The evening world. Newspaper, September 10, 1918, Page 10

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eee 2 EN SO y . a % Professional Ball Players Aren't Any Too Popular With Sol- dier Boys on Other Side. New York Evening Wo ROFESSIONAL ball players are not very highly regarded by the boys “over there” who are fighting the war of democracy while they are scrapping over what they claim is their rightful share of the World's Series receipts. No better conditioned men than ball players could be found anywhere, and naturally the soldier boys can't understand just why they have been putting off doing their bit like other 100 per cent. Americans, and beating ground the work or fight ruling of the War Department. Of course some of them have secured ful" occupa- tions in the shipyards and others have succeeded in getting themselves rigged out in non-shootable uniforms, but there are few Hank Gowdies in the lot. Hank didn’t wait for the season torwind up or to figure oyt his chance of sharing in the Wor Sertes rake- off, He enlisted at the start of things on the other side and has been there doing a big work for Uncle Sam. Just how the rest of them on the other side of the big pond view ball players and the big league races may; seen from the following, clippe from the Stars and Stripes, the otti- clal paper of the American Army pub- lished abroad: SPORT FOR WHO'S SAKE? | ‘The five artillerymen who used THE EVENING WORLD, we TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER %0, 1918. BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YOR K HUHGLASSRACERS THERE’S LOTS OF EXERCISE IN MOTOR BOATING YOUR GOING TO | HAVE THE TREAT OF YOU CAN LET You MIND BAILING ouT HE ware? Public Gets Best of It Close Finishes IKNOW (Witt GEORGE - THE EXHILERATING AIR A SAIL WILL® S WONDERFUL we HER HAUSER AND WELL SHove OFF! Copyright, 1 Now UNLASH ‘OFFICIAL BOX SCORE OF FOURTH GAME OF SERIES. WE Now TO GO FAR > 1 GUESS WELL UST RUN OUT TO THAT BUOY AND Back- HAVENT THE TIME % by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) 1 GUESS tier carrer RUN LTHOUGH Th F BETTER TEAM line. Ruth's drive sent home two runs, and two were enough, for al- though the Cubs had chances to score in every inning save the fourth, they could not follow up their advantage in any spot. The old punch was lacking In every inning, but the Cubs were fighting. They fought all the way, and fought so hard that in the eighth they drove Ruth off the slab and out into left field, when they tied the score. They banged their way to a tie and to within a hit of victory and then stopped, as they have dope in every game, lacking the final punch in that as well as in every other in- ning. Mitchell rushed up all his re- serves at the finish, but could not score again, and in the elghth, with Shuffling Phil Douglass pitching, Agnew singled, and when Hooper tried to sacrifice after Agnew stole on a half wild pitch, Douglass threw wild to first and allowed the final run to score, The blame for the defeat of Chi- cago, however, falls heavily upon either Mitchell or Tyler. They elected to pitch to Ruth when the play un- doubtedly was to pass him. In | hree CHICAGO, NATIONAL LEAGUE, mi AB KR HPO AE thetr field piece like a rifle on the | yas @ er ee southern bank of the Marne in the —_—>— | ° °° eeiiipiaen opening hours of the fifth great | ¢ ‘ + Ls y rn ae ; Dehaite cf ieik, poaitering tue | oecond. Horse Might Have BELMONT SELECTIONS ® *|Chicago Players Have Lost German hordes that were crossing Been Called First in Races First Race—Valerius, Arrah Go ° ° c , . aces i i ) ; ° ri the river until every man of the d n On, ‘Night. Stick. Feleer, Bb 8 °| Three Games They Might five was killed, did not ask to be | at Belmont. oe ae” jan Senay. | ? ©| Have Won Because They allowed to wait over a battle and | ican pe Ls 6 eta ch aie ale ada a1 ‘ 1 ome in on the next. Fi in a " 1 mw (Our ball players did practically By Vincent Treanor. FU Rog Mtr parma dl ial aad ° ave Been Outlucked, De Ben ee co eay veri the OR once, at least, this season the Fifth Race—Buckboard, Favour, ° clares Expert Fullerton, » Wherefore we can omy shout | racegoing public got the benefit bate Aacncilis Sikusil, Meee Bs “Bravo” in a faint and uncon- |of four close decisions from the| tor Crow, Different byes. eae ki 7 7 ey ace had oni Msi att | judges at the track yesterday. In d a aBattea for Neat i 7 By Hugh S. Fullerton. . js quot wmying = b lor Tyler in he wilt enlist in the service at the | three of the races the judges called | | pa tee bigs in for Hendrix in Sth inn Copyright, 1918, by The Pree Publishing Co, close of the present seasun, the favorite first, and in the other,| Starry Banner's favor, the latter was) qwatted for Kiillter in th Inning. (The Now York Brening World), Wherefore we are moved to |the one won by Starry Banner, th Seen en ne othe tor the tnird|. @0S8TON, AMERICAN LRAGUE. — | Boston, Sept. 10. Inthe arate; appoaia to tke Bes- jsecond cholce, got the official verdict. | money. Yenterday there was a diCfe-| regper, ot ie ee ot ace HICAGO CUBS exploded in one retary of War |Thia finish was close, but not, how-Jence of eleven pounds In favor sf! Shean” zh 4 inning to-day and for the third Wherefore we are geting just a |ever, close enough to admit of any) *tarry ype ane led pay yet Strunk, of.» 8 time threw away a game which little bit annoyed at all the pother | argument, but the other three were of FRCP tua VED LS Meee emrarcun [Maer er tac ieee | seemed to be won, - Ream iat auaite aoe roe ne | the nose and nose variety, None but| hy Ticker. It was pointed out that 6 Rene ena ©The Cubs, although they have professional baseball industry. |the judges could tell which was first | wins whenever he is backed, and only | geott, ss ue o shown themselves We are, most of us, fans, either | past the wire in any one of the events. | then ( osoaghd $ to be a_ better ripsroarers it yougs sone . borg As a matter of fact if the numbers} | - ac Ate bs 0 team, are beaten, ‘ollow the e of old, ent aae shad] Sauare Dealer just did win the -— and now that the whole world in |of the second horses in each race had | gidnnrs eine Only necause of the . Cot a1 0 and in spite of rocking, We like to see this touch | been hung up there wouldn't have] jide Vincent Powers put He 4 Teh oe a their heroic ef- of stability in it—a nation 100 per | been any loud protests, From where| shuuld have beaten ‘Trumpa alsostox 9 O02 000n forts to redeem oS oo ae ty we viewed the finishes, Square Dealer | ccuple of lengths, He ran wide all) oo ous anpeecbase bite themselves have . OVER. CO re » ateeplec! the way, and lost a lot o' ound, el g . tself sane and healthy and aup- | Won the steeplechase, St. Isidore won| 120 Wit. ONC OM OF the arracch | Ruth, Stolen base—Shean, Sacrifice hite | only a fighting porting the same beloved game. —_| the fourth race and Marmite first| ture time around. His Was a lucky |—Ruth, Heoper, Double playe—Rath te| chance left to re it Sethe neope up, some | home in the fifth. victory Scott to McInnis, Scott to Bhean to Me-| win the world's Tuape, Auk tbe Gewemanar, Gas | It all goes to show how far wrong ‘ — Innis (2), Left on bases—Chicago, 6; | championship. less the whole petty, unpatriotic | one can be, unless he is on the line) 4 ton of money was bet on Masiaite First base on hady tpg ace They were| squabble stops, may mysteriously | where the judges stand. More than/last time out, and she got nothing. aes pe whipped 3 to 2 lone its sporting page at the same | once a0: © officials at the| Yesterday she came within a stride yesterday, al~ time pane # ” a nm th a veel Be of beating His Sister, the odds on | Deeetan 1 in 1 inning; off Roth, 7 in 8 J Toceh they out- - flutsh have ‘been cal “}cboice. The finish was too ciose|Ineingss off Bush, none In 1, Strack oat Ci 4 HILE it ts painfully true that Otherwise decrepit, because of their] for anybody but the judges, Marmite |—-By Tyler, 1, Wild pitch—Ruth, Passed hit the Red Sox ball players have sidestepped @ecisions on hairline finishes, Wel led all the y, weakening a trifle | halle-Killifer, 2, Winning piteher—Ruth, almost two to, the war in numerous instances, jt ®Y¢ &8 a rule, refrained from criti- only when the real pinch came, Losing pitcher—Douglas, one, had more than double the num- can't be said that ring fighters, those °4!ng their lack of vision or thelr ex- other ;ublic idols of the sport world, ttaerdinary good eyesight, for the cea be fight. classed us dodgers in the real Many of them are doing their good reason that it means hing to Wem which horse wins or 8. They don't bet, and they have os in army camps here. instilling no vital interests at stake, so yester- rage and self-reliance into our sole day we felt justified leaving the | Another big open-alr boxing show diers by drilling them in boxing: | track jis to be staged at Shibe Park in others of them are in France or some-| There isn’t a doubt in our mind that! Philadelphia on Saturday evening, ee i the Allie . lines at present faa ly ie Corn cael a po Sept. 28, Jim Dougherty, who was ave i m ‘Tom Andrews, our | Sister actually won their r tive | me 5 { Milwaukee friend, tha |races, The angle froni which we| Unsuccessful in clinching @ match “Kid Wolfe, the Cleveland bantam. | viewed the finishes, we are satisfied | for that date between Jack Dempsey weight, has ‘arrived in France and! now, was most deceptive. and Jess Willard, which was caused m Hetting ready for the tront Hw - | by the latter refusing to meet Demp- le e d ‘some time ayo and Jockey Lyke was given credit for o ste the * one seemed to know of his de- samareahi. ‘exhibition of riding an | 8% is to. promot the show. He parture for the other side, The Kid) yeiting Corn Taasel home in. tho| ¢xpects to have Dempsey meet either is boxing right slong with the boys in| Amityville Handicap. He wax prac-| Battling Levinsky or ‘Tom Cowler, camp and has challenged Geni Bll tie post beonuse| Law Tendler okie ; : mont, the former Memphin feather. | gealy, left at boat, ecause | Lew Tendler to tackle Johnny Dun weight, whom Major Cushman Rice| when it was At that nestror | dee and Soldier Bartfeld to hook up took over to Kngland with him alqoke nor Tassel was ready. | With Jack Britton | year ago, Chick Simler, another) 1 \ke, however, hustled the Wilson —_— boxer around Pittsburgh and Ohio, 18) guiding away from the post lengths ted thet I a with Wolfe and is planning for fights. behind in pellmell fashion, and | ¢), ree gy ee oagg lg Simler has boxed auch boys as Johnny | jumped him out all the Way 1M WHAL! Piero, t Sue tah a Dundee, Frankie Cailahan, Willie Ad ke a Hopelean: ohare ib Mul lade in thee ore cecan to We oe] Jackson and Eddie Wallace, Jimmy | 4g the ¢ iy ween " OM tne Oia a 4 i o the front fe only A. A. of Philadelphia on Monday evening, Sept Fryer, the Philadelphia welterweight, | jatching St. Isidore, th er Sea Gea tie tbo ae " io with the bunch and recently de- lin Yhe lavt few strides, 1 its io te eats due ant Makmonator Krnien feated Jack Abel in a ten-round fight, | | NAPRUBKARAL WHA anUre | fame 10: See aboee Bane, bed Saeeineaee. Henan Jimmy fought Battling Nelson a| {me Comm Tassel was entire Seeeies e arNns le reauaet, Flere a0. v8 twenty-five-round draw a few years|{n. would have finished so couragvous: | Lessard iy to ext e bie guaranion. Lael ago und also clashed with Young | jy. It probably was the hardest 1c- — : Ahearn and Young Erne, Near this, inj: he haa ever been subjected to and, om Ohio contingent is another bunch of |e ee ae oie ee ae trainer, Tom | fAT7 Comer ef Boston, one of the three of-| boxers with the Badger Brigade, Healey, wasn't entirely pleased, ‘as he sorts peirias tarn, ee Sra Os A among them Ted Jamieson, the for- mer American amateur heavyweight champion; Bud Gorman, who fought Fred Fulton, Andre Anderson and others; Art’ Borgelt, a Milwaukee weltorweight, and numerous others Jamieson and Gorman were matched and Ted put Gorman to sleep in seven rounds. Mike O'Dowd, the middleweight champion, is also on the job, doing a soldier's work where it will do the most good. HARLIB HITTE of Albany, known some years ago as one of the! gamest of middleweights. although well past the fighting age now, has just won @ boxing title in England. He is the proud possessor of a cup emblematic of the heavyweight cham- plonship of the British Army. ¢ Hitte enlisted in the British Army several months ago under the name of Stuart. He had two brothers killed in the present war, who also enlisted un- 4 name of Stuart. Hitte enlisted Be) Barone ‘hair Gente oad ip anzie intimated there was no Use ruining a od horse just because the starter gave him much the worst of it, Cora Tassel was ready every t break seem: time when Cassidy finally pushed the button It's hard to please all racegoors. | When Deckmate was beaten arry Banner only because of a won- erful ride by Walls, more tran one regular pointed out that (he last time these horses met a dif- erence of only thr pounds, in pionship was a short affair, Hitte dis- posing of his opponent, Private Cot- ter 2d, the third round, Hite tipp 177 pounds, while Hitte has been appointed boxing in Structor at the training camp Bramshott and is a big favorite with the boys. Hitte does not like the ic of being kept in the camp, however, and is anxious to handle a gun, He t's regu The managers of ly agren! on Conley aa nileree the mo. ye Was suggested for the job, Foard of bouts between ti tional A ment hia 0 delnhia 0 Bevt fighters Mato O'Brien and Linge intend to have bat rankie Burne of Jemey City| and Obick Hayes of Indianapalis, Frankie Brown | of this city and Gumie Lewis of Philadelphia. Jobnny Krtle and Terry McGovern, and Joe Bur.! wan and Joe Tuter, Prank Bagley, manager of W ie Jackson and) Renny Valerr, the French featherscight, is now the manager of another battler is Abe Fried man, the east side bantamweight who has won many nowspauer decisions over fairly good | fellows eince le left the amateur ranks and turned professional. Hagley hae matched Friedman to meet some bantam in “Philly'* in the near future Lew Tendier, the crack PMhiladelphia light weight, Is now working for the Goverument at ite recently turned down several offe' while stationed in Canada to act a | whore Lewis wi jt cmitiog lor is getting into George Chaney in *H Johnny Drimmie, the Joney City lightweight! who toxes Joe Mooney, the the star bou of Went Hoboken, N, J up for another battle to against the a hal jo tthe show of wee City on Monday ev Dy omtpointing Battling Abo stopping Joe Bonds foar rounds at the Nation hia on Satunlay night Indian 4. ©, |. Jack Hanlon, manager and of Philade! Viympia A, A. ported as being the manager Nal fonnee Hanion intends to use Olympia and bis fimt Jack Sharkey on Monday ert dinner, Gumie Lewis and Freddie Reese. the i aso sparring partner of Ohi ard, were matched to da at the first indoor A. A. of Muilade! They witl clash for into shape for the i Spencer Called Arthur Spencer, champion of 1917, has ready to de |training can ank L. who Kramer of regained his dy from Spencer this shipyards at Hog Island, in Philadelphia, Tbe position will not interfere with Tendler engaging jo bouts, and, besides, he is to be sent to dif. amet sition (the Enat tow the emuneae of me. Ay for a position open that he wilt anxious to do his bit, | Hight-heavy weight, many offer for battles, ter him to fight Bi Ted Lewis, the welterweight obam, | his new automobile stolen national sa Young Men’, tian Association Worker pbreeg to work to the different sbipyarda, oe for his bout w on Sept, 18, ‘al Lightw at the show of the Spring A ber of runners on the bases and had three times as many opportunities to score runs. ‘The Cubs are out of \ck—but luck in baseball {s a strange and vari quantity, The Cubs have lost three games which they might have won, but the battle to-day was one which | was decided on one guess~and it was | guess that made Babe Ruth the to-night, was signed] great hero of the current event. day, te wii © |" ernat guess came in the fourth in- Levinsky recently and ning—the inning whieb, by the way, seems to be fatal for the Cubs. Again it was a base on balls which started the trouble, and you may recall that it was a base on balls which beat the the earyweight, in A. ©, of Philadel-] Cubs in the first game, a hit by & yume, ie sere) itched ball which defeated them in ¢ Armory A y Mish N hmaker 4, i now of evening His second battle will probably be | Burne of Jemey City will be the thind man in the ring) Sept on at Atlantic hight, ut after the vollee depart wn here had seardhed for several houm the Philadelphia featherweight Brook a n tgoter ire show of the Cam. night, Rew ia getting o with Benny Leonanl, Friday to Colors, en ordered hia local draft board in Newark to be rt for the National Army y at Camp I 4 Willlama of with Frankie ar from the hotel | ing & party of frende the third, and to-day it was a gift to Shean, a minor league bitter, which upset all the dope and came near de- stroying Chicago's last hope for the ot | championship. bi The fourth started with the score nothing all, and Shean drew ass, Tyler pitebing wretchedly to h A paased ball which was almost a wild 0.| Hitch sent Shean to second and Strunk fied out. Whiteman also drew a pass, after much travail, and McInnis bumped the ball straight at Tyle and forced Shean at third, so there were two out and runners on first and second, with Ruth up. ‘The game and series depended upon what happened then, and in the his tory of the World's Series there nover has been worse pitching than Tyler did, He heaved three wide ones up, and it looked as if he was pitohing to make Ruth hit a bad ball or else walk, Then he shot two right acro’ the plate. The game and series evi- |dently depended upon one ball, It had on nt they and cycling |jooked to be the play to lob a slow by curve wide of the plate or else shoot a fast one inside, but Tyler grooved {the ball and Ruth tripled over the Bast Orange, head of Flack, who had come forward cycling honors instead of backing Up. on, has applied That hit decided the game and Chi \ ris-| probably decided the series, for it ) 4 sth cles? Scat TE he ANS The Red Sox had only two chances to score, and improved both; the Cubs {had eight chances to count, and im- proved one, They had Ruth seem- ingly at their mercy at several stages and could not follow up, and they lost jevery chance to score, Five times | during the game there were close de- |cisions, and all five of the close de- | cisions went against the Cubs. Twice \they had runners caught off bases ea | © ith no play in gight and twice double | plays wrecked their hopes. It looks as if the Cubs are whipped, and whipped not by superior play, but by their own shortcomings, Even in the ninth they looked to be win- ners when Merkle singled and Zeider walked for the second time and Wort- man cracked the ball down to the pitcher, who, by a desperate effort, forced Merkle at third, and an in- stant later a double play ended game and the hopes of Chicago, it's pretty tough for a team to play the best ball and to have all the chances and then to lose, but it see as if that is the fate of the Cubs. They had fifteen men on first to-day, to seven for the Red Sox, and then lost, and they outfought the Boston bunch, but all without effect. The game was one of the most wretchedly attended in the history of the World’s Series, and the enthusi- asm was sadly lacking. Tho players still are battling with the National Commission regarding their claims for money, and have but the anteed them under the last year's resolutions, The players want the full sum, and the commission wants to pay them about 60 per cent., pro- rating the pay per player upon the reduced charges of admission, The players are on the verge of a strike, but no one cares whether they strike or not. eed SR Women's Tennis Tourney Uriday, As many of the prominent jcould not compete until later Jweek, the women's Long Island championship scheduled to start Woodmere Club yesterday poned until Ir D entranis in tennis t the Was p ables wil on Sat the entire tourna ment and doubles divisions may be completed on Sunday afternoon, —— ; Outpotntn Wallace. Joe Welling outpointed Eddie Wallace, Kramer‘ settied the’ issue and — threw lin the main bout of eight rounds, at the * ‘the Cubs back onto their Hindembure Armory A. A.. of Jersey City, last nlaht, « ‘ - By Thornton Fisher ‘ SLICES By William Abbott. | ? HE start of the annual Seniors’ |#" Ogden, perhaps, as has come to 5~ Golf Tournament on the Apa- (ame, ‘GOUNDER HAMMER Twenty-four Horses in Train- ing and 29 Yearlings Are Catalogued. | A couple of winning racing stables are in the groups of horses of racing age and the yearlings John Sanford HT will offer to the highest bidders |); ;through the Fasig-Tipton Company |jj at Durland's Riding Academy next) Friday night and at the Belmont Park race course on the afternoon of Saturday. will go under the hammer, twenty- four being horses of racing age, twen- ty-nine being yearlings. The year- \lings will be sold at Durland’s, the | horses of racing age at the racetrack; |on Saturday at noon, ! For one of the stallions to go under the hammer—George Smith, a son of jOut of Reach and a Kentucky Derby |winner—Mr. Sanford pald $20,000, For another, Meteorite, a strapping son of |Star Shoot and Hamburg Belle, he [Paid $12,500. Both of these horses have iraced to their sales prices. Achilles a son of Star Shoot and Vell, wi another horse that cost the master jof Hurricana a big sum, and he bred Valerius, a son of Tracery afd Louli, in Great Britain, paying $2,000 for the privilege of mating*Loull with Major August Belmont’s $200,000 Rock Sand horse, The colts Yurucar!, a son of Rock- ton and Kennyetto, and Ute, a son cf Ogden and Onaga, are home bred, stuff, products of ‘Hurricana Fag the birthplace of Caughnawaga, Onuodt tanunda, Mohawk 2d, Sir John John son and twoscore’ other famous lracers, Ute is a half brother of St, |Ikidore and Yellowstone and as good the races in fifteen years, Better m™ res, whether considered as racers wamis links at Rye to-day will/or as potential stud matrons, than be in the form of a golfing reunion; Tuscaloosa, Scrub Lady, Marchesa, for nearly 600 “old boys,” many of Dahinda, Wawbeck, &c., could not be whom have come hundreds of miles |>tained in a country-wide search. just to try grayheads. their skill against or over, but age is only a slight han dicap for the veterans who around for their anaual meet, competing field is cratic of all sport events. States Supreme Court Justice have .for a partner some other | All who enter this unique | tournament must be fifty-five years| rally | The} the most demo- | A United | may unknown Big Drop in World’s Series Gate Receipts One year ago when the New York country lawyer, as the list of con-| Giants and the Chicago White Sox testants is formed of men from all walks of life. ‘Three days will be necessary to de cide the tournament, so big entry. in the various class Members of the Great Neck Clud are now within sight of the comple- on | $625 tion of their new course, work which has been continued throughout Neck | the is "| Under the new arrangement this the summer, The old Great course has almost been completely re organized, pin for good golf work. Several special Sunday m ring, due to th ministration’s gasless order. clubs, for the most part located con siderable distances in country tions, are absolutely dependent uel Ad automobiles for the transport of golf|and still not get. the proposed SoS fans, Without autos there would|antee, Boston has twentycone players © hardly be any galleries at these|ctixibie, which, at would matches, so they have becn postponed | reach total of $42,000. | Chicago, has 4 “two.” players pie, and at for the present. the total would be $30,800, or « Peculiarities in golf run to out-and- playing styles or| of clubs Walter J. Travis, for in- out fads either in the choice of wearing appa and bi stance, seldom plays a round of th ancient sport unless his t filled with a big variety of palis, hole during an important is the Numerous prizes are offered for tournament winners and winners The new layout is a pip- matches scheduied for different Sundays this month have been called off because of the ban on Ge olf American League which finish second, is well The former champion has been known to | play a different type ball on every match, fought out the World's Series the | players divided as their share of the \first four games $152,894.48. This | meant that each player of the Chi- = cage team received something over | $4000, and each player vf the New York team something over $2,700, This y r the players will get only as their share of the firet folir games, a loss of $83,366.78 over the World's Series of 1917. ear it was planned to give each | player of the winning team $2,000 and h player of the losing team $1,400, with the balance divided proportion- ately among the players of the three teams in the National League which finish second, third and fourth, and the players of the three teams in the third and fourth, If this plan is carried out the Cubs on! and the Red Sox will divide the full pot grand total of This means 800. that the players of the other six teams will not get ap janless the plan of the National « Inigsion to reduce the contending teamg nd give the winners $1,200 and the losers $800 each is carried out, sh ATSINFORDS SLE Fifty-three thoroughbreds } % t { i | f ) | Then, again, he may use the same ball for fifteen holes, only to change when he thinks another kind of sphere will| give better results at a certain hole, | | Golf and country clubs, as was the scant chance to get what was guar- | | | case last ¥ order to conserve coal, — WORLD’S SERIES FACTS. Fourth game of World's Series Fenway Park, Boston, yes- lay. Score: Boston (Ameri- can League), 3; Chicago (Na- tlonal League), 2. The standing now reads as follows: a Ww iL PC. Boston 8 i 5 Chicago 1 Ss 235 Score of first game in Chicago on Thursday: Boston, 1; Chi- cago, 0 Score of second game in Chicago on Friday: Chicago, 8; Boston, 1, Score of third game in Chicago on Saturday: Boston, 23 Chicago, 1, ‘Total pald attendance yester- day, 22,188, Total receipts yes- terday, $28,292, divided as fol- lows: Players. + $15,277.68 Each club « 5,092.56 National Commission., 2,829.20 Official paid attendance for four games, 88,551, Total receipts, $128,755, divided as follows: Players ..... ’ ++ $69,527.70 Each club,......+ ‘ 28,175.90 tional Commission, 12,875.50 Fifth game at Fenway Park, Boston, to-day. Probable pitch- ers, Jones for Boston; Vaughn for Chicago, With yesterday’s game over, the players are no longer inter- ested in the receipts, One year ugo their share totalled $152, ar, will close their houses with the advent of winter weather in Dixon’s Come Through With Flying Colors In the racing world, a list of races | run is a list of races won by pixo N's | LUBRICANTS | Practically every noted driver uses Dixon's. The_specially selected flake graphite gives a superior lubrication that prevents wear. Let Dixon's rid your car of friction ag they do the racing drivers’, Ask your dealer for the Dixon Lubricating Chart, JOSEPH DIXON CRUCIBLE Co, YOK Jersey City, New Jersey Established 1827 BEAUTIFUL |BELMONT PARK AMERICA’S PREMIER RACE COURSE 6Superb Events Tomorrow INCLUDING THE | | | Nursery Handicap FreeportSteeplechase Peconic Handicap FIRST RACH AT 2,30 P, M, pirecial Hace ‘Trains Penne. Station, Bid st, and 3 Patbush A es, pa Sa ety Tosuuine War Pax.

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