Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 9, 1922, Page 3

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WIN THE WORLD'S SERES BY TRIMMING YANKS IN FFTH GAME McGraw’s Generalship Completely Batties the More Slug- gish Yankee Manager—Yankees Star Pitcher Blows Up As He Resents Huggins’ Order to Pass Young—Giants Pull Game From Fire in the Eighth Inning by Heavy Hit- ting and Heady Baserunning—Yankees Play Dumbly Throughout the Series—Saturday’s Game An Inglori- ous Spectacle in Baseball—Bob Meusel Takes His Placa Along With Merkle and Snodgrass When It Comes to Boners—Groh, Frisch, Emil Meusel and Ward the Fea: New York, Oct. 8—(By the A. P)— 2 T T;: New York Giants once more are|the plate and King (killed it, but the champions of the world. They reached |ball fefl foul near the left field bleach- that pinnacle of success for the sec-|ers. ‘He swung easier the next (‘:rflerv ond consecutive year in a frious uphill |and dropped a Texas leasuer back of afternoon that flung the| short, scoring Young. : o Yankees to defeat, 5 to 3, and crushed For a time, this afternoon, it seem: a disgusted pitcher, Bullet Joe Bush. . : It f\-’lfi the second successive time |spell of dumbness in which they ibsied[ the Yankees have bucked the away every opportunity to win thal Giants in a world's series and failed.|came to them yesterday. They never inglor- | appeared so much a&ake as gld Ifll:: ) 1 lace of having |bright and snappy ants, who 1 T e ot the, five games |the addicts of autosuggestion, seemed that comprised the battle for the title.| day by day, in every way, to g::)wll.vg:. The best the Yankces could do was to | ter and better. But, _v\‘lth Bu: o p Ld‘ he scond game of the series. The|ing as well as he did for two-thirds Giants won the other four. In all the annals of the game onl two clubs ever triumphed in a work n such a decisive fashion. the Chicago Nationals won four Detroit twelve inning first game tie at 3-3 in runs. s later the Boston Braves|business. This, at least, was the im- of the entire nation | pression they gave in the fifth inning Connie Mack's superb ics four games in a row. Discord In Yankee Fold. downfall of the Yankees t of a house momentarily di- { the head of the household which was then enjoy- lead over the Giants, #i%ered with his pitcher, Joe Bush, in blocking t of the chasapions in the Bush became angry, and before he could calm himself, long George Kelly had smacked one of his urves so hard and so far that one Giant reached across the plate with the run that tied the Yankees and an- ant trotted in with the score This year they went down Yankees enjoyed the prospect When they came to bat in the seventh was deadlocked at They made a run en Meusel's scratch ng's_sacrifice bunt, Art Nehf, the Giants, south- and a short sacrifice fly to center of Bverett Scott. The throw-in of this fly almost caught Meusel as he slid for home. It seemed the Yanks barely had squeezed out a a wild! The Slavghter Starts. t In the eighth the conurag- flung out their challen; em for a moment by stop- roft's hard blow back at and leaping to the bag just to beat the runner. Giants would not be the diamond squarely in half with a through the to McMillan it, and the batter ed with a two bagger on to third roller to short. home so fast that Groh could not safely reach the plate. third but was run who jugzled Scott hurling was thrown back to the box Bush found himself in trouble. runner on_either rched on third base and Irish Meusel ing his bat Young, who usually drops left-handed, Huggics Gives His Orders. At this moment there popped into[had men on .every base fiushed by the | the rally that had already sent two t the best way out of the| of their comrades over the rubber. y would be to let Young walk to first, filling the bases so that a ut would be facilitated. He|rally in the ninth, he crushed their ling to take a chance that Kelly, who has been weak in his re- would continue to be|fly. Young took care of the next two ordered Bush to walk | batters and another world’s series was both Glant and Yankee | ready for embalming in the record t was a splendid example | books. baseball stragety. game ruined Miller Huggins it mever- command plainly dis- to work He warmed up with a couple of hot words Huggins was signal to pass h obeved. His face showed t each of the four wide e to the catcher. Keily Smacks One On the No: repeated his eared at the plate h to him was a ball. The next and into center field at a ab d guessed wrong. won a moral victdry, but | Dugan, 3b ing else was lost. - per, Bush lobbed a lazy throw up to the Yankees had awakened from the of the distance to the end, a little slowness now and then did not mat- ter much at the time. In Dumb Base-running by Yanks. The Yankees simply could not run the bases well. Their experience on Saturday left them sadder but appar- ently no wiser in that branch of their when, after making one run, they tossed away the hope of another when Scott was boxed on the third base line after Bush had singled. 1 The single by Bush was stopped in center field and Ward scored on it. Scott, who had singled just before Bush went to third safely. Huggins was_ooaching there. Some thought| the Yankees had learned a lesson yes- | terday when McGraw's outfielders twice returned hits so speedily that runners were tagged between bases. Today was another day with Scott, however. He overran the bag and was caught. Nehf Pitches Good Ball. Facing the fast breaking curves of Nehf, the Yankees, as had been their custom through all the series, plugged along for one run at a time, while the Giants stuck to their worth-while habit of letting the hits fall where they might in the hope. of rushing sev- eral runners over the plate. The Yankees were held to five hits by Neht. A single by Dugan, a sacrifice by Ruth and Pipp's single, gave Bush one run to start with in the first in- ning.. The Giant's took the lead in the second, getting two runs on Meu- sel's single, Young's walk, Kelly's sac- | rifice, and a_one-bagger by Cunning- 4}1“11_ The Yankeés tied the count at 2 all in the fifth, Ward walked and was sent around the circuit by singles hit by Scott and Bush. Again in the seventh the Yankees forged ahead. Meusel scratched a hit that Groh fumbled. He was sacrificed to second by Schang and given a trip to third on a wild pitch. Scott's sacrifice fly sent him home. Babe Ruth a Fizzle. There were occasions for Babe Ruth to rise from his slump and regain heroic stature, but he could not smite the curves that Nehf hurled so care- fufly. After his sacrificc in the first inning, his bat produced nothing but | a strike out and two bounders to Kelly | Pipp Features. Pipp's play on Bancroft's hopper in the eighth was but one of several bright bits on fielding in the final game. It seemed a piece of retribu- tion, for Groh had robbed Pipp of a hit in the sixth. The most valuable catch of the game was made by Ward. He leaped and stopped a hard line drive that came off Bancroft's bat in the second inning when the Giants Bancroft also got revenge. When the Yankees came to bat for a last chance hopes by runming far beyond the dia- mond to catch Meusel's skyscraping ‘The SUNDAY'S GAME GIANTS ab | r h po a e Baneroft, ss . 4 0 [J 2 5 o Groh, 3b . . 4 0 2 1 3 0 Frisch, 2b S RN Sty “Let' E. Meausel, If ... ¢ 2 23 1 [ 0 insist. | Youns, rt N i SRl YeS e et b 7T ISR e T 16 T Cunningham, ¢t . 2 0 1 2 0 0 King, eof o1 0 1 0 0 o Snyder, ¢ . . 4 0 1 3 3 0 Nehf, p . .1 0 L] 0 2 0 0 ot (B BB X Ly 0 0 0 0 0 Bush's| qotals 30 10 27 138 0 cracked off TYANKEKS r hopo oa e and Meusel. | Witt, of .2 L] 0 o 0 0 Bush | McMillan. of-x .. 2 0 0 1 0 0 .3 1 1 0 1 0 Ruth, rt o T e of his tem- | Pipp, 1b . B o 1 8 0 0 R Meusel, ¥ ... 4 1 1 0 0 o Schang, ¢ .3 0 0 4 0 0 ‘Ward, 2b .2 1 0 3 x 3 0 Scott, ss .2 0 1 5 5 0 Bush, p SRON SH S g Totals 3 5 2¢ 10 o x-batted for Witt in 5th. xx-batted for Cumningham in 7th. Score by innings: | Yankees . 11000101003 Giants ... . 02000003 x5 | Scott, Kelly, Schang. Double plays, Bus | Scott and Pipp 2, Ward Scott and Pipp, | Bages on balls, off Bush 4, (Young, 3; | Neht 2). Struck out by Bush 3, (Groh, { Earl Smith (Synder) ; by Nehf. 3, (Ruth, | R. Meusel, Schang). Wild pitch, Neht 1. Hit by piteher, by Nehf 1, (Dugan). Left on. bases Yankees 4; Giants 6. Um- pires, Klem, (Nationai) umpire-in-ch at plate; HiMerbrand (A) first base Rain drops and brain flops sent the New ‘York Americans down to another defent Saturday in their almost ~hope- less fight with the Naticnal leaguers for the baseball championship of the ed upon the sloppy weather favored the < Gilants, Whodézokflfqtifid;m;dgv::‘:fomgi Iots of good luck, but they didn't miss Golvin and Dressen. The Orioles came them in a su n i k produced anl of their runs.-But the Yan- | geries. They didn't throw a chance rally, which put. them with within one |St. Paul . 01602000110 kees could have won the game in spite | ayay of adverse fortune had they made use of their legs and heads with as much vigor as they put into swinging their 4 fit of the clubs and although there has e Mays 2, (Cunningham and Bancroft):|.474, had the best record of any play-|peen a ith i the mearest to a win of any pitcher of | Swarthmore, 31; Ursinus, 0. off McQuillan 2, (Ruth and Scott).|er on either team. Meusel made his five rocnt Jomosition lordanclis the " | the Yankees. Bucknell, 5; Susquehanna, 0. Sedan des and resist- Struck outi by Mays 1| (MeQuillan); off:| singles’ connt and. drove in seven’ of.the | & ocment (has contracted. for. an: or provi strength McQuilian 4. (Schang, R. Meusel, Ward, | winners' rua year let's hope the Braves or the Phil-| Jeorgia Tech, 19: Davidson, 0. Where the construction throughout Eimer Smith). Hits off Mays, 9 in 8| Bob Meusel and Wally Pipp, with SiX | ot sor enecy oo blanks will be made plate; Klem, (N) first base: Hildebrand, | ing out two home runs They were the 40,000 persons who trudged out of the 3 driving im an open car, the Polo Grounds after the last game of|ing staff to come through, while the Gi-|and quits @ growd collected at the | New York, Oct. 8—Organization of| Temn. Doctors, 45; S. P. U 6. the world's series today had a vision |anie Doct ¢ before them as they walked—a DICtUre | oooq form. twas the 4 n prs fomgiimar 5, ~ il L TR of the two sets of club-owners sitting o Pl outstanding fsature | game was postponed until next Sunday anns purpose of provid 51 bat_whatever was a biz disappointment Sl their customers’ largest needs and| Millsaps, 39; Clark Memorial, 0. ing van cart away their profits. 3 no doubt they were sitting down, puf- fing on big, fat cigars, and listening iples: Chicago, Oct. 3—A drizzling rain made | Two base hit. Frisch. Sacrifices, Ruth, | lng“ktla MY\!mns the Yimksem - WO e forced to play. TODAY'S SFORTS Tt aimout to cut off a run at. the ' RACING plate should-he hit one in the infield. o On the other hand, should he have Meet!.nsl Mmum Jockey | m tt;wxgh'; it woul sm“‘m been Club, at o or. ’s throw to. the run- Meeting of Kentucky Jockey Club, R ner 'Ko.n third to the plate. i at_Latonia. “Kelly. has heen a_weak hitter. He 5 A R Meafini:l ]g.lryhnd Fair Associa- hfi)}““‘]‘b‘it:d ;flu,fiively_ m;n!t ;:'y Baltimore, Md., Oct. §—After a game, tion, at Laure] of the Yankee hurlers, Huggins fig- 3 TROTTING - flured ail " these things and ordered |pro ) fiEht in which they overcme & Grand Clreuit meeting at Lextng- }f Young passed. That,_in my opinion,|fIve run lead which St Pdul, of the tm.n was the best piece of strategy. in the| American association piled up in . the ] series, - third S i club, D e Boagia ||, Bt Kelly broke the law of base. TNE. e, S PU Timce: ol weste Hapind < ball averages and hit.. That was bad | [ernational league won the thifd game Club at Saratoga Lake, N. Y. luck for the Yankees and a great bit|Oof the Little World Series here his af- CHESS of u}v:rka_y ?:rhnrst tmhmt,um . ternoon 13 to 10. The contest was wit- rican national chess “The Giants have fought their best | nesseq crowd, there tommamant opens at New Fork: throughout the series, and fighting | =", *¥ % eapscity crowd, b has won for them. We have had good {18 14033 paid “admissions. . Thousands BOXING pitching; so have the Yankees, but we | Ware turned away. Wiltie Jackson vs. Jimmy Goodrich, §| had the' breaks and .we t0ok advan-| Joe Sheehan, of the Saints, and Jack 12 rounds, at Buffalo. tage of them.” NENEE Bentley, of the- Orioles, considered’ the There isn't any use quibbling about | pitching aces of the rivals, both wers it said Miller Huggins. “We were|driven to. the ? B —_— - _lwhipped soundly and well and mostly 0 -the - showers. Bentley - was 42 10 touched up for six hits in the third, |\ x-batted for Rogers in 5th: through —our. fauits. John McGraw |including homers out of the park by | xx-batted for Martin fn Sth. has a great ball team. His men had e Score by innings: ‘ right back § - —13 | o - ot prge I e (SR el vl in the third with a four.run | Baltimore 114.6:0:0.0'1 x—13 THAMES SHEET METAL WORK 102 Bank St.—Tel. 1532—New London_ £ SoHOHMHMnNOOHI N sss0oMa0 Bloroosoumumnmn ::n of the visitors. In the next inning| Two base hits, Maisel, Boone, Dres- COLLEGE FOOTBALL 2 " 15 tadng's . when Bush was| oo, ontinued pounding the ball at the | sen, Gonzales, Haas, Jacobson, .Bisho.| ~Yale, '18; North Carolina, 0. 3 ¥ nse of ‘Rogers, ho had i Drea- In trouble in the eighth, I ordered him | Sfleehan in the third. A homer. by Bien. | ey é‘.“h:‘.,'."‘s.ffi??:.:““ x',‘..f,'}"",‘.c&,,, Harvard, 20; Holy Cross, 0. to pass Young because Young is a gor : u b, of the Orioles, in the fourth, with |Styles, Jacobson, .(2. Stol-{ Army, 13; Kansas, 0. heavy bats. The score: ddtngerons hittee. . , Wi yles, Jacobson, .(2), Christensen. y dangerous bitter. Kelly had ‘been e ho.on the bases, was the blow which fen bases, by Berghammer. Double plays.| Princetom, 5: Virginia, 0. SATURDAY'S GAME b b ; he is|clinched the same for Baltimore. Score: Boone to Berghammer to Golyin. Bases| Columbia, 43; Amherst, 6. g -Eight-handed batter: and Cit, was on balls, oft ‘Bentley 6, Sheehan .2, Rog-| St. Stephens, 7; C. C. N. Y., 0 GIANTS sound judgment, I think, to pass BALTIMORE ers 1, Martin 2. Merrit 2. Hit by pltch- N. ¥ s ab r h po a efYoung.and work on the first baseman. ab T nopo a e 3 ¢ s x et o e Bon e e g : er, by Ogden (Golvin). Struck out, by Bancrott, ss B0 2ot aEe I Te SONIRIG S iwaeloh [ Matens 3 4 2 1 0 2 0|Bentley 2 Ogden 4, Sheehan 1, Hogers 2. | Lafayette, 7; Pittsburg, 0. Frinen_2h 30 0 1 .3 0|Youne couidnt Mk mieh S A A e e g i s B b E Mousel, £ ... 4 0 1 1 0 0| “Bush kicked on my order to pass|Weien vt 42 2 0 0 0|mors 5 St Paul 7. Rufis'off Bentley 7| Dénn State 20: Gettyaburg, . Young, rf 14 0 2 3 0 0|Young but that was natural. I fol-|Bentley, p 1 0 0 1.1 0lin5 innings; 3 off Ogden in 6; 6 off| New Hampshire State, Kelly, 1b S e e T lm’ée? the dictates of my judgment,|Ogden, p 3 1 2 0 0 0lSheehan in 2 1-3 innings; 5 off Rogers in | wich, 0. % d Canningpam, (of s 8e [0 0. 0 ey 2 | Botey, ss 4 2 1 1 4 0|1 inning; one off- Merritt-in 2-3 inn-| Cornell 66; Niagara, 0. Snyder, ¢ Iy e nkee players praised Hug- | Bishon, 2b . 3 1 2 0 ‘2 0|ings: 1 oft Martin-in 4 innings. Hits oft T N B leuEire e ngs: 1 off Martin-in 4 innings. Hi Pénnsylvania, -27; University of McQuillan, p ... 4 1 1 gins D throughout the | McAvoy, ¢ -2 0 0 6 0 O|lBentley, 7 in 3 innings; 8 off Ogden in | South, 0. — — — == —|series. They declared that the mis-|Styles, 1b . 3 0 0 14 1 16 innings; 5 off Sheehan In 2-1-3 inn-| Haverford, 0; Stevens, 0. Totals 384 piET 1 takesitiat had beén: made were their | Porter; £ SHT1 1 1 0.0 10540 tugp e & Hek HoRN 1 L TAN 1 off || WaNbAmin and Temre . i Tieth YANKEES own. B TG G T T 3|Memitt in 23 mning: 2 off Martin in -nflh}.‘h R BRLISR i o ha ity ST e als 11 27 10 4 innings. Time of game, 2 hours, 25 37;.8t. Francis, 0. witt, of .. % 12" 0§ oCROELEADS IN mITTING x-batted for Bentley in 3rd. minutes. Umpires, Derr and Murray. Penn Military, 13: St. Joseph, T. Dugan, 3b .,...4 1.1 0 3 B WITH MARK OF .474 g Dickinson, 28; Albright, 7. Dublic for closed car comfort. ¥ Ruth, rf .3 0 0 1 0 0| New York, Oot. 8—Offfcial batting Union, 6; Lawrence, The strength of the closed car de< EECCHES .4 0 2 12 2 0jand fielding averages for the world’s| BANTAMS AND WANDERERS TO squawk from those that put their menm-| Wesleran, 21; Bowdoin, 0. is illustrated by the fact R. Meusel, If ... 4 0 1 5 0 O0{series, compiled tonight, reveal the de- HAVE TEAMS THIS WINTER |€y on the Yanks that the series was Schang,” ¢ <4 0° 1 1 1.0jcisive superiority of the Giants over the | mhe Baltic Wanderers and the Ban. | framed. Ward, ss -4 1.1 0 2 0|Yankees in-nearly every department of | tamg basketball teams of Bultic have cr. | Manager Miller Huggins _would be Worcester Polytech- | mately 35 per cent. of theis Scott. s5 .2 0 0 4 2 Oftho game. The Yankees excelled in ficld- | panized for the season with Harry Col. |100KINg for another berth if the fans |nic, 0. duction for the latter half of 1922 tal Mays, p ~2 0 0 0°3 0jing with a mark of .995 to .972 for the|ling as manager and Fred Erickeon ag |COUMd have their way about the matter,| Brown, 13; Colby, 0. % construction of closed cars. The Jomes, p .......0 0 0 0 0 0 Giants, but in pitching, batting, Dbase-|assistant manager. Otto Phillips is secre. | Wonder who will give the banquet for | = Georgetown, 19; Lebanon Valley, §.|portance of this figure is em: Elmer Smith, x .1 0 0 0 0 0 running and generalship—the latter &|iary and treasurer. The teams held the | B2be Ruth,‘the King of What 7 Carnegie Tech, 27: Geneva; 6. by comparison with last year's — — — = T —|vital factor that is not shown in the|firt practice the last part of last week |, Frisch and Heinie Groh will go down | Rensselaer, ¢; Hobart, 0. car percentage, which was ap) Totals 32 3 8 27 13 0 figures—the world'’s champions had &|with the following turning out, Swanson, | baseball history as the heroes: of the | ~John Hopkins, 2; Mount St. Marys,| mately 13 per cent. x-batted for Mays in eighth. clear-cut advantage. Coay, Robertaille. Sinfneau, Chaven: |S€Ties of 1922, They, deserve the honor. |® The production schedule Score by mnings: The Giants hit .309 as a team, col-) Ridgeway, Burr, Sewart and Burke, a | The eighth seemed ‘to be a hoodoo | -ochester, 15;: Hamilton, 0. that the closed car of today is Yankees 010 0—3 |lecting 50 hits and scoring 18 runs, While | new man from Syracuse uiversity. Johy | {07 the Yankees as it was in this inning | - Mubienberg, 12; Delaware, 0. tinctly not a “luxury” car. It is Giants .. . 000 04 |the Yankees batted only .203, making 32| Firth of the Wanderers is very il and | that the Giants won two of ‘their games. | COl€ate. 19: Aliegheny, 0. great demand because it will stand up Two baso hits, McQuillan, Witt, Pipp. | hits and 11 runs. will be missing from the lineup as will | The Giants outhit the Yankees 2'to 1.| Willlams, 14; Middlebury, 7. under. hard driving and pounding onf Home run, Ward. Stolen base. R. Meu-|{ Groh, Frisch and Emil Meusel were|J Burr who entered Trinity eollege this |24 little Artie Nehf outpitcher the ov-| Rensselaer Poly, §: Hobart, 0. bad roads just as sturdily as the o} sel. Sacrifice Frisch. Double plays, Cun-[the batting heroes, although Young and|ay. errated veteran Joe Bush. Massachusetts Aggies, 13; Connecti- | car—and at the same time offer ningham and Frisch; Trisch, Bancroft | Kelly also came 'thoush with some| “The clubs are planming a subserip-| The Yankees' pitching staffiwas ap- et A A 3 car_protection and comfort. and Kelly, Pipp and Scott. Left on bases, | timely blows. Groh, with nine hits out | ~ I parently much over-rated with perhaps tgers, 20; Fordham, 15. The steel body construction Tankees 4 Giants 5. Bases on balls, off |of 19 times at bat, for 4n average Of | v of the cops od ok for the bene- i ho exception of Bob Stawkey who came | TUfts. 6 Bates, 0. . Dodge Brothers recently in! in their Business Coupe and Businessg chestra =0 it is impossible to cancel the | 1f the Yankees win the pennant mext| Centre. 55; Mississippi, 0. ance to strain which is possible . ©! | iad will ‘e chabes ‘s orpiaante: West Virginia, 55; Marietta, 0. of steel And prices of closed cars innings: off Jones none in one nning. | nits apicce, led the Yankees in battin. | i re thar all e meln L rele” """ | The Giants prove beyond a doubt that | Macshall College, 56; Transylvania|can by mo means be thought of A% Umpires, Owens, (A) umpire-in-chief at | Aaron Ward had the distinction of knock- s - they were the best téam in every depart. | COliege..0. prohibitive, as they might hawe ment of the game. Howard College, 0; Marion Military -« d - years ago. The prices of (A) second base; McCormick, (N), third|only hits he made and came each time |SACEY-WILLIMANTIC GAME A collection of individual stars doesm't | IDStitute, 0. Brothers all-steel’ closed cars, for ex< base. Time of game 1:54. - | with no one on base. POSTPONED BY BAIN |make a ball team. You have to have a | URiversity of Tennessee, 21; Mary-|ample, now exceed the prices of th Frisch and Groh also were fielding| The baseball game between the Am- |little cooperaion among the players apd | Ville Collegs, 0. o open cars by narrow margins of CLUBS LOSE MONEY stars. The former's play in every depart- | erican Thread Makers and the Norwich | N0 jealous swgli-heads. University of Mrayladn, 0; Univer- V. In the northern and eastern Kl 0 spot in the aggressive work of McGraw's | Sunday afternoon at Recreation Park |TO RETAIN AND INCREASE snderbilt. 33; Henderson Brown. 0| where from five to scven months New York, Oct. $—Some of the|men. e B Beceatiy x s ON THE SERIES|ment of the game was a scintillating | Kaceys which was to have been played Nig-of Virkinia, 4, Washington and Lee, 14; North Car- % The failure of Huggins all star pitch- |of rain. Both teams showed up well the year are too cold for comfortabl of the closed car is growing by moundsmen showed unexpectedly |grounds but as the rain persisted the | the Associated Bankers' corporation| Auburn. 20; Springhil, 6. and bounds. Even in the south, unce buying public appreciates the of the preiseries “dope”, but the failure | and tickets should be held for next [ing “a medium’ through which the|' Arkansas, 22; Drury, 0. protection against rain or snugly in the counting room, snick-|,¢ Bahe Ruth to show any prowess at | week. local banks will be enabled to serve| XHendrix, 56; Magnolia Aggies, 0. e s e ering to themselves and calling a mov- Y rorts ~ The rapidly mounting of closed car production shows h ) well the motor car public is easily won from the Norwich Tawn War. | CRang® of commercial paper” was| U.S.Infantry, 13; Wofford, 0. to this type of car. Ters by the score of 20 to 0. The Har|20nounced tonight by George B. Cald- in_the fourth game when he |gizs lineup: Sullivan, It; Sector Ig; Bal- | Fol. chairman of the board and drove a towering fly to right center that | gini o: Loremski rg: La Rocheller rt;|COrSanizer and first -president of the Yankees followers. o thereby retain-and increase local bank| South CaroMna, 7; Presbyt Ty were in the cobnting Toom AT | mte ot ot 0y it ot but two Hardigs Win Game yterian hits out of 17 times at bat and seldom i ies | d6DOSits through a nation-wide ex-|College, 0. was able to get the ball out of the in- | e iaey morning the Junior Hardies ; J field. The nearest he came to a home to the music of adding machines—but | ;un" ooy it was about as pleasant to them as a Turkish melody is in a Greek restau- : Cunningh: bt aft % _ Investment Bankers' - association of neither club company will get enough thb; M. Cohen Thb; O'Neil fb. The pian is somewhat simflar to that heckles to pay its expense out of the CrLEvE REAFER of reinsurance companies in that it ACADEMY FLEVEN BATTLES P les in s, one of the few times that it SPORTING NOTES has happened. TO TIE WITH STONINGTON is designed to permit the: couhtry : : bapk, after it has loaned its statutory And this, despite the fact that on| The Academy eleven .battled to a| ANl Hail é'}’ Kings of Bassball—The | imit” to- any one , borrower, .fo turn TUESDAY NIGHT each of the five days that a game was | scoreless tie against the Stonington team | New York Giants. over the excess of the unendorsed played the record for total receipts of {on Saturday afternoon. The game was| NOW that the World's Serles fs over | oo, “U0il o tha” corporation previous series was broken. Each)hard fought in all four periods and the | Babe Ruth may go on a barmstorm "% | for distribution in the usual chamneis. || LADIES 20 CENTS New York club will receive approxi-(play was imost in the middle territory ; T . 's | The association’ also proposes to assist mately 361218, which is generally be-|each team holding the other to downs| This is the third time that the World's | /o rior*ankcs in underwriting new ARMORY — NORWICH lieved to be less than it cost either|the greater part of the time. The near- 5@;5‘1;& o ! bond issues and to buy and sell secur- club to meet its world series over-|est to a score was when a series of | SINC el ities for its members. CAR FOR BAL’ head. Compared to the $108,027 that|end runs and line plays put the ball| NOW that the Yanks find they can o e each operating combination took tn|on Stonington’s 3 yard line but here|TmOt Play ball may be they will take up : : : Lambs’ Rocky Point Orchestra Friday Night GENTS 50 CENTS | eac i c 3 i F b ity A. H: G. Fokker, the Hotlander, whose ;Jt:mf:uf;e!r.;a}(a\‘st vear it looks like a Zv‘.zm\;\agfion held and the Academy lost STm groat mystery in the recent |monoplane was used extensively by the The chicf reason is that last vear| Stoninton exectted a number of good | World's Series is how in tarnation did }Germans during the worldwaris now oo eight games were’ played, in which |forward passes jand trick plays that |the Yanks win the American league | opersting WO JUCEFOCR MONL IAD L the players took the major portion of | metted about 30 yards each time in the |PenRant? B o e et four. This year only five games were | third period that brousht the ball to| Fretty soon there will be an awful tia (D. C.) aviation z played, but only four had money|the Academy 5 yard line but 2 fumble value to anyone except disabled veter- |lost them the ball. These were the only ans of the World war, and various| times that there was any danger of el- New York charities. All receipts Of | ther putting over a touchdown. Both the second game, roughly one-fifth of | teams showed a lack of football know- the total, were given away because|ledge and the playing at times was rath- the powers that be evidently thought |er ragged. the umpires had made a mistake in A o calling the game on the supposition | SARAZEN IS OPERATED i that the sun was going down. Sy The Polo Grounds was jammed each QX EOR ARERNDICNIIN from leaving elevated and subway | "Qr WO LIE BC tad Sefeated Wa trains who couldn't show a ticket to | % TREHL FUHSL open £oif shamplon. the snafemt, e e it | hospftal where ho was brousht this 38,561 t‘rickl?d past the turnstiles. morning from the Westcheste‘r»sllnnors The total attendance for the five C'“T";!“:f,ff:,:gfx gl Fr five Eames was 135,947, : after- The total recelpts wero $605,475, of [ OO 8nd the champion is reported to| which $120554, the receipts of the sec- | " JeSME comtortaby. O s roy 21 ey O ahe| where he had played the first 36 holes including members of the two teams | of the maich with vy i i s ‘!'P‘m%a‘“hm‘“l";‘;e ;‘;n‘:;‘:[" i:gz:d :}?“ tributed to indigestion. He admitted to- $247.309.11, Seventy-five per mnt. o | 423 he bad suffered periodically throughe this, about $185,482 is to be divided |°Ut the match yesterday. among the members of the two world's -WHITE SOX GAME series teams, and the other $6127 to| o Sox 8 the runners-up in the league scram- POSTPONED BY RAIN Removal Notice Our business has increased to such an extent that it has become necessary for us to mowe into larger quarters,.and . to the trade, that on and after October 14th we willsbe | located at 92 Water Street, where we will-be in-a-position, to take care of our many patrons properly. Economy Paper Supply Company Phone 2108 92 WATER STREET “EVERYTHING IN‘PAPER” The champion Giants get $111,289 to ssary to conclusion of the third game split among themselves, but since the | of the series between the White Sox division is rarely equal to all who are|and Cubs for the city baseball title. eligible—one or two generally getting | Weather permitting, the next comtest will a small cut—it is impossible- to tell{be played tomorrow at Comiskey Park, accurately what the average slice|home of the Americans. will be. The prospect, however, is about $4,470, which is far from -being | Firpo Enocks Out Tracy a record-breaker, though the shortness| Buenos Aires, Oct. 8—(By the A. P.) % S 20 of the series makes it pretty high for | —Luis Angel Firpo, heavyweight cham- S £ e five days' work. pion of South Ameriea, this afternoon > ‘ALLY PIPP OF THE YANKEES CLOUTING THE R A SINGLE ] ,‘1?3',“8 Yankees get ht,he balance | knocked out Jim Tracy, the Australian it s EmEy e 7 witich, probebly will give | fighter; in the fourth round. ND ENNING 2 o §T41%8, e, oot : THE SECO! NING OF THE THIRD GAME Each club actuaily gets $82436.57, but both of them pay half of that to the league treasuries. The remainder of the gate recei $T239L1L, goes to the advisors soun: cil presided over by Commissioner Landis. It probably will be enough to pay his salary and for the main- tenancs of his office. MOGRAW PRAISES HUGGINS AND HUGGINS PRAISES MoGRAW New York, Oct. 8 (By the A. P. T lnck for the Yankses, following one nt{:m:-he m’:d};im :; ‘baseball s egy emmplo; uring e present World series, lost the fifth and decid- ing game of the 1922 Worid baseball championship for the New Yark Americans, in the opinlon of John e, mamager of he The word ia b NeGram, mamger of the Glames. i very lest word in-sefe ?hfl ligh moments of thelr attacks. with men on second anc third.and twe out, Huesins ordered Dush to pass “Pep” Young, the Giant right-fielder, a left-handed batter. The Yankees ai that time were one run ahead of the Nationals who needed a kit to tie of tlxefll‘\_fl. Gun curred in the eighth inning when ! ¢ nothing better-in the - /

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