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| ew, re ~ oi we 50,000 FANS GHEER MATTY IN FIRST GAME | —— eee wounced that Render would Athletics there was a good s vit When the name of Mathewson sang | ¢ arough the megaphone « minute ter The canteloupe grower worked falth« ully until he got three balis and with a wicked smash hi toward second that Snodgrass, who had second, raced home with the run th tled the score. Ag Collins shot bail MEN UP. home Herzog kept running and landed | shot a hot one ‘ollins bouted, and flying start fro RE crowd of 40,00 broke Itne a roar FIRST INNIS i—Matty shot the first} safely at second. This burst of speed | dail squarely over the middle of the! took the crowd off ‘ts feet, and for ® plate for a strike, thereby setting} minute the stands resented a wilt scores of bets that had been made the | * of delight. They implored Fleten~ anmaterial proposition The big fellow | of 1? ce tee Pale JS bog i) n , el bis bate H Je curve wnd he struck aut. Sy sees ee eater ne | 2 the Geth inning. fh for the for as Lord took up @ position in the hrs time caught one on the nose and fat corner of the plate he whipped (WO drove a iong one Into left, but by A Ast ones in succession over the head great eprint Devore got ander it and of the pinte. Lord then crowded up| made a brilliant catch, Bender went | loser and Matty fooled him by bend-| after Matty's se urve and cracked | mg a wite cur over the outside|® single Into centre. Merkie made a marvellous stop of Lord's grounder and : 4 he struck out, missing the pener and he 4 whipped It to Fletcher in tlme to force ot. Oldring, who is another ety wercer, got ie samp done, £80 Rensler out at second. Oldring sent a | was struck out on three pitched balis, | *hiver down the spine of the Giant two of which were shoots and | footers by a smashing drive down the the other a curve. Collins was a new |T/Sht Zoul line for two bases that sent | petition to Matty, but he took a| 10rd to third, It was now up to Col- ates cn a big curt lins to win the game, But he was aot | ehance on a big curve right over the equal to the occasion, as he rolled Collins whanged it and drove Siete fy au rely into the hands of | Slow grounder that Merkle got and beat | Josh Devore, In this {nning not a ball Gow the bag. This was a narrow lied on Matty, No runs, — | *eape. out he followed It with a wild one that|the Giants’ half of the Afth was again @ victory for Bender, as Chief Meyers fomh then fouled off a couple slammed a groundor that was easy for cor retired on @ high bow Collins and Davis, Mathewson com- vent straight at Bender. The toxs oui] pletely surprised the fans by laying on timost took off the little fellow's hend. y. Ls y Doyle broke the 4 a fast one for a clean single Into cen- e crac yarri he ‘ < was onty. tarry I eS Sead eh afe. tndg a Teens gttaiOn re | The crack warriors of oth seams had been out on the greensward 2¢ 8 single that whizzed past she ips) catch, he AOati Teele Ba poIae with for half an hour when the final signal came, and the stands had been | € Collins's fingers, The crowd broke /@ bunt, but the ball rolled a foul, and) : | nto a roar of applause. Instead of try-]on the aext attempt Uttle fellow in a furious state of uproar from the moment of the appearance of the ng for a pitch ov to prevent Doyle! whi Doyle gave Hender quite al. 2 : fom stealing, Bender uncorked ail of |b at the plate, but Analy banged first Giant that strolled out of the clubhouse. From then on, as the a don Snodgras J struck him) a bounder to second and Collins threw | é ut with three fast ones that came over | him out stands blackened and the thousands poured into the arena the clamor 7 treak, Doyle delayed his start] Beginning the Sixth—Bak nant | " . intl Murray came up and then, like a! the second one square on the nose and | had continually increased in volume. Ned di ade a clean steal of sec-{sent a single whistling over second. | 4 ainire ® ind. Thomas's throw. was low, dit] This abliity to hit Matty was beginning |, GFeat and widespread as is the popu-| vanished before they made up thelr to Wear on the crowd's nerve, but they doyle had it beat anyway. 4 " 1 Murr y swung at two bad ones and/astill had faith in the judgment of the Os of the New York Baseball Club hon was called out on a bad one old master. Murphy was retired quickly and the flaying of fandom by the spe Bigs go. by. The Giants ; ans fly 1) Snodgrass and there ulatore’ trust, there wasn't the Mmtest | fret blood, having got a hit and a| WAS A sigh of relie’, Baker att psa tinge of a grouch visible in the myriad stolen dure in the first inning, Each | the fret steal of Mevers and the Cllel | countenances of that ocean of fans ticher had struck out two men, NO) M000 Manding up, The throw went that swept In a dozen rivers through 14 FIRST RUN OF | like a rifle shot. ‘Then and there the| the various gateways to the ground BAKER SCORES FIRST RU crowd decided that they no longer need | Thanks to the admirable arrangements GAME ON DAV SINGLE have any fear of the big Indian's arm. made by Commissioner Waldo the tens SECOND iNNING.-Matiy guessed | Davis bit the dust on an easy grounder | o¢ thousands who laid siege to the rong on Baker and put a slow curve | that Herzog torsed to Merkle. Polo. Grounds in the early hours of aside which was smashed Into right| In the second half of the sixth the wv a single, The Athletics showed |Glant fans agat got a breeze ylr style of game immediately, aa] when Snodgrass was hit by # p urphy facrificed, Mutty to Merkls, | ball for the second time and gave us| l he runner advancing. Meyers dropped | start. McGraw suddenty change? a's | pat de Becond ball pliched to Davis 1 ‘tactics and ordered Murray to snerittee, | aker sprinted to third inches ahead |He executed the order perfectly und | the throw. was out on a slow bunt to Baker, Snod- moving up to second, Snodgrass 0 on him gras’ With two strikes on him Davis drove faa tha Maw fork crowd ANE lean , i | elect oe Aken py od ns Ragga aeseeeeeres [threw the Athletics Into consternation ‘oy. of ‘the. Philadeipnia contingent, {bY making a clean steal of third, As Tatty knocked down Barry's drive una|he went into the ba« ike a catinult, osved him out at first, while Davis ad- | Baker was Pst aoe is Reis a ‘anced to second. surgeon had to be called to bandas Thomas retired the elde on an eaay [the wou rounder that rolled to Herzog at third, | DOUBLE STEAL AS COSTLY 48 IT ‘he throw to first was perfect WAS DARING. After getting two strikes on Merkle] Merkle struck out as Snodgrass made ‘ender gave shim a slow one over the| the steal Once more this put it up to die and he went out on an @a8y | Heraog to put over the telling punch. | ¢ 4 ; the Giants @raog cracked at the first only to go ates. but It ON & afass cutter that was meant Coling ran it back of the pitcher, took op Barry and Davis, Fletcher was | the short throw and shot it back to <limg outson three fast on je 1Ast yhomas in time to nail Snodgrass at bg to be a itte hight, but the plate. Chief Bender and the © protest Was very mid. Athletice gave the Giants the laugh on Bender proved an easy victim for. ali Uy atty and was quickly retired on an sy roller that Big Six tossed to, erkle. Bender refusing to run it out. ard could not solve Matty's ble curve play. After Matty had given Barry two balls in the seventh he made bim look fool- ish by whipping over three curves, all] Mfted @ high one to Murray, Who of which Barry mised a foot. Thomas & beautiful running cute. Ol- lifted an easy fly to Snodgrass aid 8 doubled along the left foul line Bender died when Fletcher made a! ot wo bases, This forced a battle peautifu’ stop of his grounder and| f wits Between Matty and Collins. Ynrew him out at first tatty kept the ball too low and ‘ol 8 got wm base on balls. Havin WHERE THE GIANTS WENT INTO frned a lesson in the second innin | THE LEAD. ‘Tatty went after Baker with e curve all and struck him out on ched ball | Giants their usual che Thief Meyers was given a groat cheor ment. Fletcher swung at the first ball | he came to bat in the Glints’ half of pitched and drove a frounder to first | 4 third. For the first time in big which Davis handled unassisted. gue ball, a full-blooded Indian pitcher | ch for the [put the hopes of the forces on the shoul- 4 shout, [ders of Herzog. for the beg the and Sweeney pres every perfectly clear. SALE OF ADMISSION TICKETS admission tickets that bega was carried on as smoothly as clock-| work. camped all night before cha: soon as the thelr fatiure to work their celebrated |to establiea a solid wall of policemen along the line it was broadened to six deep. By 9 o'clock there were 10,000 In ling SAW A BALL GAME PLAYED ets CROWDED IN —---——-« Hundreds Carmped All Grounds and Police Quickly Brought Order Out of Chaus When rifty thousand frenzied fans let out their lungs with the roar of la cracking volcano at the Polo G Gaynor of the City of New York cast the ball onto the field as the signal ning of the struggle for the world’s baseball supremacy between Connie Mack's Athletics and Johnny McGraw’s Giants, lar indignation over the gouging meth- handled without a Fifty mounted po- hundred and fifty of Inspectors Titus rved orde’ and kept and estuary of approach morning were of confusion. en and two Imen tn char lane CARRIED ON ORDERLY. The sale of the fifteen thousand $1 n at S o'clock column of fans ha’ the gates in) of a squad of policemen who A argument and adjusted dif- wood-humorediy, At dawn hig slim line began to augment, and | A alim when Inspectors McClusky and Sweeney arrived with thelr big details of patrul- m for a chance at the box window, was three blocks long. and cavalry cops the Mne waiting At firat the line was single file, but two Inspectors were able moving at a snail's pace toward the Polo Ground gates, but moving witn mathematical precision and without josiling or shoving. In the line there were many agents |for speculators, and bunches of fifty tickets were sold messengers until the police were able As the Inst half of the seventh came | to spot to some boys and these agents and eliminate three around the crowd arose and gave the | them. No speculator was permitted to F of encourage | so much as whisper and display the edge of a ticket within the police zons | A few bold ones who boasted of ‘Tam- Meyers woke up the crowd with a|™@ny pulls were hustled Spanish fash- ed a full-b ied Ne isicin batter, | terrific drive against the left field fence fon to th outer regions below One vers took one bal! and drove a long for two bases, A fast runner could Hundred and Fifty-fAfth street and to Oldring, Matty gave cender quite have taken third on this wallop, but, cast into the gutter. There were a ttle ff the but atter getting Voaohne lated mnie ig att -|score or more doing business on the ce balls, finally #t-uck out, Devore ond, Mathewson struck out, al ony et fi aver. ¢ fted patiently and worked Hondar chanco to win the game in front of) 2 ctation platform, however, und in &@ base on ba! Devore worket him, Josh Devore took two strikes and | ¢\ery nearby siop and closed booth the neat trick on Tho vas by making a then smashed a wicked drive down the | eket scalpers held forth and bruited s@ start so that Doyle could get a left foul line for two bases, and M their wares, Bou: He (ier s.usried raced home with the run that put| Five thousand admission tickets had bag and Herter was in the Glants in the lea! and awoke the! been sold before any of the possessors was no good, however, as fare to the wildest se nes of enthus!-\ thereof were permitted within the uahed & not line drive aiuaciiy inte asin that have ever been meen on the | groundy, "At frst they’ were admitted nd eh Je Yolo Grounds, - ball of the sare. but lucky ‘or the | The smile quickly dled away from|!" batches of fifty and one hundred. letics ft went wats. at Renders iace ang he was #0 upret that 49d then, when all the turnstiles aad er, Doyle gata base on balls, ‘The Glan-s Deen manned, they were allowed to Mh two con on bim Danny now had the upperhan and th were fow in in @ steady stream, By 11 rphy went affer a had one and Witte yelllug ond shoutng like a lot of wild-|oclock there were 10,000 bleacherites 8 foul “u to # iuaged men, Snocgrass Aa by lted aehhy inside, but even this number cast but reely at a slo ie: Hein Jek otit, One run Sables a v sbbling up to ti J went ou: In the efghth inning Matty put three | * "ease shadow on the vast atands. @ slow grounier that Meteler our Lis over and struck out Lord, | Tbe entire 15,000 admission tickets hac ndled perfe tly. Burry. wes obo Odrng drove @ long fly that Devore, “en sola saortly after i o'clock an able to caicn 0 i eaushi © thout moving from his tracks, | 9 #peculaturs who iad them sw.ttl weed app 1 ‘ ¥ Coll @n easy grounder stralcht at oosted the pr.ce from $2 te $3. r pueres wo ve 4 n 4° Ma.he ma and Was thrown out at! eckoned that wen ye real advance ay, but the : inst han fivat guard from the lower regions of the a blewer ey In the e'ghth tnning Murray smasied | ity got up town (hey would be avie to {h the Glants if of the fourt) neds a long drive Into left that Lord caught | et a and 8) for them, waa was Int yoand Cir fter a short run. Merkle completely : en Bender un a fos t fooled Hender by dropping a bunt inj TRAIN AFTER TRAIN POURED scked him on te hand ont alu Tonk of plate and beating it out! THOUSANDS INTO PARK. she & funwer 1 with comp-rative case. (Rrennan um-| Phe vieacicr {sre ouured into the the crowd, w 1. ¢ on the bases now instead of Dineen.) | crounds at th fate of 6,.0) an hour, and vered wildly f tergog sircek out, going after a bad gnortiy before moon the vanguard of Murray one for his third strike, Fletcher sed | SNOftY before noon the vang Sahot & Mabe Lent te Marah, (he possessors of reserved seats began mat first as In the ninth, the Athtetics’ laat|{® arrive and form into the separate n to second. oh Baker out to Merkle anes estadl ed for their means of ckle was st vr le to solve Ben- Murphy out to Meyers. | earess. The special elevated traing that “A great aperd aod, fan out on Lavis out, Fletcher to aerkle, vegan piling up at the One Hundred 0 that came over A bullet, Tha Gienis won, 2 to 1, and Fifty-fifth street station at 1 —eV———— “ oe | o'clock were packed to the sates, anu | there was some confusion at first in ID . fl | Keeping wangway's und stairways clea! } i | |tor the devarkation of these fans ! % ihe | When the special detatls of po! signed for thls work got onto their Joo ja aedaall atte mati | the contusion disappeared tor the time Moty eu mot Lord and Oldring, fret two men up. bo Pet aine arn at {ihe thousands who fourneyed uptown Bexder also struck out two Gants in fret inning, GTLURaP Ay Nie ee (nk Ureatdt ena oe Baker scored Scat ruv of game on . Davis's si , ‘ Fey oe ne yierten, Over Sani 4 Game te Bret writ a@ Hundred and Fifty-ftty street, and Matty gave the first base on Dalle to Collins in the third, Sead EEF paca te Sualew aye Letting First two-k a ; : A two-bagger of game was made by Oldrirg in the third, sembled a tenement fire oscape in @ Matty struck Baker out with three pitched balls in the third. Devore worked for bis first bare on balls. ‘The score was tied by the Giants in the fourth, when Mersog’s grounder scored Suodgrass and Collins fumbled the ball. Oldring got big second double of Matty in the Fifth, Baker spiked tn the leg in the sixth when Snodgrass stole third. The wound wee bertazed and Baker continued in game. “Indien” Weyers got bis first hiy off “Indian” Bender in the seventh, rt Yves Wwe-lerncrs Bercre pet tle Ciarte akend in the seventh whe Meyers. Up to the ninth inning Bender hed struck out eleven a had Deen bit eately six tines and Bender five, bis two-begger scored Matty five, Matty state of Jam. More police were sam- moned from the One Hundred and Pwenty-fifth aueet station to look after the congestion of these stairways and | thelr work was more than mildly strenu- | ous. Mathewson the Great arrived at the Polo Grounds shortly after 10 o'clock, driving up in @ touring car, He was accompanied by his wife, hie little son jand & bu pup. He was almost inside | ¥iron the Polo Grounds there looked to TO THE STANDS $e—-- --———— Night at Gates of Polo Big Throng Arrived. rounds this afternoon when Mayor ninds to give him a cheer. Mathewson opined that it was a great day for | baseball, but aside from that HA nat commit h'mse the Hovel Somerset this morning while | Connie Mack's Athletics were still at| breakfast. The American League pen- nant winners had come over from Phil- adelphia last evening and had turned into the feathers at the mystic hour of curfew. The lobbles of tho hotel were packed with thelr enthustastic admirers by the time they got ready to make thelr journey to the Polo Grounds in a little fleet of taxicabs. They left the! Somerset at noon, cheered from the! curb by several hundred Philadelphia | rooters, When the Giants’ foes got to the great uptown batle arena there were fully 19,000 fans inside the grounds, while out in the highways and byways that en- ‘be 20,000 more. Inspectors McClusky and Sweeney Agured that before Mayor Gay- nor cast the ball onto the field at 2 o'clock his men would have handled a crowd of fully 60,000 baseball fanatic: 10,00 of whom would be ‘urned away. While the speculators didn't have a chance to peep in the immediate vicinity of the grounds they plied their traffic openly throughout the city, many of them boarding “L" and subway trains | and hawking their pasteboards in the solid Jams that filled the cars. WwMAN AMONG THE FIRST TO ENTER THE ARENA, One of the first two persons to gain admission to the scene of battle was a middie aged woman who sald sh been tn line since 2 o'clock this morning. She refused to give her name, but said > ma APPEARED man 1s a boy and every fourth boy ts| & woman, as you might say. Automo- | biles, ple wagons and sandwich carts | bore through the press. We can even! ave one baby and one dog, both under escort. The dog is an Irish terr'-r, that |, he would be one, too, when he grows! up. It is @ safe bet he will be the} game of the world’s series. 9 A. M.—To. get a correct Idea of the work for them to do, | Inspector Hughes, accompanted by a score of Central Office men, arrived ind minged with the ever-grawing concourse of humanity that sifted torough the police sieve that had been established on the west side of Eighth avenue. Here and there they found 1 pickpocket, who needed only a whis- ered Suggestion to cause him to melt itherward and divorce himself from the nelghborhood, \ ee et | {UT( MOBILE FANS — | UE UP TRAFFIC FOR MiLbs IN HARLEM. Incidental to the ball game the pop © of Harlem enjoyed a free auto- show along Seventh avenue, One Hundred and Tenth street Seventh avenue was the thor- chosen by about everybody In auto- nobiles, and it vers that there could be few private cars or taxl- cade left “owntown. The broad boulevard was lined with cheering crowds, Many of the cars were Tecorated, Occasionally there happened along @ Philadelphia car, the occupants of which chee: for the Athletics, and were cordially hooted by juvenile New Yorkers in return. At 1 o'clock the uptown-bound stream of automobiles were passing along Sev- enth avenue at the rate of forty cars a minute, There was great congestion at One Hundred and Sixteenth, One Hun- dred and Twenty-fifth and One Hundred end Thirty-fifth atreets, when the auto- mobile current was halted to let cars ass. Pirhe arrival of thousands of automo- piles In the congested vicinity of the Polo Grounds between 11,8 o'clock and 2 o'clock gave rise to seemingly inex- tricable confusion. There was no park- ing space for even a fraction of the cara that swarmed to the grounds, Many were compelled to leave their automo- bh 4 mile from the gates and walk moplle from north, ughfare full now, looking lke big terraced « dens of swaying Luther Burbank flow hybrids, for every other sun god, un-| able to’ keep his enthusiasm corked tn) and botded up longer, 1s waving a fas} or an umbrella or @ hat and cheering at nothing in particu except that he's on hand and his friends are on hand and the weather js perfect, and there !s going to a baseball game, starting in four hours from now, Fron where we sit the bleachers have tha semblance of long curving, nging | gardens, full of beda of blac 4 wite | blossoms. and ps and yellow d stands be- | 10.380 A. Mim ‘gin to fill, who are secure jin their posi tickets couldn't |stay away untll starting time, The bleachers are full now, full up and running over, and no new general admissioners are being let in through the overworked ani clicked-out turn; | An hour ago, 80 a red-capped ttendant says, there were more p sons in those same bleachers than w! heesed the first game of the world's) etles between the Cubs and the Tigers | two years ago. But shucks! that wasn’t | patching to what this crowd ts go- | ing to be. H BLEACHERS PACKEL AND ALL | ARE IN GOOD HUMOR. | ‘The stadiumites are arriving and from up above the roar of thelr on-| coming feet sounds Ike ten thousand | runaway y horses all crossing | @ covered wooden bridge at once. The | clatter of all those hurrying heels upon the concrete underfooting makes ja strange clattering tumult as though | hundreds of snare druma were being |ruffled all together, There fan't room for another soul in the bleachers and the bleacherites. pass the time by | throwing wadded up newspapers at those who pass along the lower tlera seeking space to sit down where there is no space, Hats are knocked galley wet of these volleys, but everybody ‘Continuet from First Page.) is plain, and the baby looks as though! cesses of the stadium like 80 many red- | youngest fan on hand for the opening | Outside the wallr of this bali | Dining Care and Goache: Up or possibly not at all. vading smell of the persuasive and dlushable sausage, garnished aa the case may be with succulent a Sauerkraut smells up the open spaces and the closed, A statistician in the | press stand estimates that if all the | frankfurters that will be eaten here in j the next hour or two were placed end to end they would make an unbroken string of welner wurstfulness three | times around the State of Rhode Is:and 1 still have enough left over to give acute indigestion to everybody in Hart. ford, Conn. He insists on calling there frankfurters by the trade name of hot Cogs or spaniel. But In the case of 4 comparatively hairiess hot dog, as must of these are, wouldn't Chihuaiua be @ better name than spaniel? While paw ing for a reply one moves or to— HIGH NOON,—And ail Is well with the World and the Polo Grounds, No more room in the outdoor stand-up spaces, no more room in the outdoor ‘sit-down spaces and blamed little room lin the stadium. 1 trifle more hazy now than It was awhile ago, and people begin to say it ought to be fine and dandy for a pitcher who can fling a fast straight bail. But of that I pro- fess to know nothing, being not a ba ball expert but merely an inn bystander. tele COMING WHEN TIME FOR nt GAME DREW NEAR They are still coming, thousand thousands of spectators, ‘The Ife s corps in the cafe back of the lower tler are working their neads off to quench the famished and the thirsting and about every sandwich booth is an im | penetray! st of unassua) appe- M=It 1s reported that Harry put his sandwiches in the Vator, ~The report is confi 1P. M.-It is stated on relianle itv that one man res‘ding on By ned. thor- Sixes teenth street couldn't get here because his aunt died, body el#e in Man- n is either already here or on the way, In contrast to other years, when there were big games to be played off, vy of the multitude ¢ rattles or eRe etybody and everyboly uses It any ¢ eimile in your vocabulary for a cOmparigon to fitly deseribe th pund that * forth now When a gate opens un the front wall of the bleachers and tes roarch out from the club- striped in gray black that welcoming roar triking on a shin of Fire Island in ot ” buftaloe the Grand rado, or anything Ming off Canyon of the © vou might tl ently thunder. ull of vast i and you'd fall short of the right ted, full fettled human beings mouths all at and lét off rom their r lungs in chorus remember it even though you Is in your inadequate sys ne Mt, and you remember afterward that the welkin went out of business at one crack. As the Visitors swing across, the team spreading out fanwtse, scores of | photographers go scuttling over the |green fleld, and the gray clad form | tion is most extensively snapshotred. }OLD BEDLAM BREAKS WHEN GIANTS APPEAR. 1.10 PB. ve minutes ago | thought were at last repo excep: perhaps more #0. The wide-spreading wings of the grandstands, curving out and about Uke the horns of a Texas steer, are black now in plac Hundreds of |1 was listening to probably the loudest ushers and venders, al! wit. bright red | 1 that was ever uttered at any 8, Mit about In the cool, shaded re- But T now desire sald and take It headed woodpeckers tn a H nie ae Late comers describe th tuation | nH GIANTS HAVE COME. ark 88! They come at a brisk jog trot, all tn bordering on the chaotic. sudging by | yunch, all tressed in new black unt. what we on ihe inside can see and hear | 4, and all, judging by thi for ourselves, we are p: Pared to b that she would have sacrificed +n arm| situation at this hour the reader 18) jieye it, | full of snutt, peper and vinegar, rather than miss the game, She consid- | requested to kindly read this yarn all!" 1129 4, M.—Moving picture machines | #3, tex come this ve ne gred Christy Mathewson as one of the) over agmin and then just let it go! click and grind and. (ck. ike. dollar | ball Park fairly rocks 9} ° fow greatest living Americana and hoped | double, watches all over the fleld. (Loud cheers | 7st howl of, the crowd goes rocking above her highest aspirations that he! va) A, M.—On the front of three | by ahete), Mewapaper photogs (sir One MOP, Of te Meee Cates wou the chose, corners we cas | a bustle: about berdened. with |cuien only to mest obher sound wave day for the Glant signe up “Baseball Tickets on Sais | cameras, taking pictures of every not. /4r4 come dashing into the wide om There were scores of women in the | Insid Jable or semi-notable who ventures out |f4ces of those that made jt. Tie fi line that beleagured the admission | We hear of all sorts of people employing | UPON the greensward. (Louder cheering |MNded photographers desert the visli- ticket windows, some of them fans! au sorts of subterfuges to get up to the| DY the bleachers). A throaty baritone Of for ine home team and there Is a and some of them mothers of crippled with a megaphone perforime an ineira: {tot of posing and reposing about the boys, or daughtera of feeble old men, | S&tes out of thelr regular turns. The), » upon h'a favorite instrus | home Pla nd afte grouping One young woman Who came early, but | Whiskered veteran who was coming to Pration ALOU? Gomeetis of the Giants as @ hap yy and found many hundred ahead of her, | baseball games when the Hudson River ich novody can hear and which now Matty and Meyers as a. sketch tea bought her way up the line by pur- | broke through into the gea is gently but inody wants to hear eltaer. <Protonged, 824 Cha: Faust, the omcial Jinx, al chasing the places ot boys ahead of firmly turned back, Caristy Mathew-| enthusiastic and tumultuons cheering | 2%. Munsell, her. She had to get her tckets and son's boyhood chum, who knew. “Big iby the blencherite thousands), bane Ae te tl He then go up to stchester Village to Six" when he was only “Little Three,” SANDWICH BRIGADI id th @ stele bring down her crip. ed brother. All would like very much to get by, Dut he WAY MaReLER MhOWEOe hetween the A start snappy prac: Of these women whe braved the crush doesn't. The police are playing no fav-| 4). 3 . tice, Every brisk play is cheered until were treated with every courtesy, | orites for once. lee Gee ane eat tan tobtever down tn the prebe stned: oun overs ioeich iFowaaat nolekar that ee e sandwiches without ham, worked es s ache under the pres- Pee ea ant poticed that Many MATHEWSON WHIRLS BY AND turns loose his cohorts, laden ‘with gure that ts put upon them, Little Dick The chief assignment of ‘hustling CROWD FAILS TO SEE HIM. i" ne Oras on ef ui a A offt rl mAgoat the the tleket speculators was in charge! «pig Six," by the way, goes whirl re et oll has New York's goes to first and scoops up of Lieut. Becker and forty meme, Mela - nue tlie ands Grenead n Inserted into the hinges of these stinging fast balls which Mana era a nm DY GA sey 80 the job won't crack n J. MeGraw bats down the white era of his Strong Arm squad. He yg q mere person, nobody knows him yi ds we , when a purchaser wrests one apart to line to him in a fashion that wins him and his husky lads were on the Job!ina he escapes getting the chee it ek and after they had «iven | 2h4 Ne eacapes Bertin ee wearing ae Whether the meat 18 photographed a lot of applause. a few demonstrations of their exc eae tear 6 ¢ [OH oF merely painted, 140 P, M.—Twenty m'nutes now until lent teamwork there was very little | MS SPAN E ee snout, Tride in the hot frankfurter also ine the game starts. Haviog pitt hed creases as t nm hour draws nigh @nd the early comers begin to remem- ber that they either breakfasted standing SYLVANIA RAILROAD SPECIAL TRAIN PENN Gia nts--Athletics World's Championship Baseb.i! ° S©HIBE PARK, American League Grounds, Near NORTH PHILADELPHIA STATION Monday, Oct. 16, 1911 Leave NEW YORK } Penneyivenia Station 10.50 A. M. Hudeon Terminal 10.50 A. M. Returning, Leave North Philadeiphia 30 Minutes After Game. GAME CALLED AT 2 M. P. everyoody else modest pho: are themselves Pp in this the and art ow aphed NEW PUBLICATIONS. | NEW PULLICATIONS, Is Your Home Happy? Are the ohildren of fo-day to grow np without home 13: Avenicest Ane Wey ‘Bok ented "to hayny ehiht rsodat THE PASSING OF THE CRADLE By FARMEK SMI1H and tnoftten would really lke to kvew, stays good humored because that's a way a New York crowd has when It goes a holidaying. n M.—There 1s a haze over the way ju At you je the matte! Panag Eells tm an amusing 3 what ue nal 4 are ia the bos th 01 if homes to-day read Thi pom i kno ba JoNes i'w he clothes wndie At Mind "what reletion, tbe botwe RICA Mag imhater ane Bim ga iy ms —— ‘The all-per-, their number, 1 portiere-like, who drew a blacu Dean out of a hat and so had to take the picture instead of being In It. They are telling us of congestion out side, of “L" trains haited on the traces, und of belate: ds clamoring at the last minute for admission, but here inside ali goes well, 1 The biggest aixdience that ever weat to see @ ball game in this country hag been handled without confusion, mix. 2p or mishap, Whatever you may thhik of the way the tickers were distribute! you can find no fui: with the way the holders of those Uekets have fared once they were within the concrete bounda- ries of these grou The alsies ar now clear, the #tinding room has bee restricted to reavonasie bounds, the fleld Is clear except for those who rigny ly belora ont we ushera and the spy cla! officers have proven themselves ates, We hear, havc 4d there tsn't room for another person to gec 49 Probably everybedy of note im al! New York why coud get here te in this crowd, but from the masses be- hind ua we can pb. out no familiar faces at all. This crowd is too over- poweringly vast fortany individual to Stand out In relief from the masses of other individua's that form it. On every side of us, behind us, in front of us, to right and left of us, the great quiver- Ing, heaving, slanting, human land- slides siope down from roof to boxes, gaudy with flags and women's millin- ery finery, crackling with yells and cheers a pent-up, packed-In, overflow. ing multi palpitant with hoy enthusiasm and spirits, 5) P. M—Ten minutes more. We Write our story in a Niagara sound that deatons us 1.35 P, M.—They and announ tieth and closed- name the batteries the umpires, For the fif- time MeGraw and Mack ed in the poses of Damon are photon and Pythias. 19 P.M 2 ERUPTION CAUSED TERRIBLE SUFFERING Baby's Body Covered with Large Sores, Seemed to Itch and Burn, Finger Nails Fell Off. Little or No Sleep. 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For more than a gencration Cuticura Soap and Ointment have afforded the most eco nomical treatment for affections of the skin and scalp of infants, children and adults. A singie cake of Cuticura Soap (25¢.) and box of Cuticura Ointment (50c.) are often suffi- cient. Although sold by druggists and dealers throughout the world, eral sample of each, with 32-p. book on the skin, will be sont free, on application to Potter Drug & Chem, Corp., Dept, 13A, Boston. ereat deal more.” :, Dodson, Mont, Jonson's Foors Borax lodines Bran “AR ACTS LIKE MAGIC 3 Try It To-day bLvery kind of foot trouble is relieved by 9 single application. This ie the time ot year you need it tor burning, smarting teet, corns, tunicns of callouses, opnson soo cap, 200 cia An, NY, it is with that small sum of money—one solita:y dollar— that Mr. John W. isockeieller started to buiid his cnomous } sortune, | i ’ ' Why not take Mr. Rocies tt cller's advice’ Set asicie a | dollar and see how much | imoney you can maxe with it. {i if it is invested in a Sunday | world ad. tomorrow, your chances are best ior ; hiring a profit-earaing worker; Finding a jucra ive posiiioa; Selling a business en erprise; ‘turning Real Estale into cash; Locating lost valuables, ete. A dollar spent for Sunday World adver- tising often returns with an hundred-fold proft. ABOUT 9,090 SUNDAY WORLD ADS. TOMORROW | | | efore any of the Ine of f Ath lice Ines the rest rrr id ardent therwi \° , jine erouns resogutaed himcand he had "ancer” Dove nee She For of-te dtr) SAT, wir “about ‘the same” ee thay | GEORGE HENRY SM|TH, Publishes of Quick Sellers, Cedar Grove, New Jersey ; OLN Rk EI ne frtnap agra ay gengmramem tance eo 1A TTC ARES SANE AR cc ae tenet tt ATR my TRAE, Ur