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} H —— ee a ~ < - ey ‘i BOZEMAN BULGER WILL WRITE THE STORY OFALLTHE PLAYS. ii entee een Ah mcmama THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1921, THA@ NEAL OH Vi ening World TELLOF ALL THE HUMOROUS HICH SPOTS, ek, ALIEN" FANS ARE TAKING GREAT INTEREST IN SERIES. & Is Proved by Fact That Over 600 fen Wate WE bay Newspapers Have| Applied for “Direct Wire” Service for Big Diamond Battle | That Starts To-Morrow. By Bozeman Bulger. Copyright, 1921, by the Press Publishin N unusual ano unexpected feature to the baseball gathering about to take New York in its grip {s the interest in a purely local affair = by out of town fans. far exceeded anything ever known or are crowded and it. Already more try has asked for is impossible. & private fight between our own boys. where we were to setfle our own affairs and outsiders were not wanted, Here !s a new angle that the aver-<@————————___ age New Yorker, generous and open minded, as a rule, never contemplated; “It's the first time in forty years,” explained a Philadeiphia sporting weiter last night, “that w. out-of- towners are sure of seeing one New York Club licked, That may not mean much to you but It means 4 hellofalot to us. I'm not kidding, either, “This ia a unique World's Series for fust that. Something in the spirit of aggrandizement that pervades a New York team when it tours us provin- cials has aroused a general antipathy toward them. It makes no difference what is the league. The provincial is dead against New York. Usually if you are an American League fan you root for the American League club in the series and hope to see it win, because your own American League team becomes stronger along with the whole league. The same thing goes for National League ad- dicts. “But this year if you are an Amer- fean Leaguer you want the Yanks beaten because your antipathy is more directly focused on them. | Same !f you are National, Sure of Seeing One New York Team Licked. | “We are sure of seeing one New York team licked and that makes us) very happf. It also makes us all) want to be present, Our joy is just/ the opposite from yours, You are gure to see one New York team win, Gentlemen, I claim that that ought to give the New Yorker @ pretty good line on himself. At any rate, {t ought to make our chest slip a little. It is like the crowds who used to pay to see Leach Cross fight in the hope of being present when he was licked, And Leaches was getting rich all the time! Among the very early arrivals are all the scouts who have been sizing up the opposing teams to find their weaknesses. Present are Joe Kelley, | Bobby Gilks, Bobby Connery, Paul Kritchel, Jesse Burkett, Gene Me- Gann, Dick Kinsella and others. With the arrival of the scouts and @ closer survey of potentialities of the two clubs the Giants have forged @ little ahead of the Yanks in tho betting. A few bets have been mado at ten to nine. ‘The Yank bettors appear to fear the force of the Giant machine, de- spite the spectacular mauling power of the Yanks. If the Yanks show tendency toward timers believe that co-ordination, the ( take the bit in its unsteadiness ant machine will th and plough Application for tickets from these alfens have coming in sheaths. It is the policy of both Yanks and Giants to look after the home folks first and the officials are up agaiast for prees seats. Nearly every daily paper in the coun- If it were a game between the East and West the Bass eeee™ situation could be understood, but the offictals, caught unawares, are beset to know just why such a hullabaloo should arise over the slightest | old-} with its smooth | ® Co. (The New York Evening World ) ever anticipated. Already the hotels| requests for room reservations are than 600 applications have been filed direct wire service, This, of course, It was supposed to be a little affair general to allow Babe Ruth to be Passed every time he comes to bat, the scouts say. He will never purposely put the winning or tying run on basi by a deliberate pass, Ruth or no Ruth His pitchers are starting in with th. intention of pitching to Ruth, That gives the Yank fans heart They believe that if he gets a good ball to hit at, elther Babe or Meusei will break up the old ball game. The Yanks are counting on the sensa- tional. The Giants are pinning their falth on a smooth running machine. You may take your cholce. Hughey Jennings, who ts by way of being quite @ historian as well as @ manager and coach, last night dur this out of an old British school book trom the time of the War of 1812, He thinks it has a rather odd bearing on the present series and also gives us a tip-off on the English: “Help me but to abuse those Yanks, And thee, O Muse, I'll load with thanks, In ancient custom at thy shrine, Offer a bottle of port wine, Or, in true flash of English spunk, Swear my devotion and get drunk." There might be something in that last line, at that, In this ticket seeking maelstrom it might be well for the average fan with’ a smal} bankroll to remember that there will be in the neighbor- “SERIOUS ” STUFF STRAPHANGER | FROM BROKLY! Copyright, 1921, by “We Reau Fans witt Be IN LINE EARLY..... OH! HE PASSED ME RIGHT BY WITHodT EVEN NOTICING Met INTERESTED IN THE “EXPERTS DOPE AS t AM IN THe WEATHER MANS ! A @Onueeven... One Tite we'D'/* ALL Vole AGAINST “7 NM. Goina PLENTY Room Room uP Forwarp! By The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World). “Wor poas! WaT Corree! —— poder | Het GONE Cuckoo —No! He AINT “Touched Laat TN TRAINING “THATS ALL sorsres Migostut GoNNA @UY THE BROOKIXN BRivGe OR BomMETHIN' f HOW PREVIOUS WORLD SERIES Bud Counihan a C'mon ca: WER TH FE! Foul? ILL “He Raseser tt OLA -BLA- tendon, Ameren Year, Winning Club. 1003—Borton Red Sox (Red Sox, 6 games; Pittsburgh, 3 games) 1904—No sortes, 1908—New York Giants (Giants, 4 ames; Athioticn, 1 game)... Wattonss Ameren 1907—Chieape Cubs (Chicago, 4 Games; Detroit O-—1 tle game) 1008—Chienpo Cubs (Chionge, 4 games; Detroit, 1 game). — irgh Pirates (Pitteburgh, 4 games; Detroit, 3 games)... 1910—Phitadeiphia ‘Athtetion (Ath= lotion, 4 gamers Cubs, | game) 1911—Philadeiphia Athletes (Ath~ tetlcs, 4 games; Giants, 2 Wationat National Amerie American Americas 1019-Phitadeiphia Athletics (athe 4 games; Giants, 1 latin, fame) 1014—Beston games; 1910-—Bosten 4m Matiooet American Ct Awertean 1917—Chioage White Sex (White Box, 4 games: Giants, 2)... 1918—Borton Red Sex (Red Sqn, 4 games; Cube, 2 games).... 1019—Cincinnatd Rede (Rede, 8 ames; White Sox, 8 game). 1020—Clovoland Indians (indians, 5 game; Brocktyn, 2 games). American SUMMARY—Amorican League won 11; Me tional, 6. Gameo—Amerions Lousus, 60; Mew tlonal, 43; tle 2. ———————— Trotting Races Post, 4. LEXINGTON, Ky., Oct. 4.—Opening of the Grand Ciroult trotting meeting here yesterday was postponed to Tues day because of track conditions follows ing heavy rains Sunday. The entire tee days’ card will be put forward one dap, American Anertes Woriss sees ane Ticker? GEOMETRY SAYS GIANTS WILL WIN; LOGARITHMS ; PROVE YANKS MUST COP Last Call for Experts’ Dope as Teams Line Up To Make ’Em Prove It. By Neal R. O’Hara. hood of twenty thousand seata on sa’e nt the Polo Grounds every day for that particular gaine. The tickets are cheapeg, just &8 good and just Aas easy to get as the reserved seats | | for $5.60. Besides, one is not com- | pelled to buy tickets for eight games Not a bit more time will be con- | sumed in waiting In line than 1s| consumed waiting to get reserved | seats for elght games. Maybe fifteen hundred people will get there early and wait, but there won't be twenty | thousand doing that. That's worth | while thinking over, Mr. Fan." Judge Landis has sent out a notice fo each player of the Giants and Yanks calling their attention to the fact that none of them are permitted After the series to play on or against @ ball club that harbors ball players who have been blacklisted — by organized baseball, The Judge re- quired each player to sign a receipt showing that he had read this docu ment. ——_____. Interest in World's Series | in Parts, PARIB, Oct. 4.—More interest than usual tn the World's Series between the New York National and American League teams ts being taken by the Amertcan colony In this city, owing probably, to the fact that both teams represent the “American metropolis, Several wagers were the ongchamps race track gunda ven money predominating, but to-day the Yankees wero slight favorit belng 11 to 10. a oa One bet of 1.000 francs was made Unusual at Straignt ahead. McGraw |s too much of a bassbnll at even money that Rabe Ruth would three home runs during the J berles, How Giants and Yanks Compare |: In Batting, Fielding and Pitching n 20) 208 165 ry) 586 ut 503 00 17 104 INFIELO—BATTING, OUTFIELD—FIELOING, . 8.8. PC. P.O. AE. 1.8. P. 302 369-18 12 400 87 4 2 206 48 8 IB Bmw . 210 22 mt 43 18 08 15 896 20 12 388.969 7 3 a 24317 7 267 974 4017 4 18 282 0 20 42.434 n| AST day for World's Series dope, | teams is heavily ambushed behind strange decimal points. Logarithms prove }lects to show David was a Yani Copyright, 1921, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) To-morrow the ball teams make us prove it Statistics unfurled by our own statisticlan impart that strength of both Yanks will grab the series. Geometry shows Giants are labelled to cop. And there you ain't! Nothing 1s cer tain {n baseball, except the scalpers will have the best seats, Ellery Gumpf, our own private fraction hound, has worked himself into a heavy lather gathering data and | translating samo. weather. Mr, Gumpf will be thinking fans as the genius that baseball. He remembered by loose- intreduced opium t ls one of those guys that says it wth| figures. | When Washington crossed the Delaware, Gumpf | claimed the stroke was 86 to the minute and the tem- | ‘That's statistics, and statistics are Mr. Gumpes perature five above nothing, lorg dish, If Giants or Yankees bring home the bacon, Mr, Gumpf will pop | out with data on how many calories the bacon contains. That'a the kind of a guy he ts. | Gumpt will witness the series froma | a private cage, surrounded by adding machines, He will watch each con- that many favor the nine-game clash, and among that many are these ie The Western Union Telegraph test through the eye of a hypodermic | Company, needle. Exclusively for this paper.| Ruppert & Huston. We admir that as a prophet, Gumpt The Popeorn Trast {ea lows. We admit he picked Bul-| The Interborough, ‘The Scorecard Vendors’ Brother- garia to win the war and Ford to stop | proves Goliath was a Giant, but neg- have brought tickets reach of the landlord classes. hat can't afford $5.50 chairs | have @ grand chance to snap up $6.60 box seats, ew years ago you could have That leaves the series 50- ticket scalpers will xrab both 60s, Mr. Gumpf's telegrapher 1s pulling | for one team to win five straight. | bought the Yanks’ franchise for $6.60, He doesn't mind sending Mr. Gumpf's | with 60 cents off for cash. That was but he hates likes Hades to have |! bre-Prohibition days, before the to read it. The trouble with mpt | gaye ware dollvaring she woons, EKe . i days when Ruppert had a couple of amp | hundred teams that wero deliversng ething for | the goods all over Manhattan. te writing | Six-sixty eip't bad when an all- Worse |New York gertes comes only once in a lifetime, The boys will come across, y fin that Went insane when |both teams copped should be willing The | Gape, is that he suffers from writer's c: und insists on taking #0 the cramp before he + dope. But there will Jelans than Gumpft Thelr own be INFIELD—FIELDING, 807 95 180 45 8 23 8 to7 1839 113 47 1069 ,990 oe 4 et el CC 1614 04 141722 oor i ee 348 408 72 584 Je 170-29 10 2 607 12) 188 26 14 973 868 87) 128 160 28 6 796 948 617 120 2 672.957 : 2 8 8 208 wet CATCHERS—BATTING, CATCHERS—FIELRING Snyder, Glante . 12 200% ow Is 2 8 8 206 98 6 409 985 Smith, Giants . 2b 8 77 kB ke 8 825 Gonzales, Giants om 8 8 0 1 86 ®cnans. Yanks . 134 42677, 188 7 18 622 Devormer, Yanks a4 6 7 4 00 7? 2 9 footmann, Yanks ao 7 2 oO 4 8 wu 8 og PITCHING RECORDS, Yankees, LP. ow L 10 a7 Maye 7 "eat Hort ao 4s ts Shawkoy a a ery naive f ih 4 600 Collinge . “ 666 2 46 Quine o 6 tte ia |to go Insolvent now. § Pa a bsp And may the best team win! Or Ames have captivated the better team, ag they say in Bos- Yanks and ¢ ton. waumes in this serie Prine ton's football team will Only thing he will predict 1s good)‘ \J"ehthic we will be able to give them aa it. But he 1s almost uncanny at pick- and McGraw | ing his teeth. Historically, Gumpf | Telegraph Company. % | Speculators claims the dope is confused, History) The Ticket Speculators | JOHN A. HEYDLER, President of | ¥cu're going to see some base running, the National League—McGraw has & good fighting club, one of the best that has represented the National League in many years. They showed weir gameness when they wiped out that) can do this, f think Hoyt will be the seven game lead of the Pittsburgh |atar pltoner of the series, 94 INNY former manager Club late In the season, and thelr) ¢'th6 Cubs and jast year coach of the record since has been very good. |GlantaI like the Giants. McGraw is Neither team ia likely to get as good|s great manager and has a better team itching as we have seen in. past|than many think he has. ‘The Giants World's Series, but Nehf and Doug-|Sfe 4 smart bunch of players and fast las have defeated Pittsburgh steadily | On, the, “play a ane and show their ability to win whet| tay he one games were vital for their club MeCraw'n piteh VUHARL! A. STONEHAM, President of the Glants—We will win easily with = —— rood pitching, but we realize that we Hist stop those big sluggers, Ruth and Meusel, (DICK KINSELLA. Giant scqut if ot gopod pitching we can beat those fond ‘MeG has a faster, sn.inpler team. BOB CONNERY, Yankee scout—W« | will win because we have the best bal’ cinb, We can 5 away pitching, Hoyt and Shatvkey will hold the Giant batters, | Furthermore, 1 think we will win because our club has always come {tical series, ' , nkee scout—Or | think the kets will win, h ft is going to be a hard battle. “BML PRATT, Red Sox second base= man and former Yankee—Pitching will be the big thing. Take them man for man and the Giants seem to have tha bett@P team, but long distance hittlag will be the big factor, and the Yanks e stars of the series. 8 will have to watoh ccurse 1 thou, food, pitching aa they, give us and our | jg hitters will turn the halance. The Yankees will have to be on their toes aii the me, for I know what able | strategists and hard fighters John Mo- Graw and Hugh Jennings are EDDIE RRANNICK, Giants’ tram | manager-—Nothing to tt but the Giants, We're DUE! Walt ull we get hold of that fast ball of ‘Host’ snd Mays! DIRECT WIRE MUSIC Livety, appetizing flavor—natural zest and relish— no other cigarette its equal... . it’s straight Virginia tobacco, that’s why, all s guys hay on, Looks lke alot to Nee a the o bout box ‘<i; WORLD’ pt maynates National Commission players and The National | Commission is 15 per cent | Nine games for the series ts very ro! Last world’s championship | in 16 minutes and 10 se. rp claims he was short- He didn't remem- GAMES ON THE WONDER. COLEMAN LIFELIFE BOARD BRING THE Lapiel ADM, 000. ODORS OPEN AT NOON. as alxo flat Latest food of intelligence shows the good t Lioogrr & Myans Toracco Co. WORLD’S SERIES 69th REGIMENT ARMORY Lexington Ave. Reproduced by the wonderful little men who will play the game as it is played on the field. ‘DOORS OPEN AT NOON Piedmont The Virginia Ciga —from down where {nelr step shen it comes to Ruth. The big fellow is apt to bre: a game 'y tlme he comes to the bat. Outside of Ruth, though, I think the Giants have the edge on the Yanks in batting. I figure the series will go about seven or jelght games before coming to an end. Co Dancan and Mitchell Meet Hage; and Barnes To-Day, George Duncan and Abe Mitchell, the two British golf pros, are destined to meet exceptionally keen competition to- day when they hook up with Jim Barnes and Walter Hagen, two of the outstand- ing stars of the American golf world. The scene of this contest, which has been eagerly awaited by golf fans in the | metropolitan district, will be the new | Westchester-Biltmore Country Club at | Rye, N.Y Why let your Dollars get away from good Sense? If clothes of inferior quality cost you as much as ours— Why not have ours! pocketbooks but have rigorously maintained the high standards of wooleng and tailoring that put ue where we are. Fall suits and overcoats —all our own manufacture, Prices ‘based on to-day’s replacement costs. You'll have to hand to our gloves—such quality and so moderately priced. Fall hats, shoes, shirt neckwear, underwear— everything for the Fall wear of men and boys. Roaers Peet COMPANY ~ and 25th St. ADMISSION 25c. | Broadway Broad at 13th St. “Four at ath Be Convenient Broadway Cornere”” Fifth Ave, at Warren ~ at 418m AUTUMN RACING aT JAMAICA Tomorrow's Special Features $4,000 Mineola Handicap The Cherry Valley AND 4 OTHER GOOD RACES, FIRST BRACE AT 2.15 P. M, SPECIAL RACE TRAINS leave Penn, Station, 884 Btre Aton also Fiatiush ‘Brooklyn, at iB to 1.40 iN tng F kati é e180 Jan alah thence by trolley. in et, GRAND STAND 83.85, melu: v3 rette obacco grows hay saints ante va Tomy ag HAVE RESULTED