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RED SOX WIN THIRD FROM PHILLIES _Che_ [* Circulation Books Open to All.” | ty The Prem Pobtioniog Vere Berta) — ——— RED SOX END PITCHERS’ DUEL WITH VICTORY OVER PHILLIES, ? The Hub Has Its Stekex: Baseball Day ' | ‘With an Estimated Crowd of | 48,000 Fans Jammed Into Its Most Spacious Grounds. | CHAMPIONSHIP GAME. PHILLIES 01000000 RED SOx 000100001 Batteries—Alexander and Burns; Leonard and Carrigan. oO 2 Umpires— |p O'Loughlin behind the bat, Kiem on bases, Rigier left fleld and Evans right i) fieia. y pit an PHILLIES. RED SOX R. H. PO. A. E.| R. H, PO. A. E. | Stock, 3b 0 t 1 0 0! Hooper, rf 1 {2 0 | Bancroft, ss 0 1 4 1 OO} Scott, ss oo2 1 0 Paskert, cf 0 0 7 0 0|Speaker, ef 12 2 0 0 s' Cravath, rf 0 © 2 0 O}Hoblitzel, 1b oo 9 o 4 Luderus, 1b 0 0 3 1 O}Lewis, If 60 3 1 0 | , Whitted, If... 0 0 2 0 0} Gardner, 3b 001 5 0 Niehoff, 2b 0 0 O 2 O}Barry, 2b... oo21 Burns, c. ‘ 1 4 5S 2. O} Carrigan, ¢ . 0 0 8 O Of Alexander,p.... 0 0 2 0 0} Leonard, p o 00 2 0 Totals 1 3.926 6 | Totals ‘ 2627 9 1 wo out when winning run wis scored, j ae us ‘ | Off Alexander, Pht Summary; First base on balls ander, 1; by Leonard, 6; left on dases . 2; Red Sox, 2; the ase hit—Speaker; two-base bil —Stock; sacrifice hits--Bancroft, Stock, Hob Mtzel, Scott. Double plays—-Burns to Bancroft to Luderus, Umpires O'Loughlin behind the bat; Klem, bases; Rigler, left fleld; Evans, right field, FINAL INNINGS. ; struck out—by Alex-| By Bozeman Bulger (Special Staff Correspondent ot The Evening World.) The game started promptly on time, | to Cr NO RUNS, | fly in centre that Speaker lost in the NO ERRORS, ONE the ball falling at his feet for ;* while the un, INNING nder Burns flied to} two buses, great crowd | struck out, Stock ker, NO RUNS, NO groaned, Bancroft rolled a neat sac- RRORS, NONE LEFT. rifice toward third and was thrown popped out to Bancroft, Car-| Man rigan struck out croft to Luderus J HITS, NO ERROr next) NINTH INNIN out by Gardner, while Stock advanced | Leonard wasted two ¥ » but lald the Leonard ou! rl NO No| to third curves on Pask: Baneroft out on one over, Paskert missing tt a foot.) a bo ate apea vere a AES e tor dropped to the ground to | im Paskert popped out to Carrigan The batter drop ree itch which came | (ardner threw out Cravath, NO oe anette heame) RUNS. NO HITS. NO ERRORS, close to his head. On the next one} NONE LEFT. Paskert, a little overanxious, p LAUREL WINNERS. The a high foul to Gardner. (Continued on a anor RESULTS. AT AT LATONIA. orting Page.) * sf 49 KECUND wave: For ty Wounded) 810,000 Raised. the passengers of the Hner arriving to-day fom Naples is f the Chi- | waa uecome | of the Milan} ‘4 Y Uagar =e Hs SAILING TO-DAY. Tocantins, Montevideo .. . fenaninet Piraeus ’ Hiow s10.400 1 On| ship Mag, Minto: Kyonst, who fe'mew to sing ia Chlcugo. \ | Episcopal Church, one | questions as to who he was and wha jhe wante -|parents or friends, |Here are some of their ads, MINSTERSHOOTS ANTHRAX VICTIM WHAT CAN THEY DD. YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8.000 GERMANS WERE SLAIN AT LOOS; GAINS CLAIMED BY SIR JOHN FRENCH f: AND KILLS MAN HE |PREPARES 10 MEET WITHTHE GIRL OF 13 we IN ws haps DEATH BRAVELY. WHO SLEW FATHER? New Orleans Pastor, Says > Took Victim for Robber. ICH ALLENGES INTRUDER. Declares Son of Railroad Man Made Move to Draw Weapon When Ordered Out. Soectal to The Evening World.) ORLEANS, O 11.—Rev. Hivlley, rector of St, George's of the most fashionable congregations in the city, early to-day shot and killed Lansing Pearsall, son of a prominent railroad man here. Dr. Holley told the police he shot Pearsall thinking he was a burglar. About 6 o'clock this morning Dr. Holl elephoned Police Headquart- ers he had shot a man in the rectory tudy, The minister told the poitce that while in his office he heard some one in his study adjoining, Taking a pistol he stepped into the study and saw a man near the door, “The intruder did no’ NEW Byron answer my 1," Dr. Holley said, “and when I ordered him out he made a motion as if to draw a weapon, I fired and the man fell.” Several hours later the man was! | identified at the Morgue by Nathan G,| Pearsall, claim agent of the Texas and Pacific Ratlroad, as his son, Lan- sing) twenty-two years old, No rea- son for the young man’s presence in the rectory could be given by his Dr, he never had seen Pearsall before, Police found a window in the rec- tory parlor had been opened, Pearsall lived several blocks from the Holiey home on the next street, eR Ry Woman r Fined, S Boaion thr the Rela andthe | On pleading guilty to an indictmest te Hostons: tok charging her with baving violated the visiting Phillies going to bat LAST HALF OF SEVENTH, customs laws by failing to . for- FIRST INNING—Leonard's first} Speaker again found Alexander and | eign hanaise Waicn sho brought] lined a clean single to left, Hobiitzel |with her as baggage, Milas Frances Clyne offering was wide and Stock fouled lise 4 bunt In front of the pt vies lof Nodal West One Hundred and e over th ‘ a out Burns, with quic nought, shot |'Tenth Street, a buyer for a rifth Aves | the next one over the stand. Again) it iit at second, fore inue wom ouintting establishment, ok fouled to t and, walted |ing out § ehott in was to-day fined $150 by Judge Sheppard aN Ae cela cet th ini eee ed een iibiitual {Inthe Criminal Branch of the bederal as Leonard threw the next one igh | (ree ee tlay. Lewis beat out an | Distrtot prt ie Le = over his head, Stock swung heavily jinfield tap to third for his second hit; ~ | Gardner retired the side on a slow curve and emoshed a tong Arde w ite! All Classes of Workers Respond to World Ads.! The reason is “ample. They kn know The World prints more “Help Wanted” Ads. of various kinds than ALL THE OTHER New York newspapers ADDED TOGETHER, Take Paper Box Work They are rather difficult to find Yet employers turn to World Ads, for this} class of help. printed in The Morning World to-day: PAVE HOXbS— Eayerionces sinppers aad quer. im; steady Work; good pay, Salamon, fs ueadt wore? West Broadsay Kayerien TW ened timen in wnt ood pay, Hulee Coe. PAPER Ho _Sohware Ui Perhaps \UU need Paper Box Workers. If so, ADVERTISE IN THE WORLD, which is the workers’ favorite guide to employment Your ad, will get a circulation in New York City, morning or Sunday, great- er than the Herald, Times and Tribune COMBINED, and what is of still sess ty er linportance, It will be most eg sought for by those who are po! ing | for positions Read World Ads, for Work! Use World Ads. for Workers Holley said] Young) S, for instance, |, ainaaiipeie Lawyer Greets Son Who Raced From College to See Him. 2 EXPECTED Mme. Curie to Be Tried and Anti-Toxin May Be Used. Dying in torture of antlrax, a rare disease for which in Its advanced stage medical science knows no certain re- Nef, George F. Stackpolo of River- head, L. L, lawyer and Justice of the Peace, refused to let Dr. H. E. Dwyer of the Bellevue Hospital staff admin- ister an anaesthetic to hita parly to- aay. Stackpole inristed he would rather beat tie palm than be unable to say wood-by to his yon Philip, who was hurrying here from Dartmouth, N. HL The boy arrived just after noon. ‘The two were abla to talk, though at- tendants prevented the son from tak- ing his father in arms, fearing Infection of dreaded bacill! his which tna discharged 4l- rectly into the blood and cannot be diverted. The irritation of the pol- soning in the immediate vicinity of the spot on his throat, which was | first infected, causes a swelling of the throat, which may cause death by strangulation before the same end is brought about by the action of the poison on other organs, Stackpole, |who is seventy-two years old, has known of the certainty of his end since Saturday. Propped up in hi Hospital, the white-haired old man, his wife and daughter Celina by his deathbed, whispered to-day hia appre- | clation of the messages of sympathy | which have come to him | “My message to the public In the plight which has come to mu here,” aid Judge Stockdale, “ls the mes- sage of a fur greater and better man than myself, though I have tried to ft cot in Bellovue liead an upright, Christian le,—ol |President Garfleld, When told bis end was near he said: ‘When my time comes I am ready to fo.’ Now that |my end is near, I, too, am ready, Anthi is known asa virulent and highly infectious disease among cat- tle tn tropical courte There have} been two other cases in Me vicinity of New York in tho past two weeks, Dr. H, M, Silver, the family physi- by ultra-violet rays Kested in the | Medical Journal of November, 1 and approved in theory by Mme | The treatment will be to-day, but w nope that Jwill stop the ravages of the anthrax | pactilus, The Board of Health iseued a bulle- tin this afternoon in which all persons who suffered from w it warn: vat weemed to be a ra develop: boil to medical . It was recent oi ong Ivland n Ma by of anthrax, an the Bourd of Health n tre sail that the eotive animals, Was |for human patients. None the |the Bellevue authorities arrang the delivery from Washington train arriving here at 7 o'c night of « quantity of anthrax toxin, anti- |ee nt, though ef- | Stackpole |f SOON. | WILL Ultra-Violet Ray Suggested by|Says She Simply Wanted to |spent the thirty-six hours after the| The disease generates poison in the | Coroner Foshay Saturday night t! affected part, |be ready when he re jelan, learned to-day of a treatment] ir! pulled the trigger | started and grew until he accused his | wife of making a fool of him by! {to the village. va Tice Learns rn Bullet, She Fired to Save Mother | Was Fatal. 7 GO TO FUNERAL.|* Scare and Didn't Mean \ to Kiil, | oe | Eva Tice, the t*irtoon-year-old girl] > who shot and killed her father to save) 4 her mother's life’im their home ‘a4! | Croton-on-Hudson Saturday, was told only to-day that her father was dead. Until then she believed him slightly wounded; {t had not entored her mind that @ shot fired with the one {dea of making her father reloase his strangling grip on her mother’s throat could have ended his life. USA The news broke down the calm, selt- controlled mood in which she had} shooting at the home of Justice B 1, Decker, to whom sho was sent by Tho! girl went Into a daze of bewildered | grief which was almost a trance. Tice had been in a mood alternately quarrelsome and playful all day Sat- urday, He spent the afternoon clumsily repairing the “beanshooter” of bis seven-year-old son Georgo and went out domanding that hiv supper} avned, He came back in two hours, rather earlier than he had been expected. A quarrel linto kille secretly taking money from his clothes Friday night so that ho found himself without a cent when he went When Mrs. Tice denied having the money Tice sprang at lier and choked her, threatening to strangle her tf she did not confess and return what ahe| had taken, Eva, who was in the} kitchen, heard the seream and ran into the Iiving room, Tice was bend- ing his wife back over the table. “Please don't hurt mamma," she erled. "You mustn't do that.” His only answer was a grow! of anger. Eva ran to the open drawer of a sideboard In which a revolver given to her father by a Miss Hagel burst, on a farm Tlee was once superintendent “It you don't stop hurt! sho erted, “I'll shoo! Her father pald no heed. Ww ing mamma,” The little | a! 1915. Lieut. | SAN Walter D. Taliaferro, stationed at the United States Army Me ered. President Wants to Revise Wilson to-day prepared awering tho several notes received in ty last few months from Great Brit- non the subject of Interference with Circulation Books Open to All.”"\ 13-YEAR-OLD GIRL WHO KILLED FATHER TO SAVE HER MOTHER. 4 <i \ EAM, 2 Poh kT S, ARMY AVIATOR W. D. Talliaferro Falls One Thousand Feet to Death in Flight at San Diego. DLBG! » Oct L.—Lieut, Aviation Corps School at North Island, fell 1,000 fent an Diego Bay to ay and was a. ss body has not yet been rocov- <atentnele | PROTEST TO BRITAIN HELD UP BY WILSON Note on Seizure of Ships Before It Is Forwarded ASHINGTON, Oct. 11.—President studied the long note by Secretary Lansing an- 16 PAGES WEATHER—Faw Te-might and Tesedey, Warmer, . Foner PRICE ONE CENT. All. 8 90,000 GERMANS CHECKED BY THE BRITISH AND FRENCH IN BATTLES AROUND HILL 70 ‘French War Office Declares That This Force Was “Completely Re- pulsed and Dispersed,” and That Enemy Suffered a Grave Setback ‘GERMANS CLAIM SUCCESS | PLUNGES INTO BAY: HIS BODY MISSING Her father,| Amer trade, The note has been atruck near tho enr, fell tc floor, | delwyed largely because the President |e v4 the revolver and ran up| wanted to keep it apart from the con jthe front stairs and down the back|troversy with Germany and is now Stairs and out to the € of thelr ected to go forward soon. nearest neighbor, Mra. James De-| Although practically complete, tt laney, whont she begged t > to her| may require some time for further re- mother's ald, Mrs, Delaney found] vision by the President and State! | rother of the lute at (ras Eiger 3, Dudley, U,) turned the L | pails. | Weeks and Core Ticw dying and his wife in a faint, Sh@ sent for a physician and then hurried back to her own home to keep the little girl from the shock of knowing her fathor was ded onsider her under ntraband as dealt Hons since then: | } WILSON GREETS D. AL R, not decide what course the law should | Organteation Colebraces Twenty- ake toward the Id unt aftor @] pit Analversary of Poondin conference wit dntriot oF ; teroni with District Attorney! a siixaroNn, Oct. 1L—Pr er Forshay. She will! be allowed to attend the funeral of her father to-morrow, The officials are puzsled as to what to do with the! gir) yuirat retiring room| Maste. Ou over to the Wilson the Dy ylution at @ ty-fifth anniversary founding, | In @ message H { it} Sunda yeday extended greati uKhters of the Americ ebration of t of the ae iddreased te World Wants Work Monday Morning Wonders, Department ofMelals, as it covers the, entire subject of © with by the British fleet before the no-called blockade orders in counoll| were inmiied and dete > “a) commander, the 115,-{ | 600 members, Mrs, William Cummina ’ Th boy baby's |Btory, President General, urked upon o | trunk right leg ut- {the Women of the country an Interest tached, velock this|in national defense mon Brathy -- ee LEE nt CUNY URES BFE HONIG ike DUS 46 Was "Ene Sy GF URS WHole w IN ARTOIS AND CHAMPAGNE OFFICIAL FRENCH REPORT. PARIS, Oct, 11.—Following is the text of the report issued to-day by the French War Office: ‘ “There has been reported during the night nothing more than fairly severe bombardments on the part of the artillery of the enemy at a point to the north of La Scarpe and in the Champagne district against positions to the rear of our line, as well as in the region of Souain, Everywhere our batteries made efficient reply. “Further information confirms previous reports that the violent counter-attacks delivered by the Germans during the past few days against the British and French in front of Loos and to the north of this point have resulted only in a grave and costly check. The principal assault was delivered by an effective force of between three and four divisions, (nearly 50,000 men) which was completely repulsed and dispersed. “The number of dead left by the enemy on the ground in front of the lines of the allles is estimated at a total of between 7,000 and 8,000 men.” LONDON, Oct. 11.—Since Oct. 4, according to Field Marshal Sir John French, the only change of consequence on the Loos front has been a steady gain of ground by the British between Hill No, 70,'which is the key to the situation, and Hulluch, OFFICIAL GERMAN REPORT. BERLIN, Oct. 11 (via London).—The official account of operations in the western war zone issued in Berlin to-day is as follows: “In the region of Souchez and Neuville and in the Cham- pagne, northeast of Les Mesnil, enemy attacks with hand gren- ades were repulsed. “Our battle airmen yesterday destroyed four enemy aero- planes. One British aeroplane fell at a point east of Poperinghe. Northwest of Lille Lieut. Immelmann compelled a British battle biplane, which was flying at a height of 4,000 metres, to descend. which was flying at a height of 4,000 metres, to descend. This officer within a short time had brought down four enemy aero- planes, “In the Champagne one French battle biplane was shot down near Somme-Py, another on the heights of the Meuse, west of Hattonchatel. We lost an observation aeroplane south of the Forest of Le Pretre,” Allies at the Dardanelles Renew Land and Sea Attacks LONDON, Oct, 11.—Terrific ftiring|the new Italian Embassy there, the at the Dardanelles by both land | rioting being provoked by the big reported to-day trom {C8 of lving. Riotous demonstrae cael tions have taken place before the il Sublime Porte and 4,000 women had An extraordinary bombardment there |to be dispersed by troops whea they leads to the asyumption that | held an anti-war demonstration, The Gen, Sir Hamilton, the allies | Turks, the despatch says, place ttle anawed hla’ of | fait in the Gormanio drive through fensive operations. Reports from | Serbia and are distouraged by the Athens declare the Turkish defenders ShOrinols Nutaoar Mm rounded arriv. are in worse strait than ever for |S dally from the Dardanelles, food, water and war rounitions and that starvation is threatening them naval guns te Mitylene stil to progress |g Tan ince British submarines have com- manded the Sea of Marmora, tr Reports from Athens say a Turkish! ond aut mob in Copstantinople has wrecked i te etal