The evening world. Newspaper, September 21, 1922, Page 24

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i et DRE Agi SB TOF PR, take to be; hard traint gine. “The hitting slump that hae had me almost orsky for ‘ten days Ist apeidl ; Groh Dugan Traynor —-Fester arindlGt vapid Pesta ierorie enapped yesterday when Wallie Pipp caught that two-bagger on the Giants win seven of their re- 108 161 146 \ 62 Statistics prove that mai nose with the sacks loaded. There's no more cavee for worry,” coheed Aram al maining games \t would be impos- 59 86 56 39 who go through active compe! ” . Ew te . Te D. 2 232 y ay a! gud Lomt gute ts de that vesccos'l ware Bushs Tones and’ shaver _|NYerk 96 OF Zié|ciovwa, W625 Aci| sine tor tne Piraton to capture | Dating aromas vereersees eta fants aedvarel at Chl folece on | wi my e by | Errore ....4. 1a 23 18 1 10/5) andi rse to jo boy shou! put thro: according to the partioular game in hand and will pay no attention to Chie Frac Vastu ntay % still to'play. If the champions | Double plays 21 29 7 ni nl ensationa Handicap Horse severe strain of competitive- the regular order. ° win one of the remaining games | stolen bases ana 3 12 r 42| Carry 129 Pounds in $10,000 | until he has become fully This explains the rather surprising move of yesterday in taking Bob| New York, 6; Detroit, 6. . of the Pirates’ series they will (Above averages include games played Sept. 18) R 5 d and has reached nearly his fu Shawkey out so-as to use Joo Bush in the last inning. From the grand + St. Louis, 0.. have a 4% game lead with only ace Saturday. and growth. stand “ 7 the pane ig oven gong had been taken out because of a Shisene: 3 oar as . a) ten more games to play. 1921 RECORDS. + --— There will be a great ch rap.on itching arm a pi 5 second). Yanks take four of their remain- hy Di Ti Foster Friech . school athletics within a year Hekslns *Plave a Huneh.” Cleveland, 5; Boston, 2 CHret). far rpenes the BroWos oot eek Gre sagt a Alia fag eral nes) BY |v ecemt Breanor: x.| The, athletic “authorities “are juggins ys a Hunch. Cleveland, 5; Boston, 4 (sevond). no better than a tie if they . 6 : ‘These are strenuous days for Ex-] on the problem. “No,” sald Huggins, ‘Bob had pitched four innings in great style and GAMES TO-DAY. cleaned up every one of the con- | Batting average .. : Ate a a ae terminator, tte remarkable piece of — could have finished. But I had a hunch and played it. On a preylous trip}|New York at Detroit. tests they have still to play. The Paes chances age ° obs 919 937 ggge|horseflesh trained by “Sunny Jim” |RHYTHM HELPS COLORED here I took Shawkey out to let Bush pitch the last inning and we got away ‘Washington at St. Loui Browns must play 1,000 pef cent. sh an Sah avin Os , f Fitzsimmons, as he is bejng sbipped LETICS STAR. Re ee oe eee enon - co eee - —— r ay } ‘ ' . _ THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1999. _ - LOOKS LIKE SURE THING WORLD’S SERIES WILL BE STAGED HERB Carl Mays Booked by Manager Hug- gins to Attempt Clean Sweep _ of Tiger Series To-Day. Yanks Are " Glad That , 4 sareapeee aan Tiger Yanks have fought harder in’twe days than they did Sport World Loses Its Gri Series in entire Browne ser Will Be “(Murderere’ Row’ |e out of its batting slump, eo Man- Woman Athlete in Retire ager Huggins ie smiling once more. of Mile. Lenglen. Ov. : er Carl Mayp to pitoh to-day, as Hug ie saving Bush, ONFIRMATION of the from France that Mile, has decided to stop playin nis matehes marks the end d most sensational series of al triumphs ever enjoyed by any wi Suzanne Lengien, rrained childhood, became one of the tennis players in Eurepe. In determination aha strength she‘ like a man, " Until she came to America to honors on this side of the sea sh invincible, and there is iltde To-Day as § Jones and Shawkey for Cleveland, Ty’s Men Yanke so happy when Bob Meusel’s homer breake tic P * in ninth, simultaneous with announecament that the Ser- Are FYOVING} ators trimmed the Browns again, that Pipp slapped his Twice as } “enemy,” Ruth,.on the back. Hard to Tiger players display @ lot of hostile feeling against ‘ B t Yanks, Cobb and Schang nearly goming to blows, Thei Bi “Old man” Pipp sees hie son break up the game, ng Yanks angry because Ban Johnson gives out letter 4 Rivals, the } that said Witt fell on a pop bottle, instead of being hit Browns, 3 »Y >" - P H New York Is now three and half games ahead and ved, im } 4 icoke like « cinch for the slup to win pennants 0 i now that her collapse in the ir Series * *& & against Mra, Mallory was du . * . claimed at the time, to heart tro errr in St. Louis NATIONAL LEAGUE. Ne induced by the physical strain o Recently. N.York 86 86 .606| Chic'ge YS 68 .625 Reanevnetolee She proved her right to be reg as the greatest woman player in world when she easily defeated Mallory in England this year an tained her championship title. ta’, 83 62 .672| Br’klyn 70 74 .486 Bt.Lo'le 80 64 .656| Phila.. 63 89 .374 Cin’ati, 79 66 .845{ Boston, 47 94 .333 GAMES YESTERDAY. itteburgh, 4;New York, 1, By Bozeman Bulger. * DETROIT, Sept. 21—Murderers’ Row has broken out Jn # rash again and Httle else matters, About two more broadsides from that heavy firing the effort she made at that time, outfit and New Yorkers may begin calling up their friends about World's Bt. Le 1 (first), succeeding contests, seems to Series tickets. 13; Brooklyn, 7 (seoond). had its effect. Miller Huggins’s usually wrinkled and woebegone face has broken THE PENNANT DASH. E : Pe tibee placentas beta pai : into a broad grin. He grins despite Detroit having given him the tougaest GAMES LEAD. RECORDS OF PROBABL in hard tatohes from the tin fight of the trip. ‘They fought harder in two days than did St. Louis Inj Chives to.may, Giants 4% Yankees....0% , , Se dels ease ratniutie ® the whole series, and they kept right on fighting to the finish of both| pittsburgh ‘at New ‘York. GAMES TO PLAY. W ORLD SERIES PLAYERS is likely to strain the: heart 4 games. .| St, Louis at drooklyn. Giants 12 Yankees 8 boy or girl. Our colleges are ¥ Chicago at Philadeiphia (2 gam Pirates 9 Browns..seee 7 THE THIRD BASEMAN. ning to realize ‘hat it is a gre “They can Cid a far ae they like new on the last one,” eaid Hi Cincinnati at Boston (2 games). ing ef IF (Traynor’s averages are his 1921 ffgures in the Southern Association where he played shortstop). (*Third Base records only). LIFETIME BATTING AVERAGES. Groh Dugan Traynor Foster Frisch with it. I tried it aga{n, that’s all. You see, the Figers dread Bush more Boston at Cleveland. ball providing the Huginen go at than any pitcher in the league. We only had to retire three more men and Philadelphia at Chicago. no better than a .500 pace. the result meant so much that I played the psychology of the thing. And Good Thing for Giants from Toronto to-day, where he won the big cup race yesterday, so that mark in’ amateur athio he will be on deck ‘for the running the national championst of the Aqueduct Handicap, worth] Newark, Hart Hubbard, an e OLORED boys are maki: it worked.” ; It would be difficult to picture the outburst on the Yankee bench when Bob Meuse? walked up in the ninth inning with the score tled and smacked Years in Majors . a 1 set ‘ 114] $40,000, Saturday. yeur-old Negro boy from Ct the first ball pitched over the left field fence for a home run, This ball, by Average: 3050 us Bis p . tional veteran thorough- | student at the U: ; the way, dropped on the front porch /of the home of Harry Tuthill who used Groh playéd only 27 games in 1912. gan pled only 43 games tn 1917. The sensatio vet student at the University of MI bred has won something like $200,000} Won the junior and then thi ; hamplonship in fhe runnii in purses, but don't be surprised if he| © jump, with thi rune the figures up to over a quarter! 4p" Wi" (he splendid leap of to be trainer for the Giants.t Just as Meusel turned third the figures went up on the score board showing that Washington had trimmed St. Louis, It was like a signal for Foster played only 36 games in 1910. Frisch played only 64 games In 1919. WORLD SERIES RECORDS. National Race Closes Oct. 1 ‘a riot. New York players threw up their bats, turned filp-flops and ran| pj ste a|from New York sat rather non- . Groh Krisoh ‘of a million before he retires. ‘ ed around in circles. To show that bygones are really bygones Wallle Pipp Pirates in First Battle. Here} cnatantly in thelr weats, belloving the). Ratting average sesseesee 272 300 Exterminator is considered the best| the World's record of 25 feet 3 Sarasa oat tate notes ntact ages Bor The | Reduce New York's Lead | sncte iitt'Cautan wn te ee age. iy ae nore Im tania erty nk cd ince aout etal Maoh chin’ Binee that day, by the way, Pipp has been hitting better thas to 414 Games. last man, Bill Cunningham, was out in By Ed. Van Every. Joe in dping his stuff, Frisch seems| Handicapper Vosburgh, who bas al-| colored, was third with 28 400 end Miller ‘Huggins has becn egging some of the other boys on to 2 the ninth, and then they awoke to the , Har are). 40 {tll Jost a little bit better, |lotted him top weight, 129 pounds—Vinches,\ also. a splendid perform ilttle fistic action. . = ae realization that the Pirates are a for-| Third base presents a pecullar @F-) reine! Groh, Iast season reckoned |for Saturday's fourteenth running of} rire colored athletes in first, midable ball club and it is fortunate for the present world’s champions that the race is nearly run. The Buccaneers, who have been making a game and impressive fight during the closing months of the pen- “hitnt raco, had all their fighting spirit with them. Fred Clarke, who man- aged the Corsairs years ago in the days of Hans Wagner, donned a, uni. form for the occasion and was out on gument in the coming world’s con-|one of the gest of third baseme! the classic, ato mile and five-six-| ang third in a national eharmpiog . Both the American League} been handicapped by a bad lmee ajteenths. and each with a performance, teeversy airy | Considerable part ef the year with| The figures given out yesterday not} wouig have won the title In isnt she) Nationals ease: 1O8P: the result he has slowed up in hia|only show an allotment of 129 pounds| any other year Hubbard aled the honors at the far corner. You! yoy He is hitting about fifty points|for Mr. Kilmer’s great gelding. -but/ tng nop, step and jump. see It's this way: Dugan, since hit|ynder last year ond shows a falling) 128 for his most famous rival amows) ‘Ten ‘there was the fve-mil acquisition by the Yankees, has dem-| off in other departments. . the handicap horses, the Rancocas| 1, hy R, Earl Johnston of Pitts! i Lag. Mad Hatter, y ter] Traynor of the Pirates has made a/Stable’s Grey in 25 min,, 33 secs., which wi onstrated that he is by far a great wonderful showing in his firet big|stablemate of Grey Lag, is in at 126. tharkably teat for the teary © third-sacker than was generally ¢8t!-}ieague year and 1s coming fast. He|Kal-Sang, ster three-year-old of the) which the race was run. Jol mated. He 1s now rated the best in} was a sensation at short last season {s.rated two pouns has had littleeexperience in co tion in the Ban Johnaon| in the Southern Association and when|ter than H. P. Whitney's Bunting, tion and he was against some Or n in 18 he sie lines copahing: bis cit tears, pe hai eced above} he could not replace Maranville in his|the respective tmpositions being 317} rastest distance men in the col Bu Mp sche, who has been leading] circuit and is even pla weve | remular position he forced himself into and 116, ‘ but his judgment of pace thro’ the Smoke Eaters in their) valiant] peinie Groh. However, Heinle Grot the line-up as a third baseman, . the race was perfect. From th fight the last two months, had Wilbud] wil! more than likely bé out of the Charlie, Stoneham, Giants’ owner, | the Tace was perfect. | From th Cooper, his southpaw ace, all primed | Foster, after his long service with) \¢"Gver another winner yesterday, had big series which brings in our old Red Sox, {i é aing all to himself. for the defeat of the New Yorkers.| rend, Frank Frisch, and they former riers ie On ne ee eroune in| The president of the world’s ‘charm-} "Sten of African race are natu Cooper, a smart pitcher with a world] Fordham boy deserves the heavy|.. wnergency and is playing practi- pions a me sented aa pent tn{istes. ‘They are naturally 4 of stuff, has been a stumbling block} yote. cally on his nerve. It is generaliy| COM? over Tyee the Mature race | ™usie, and whether in boxing, to the Hasterners all season and he| "Ait the nice things sald about /°o7% 208 inte the fe about through ax| {ont of the field in the feature r6 Jing, running or playing baseba played the role again yesterday to per-| Frisch at second hold good !f Frank | \°) 10 jeaguer, when Dry Moon galloped off to 116: time thelr efforts with @ rhythi Lelie ishiastg: Bip bebeal fi OE ie ares thes apagrnye tt pong caine’ i thes quartére Of @ mille. Dry | cavelors the maximum of sp ve scatte and one run, whic! . ‘Thif game was chugged full of Vitter repartee and the /retort discourte- By Robert Boyd. ous. The Yank: t aboard Ty co in the first inning and it was all the| “It is a good thing for the Giants NES Ot gee a Piety br aie keep down personal en-|that the reason of 1922 draws to a counters. t one time le ang were just to it when] , ” Umpire Owens and Bob Shawkey got between thon. JGuapine vane siena | 2200 Oct. 4.” philonophicallpremarked at a gafe distance end shooed away tho hostile athletes as they came run.| | {#7 &# he departed from the scene ning from all quarters. The argument started about the examination of aj! yesterday's game, in which the Pittsburgh Pirates overwhelmingly bali and some consequent observations that Schang made about the general character of the Georgia Peach. lefeated the world’s champions by Yanks Wipe Out Tiger Lead. = the score of 4 to 1 at the Polo Grounds, In ylew of this hostile feeling nothing was ever so sweet to the Yanks} ‘This in brief ex plains the senti- back dlastt: . epee et aad and blasting in four runs, wiping out the Tiger lead| ones of eight. of the ten thousand Scott opened this particular set of fireworks with a two-bagger and] 408 who gathered under the shadows Phawkey was hit by a pitched ball on the wrist. Witt filed out and Dugan | of Coogan’s Bluff to witness the firs Struck out, ‘Thereupon Cobb turned a few verbal shots at the Yanks’ bench.| 5 the “crucial” series of three games But Ehmke gave Ruth a base on balis and filled the sacks rather than take] +6 stayed between the Buccaneers a chance. Pipp walked up and—"*Wham"—he soaked tho pill to deep right centre|/rom the Smoky City and the world’s for two bases, sweeping the sacks clean’ From our little perch high up in| champions, The remaining two thou- list of champions. the stand we saw a commotion back of the Yank dugout in the grandstand.| sand fans camo all the from t least fif- a Hie has an advantage of at leas i Edie Media Sil ag for nedingr teat lta Ppeinroy Aig foot and, waving | pittsburgh with the team, and,they| was scored in the fourth inning on] teen points as a hitter over hie near- | WHITE, SOX INSURE oon bet WO: Cane ee eran ey apple Saal i BGS NTS EY WOY—FES| vere bewalling thetr fate that the] *insles by Frisch, Meusel and Young] est rival. Doren; hash stolen thirty KAMM FOR $125,000]? 2 1eDsth ond © Mago om aud . in succession. Cooper also crashed a| more bases than Traynor, Bs kallonge by a length. ‘The old gent we quickly fecognized as Bill Pipp of Grand Rapids, Mich. | season {s only a few days longer. be id ‘ Fisher's Mus! we by xual He ‘had come down to see Wallie soak one, marin id bari cabs home ryp in the ninth inning off Bill] outthink or outplay any player Ne 8) cuicago, sept. 21-—A.baseball play-} Dry Moon had to be much the best) arin PADDOCK, fo “Yes,” he said to the laughing crowd, ‘and that's only one of them {s dimeult to picture the Giants) Ryan into the lower right flald stands. | likely to oppose In the coming GARIN | ie yay insured for $125,000 when| to win, a fact that was all the more eae poet? i n i : ; one weal ; aj champion sprinter and ho! T've got three more just as good. ey er trenseres yisrdy peal Hie] ie peer Rane ar hat or apse Nhat he goes to his|s policy was taken out by the appreciated by And pull ine foe fo Aan pi gain, He ering t wallop broke the long slump, put the Yanks on thelr feet. Meuse! The pitching of the Giants nearly de-|time Hugh McQuillan, who was burl. |knees quite often playing fast|Chicago White Box, insuring the club) Try cae, vorite, eddie Taplin did not! nas been harshly criticized. f immiodlately came out of his moroseness and whanged @ single that scored privei them of playing in ancther| ing: for the Gienia and conver ap. [amaahes on the left side of the dia-|against the death of Willle Kamm, the | ro ote ready when the barrler| running in this year's champion aa ay Wit, Suiler Hu es ase Gu th pi iss vee ai World's Series classic. But yesterday | peared to have porhe leekes (0 Wik mond: were it not for Frank ® won: |seneations! thied Wasemen of She S08 | was aprons, While on the Pacific Const thi ent eter out eatticlally bor Bann panrere are very indignant |, new menace arone on the basebail| might develop int ttehti ’. | aerful ability at recovery and his steel | prancisco ub of the Pacific Coast mer I asked Paddock if he woul to-day over a letter given out officially by Ban Johnson in which a fan de- “4 p @ pitching duel. of these stops would be lechase was only a rom Bee ae aur use uit by @ ow hottie a ait Gut tHe horizon, (his time it was a group of | But Bigbee and Max Carey tried ajurm, many i League, who recently was purchased by| ‘The stenplec y Blin the Antional ciset ee balla pose “) not hit by @ pop at all but that he stepped on} niayers from the city of steel and thelr | double steal in the ftth ba the | turned into hits instead oF Gat babies pre leg for J, H, Lewt Gag 8 Hill, the} was tired of running and 8 ; Their indignation {sin the fact that Jobnson gave publication to auch |rames were Wilbur Cooper, pitcher) former on first and the latter on wec- | Nad one ther wet of his quick plays | This is the largest amount for which | heavily, yee eee carly pace ad) T&ce#—No more exlotement i) a statement, even though it be ridiculous. The umpires, the players, ‘the | cree, qudecs UPigt Tremor wag [ond Pancho Snyder did not throw | to 1% cnet d ‘that the Giants [a baseball player ever has been Ineured, | shot laid of Docialas sony Dace ted) him-—nothing but a lot of spectators and the newspapermen saw the bottle fy out of the bleachers)“ napbit™ Muranville, ‘The rest of the | oy cet? get Carey, a fast runner |'CC) wag ‘too fast for his hat. This|it was announced. Ray Sehalk, star} ay trom the feld. ng apd Hirvecene trareing, | and strike Witt on the head. The New York players feel that Ban Johnson | pitshurgh players also shared in the] pug mies akester” Bisbee at second | toon he has been equipped with a|catcher of the White Sox Club, whg is niece IE He Airave Je jias little sympathy for them or for the sport to pay attention to such al sound trouncing dealt out to the proud | nna, close play. Bigbee protested vi8- | stor Br closer fitting hat. Frisch {lan insurance agent whtn not playing INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. East, because of the intense hi Ching anh mislead the public when be bad thé proot im his possession thet |anq haughty New. Yorkers. Grously as Umpire Quigley declared | i opamly the fastest mun who ever !pan, wrote the polley. w, & Pe. W. L po.land that the change from the 4 much a sta Hivjedie ge * Cooper, Biabee, Carey, Traynor and| .™ cut, and witty his protestations |*i2%¢q third; some claim he ts tool “Kamm, who ts only twenty-two yeart | maitre. 114 86 696 |To As tigorating climate of Californtal | Witt has written him a letter asking an explanation. ‘The athletes do rought down thé wrath of the| 0)‘. the position and gets such alold, ts said to be one of the grea 102 61 1624| Road’ 70 90 1438 severe hardican, Monide this. he Maranville were the most aggressive 1 Roe! peed rgd actiae on ae Part of Johnson as the loyal support one would| embers of the Corsaira and thoy Journey in iy ned heen me i. wonderful “Jump” on a bases ball Buffalo 94 69 576 | Syra’e. sure thet continuing the st pect of a league President. y ‘azzing” that he will not} y; Mable to overrun the play. 500 | Now’ rm With a lead of three and one-half games and with the Browns having |e tere, Spatiight during the | soon forget, It was what we picture | ot he tp te ; od | J. City, 81 81 New’k. 51111 316] sprinting beyond. his college! entire afternoon with thelr deeds. . ‘The defeat of yesterday means the ey ith must have been sub- iting back of MoGraw’s men one} % tt ently In St. Lous sans game in the lead they had over the| PP bottles, Te ea eee ater next the Nan} erase Dress GAMES YESTERDAY. lays 4 J Harry Cour toned League will shape uy strongest | Shov Hodge, aiready hav Reading, 7; Newark, 2, inthis department. turned over to the Beals as part pay- Syracuse, 8; Buffalo, 2. would do him any good. And additional reason he ‘s playi and hopes to work up into the but seven games to play, the worst the Yanks can now get ie a tie, even tf they win but half their remaining games and the Browns win all thoirs, LL A pionship class in that sport, i And just like Witt, h yeking can do éyerything one| ment. Kamm will report to the White Rochester, 8; Toro r fall m aggressive Smoky City club. It is he was se 8 Joe Dugan I can play golf a 'y aerigetnr Carries Of Pever ‘Trade| City College Football squad Has| now reduced to four and one-half, *|fetribution when he came to bat in|ooild ask of a far-coYner, guardian, |Sox next x Other coame ABt oohedu Paddock, ‘put nobody can go © HEA, Sept, 21.—Ale oe oe ‘This series with the Buccaneers was|‘h® seventh inning With Max Carey | He is a star on coming in ‘for bunts, Lor ganas. ae GAMES TO-DAY. ning races'in record form for PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 21—Alex-] The C. C. N. ¥, football team apent rred to ae the “erucial” one in the | ° first he bounced one of MeQuilian’s| ;lays balle on either elde in expert MITH EARNS DRAW. Itimore at Jeresy City. years without burning himee| ander,Calder of New York won the an p SER Golf tournament of the Philadel-|'t® third day'y practice yeatertay in| National e. It had all the as.|Utshoots into the lower tier of the] fashion, hits close to the .300 mark) J oimnmar, gept. a1. r Newark at Reading. Playing golf {s fun and sprin Trade Association by Je-] work on fundamentals and A peefs of aScrucial” series too. right fleld bieachers and sneered at/and holds his nerve much better than] a poppy Ebor fought twelv Buffalo at Syracu hart arora.” s oC A. Harle, also of New York. | ona Neville put Ale cher, Siena! dill, 9.009 fans from Pittsburgh brought a the silent multitude in the uncoveret| conceded Dy his Philade ey fastest rounds ever witnessed here att caaeeeestipe meme! Pallaock reasons for desertin . 2 b elittee West CoUses 01 : test as he slowly 0 th ering Joe “Run' 4 * night. It was decta: 2 7, 3.30 B. Polo track seem fairly good. pay ryues vis : gir 4 ie slowly ran who dubbed © ees ae Ares ie nigh Pea AY rl bag cal He Bt. ete S sf H 4 | ean a

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