The evening world. Newspaper, October 7, 1921, Page 35

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THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OOTOBER 7, 1921, : STRATEGY OF MILLER HUGGINS HELPED WIN FOR YANKEES THE BUSH LEAGUE DEMON ° YANKS, SUPPOSED TO BE | Pitchers Have Babe Handcuffed || scow: are vispuayina But His Legs Aren’t Manacled)\ more sree THAN GIANTS “Where's all this Giant «peed we've heard so much about?” dis- gruntied fans who have followed the fortunes of the McGraw team |New Yorkers Demonstrate at yi x _ ~ mn . led over by the Sul f cis SBKiag emer! sertorenya | Second Game That They slain, Bhiivite te CARE In two days’ play the National Love a Winner. || Miller fuggins'’s stratery again} ts demonstration ‘ ts demonstration when Ruth Lenguers have stolen one base, * - | the Polo Grounds—trom friends and relatives only, 4 More proof that it was the ¥i nblage came in the eighth y who had, by the way, been getting most of the applause given the Giants, dropped Peok's pop fy, The crowd howled with merri Crowd’s Sympathies Are With the Yanks irk It. Pitchers’ duela are Peck at second and then roared with dull, especially when one is| delight when Bob Meusel singted . © twarne of erstwhile | sharply to centre, sending the Babe third and himself taking secomd on the throw-in. A Home Run With the Bases Full By CHARLES E. VAN LOAN. (Coprright, 1019, by the Bell Syndictas.) SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING INSTALMENT. Patrick Het Dolan breaka into the tush eague and starts ty terrorin ni ie Recause vt hie strenuous tactin “nm the fieic : pg inl Ma Mad ought about the defeat of the|on pip: as ° p's slow grounder to Banorote | Giants—and It was simply strategy, almost rivalled tie ninth Inning riot- ERS olin he eat ticecker, chars hat so eases dale wii ehow that by Frisch in the fourth Inning By Isaac Shuman. |S far as Miller was concerned. He] gusness of the day the Yanks on Wednesday. Burns failed in | EW YORK loves a winner, #0, de-| the tants, once more running them |e iadians & to 7 and virtwally is pL EL aed ae i Pe ada nover more than the eighth yesterday, ‘The | spite the greater demonstration | off thelr feet ror the Yanks! second clinched the pennant. a : . Yankees, classed as slow of foot, | given to the Giants before the) victory. The Babe's two steals in the) and they did all ayer again @ mos ing Pudge’s prophecy to ful-} The fat stranger behind the nose have outdone the Giants at thelr {Second game was started yesterday, | j\{(h were samples of it, as well 48) ment tater when the previous filment, and Dolan went back] lasses made several trips into the kina of a have af tho $8,000, more or loas, who packed | tight * “eM! OF home Jn the| history repeated, itgelt and Mewseh to his home town with three| territory of the P. D. League, but his Sree oe nthe cathe win ee |and jammed the Polo Grounde from 4 -— ee he new sults of clothes, a gold watch, a| report was always the samo. | : them up om the paths with two 1. cutset showed its Yankee sympa-| Three hite were all the Yankees cued nee “_ batting average of theee hundred and| “Wait till he's had a good licking; 1) steals on Wednesday and three |inics, ‘There was no doubt thin day |CO'ld got of Artic Neht, but not one @orty-nine, and a fighting record un-| then we'll do business with him.” yesterday. Twice they've been |anout which club it wanted to win. Tate wt hota A TDBANACS Oy the! _Then—this ts sad to r : pped at the | Kelly mad toh turned back, Pipp on Wednesday [irom the moment tn the first inning |Plate were productive of three bases pop tout for the entra, We MS and McNally on Thursday, Wes | that Waite Hoyt struck out George |o" Rag und a ‘ grounder to Kelly | eighth the 88,000 yelled with Nally and Bob Mensel have stolem | Burns untii the one in the ninth when | “//ch forced out Peek at second, Be Ta ie anceee Gat home, McNally and Ruth havo |“eorge Kelly hit into a double play,| But the Babe, nevertheless, had an " 7 m nimost great fifth inning after ob- Th mm it Giants stolen second and Ruth has stolen the crowd, native and in the process |" & ie e@ ones rampnn' , v taining his second pa He stole} to come to life again in the third. Instead of the Giants [Of ®climatization, was vooully Yan-|socond and then he stole third off|arter, Bancroft. had ground Btained by draw or defeat. “How's he getting along At least two big league scouts had| fat man’s employer. been watching the young man, and it ame old thin; said the scout.! was common rumor that Rowdy|‘He's going through that league with would next appear in a New York|both feet and both fists, and he's uniform. The scouts, while impressed | rougher’n a grizzly bear and mean- asked the fs “ orn a shaggy wolf. If somebody ‘ with MAM dint) of nat aon Would hiv That RERTION Hote cout “stealing” tho World's Champion. |*°* Karl Smith, He was left there when| Ward to Kelly, Frisch all League Demon.” reported adversely.| of him, hed be werth tis weight in bis Weak th th e i Hob Meusel grounded out via Ban- | right for the Giant's second hi! f One fat stranger who wore noseldollur bills ship it looks as though the Yanks lowever, and this would be anaw- /oroft, but his gang out in the left} afternoon off Waite Hoyt, wi may prove the bigger thieves, ful thing to say about a crowd of | field bleachers gave him a great ova-| looks as If he left Erasmus Hi! Now York fans, were 1t not for the |tton when jhe resumed his fielding | last spring. Young walked fact that whichever way the game | Position a moment later, frie and relatives set up .& Te- ’ . pateaseaey spectable clamor. Kelly, J or s erties went the fans would win anyway, the| The crowd had by that time be-| run Satrap of the serles, was aforementioned 38,000 were ready to |come as definitely Yankee asa dough- | le only hit into a double glasses, and said that he wasatravel-|| The Wanderers, playing In their Die aalveas. tor @ hertiess ‘house, home town of Southwiek, closed the Us | xeasol vith a four-game series made three trips down to Perryville) against the Perryville Club, and the and went away shaking his head /fat stranger with the nose glasses Tgter he mado a full report to hie|Journeyed down to Southwick In the employers, same Pullman with the members of Players **Rode’’ |shitt allegiance at a moment's and a ae orn ie Ahoy hole was re- Fake shld 6 Siarp end ee “He'e too cocky, too full of fight.» [te Perryville Club, The scrappers % run's notice any time up to the third. : ently certain now that the . re one game behind the Wander- wald the fat man. “Give him another|ers, and the long summer's race had BABE RUTH STEALING THIRD BASE. Each Other Hard Barely a sound of applause grected| Were not by @ long shot what sae HOTS by VNOERWOOD b UNDERWOOD. ;,. It had prior to that inning g¢iven|Nehf’s throw out of Pipp in the| Were cracked up to be. year in the bushes! lot him lose a| Narrowed down to a four-game series, | ~ the Yanks more applause, but had|sixth, and. there. hung over. the j | fight or two and he'll be ready to| Perryville won two out of the first “Twas no parlor game, that ilttle/8°t, stinted any with the Gtants. |grounds the stillness of a churchyard], There'll be more an.usement for he | settle down to business and play| prime rk pe phot pdt ne affair between the Glents and the| Neither side had made a run, but the jin So: early arrivals to-day than on elther | e ° e ’ tude, Tenn. when a moment ey | Same, 5 i : Yanks had got more men on b . ee of the two previous afternoons, baseball, If you grab him now you'll| Southwick rooters swarmed out on Nose Ff inish Spoils (| LLYTLEY S | kanvees, at tne Polo Grounds yeater- | gstorded more action, and this crowd, [Amd certainly not more than a sence] Altfock and Al Schadt of the sone have to tame him before you can use|the field and threatened the Perry- day. The players of the two teams ey, ters willl be out ‘co entertain ‘the on as the first day's crowd, craved | applauded Frisch’ Nally’ him, and you'll have to hire aheavy.|| Ville players. Dolan, right tn his el ° ° “rode” each other hard throughout the laction. It was for the team which [Me Thon thes clamped nonela a] crowd with their own antics, whlobill eval Mo the taming | ment. punched the ringleader seve iel al at Jam ALC | #2:"9.,22 8h 20 that George Moriar | provided It, and because tt happened [one applauds the clocutionary efforts] put every, one In a good humor. yee weight champion to do the taming) in the eye and fought his way to tho ity, the umpire behind the plate, thrent-|to be ‘he Yanks woo In the: fourth lot a neighbor's child ort) for a pitchers’ Ghat) ; Let him alone awhile. He'll get his.) clubhouse to escape being mobbed. ened to put Bobby Roth, of the|Scored, through Aaron Ward, the first peareniesed 1 wait!" The fat man in the front row of the ” Yank es, off the bench and Earl Smith,'Tun, the crowd gave them its alle-| The Giants were undoudtediy on tae oe On Dolan opened his second year of /fAnstand sighed heavily ashe wip'd) Clever Jockey Rides Three|througn the etretch trom tar back to) who did tho catching for the Glants, mente teh aod thers: the downgrade in the crowd's affec. | HETHLRIIAG Pa. ost tates nis glasses. He bad hop 80 BO) jbeat Sweep By, Ray Jay and other] out of the game. tion for the afternoon. Still, EF Rigs VR VOnty ere vce three professional baseball as the brient ovement. Winners Out of Four good ones. That day Surf Rider wore] When Bod Meusel came to the plate|, And st was a more excited crowd| Young had enough frien In ine events on the sports programma agalnag tar of the Perryville team. Before last game of the season brought blinkers, and tney seemed to bother| in the eighth inning, Smith began “rid-|than the one which eaw the first | stands to receive a yell when he was| {he Sophomores at the annual Fou " cae ed he had been in| oUt the greatest crowd in the history Mount him during the running. He didn't| ing” the outfielder of tho Yankees, Bob|day's game; that is, It was throug |walked In the seventh, It soanded| DAY sorts yesterday, | The yearlings @ week had passed he had been in| oe the league. A special train brought | mounts, get down to his racing business until | Fetallated, but a word from Morlarity|the fifth when, apparently, the pitch-| like the ones Rogers Horasby of the] eonc et eed are ae ¥ three ait Sng ho MEER ARD UM: four hundred Perry a | —_—_——— Almost too late, but he finally came allcnced the DIAvers .. Buras’ throw | 2 duel betwoon Hoyt and Neh? be- (Cardinals gets when He te walked onlfaartines | 7 pire forty feet by the scruff of the| brass b By Vincent Treanor. trroush like a jeood rev Yes wet. Ruth at third, the outfelder } out blink- Rider ri ched second. He reached third on now twin boys. The secreta neck {n order that he might see where | Cullen’ ea {the Perryville Chamber of Com LARENCE TURNER had a goodlers and was away from the post out at first a ball struck foul, he had beon fined) | ig eyed baseball fan, had p ( May in the saddle at Jamaica|traiting. He ran far back of the| |, When 1 was on, third 1 told Gmith $25 and banished from the game for] oq the Cullen twins with a A leaders all the way and had little or | {4 Rane AO as REDO ee , ; aid," Ratd Bol y. He had four mounts|no early speed. He came in the|! fit.’ Said Bop eo aked to live up to his reputation, bad as| Wicker phacton, and the entire equip-|nd got home im front three times. |stretch with a rush, but by that time| pack to Smith, but Morlarity came be- to was. That season wae a night.| 26°, Was shipped by express in order!iz. won with War Note, Esquire and|the race was nearly over. Mnddin| tween the two before any blows could NEW YORK BROOKLYN NEWARK that it might accompany the Perry- now {s puzzled as to whe ler the| be struck. mare for P. D. League umpires. vitle contingent Challenger and bi beaten nee sn Sing is benefited or hampered wy eS Dolan, finding that opposing players] The gates of the ball park opened| Mustard Seed, It was no fault of |the hood. refused to go to war with him, fell at 1 o'clock, and shortly thereafter the | purner’s that he didn’t land the latter — AMERICAN ASSOCIATION | i Perryville rooters, headed by the | jy the Remsen stakes. He rode a| Trainer “Kim" Patterson of the| DREW RECORD ATTENDANCE. back upon the umpiring staf BY /yand, with the pony phaeton follow-| great race, got Lis horse off in front,|Lexin on and Xalapa farm horses, L | er rests expensive’ experience he learned that} ing, marched across the field toward | good ott Toil’s early wid for the h is In » now. He has saddled two! LoyrsviLLn, Ky. Ont @=cnibe th it would not do to thump umpires, so| the stands. The ty Adrian Anson! ang only succumbed to a better hi gond Ww ind Mission- i y : Cullen and Dantel Brouthers Cullen, | it the route In the Lexington’s et in the last tw ays. Mission- |‘ ' Amerioan Assoclation drew a record BAY three days. Dolan was doing his best| pony, watch charm size, and a tiny pas Oth ES -S EAL BE bles he plucked the buttons off their coats, 4 ™ lbreaking attendance of 1,522,822 for the FRYy 9 > tweaked thelr noses and roared at) are hago and just outside the . Mitin was go close that none {not @ good. betting proposition ut] 141 geason, President | Hickey an- ERY ne 0 Ulo¢ B every close decision. He spent his! hy the time the teams appeared both| put the judges could dec best. He has a bad habit of beart noone her Seyi ae waaan ine 4864 Suits . evenings lounging about pool halls,| sides of the fleld were lined with ve-| who had wagered on Mustard EO TE tee y jay K d third, led the Teagie ¥ zt " fA inted out as a fighter. | hicles of every de ption, the stands | looked expectantly 2! the number |! ked i é 3, and Minneapolis was se T Were he was printed out ae a Qehter [ices of every deicrpron, th stan |fooked exp: ataney the nue: |e RS nay dice alaaecal et omorruw Trouble had become a habit with him,| wore acked aml te Peano DAHL cuimbar andi those; why | Meakenis Wie . Wes Linitsvtile, whlch won the pen- RM gz and where he could not find provoca-| “yjsten, now!” said Tim Dinue to backed Missionary Sgreodily, RIOR Of thes Felt et ea wey eons are eleviatiadensa 19{8 Overcoats ¥ tion ready made he manufactured It.} his men. “No fighting to-day, That surprised when his Waar hoisted. | re Wee latter was) on his tose (nil Kid jo ieee eons © ger ean RY Mo FY « Somewhere inside his well-shaped| wolf Dolan hasn't killed anybody off Hither could have been seratched ia paddock and looked rendy ter min Rotgers Perfects Pass for Use Sy rnirg S Fond there lurked the idea that he| for week, and he's about due. We) without surprising anyone. | MEd rea, He did, too, but, hook- | Melee er awioR: ‘ S won't give him an excuse. I've had!” Losing tis tight #(, Turner suft , ) with the fast Mustard Seed] New BRUNSW! Pe might have done better had he chosen] 4 tak with npire, and ff Dolan! only as Marinell the 6 up with the fast Mustard Seed NEW BRUNSWICK, N, J. Oot 7.— the prize ring. starts anythi ing! the clubhouse race. In this event, Turner put it on bad cde ata 5 Ronward aay! i gosupledia (cone | REN s for his! Clean, straight baseball,| Marinelli on Rolo, : cas the victim of much |SP!cuous place in the workouts of the PRY nN Col. Swipes, who had rubbed a tow} 07 is), Bre Ne AINE: wae: (he Fe eee enone tat the | Rutgers cloven this woek In prepara- [ey prize fighters in his day and never! At the same time Cullen was gt¥-| nailed and Mustard post in the last event, and this may | tion for one of their most tmportant » races W day These t ning features of the They fur 1 what have been the reason for his. bad|ecames, that with Lehigh to-morrow. ace, Lady Gertrude trampled all] Coach Sanford found difficulty in ver him and Billy McLaughlin made] getting a player to receive the forwards iad to his hard. Ite but with Dickinson and Brennan play bad ride from Fator. He was in a| ing the wings this weakness is fast ce run by Surf Rider in the|sood position to save ground by © disappearing. Watte is on the heaving i sen Stakes disappoint-|ing to the inside at the head of the |end of the passes, so Sanford now has baseman, to whom he gave more at- | the : any fighting to be dune, lem- | to owner John E, Madde an It} stretch, for sor e reas BOE oth | this style of offensive play work!ne ing | me do within pounds of his previous | Fator ose to mink he turn valwith a greater degree of perfection tention than to the entire pitching right, chief," sald Dolan. “Who giort in the Babylon Handicap, when|the overland route. Don't charge this | than before staff, great fighteh was lost in you, | are they going to pitch to-day?” ling came picking his way |race against the horse. Lehigh has seventeen linemen from suh. You all simply wastin’ yo’ time for the Pennylynhin college has ically a new backfield to pit ° |accond ‘base. In the sixth. Dolan In Bi Bouts To-Night€)| <:reco-c ta orm for saturday over on the rubbing ta [waited for three and two. Mackar- | n BbOxing bouts Mere LO-iNigiit |» eee Ory pleas 6 | : may Single through the infleld. F the big league pretty soon, I may) jn ho followed Dolan, tly every play that the Orange wil! challenge some of these heavy- slow grounder between fir © against the strong Maryland Uni- is ‘ike aractariand! celal Cule lust’ season's squad. Rutgers's back ee , % len playin’ baseball. Whyn't you evel) iis had something on this club.” N Fi Will Bi S PEARED [slays hod something on ne sue | Two New Faces Wt e Seen | ma “So: , Colonel,” he would an-/ and we SORA LOIDU a lawicanall jome day, ind was forced to put the last one SYRACUSP, Oct. 7.—That the Syra ” second, Rafferty, the Southwie wearted telling of tho time he waa] ing Dolan some Hire teeters i | you get into a jam to-day, with Tommy Ryan, believed that in|. Jf JOU Set Into ft Jere vou a| ee Dolan he had discovered the coming| month's salary. You walloped that wants to see. Aaa LOANS heavyweight champion of the world. [ue seater and this whole crowd | wire and all hands try ; 8 aying for us. No “Mist? Dolan, suh,” the Colonel would) what happens, you keep your m remark, while rubbing the big first) shut and play baseball. “Savvy? WUELE > OMAK Sacrifice Sale for Creditors I MUST GET THEM CASH The doors of my five stores will open and thousands of economical buyers will select their Fall and Winter Suits and Overcoats at prices that be, gear description, You will find a complete range of advance styles and models to be sacrificed regardless of the price marked or the cost to produce. YOUR PICK OF THE HOUSE ti hbo b Mish Et bE DEE anxiously. “Mulford for us; he's Ifold should decide the issue with Le against the Patrick Henry would yawn and turn| scored a hit or got a man as fur as let “Sa y. If I don't land in| straight over and Dolan banged a ewer. “Some day ft » mets Yo! Shubert in a twelve |cuse University players may know per Harry Littleton and Paul Shade) roid” aes 7h e the Lads Who'll Make lant Dares Nowe agian. el cen aa) Baa aaa t y; Mints Weber fie weigh on a a " hed. by Mia mance tony yaa” | versity team here to-morrow, Coach x 2 yen! aseball saw | ond baseman, who had been playing | ») H meat Thurs i Meehan da clgnal drill in the Dolan’s second yenr In baseball Rate mel iaten tNbera Ge namrea | Their Det ut. Apia tes rauke e tisted with Tae: | Arenbold ‘gynmasiuwn attr: BUpper Inst S a great battle between the Wanderers | into Dolan on the line, and almost| | pion Jack Britton ther me rf ibe S and the Perryville Club. The Wan-| knocked the runner to Nis knees, Be- | 1 ae see OFaanS Jett Smith “ Morea and quarter derers, stiffened by the acquisition of| fore Dolan could get into his stride | By inte Pollock. J exttunion” midd ewes Mean ny edlat eailini signin, ard 3 a hitting outfielder and a left-handed | *84in, Rafferty threw to se , and| Two new pugilists will be intros | {i players and Conch Mex big building will probably be e team and. that ft guard tn ly strained n first strin At in Se ’ the umpire’s arm went up. | duced to New York fans this evening twirlen—-both castaways from fast| (Don't Miss Morrow's. Intersating|| ee a a Avene company—were leading the league, Instalment.) at the Madison Squaie Garden sho ttleton of Ne Orieans ny Howard Day Nghting Shad. What Hoyt and |\Jim Mutrie Sees |*'.00 01 be vee tenons Snes Nehf Had to Say | His Old Team (32. oe eee ns After the Battle| Lose to Yankees " tee ia Hees n,n few years ago twetaht has resin d a bou when Ha o Mater Miler bies SUIT or OVERCOAT Many of these suits have two pairs of Trousers. Just think!! Now at the start of the season, when merchants shout for profit, you can buy a Suit eheeo | | Their Quality has wiped out Shite aye 3 or Overcoat that was made to sell from $530 to $50, take your pick, $16.50 = “My w ball fooled the Giants “Tho uncertainty of baseball makes| J seeped dis t eS ¢ il T . 8 . 0 t ey gust ua easily ax did my fast oney"|%* Popular.” remarked im frat price istinction in cigare tes $ ustom Hand Tailored to Your Order—Suit or Overcoat] a Wa Hoyt, the Brooklyn boy.| who gave them their name. bisadt A ‘ All wool and worsted, pencil stripes, herringbones, silk mixtures, blue and ¥ f i Sener es ‘ending Teoma," aa ¢ Treat eat oa uel HR .y black serge, French . plaid backs, ker ond melton, foreign and do- ay the club house after yesterday’e | one ee Aer a = yan ~ 7 s mestic. Take some of these samples or hive my designer take your measure. & game at the Polo Grounds. rs 7, atk. < ede the ee on You will surely appreciate these VALUES. ~ : Hants for | ye ay he suw also suugit, Sy i * "! was confident of winning and so | his first World's wan several | band Kitson, the former bantam g ¥ t ra woe x were the other players. It was one : ne. ‘ ie x i : ‘ sled bin ond i Lghtwe cham of Grew best games I have ever pitched, | /°0 LRT eM EAR aie nit nen aie Mone fi Men cao te n >u know that I was once a mem- | ficially that he was to be pensioned by F 3 the ANA nent of t i be . . ber of the Giants, just after I oe , 4 . . x 2 Erasmus Hall, but McGraw cast me ro banlie Dae, Sale NS wift, That was one of the reasons G Frankie Jorome,. the loa) bantam ng scheduled ny L wanted to beat th ants.” Arthur Nehf, Hoyt's pitching rival, a few words to say about Ceo Mihi tbtk NEW YORK 1 > BROOKLYN "| think T pitened w good Kame. 1 una aia ; 118 Nassau Street, ne 44 Flatbush Avenue, was a tie bit wild ae the star, wut) fata sheild Rarer wins agen TT r Near Henkioan Sizes Neer Dene dines progressed. I pitched to Ruth every] O'Kpurke. Old J 1 could Fetes » has c CIGARE ES 1414 Broadway, 4 756 Broadway, time, but I didn't put the ball in the | 'Xfur n to swing at. That i at 39th Street, AT YOUR SERVICE Near Flushing Avenue, NEWARK was escorted to the ‘alley would have been fool M4 ' i ee ae “ ] b li ] ‘ “1 don't want to take any credit| Naver tik at ’ ioe ae You cant he P ut ike k m S 186 Market Street, at Broad Street from Hoyt or the Yankees, but those | io havea hay ear ty tsi > Where Murray's Used to Be three runs were the EASIEST ever | Rae erou t r : * 20 > 15¢ @oored by @ ball club. Luck was with La, ie, ss ene Me < 1 yo Rit AVIAN te: ITT ALCL OTTO 0)

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