were th an % of 8 C08 All-Stamford team, and is open to book | g€ OO n in a tie and in the| games with' all the foremost semi-pro| L " S0et the BERSOT OF elevens in Connecticut, New York, | PV : had tn ormer president average weight of the Stratfords is| Nona8 : E L I . € 3 vear he has had as first assistant Jen- 155 pounds. The Stratfords are open fifn‘;:“hih: la e mate on thetou play on Saturdays and Sundays and S SriOn ¢ Bal - 2 am of Orioles of Baltimore and Bur- Dolidays: In the lineup of*thel Strat=f 28 204 S0 S0 o aeputy’ The Tndivielv orgs awe the foliewinz “well ‘knewn| 2= 00 G PG DR Tt and ]”’.”f{j‘““ porriors: Joe Funk, Danny|,ciclq stands out among the test Bergen; of Geotgstown; (Hi Kirk, for- (it SUECE S5 AUO0E 0 T‘o\rtxé o[r th; Thlunderfnns and All-|"'mp o Newe York National Lea State star. Frank Tickey, Chet Ga-|,. £ club cama into be bor, Jimmy Finnegan, Harry Rymo, of CascPall club came into belng in “Father of the C duced Day | ¢ to back the club me had | been tried on the old Polo Grounds. RO LAN PARADE progress. ter Camp’s choice for the All-Ame: can football eleven. Joseph Stavola 7 ratford avenue, Stratford, Conn it 3 is the manager of this speady azgre. s gation. s B r S ‘ J e 2&“1 telephone number is Strat- finished first in 1888 team finished second in gl STty vear of its life and the initial LOUISVILLE WAITING FOR son of McGraw's management. In LITTLE WORLD SERI they won the pennant but refused to| — b s < O'. 4—While New |Play the Boston Americans for the|gss009 DAMAGES FOR el AR Skl xcited about the worla's | World's Championship. LOSS OF HER LEFT EYE |rio: mes that start there| Reunited after many yea 3 | tomorrow, Louisville tonight with con-|and strife on the g flicting ' emotions is awaiting the first|0f baseball players has brought game of the “Little World § be- | New York Gian ough this sea- ille club, 1921 cham.|son’s battles for the pen e pions of the American Association, and | McGraw, Hughy Jennings, . i Baltimore, International League pen- | Kett—the names of all three are writ- nant winner. ten at the top of the list of ba; The Orioles, headed by Manager Jack | ball heroes. Dunn, arrived tonight from Baltimore e and tomorrow morning will limber up |VOLUNTEERS FROM CUBA at Eclipse Park. The Colonels today held FOR THE SPANISH LE final practice, under the direction of Manager Joe McCarthy and Captain| Corunna, Spain, Ocf Charles L. “Buc Herzog, himself a [tingent of volunteers re veteran of several world’s serics, the |fir the Spanish legion in Moroc of glory umond a great trio Oct. 4.—Twenty- lamages we Hambu art ju TS got ready for the coming eastern- | bering men, arrived her L aboard the steamer Alfonso the leadership ¢f Captain San DICT IN THE DIRIGIBLE ZR-2 DISASTER RICE ELIMINATED WORLD'S pino. They were landed amid enth TENNIS CHAMPION, TILDEN |2Stic cheers, many rowboats going down 4 TLDEN | ihe bay to meet the stcamer. Providence, R. I, Oct. 4—Playing at| "y, tpe evening the recruits went aboard top form, Lawrence B. Rice of Boston . . b : - % the steamer Marques Del C 0. wh today eliminated W. T. Tilden, 2nd,|o convey them to Ceuta, 2co. world's tennis champion, in the semi-final | * Pt round of the Rhode Island Clay Court ¢ championship at the East Side Tennis | MAMMOTH DEMONSTRATION club. Tilden seemed over-confident and OF U PLOYED IN LONDON ner's jur: ster to the into th more M. ha the breaking of the 6, 9-7. London, Oct. What the police char- . £ se or causes unknown. | n's second defeat of the |acterize as the biggest demonstration of le the in I rly season here. Vincent Richards beat him |unemployment ever known in London of for the Rhode Tsland grass court cham- |curred today when about ten thousand pionship this summer at the Agawam |workless, including hundreds of women, ng babi mbled es, TURF NOTES Fred Brusie, who suffered a bro- ken leg at the Fairgrounds, Labor Day week is said to be progressing nicely and soon will be able to leave his loakings direct from ings and ¢ the mill at mill prices. Fine? Jack Carney, whose injuries at Lew- iston, Me., werg feared to be fatal ,is on the road to recovery, which will be good news to his many friends in this section of the country. ‘While being shipped from Rochester to Woonsocket the trotting mare, Nancy Lee Hanks, in the stable of| , Frank Fox was slightly injured. Colonel Bidwell, 208% the pacer owned by C. C. Pendergast, of Bos- ton and driven by Joe Johnson, scored his thirteenth victory of the season at Rochester. Here are the fractional times of the three heats of Single G. at Spring-| , field: First heat—.30%, 1:02%, 1:34l5, 2:04. Second heat 1, 1:02, 1:34%, 1%, 1:01%, 1:33, Northern Direct was the gentle- Suede, Velours and Polo Cloth.g GLEN WOOLEN MILLS A 100% . pure vegetable oil soap that dissolves and removes every par- ticle of dirt, grease and oil, and leaves your car as mirror-bright as when it left the paint shop. Eaes 6TIIE Norwich Town “You Can Do No Better Than Buy Our Wurst.” No Salad Complete Without cikge 2 2:031%, 2 i T 3 2| man which made the going so fast T o 4 |10, the first half of the third heat. } 2 humm’s ‘Will Crozier's fractured collar bone is Bz 2 8 | mending nicely. }-Igme-l ‘ade B 1|, Waile driving the pacer, Billy Patch, ,_‘f 4 ¥ 5|at Lancaster, N. H., Henry Beaure- Mavannai 2 5 | Fard was thrown from his sulky, sus- ylayonnaise - taining a broken arm, which will keep ¥ i him off the track for the remainder THUMM'S - of the season. = ¥ Monte Gerow is having good success DELICATESSEN STORE ¢ . Oct. 4—Jim Barnes nat-| with the horses of the Newport Stock : jonil open champion, and Walter Dun- | Farm. He won four of the seven races i 40 Franklin Street