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oer aes OOS VELT’S WOUND IS SERIOUS GIANTS NOW EVEN ON as WITH RED SOX "PRICE ‘ONE CENT. Conrviagt. 198, by The Frese Publi (The New York World) LASS EN Ny NEW YORK, TUESDAY, ¢ OOTOBER 1 tt GIANTS SHOCK ABIES BY KNOCKING WOOD Tes NO WANING 11 104 World’s Series'With Red Sox.3 to 3 With To-Morrow’s Game in Boston the Final for the Title. M’GRAW’'S MEN BAT HARD, DOYLE GETTING A HOMER Only Good Hit Off Tesreau. Was Box Score of 7th Game's GIANTS. | RED SOX. RH POA EB RH. POA B 2 1 3 1 OO) Hooper, rf... 0 8 % CoO 3.3 1 3 2 Yerkes, 2b... 0022 0 1 2 1 G O}Speaker,cf... 1° 2 4 0 4 Ut. 0 0 1 O OfLewis,if.....1 1 3 0 0 1 2 10 O 1/Gardner,3b.. 1 1 2 0 0 2 1 0 2 OjStahl,ib.....0 110 0 U 1 4. 6 0. Ol Wagner,se... 9-1 4 3 0! Fletcher,ss... 1 1 3 3 0! Cedy, c 101 2 0 Tesreau,p....0 2 0 6 0]Wood, p 0001 0 Wilson,c.....0 1 2 O O|Hall,p.. -0 3 0 5 1 Totals.....11 17 27 15 3° Totals.. 4 9 27 12 2) Thase itte-ont Tesreau, 8) Off Wood, Tin one “of Mall, 10 in eight jinnings. Base on Balls—Off Tesreau, 5; off Wood, 0; off Hail, 5. Base on Errors Left on Basxes—New York, 5; Boston, 10. Struck Out Hit by Pitcher—Gantner, SGHEPPS IN A WILD RAGE GIVES LE ON THE STAND Home Run by Gardner in the Second Inning. SCORE SY INNINGS GIANTS............6 10006021 0 111 BOSTON...........9 1700021 0—4 BY BOZEMAN BULGER. . (Special to The Evening World.) FENWAY PARK, BOSTON, Oct. ‘The Glants administered a crush- ing defeat to the Red Sox this afternoon by a score of 11 to 4 and put them- selves on an even footing with the Red Sox for the World's Championship, Each club has now won three games and the deciding contest will be played here tomorrow, ‘The blow that sent a shiver down] ar the spines of the Red Sox rooters was an easy victim on a grounder that the complete downfall of Joe Wood, the| Herzog threw to Merkle. NO HITS, NO man who was expected to rip the Giants] RUNS, SECOND. INNING, into bits. = box under a siower of its in tho first In the seeond Hall was gent in to pitch he Red Sex, Mani Btahl decid- a long fly to Murray in left. Lewis fnning which netted y York six rune and the game, The hitting stars of Jay wero Dovle and Mey » wave *Vood for e:other dey. tel! theagh anybody could hit the ball for] was wild at the start and gave Devore that matter, 4 base on balls. Devore got a flying After the game, more than a thou- rand Red Bva ru with baud to lead them marched around the fleld bo ing the Boston management they were deprived of their spe today. At the same time, they would follow the boos for a cheer for the New York manu, ent which wet asidy asgee Uon for them in the Polo Grounds, FIRST INNING, Devore swung at tie second bail rolled @ slow grounder to Wagner wn infleld hit. Larry Doyle went the firet one and sm: a corking © le into centre, advan Josh to secs ond, Determined to play a rushing game Doyle and Devore got a big lead on Wood and made a clean double stea! ‘Tis instantly rattled Joe Wood and he put in the froove for Snodgrass. The Californian smashed {ft into right for a long two-bagger, scoring both Doyle and Devore. Having got the Sox on the run Murray sacrificed to Stahl and Snod- grass took third. The wind fooled Le om Merkle's high one to left and the bi start and made @ clean eteal of second. Dusty wlio tou is tine and worked Mall for another base on balls. Devore took @ big iead off second and Hall made a quick throw tv Waguer, who blocked him off the tee und (ouched itm out, eget at Riry, Soolgrase drove a sir ‘s into right, advancing Doyle to second. Murray waited until the count stood two and three. Just then Hell tried to make another play to got Doyle off second, but when Wagner tried to block Doyle the ball bounded away to centre and Doyle scored while Snodgrasa went to third, Murra y was out on ® high pop fly to enough out lerkie finally rounder that ONE HIT, ONE @ aide on @ jot Waguer threw to first. taking two strikes Gi entre and bounced over the rall for a home run, the first of the series. fted @ hh foul to Meyers. W bounder jumped away from 1 fell for two bases, scoring Snod-|reau, but Fletcher got it and naii grass. Wood got Herzog's sharp, Wagner at firat. Cady etruck out a! Dbounde: and threw to third 1 ntime to; having threo balls called on him. ON HIT, ONE RUN. THIRD INNING. After taking two strikes, Hersog got hold of @ fast one and rammed it over second for @ clean single, Meyers snappel the first one squarely on the no#e and almoat knocked down Lewis with a single to left, advancing Herzog | to second, tcher attempted to mace | rifice, but Hall got the ball and by a head off Merkle. While Merkle was be- ing run down Herzog went to second and scored a moment later when Meyers rammed a shot duwn the third base line! that went lke a ‘ullet for two bases. Fletcher followed this by driving a not amash past first for two bases that s Meyers spinning around to third, reau then cracked a shot off Wood's wrist for a single that scored Meyers and sent Fletcher to third, The Sox were | so rattled that Tesreau walked a4 fake ateal off second, and while they were running him down Fletoher ran home) with the sixth run. Tesreau was then} tevr (nadvatce Sievers and Fis ee wonderful threw got It to Gardner ln touched out at second by Wagner.| in, ‘ 1 ‘ t Hooper caught after a run. He SEVEN HITS. SIX RUNS caught @ sire home rua, ‘TWO ITs, Pesreau appe to be quite ateady,! No Rt and got two styikes aver on Hooper. Ho got Hall's grounde then wabbied a little and gave three ue fatled to to the balls, but put the next one over and Merkle's peg, howevel Hooper had strick out, Mie wind was! aliowing Hall to take se blowing such a.gale it was very d!M@- | ranmed a clean single cult for the pitchers nitrol the ball It to third. 0 cateh them | sreau Was ting worried © and ¢ot @ base hurried atty ov , on balls, two strikes over eto ward up, Yerkes strak oot 1 Bheaiers “And ont swing helafter getting three halls on hiva.. ‘rhe 4 = ae 1) “eonuaGan on hare Ninsiee Wee! VAM LJ bd PTS, eyped ae Fas uh pe Am by ae of hy Achar, ‘Mousse ee Nil, ;{out the pale of the law, was called to the stand to-day before Justice »| their sories, With the count standing two and three! TO COUNSEL FOR BEC Goaded by John F. McIntyre on Cross- Examination, He Snaps and Snarls, Makes an Apology, but Lawyer Won't Accept It. Sam Schepps, Jack Rose’s silent partner in shady enterprises with- Goff, in extraordinary term of the Suprethe Court, at the trial of Police Lieutenant Charles Becker to corroborate the State’s witnesses in their confession of the murder plot. While Schepps was on the stand the Chief of Police of Bridgeport Conn., sent word that he had two men in, custedy who cleim to have {been eye-witnesses of the murder of Herman Rosenthal. Deputy As- sistant District-Attorney Groeh] was sent to Bridgeport to investigate Under the lead of Moss per little man with the grot Assistant Districi-Attorney quely solemn countenance, related_the. mart * ‘Toareau, § “. O} by Hall, 1. Home Runs—Gardner. Doyle, Twos | Base liits—Snodgrass, Meyers, Fletcher, Hall, Le Stolen Beset—Devors and | Doyle, Devore. Double Play—Speaker unasuistel, Wild PitchesTesreau (2). Schepps, a duped the had “innocently” played as paymaster {o the gunmen, “Gyp the | Blood,” “Lefty Louis,” “Whitey Lewis” and “Dago Frank.” He swore! (that he had never heard a whisper ef the murder plet; sort of deaf mute messenger boy who ran errands for his good frie: Rose without questioning the motive or purpose of the errands. A BUSY BEE WITH / GUILELESS MIND. | He had been busy as a bee in the interest of the conspirators, he liad heard the name Becker mentioned in damaging connections but never once had the light broken in upon his guileless mind. or Webber or Vallon, but he stuck to the main facts of their testimony and occ. sonally used phrases that had fallen from their lips while on the stand, His poise on the stand was graceful and negligent and now and then ‘ne would illustrate with a dainty gesture. His direct testimony consumed little more than ai our of the fore. noon session and then came the cross-examination by John F. Melntyre and a heckling which swiftly transformed the breezy Mr. Schepps froma cooing dove into a snapping turtle. He braced himself at first for the ordeal and met the first volley of questions concerning his previous o¢- cupation as an opium smuggler with stoical calm. At one point in the cross-examination “If — you — say — John F. McIntyre asked Schepps about! ie," shonted Soheppe, carrying the $1,000 to pay the gunmen “TE will be @ gentleman is the for the murder. presence of the Go: that — you “Don't Molatyre, iiterally shaking wits timan he rage, while Attormey Mart stood —that you were the murder pay- master?” Bohepps bounded far out of his seat, his face purple with passion. Prepared to restrain cossary, “You must not use that J © anguage,” warned Justice Goff, gag rdon,” him it ald Schepps, pologies from that shouted Mr, MoIatyre, ia not apologize to you, pologized to the Court,” tn. Judge a Newspaper by the Number and Class of Its Readers: has a cireula- vrning the | age) Hostou Mrisoner & aby Pe of Winnipes. ka fie Maniiova ae {POLITICAL PARTIES aN Med ia tbe The witness was a little jerky and not as coherent a narrator as Rose! Mat he 45 a oversoat, his undercoat, : | per ders. Possibly some of the cloth | the Suspenders was carried into the wound, This stalement coming direct trom. Dr. Murphy may be taken as the actual diagnosi Col, Roosevelt's case, It is a trank statement in: that it doe k to minimize the seriousness of Col, Roosevelt’s iniury | Dr. John B. Murphy is one of the most prominent surgeons in the world. li was Dr John B Murphy who invented and ted the “Murphy | Button now used in fntestinal surgery the over and acknowledged by surgeons to be one o # most Important additions to surgical sclence. The Murphy button ig a contrivanee for holding n of intestines and allo them to do thelr i While healing from * TBs. | wounds of the surgeon's knife. When Weal, “Bec 6a) Fg presees the Murpby bution Is abso, “ROOSEVELT'S CONDITION {his present condition. QUIETUDE IS WPATHRR—Fate to-night and Wednesday. FINAL EDITION. ‘PAGES PRICE ONE CENT. ESSENTIAL,” - SAY COLONEL’S DOCTORS. IS SERIOUS,” OR MURPHY PHONES EVENING WORLD (Famous Surgeon Says: “The Indi- cations Are That He Will Get Well, the Chief Element. of Danger Being Infection.” The Evening World called Dr. John B, Murphy, the famous Chi- tage buurgéon, who Is in charge of the case of Cbl. Roosevelt Roosevelt,'oh the'tding distance. telephone at 2 o'clock this afternoon and. conversed with him about the Colonel’s condition. Dr. Murphy was at Mercy Hospital in Chicago and had just left his distinguished patient. “Can The Evening World say"o the people of New York, as com- ing from you, that Col. Roosevelt will get well?”"Dr. Murphy was asked. “The Evening World may say,” he replied, “that the indications are that the Colonel will get well. Unless complications set In—unless blood poisoning or some other form of infection intervenes—the Colonel will recover. “He has the advantage of a splendid physique, unlimited courage and abounding cheerfulness. He told me only a short time ago, and I'll "| give it to you in his own language: “Docwwr, ii will take wore than one bullet om a short gun to kill a Bull Moose.’ “Do you regard Col, Rocsevelt’s wound as serious?” World asked. ™, do regard us seriotis,Yeplicd Deo MUrphy. "The Fret clement? of danger, ast said, comes from eae irecthin, ant we'dd hot know! as yet whether there is infection or no!. “The budet betore entering the Colonei’s chest Ris Vest, Nis’ shirt and nde on his clothing or-material foi We have not probed the course of the bullet, which entered one inch to the right of and below the nipple and passed tour inches atong the chest wall, RESTING EASY WITH LITTIE PAIN, - “Have you decided onan operation. to cemave the. Luller2”” “Not yet. Our future course will depend on the developments of the case. All we can do now is watch the wound and the patient and act according to whatever necessity may arise. The Colonel is resting com- fortably and is cheerful and optimistic. He feels very little pain. So long as he remains in his present condition we shall feel greatly encour- aged.” “Will it be possible for the Colonel to resume the speechmaking tour mapped out for him before election?” Dr. Murphy was asked, “1 hardly think so,” was the reply. “He is very anxious to go on, but is more than reasonable in his acquiesence with our advice. 1 do not think it will be possible to remove Col, Roosevelt from this Hos pital before the expiration of ten days. This prognostication is made on He must remain under observation until all danger of complications has passed.” “Will we be accurate in saying that the Colonel is now in the hands of his physicians waiting for time to tell whether the wound will "| heal or infection will develop?” “That about expresses the situation. Col. Roosevelt has the best of care. His wife is on th ‘ay to ¢ shicago or will start from New York! this afternoon, There is nothing to do but wait and watch and be in instant readiness to cope with any untoward symptom w! itself known,’ 3 nature has completed the heatlog bed into We eystem and passes away. a The Evening + hich may make; Keune Bulletin Si asoietie Rooseveit’s hap Are Barred and Completé t Ordered for Victim. - Ray Photographs Locate the Bullet in Chest, but Surgeons De- cide Not to Probe for It—Mres: Roosevelt Starts for Chicago. to Join Husband: CHICAGO, Oct. 1Sim-The following supplemental letin was issued by the eons in Col. Roosevelt at'3 o'clock “(4 orteck New Faro “This is not a mere flesh wound, but 4 serious wound in the chest, and quietude is essential. «J. B. MURPHY, “A. D. BEVAN, “S. L. TERRELL.” (Special to The Evening World.) CHICAGO, Oct. 15,—Col. Roosevelt is in Mercy Hospital in this city under the observation of a corps of the most distinguished surgeons and physians in the Middle West awainitg whatever course Nature may take in the bullet wound inflicted by John Schrank in Milwaukee, las: night. X-ray photographs, taken this morning, have accurately locatec jthe bullet and its course, bat the wound has not been probed, and ww the present no attempt will be made to remove the bullet bul- ‘ | Lending. Col. Roosevelt at Merey Hospital: temperature was 98,8; his pulse 92; his respiration normal. ‘him to breathe. He must have absolute quiet; mu: ID aa! Wist-Robseeangon wit! wogise permlosien” An hour after the examination Col. Roosevelt dropped into ito a peace __ Hul Sleep. His physicians Sid the sleep would aid wonderfully in im proving his conditian. Dr, Jameson of Milwaukee arrived this afternoon with plates of X rays he took of the wound last night in-Mibwaukee—coea-aft.. Ce! Roosevelt Was shot. Cay OME WOT WHY aTeuupt to asertain whemer the bullet ha “travelled.” While Col. Roosevelt's condition ts hopeful he !s not out of the darge that always attends a gunshot wound should septic poisoning intervene The surgeons now are waiting to see if blood poisoning develops. If th wound remains clean and heals naturaliy then it will be up to Dr, Murph’ and his associates in the case to decide whether to remove the bullet frou the muscles of the chest wall or allow it to remain, The news has been received here that Judge Neelan of the District Cour in Milwaukee, before which Schrank was arraigned to-day, has ordered . chemical test of the bullets remaining in Schrank's revolver, Thig test wil he conducted by Prof. E, W. Somer, head of the chemical department o Marquette University, and the object 1s to determine whether or not th bullets were polsoned Medill McCormick, who saw Col. Roosevelt at noon, sald the Colone was witting up in bed drinking tea, munching oast and reading Maca. llay'a ess He talked to Mr. McCormick abou. the Bull Moose movemen and asked that O. K. Davis call to see him this afternoon, The doctors have ordered the abandonment of the Roosevelt campaig: tour and bave announced that the Colonel must stay here ten days at least Col, Roosevelt Is averse to tals programme, He wants to start back 9 | soon ay he 1s able to get to the train, The Colonel reluctantly agreed t abandon his speech-making tour, his judgment as fo the seriousneas of hi wound confileting with that of the doctors, Even now he ts insisting o making at least one speech in New York on Oct. 26. Col, Roosevelt's secretary, E Martin, announced when the Photograp. was completed, that the Injury appeared to be only a minor one, and the the pation! was resting easily, “His pulse and respiratory action at normal,” said Mr, Martin WILL MAKE NO MORE SPEECHES. That the surgeons thought « loug period of rest necessary, however, wa shown when Col, Roosevelt's secretaries announced that he probably wout make no more speeches (his campaign, Preparations for his removal ¢ Ovater Bay were sketched and when (he time comes for hts Journey every thing will be prepared to make It as fortable as possible. ‘The following statement was issued by the physicians after the X-ra_ It pain; cease from ta'king » pictures bad been taken "Col, Hoosevell nas just returidea Onl lie Jperauing room, We have ““Wound Is~Serious—Chiéf Elté-— ment.of Danger Is Infection—All — AL t.u3 7. M. the following bultetin was issued bY physiciais’ af'"~ He witt-compare the plates With those taken 1077 “7 NOTA MERE FLESH WOUND, | issn hes noses ioe “The examination of Col, Roosevelt _att PM. showed that bie. vet of DIMES UDO HEU vurs are walttoy Cur Di. hae so devtiop taen » ®