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asthe 1) Ak haa rs y THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 152%. THAT SECON | GIANTS’ LEADER PRAISES FRANKIE Paste} GAVE THE CRowD SOMETHING TO GABP Ar AS HE DIVED AFTER. AM (MPOSSIBLE LINER AMO STOPPED | YANKEE PITCHER FOR — GAMENESS HE DISPLAYED Stengel’s Lameness and Failure to . Take Third on Snyder’s Single to Rightfield in Second In- ning Cost His Team ‘ Game, Says McGraw. * By John J. McGraw. (Manager of World's Champion Giants.) HERE was never a more bitterly played contest in a World Series than the tle game yesterday. It was a splendid battle between Bob Shawkey and Jess Barnes, in which the honors were evenly divided ‘ns regards base hits. | Lord was simply grand in hie@——————___________ 8 was ‘ syed Sereno: Snatligs wus to Soott. Now Casey, if he felt that Tthe handicap of a lead against him.| 20, "as inctpacitated physically tn fe showed excellent judgment as well] * ¥ way, should have immediately pluck, oo aelan who was coaching at first, Barnes, too, did great work. Ruth| once, A World Series is ne plac tor “orossed him in the eighth inning by|q crippled player. sutting at an outshoot instead of : ibwinging, and Babe got a double to], The fact that Stengel did not go to heft. ‘That was the direct cause of| third cost the Giants the game, for Bhs Yenhets tleihy Gb Up, there would have been none out at T'was as much surprised as any one|the time. If Stengel had reached «fon the Polo Grounds when Umpire] third there would have been no ne- {itdebrand called the game on ac-| °*#sity for extra innings, ‘gount of darkness at the end of the} That was what I consider ‘tenth inning. I regret too that so|the breaks against wu) many of the patrons seemed to reecnt| ing this as an alibi. GHildebrand's decision. It has always| just mention !t as an incident of “been the course of my club to cater| baseball. It was costly, but I am not fto our patrons in every way we pos-| in the least bit worried over the ulti- ‘aibly can, without regard to the out-| mate outcome of the series that I held ore, before the first game. That was that 1 would have much preferred to|the Giants would win out. 1 still uave the game continued, and my| have that idea. layers to a man were anxious to play} Although I regretted we were not m to a definite result. I can seejenabled to play the game to a finish. inyder now as he caught Bob Meu-j still I think that it makes the Giants’ ’s foul in the tenth inning puttin} outlook more promising. We have ut the Yankee side, looking around] won one game, while the Yankeus ; ‘et Hildebrand in dumfoundtd amaze-}have yet to win their first victory. ;ment at the announcement. The first game to any team's credit |. Of course every one of the close to] in a short ,series, the best four in 0,000 spectators who witnessed the| seven, is a great big advantage. truggle was, like myself, simply] I consider that we have the edge ralyzed when Stenglé failed to try]Om our opponents the situation ¢ third in, the! second inning when] Tow stands, snyder, who followed Casey at the} My pitching staff, which was so be~ (but, made a perfect hitting play by/littled by certain people wliose wish Planting @ single to right on the hit} was father to the thought, no doubt, fnd run tignal. He could have an-}{s now doing more guessing than me. fhored on the bag in a walk almost. | To tell the truth, I feel safe, and sc It seems that the Charley horse he| ao my boys. Perfectly so. eprnng last week returned to the} (copyright, 1922, The Christy Walsh Syn- stable as Stengel beat out a grounder icate.) ¥ < TWO GOLFERS i TE FOR MEDAL AT SHAWNE CLUB Gardner and Quier Have Cards of 77 in Autumn Invitation Tourney. one of Tam not giv- Far from it, I SHAWNEBD-ON-DELAWARE, Oct. 6. -So fast was the pace In the testing round of the autumn invitation golf tournament at the Shawnee Country Club yesterday that two players with scores of 77 tied for the medal. They were Hamilton Gardner of Buffalo and Hawley Quier of the Berkshire Club of Reading, Pa. Those with totals of 88 fulled to make the first sixteen, Gardner, who was runner-up in tournament. here a few years ago, made a great bid for the medal by coming back in 35, which included a 6 at the eleventh hole. He was 9 under. 4's for the last seven holes. 8 4— 80 #0 2-99 a ‘The leading scores follow: Hawley Quier, Berkshire. {amilion Gardner, Buffaio. or, He Ve . 8. Worthingto Henry McKeen, Novthi W. 1. Harriety, unatt Miden, Vv. } HV. By Robert Boyd. Judge Landis did ‘not even know fer fightin close. | the Bame was to bo called at the end After fighting ten of the most close-| of"ine tenth, Ie too sat ami ly €ontevted innings ever witnessed On| hewlidered at the sudden dc wny basdbail fleld the umpires declared am armistice, the fighting to be re- sumed at 2 o'clock to-day. The fans who were almost {n a state of rioting Will be relleved to hear that Judge Landis has moved that the en- of the players to the club house. The players were to blame for the calling of the game. They protested to the arbiters that they could not see the ball. The vast crowd helpcd to darken the field. They said if the Miller, H. Watson, George Lew A. EB. Jot ‘Overbroo! 2 one rata eee oe lees S. ting, propesds of the aecond. game be|zame continued wome of them would | ii; B puird, Newark A: O.5:: ven ta the biel solders of New “re ‘ Hildrbrand called @ halt to the i = arrests creat strumgie and declared an cr-| Pp Pick i inistice, empsey Licks The pisyers did ‘most of their fleht- J h t Wi {uring the game. Some of, the} Many of the funy were only onnson to Win Wildered at the termination of the ogtators Ww d to do theirs after game. Lord and Lady Mount}atten Sea aA-8 Bi atk Eee tho & Tsp menmihaniedareend! ccantie of the Prince of Wales, aut[_c° Te WaY Gown sfter the second game Jack Dempsey yesterday had a tue wire fence that protects the verlbes and threatened violence. Only the Wire screening saved us fom an untimely ending. throughout the ten innings as the guests of Col. Jacob Ruppert. They were bewildered all during the game, as it was the first one they had ever witnessed, word or tw6 to say about his pupil, Floyd Johnson of Frisco. “T think that kid will surely win over Bob Martin at the Garden to- One'frantic fan dashed up to the night and I'll tell you why," he began. screening and asked a scribe, “What “He can hit well with his left hand. So fo you cull that?’ The reply was, far as I know, in has no left at all and depei y on his right to turn his tricks. t see a fellow Still, the fans who swarmed around and wanted to start a riot, could not *'Perrible."* be pluced in the same category with ce “ary . the aristocratic English couple. The] tike that whipping a man who has any P. petane thoug . ie was 80 ae hs fans paid to see the battle that was| sort of a left at all. I know Johnson 4h unded on we oce Ay) ¥} called a draw, while the Honorable ith dhis, as I've sampled a ude K. M andi booing and Jeer-|Vont and Lady came as the guests and here tho ehampion jag the venerable head of the national! (? tne owner of the Yankees, p breath and looked solemn: n't tell what any fellow is go- ing to do until he {s in the ring against the real thing. I've seen @ thousand champions in the gym and not one titte holder among them in the ring. It's just that little something that they inck when they get into the limelight. Johnson, however, is a good boy, will- ing to learn and I think he will’ make He has ovly to wateb and wall game. When he attempted to explain that he had no hand In calling off the game the rabid fans again jeered him, nee ae Irish Meuse! hit homer over the left field bleachers in the first inning, scoring three runs with his tremen- dous wallop. That was all the scor- ing the National League champions did all day. It did appear as if the game could have gone on at least two more in- lungs. Just as every one was settling back Kood. SHAWKEY SHOWED EXCELLENT FANS @oULD UNDERSTAND WHY THE GAHE WAS CALLED ON ACCOUNT OF DARKNESS D “GAME” . Copyright, 1922 (The New York Evening World), by Pre: Pu me COX EMte (iersH) MEUSEL OF THE GAME WITH & HOMER Im THE FiRst tak HEE - HMEUSEL CAME WHICH BROUGHT JUDGMENT AS WELL AS PLUCK“ ie) ae WHEN THE GAME Was OF DARKNESS @ HOB THREATENED JUDGE LANDIS BUT THE JUDGE HAD NOTHING amp TIED THE SCORE FOR THO WANKS (N THE GIGHT BY A DOUBLE By Thornton Fisher TIE-GAME FIASCO CAUSES STOP 10 BETTING ON SERIES, Out-of-Town Fans Peeved Because of Calling of Second Game. blishing Company By Roger Batchelder. The fans from out of town were not of peaceful mind last night. They admitted that they had their fill of baseball, but they were not even pacified with the announcement that the proceeds of the game which was called for generally unrecognized darkness, would go to the wounded soldiers, That was fair enough—and more power to the disabled men— but why keep a Jad from home, a thousand miles away, perhaps, sim- ply because the score was tied and 4 was getting dark, The New Yorker ts willing to make his donation any day for a ten-inning tie-score game. But the “New Yorker For a Day or Two,” who has come here at no little expense, and is spend- ing at Teast $10 a day, and usually much more, will not go home satls- sled with yesterday's result. In the first place, the umpire's de- cision stopped the betting, The writer could not find the record of a single bet in any of the big hotels of New York. The Yankees are favored by the out-of-town fans generally, but the tle store seemed to dampen bet- ting desire The visitors could not understand the unfavorable reception accorded to Judge Landis at the end of the game. No one who was interviewed thought at the Judge had anything to. do ith the decision, So far as extra- New York is concerned, he has @ clean slate, and had nothing more to A CALLED ON ACCOUNT TO OO WITH IT 6 Rp. BoB ALONG NiCke ALTROC AND AL SCHACHT PULLED A BURLESQUE ON “THE SHEIK” oy IN RUTH. SWEET SUM OF $120,554 GOES . _TO CHARITY Second game of World’s Se- ries, played at Polo Grounds, New York, yesterday: Score: New York Giants (National League), 8; New York Yankees (American League), 8 Game called at end of tenth inning. Score of first game: Giants, 85 Yanks, 2. The standing followss LOST CHAN By Advancing Scott in Second Game Winning Run Would Have Been on Middle Sack. © W.L. PC. By Bozeman Bulger. Giants .......6 1 0 1,000 Bob Shawkey’s masterful pitching Yanks 0 1 000 in yesterday's game that ended with- out @ decision was a revelation to those who saw him try to struggle along last fall with a bad arm. Often the Giant. players who sat within a few feet of our point of vantage looked at him in open admiration. But {t remained for Shawkey to fail ina play that would have won the ball game. It proved that, after} all, one of the most valuable aids to any ball team is a batter who can bunt. : In the ninth inning Scott, after be- ing repeatedly robbed of hits, by Frisch and others, finally smashed through with a single. Ward had just struck out. Shawkey was the next batter. He was called back to the bench suddenly, the crowd think- ing that he was being tak pinch hitter. He also thougit so and expréssed his disapproval by striking his bat into the dirt. In fact he had been given instructions to sacrifice with one down—an unusual play Shawkey dumped the ball all right, but dumped it straight at the pitcher. Scott was forced out at second. Had that ball gone to either side so as to advance the runner the game would have been won. Whitey Witt follow- ed with a clean line hit to centre. Bob's failure as a sacrifice hitter had lost him the game. He was not blamed by his teammates course, A pitcher is not suppored to be Total paid attendance yes- terday, 87,020. Total recelpts, not including war tax, $120. 554; a new World’s Series rec- ord, In view of the decision of Judge Landis that the receipts of the game yesterday be turned over to charity rather than have any reflection cast on th integrity of baseball, the total of the pool remain as they were before, after the first game, follows: Players . « $60,708.36 Clubs ... - $40,472.24 ‘ational Board.. $17,855.40 Record paid attendance for a World’s Serles game, 42,6205 Brooklyn ys. Boston, at Bos- ton, 1916. Prectous high total for receipts, $119,036, first game of present series. . Third game at Polo Ground: to-day at 2 o'clock. Probable pitchers: Hoyt for Yankees, Scott for Giants. n out for BRITONS VICTORS ‘IN 36-HOLE MATCH BAST WILLISTON, L. 1. © George Duncan and Abe Mit vaded Long Island, and tn spite of an vallant efforts of Jimmy Crossan,Joxpert batter, But it was a great Wheatley Hills professional, and Will-] opportunity that he had lost iam Kline, the Long Island champion,| Then came the big scene—the un- expected calling of the game on ac- count of darkness. Umpire Hilde- brand in making this sudden deci- sion practically spoiled the sports< mantike feeling that had pervaded the the two Britons were successful tn the object of their visit. The quartet par- tielpatgd in a@ thirty-six-hole exhibition mate! at the Wheatley Hills Golf Club, to ereep through the left and right|see a great ring battle declared a thought they were ‘‘gipped.”’ minutes. a Se aps in their aeats in the end of the tenth! After the first inning Bob Shawkey| for Martin's right. I know he can do| Crossan and Killne being pitted against) whole series. His action was inex paring to see some dramatic cli-| tightened up and had the Giants| ‘> the two British stare. cusable. His was, at any rate, very = to one of the ie eng sea swinging at the warm Harlem at bad judgment of the World's} mosphere. “Shawkey really had a The great crowd, not familiar with pitchers’ battle] x) the better of Barnes, as the OFFICIAL BOX SCORE OF SECOND GAME the rules, appeared to think Judge i and Jesse | former was getting better as the gume GIANTS. YANKE! Landis or some other baseball aificial Liyvaes, the players scrambled off the] progressed, while the latter was PO. A A ‘esponsible, Their booing of the field after the last man was disposed | fading. rire te $ Judge was not a credit to New York, of in the tenth, a 2 1 2 ol tuth tet “| But, sorely disappointed that - the - 1 @ 6 0] Pipe, wb. aa | battle had not gone to a finish, they ‘ Manager McGraw issued orders to ‘ a It happened like # bolt out of the] ..i0y bull the heavy Yankee slug. 613 8 Sl Bcnansr ess: ‘ vented their wrath on the only vis- CURE TaKY.. {The pinyere Tan Of toe ee ne eyo nee atany 11 0g) Ward ab ‘ {ble authority. i ae Sig the fang in the seata) irked out remarkably well, for ¢ 8 9 Ob Shewker, Hr! The umpire in chief is sole judge of vewlldered, Barnes baffled Ruth, Pipp, Bob Meu- ae ae * val peat Ae ONE OD r sales FY the field once the game bas started “Many. of the fqns did not know that] #0) an chang with his teasing oo es Nobody has authority over him. Thi Umpige-in-Chier Hildebrand”had con- . 12 1] Totals FT) authority has even been acknowledg: fered with the other ympires and by the courts in the matter of di greed to call the game fo prevent a oe will be game number thre SCORE BY INNINtS. recting the police. The Judge knew ipia as he called it Merpeas Oa Yankees OER oH Se bg 1 “0 01000 no more a sie matter than Jid the most excited fan t was as light when the game was] Strange about the difference in Gants 30000000 0 0-8 Mr. John J. Fan, though, did not celled ag when they started at 2]crowds. A fight crowd does not de- (CALLED aT havi e or inclination to de . AR J END OF TENTH CNNING—DARKNESS. have the time or inclination to o'clock, ‘The shadows were beginning | mand their money returned after thoy 1 Meme Rang-E. Mevsel and Ward,|!berate over these matters. He wanted his Yanks or his Giants to nd Pipp. 4 toung); off J wing of the stedium, This ts what}draw. The game yesterday was a| Glam \ $ . Barnes, 2 (Ruth | 41 ish fight nnwber. 3 {tices ane Tonne)) ot win. He wanted a finish fig! yaakes the Polo Grounds perhaps tha|draw, many of the players of the re nt Basen) WHE ithese shee: | Some of the more excited of our PQs) pourly lighted fleld in the coun- verge of exhaustion, yet the fans samy Chapire. tol Chiefvent, plate: McCormick. (Re proletariat were of the be been cal the game had 4 FAILURE OF SHAWKEY TO BUNT IN NINTH INNING CE FOR VICTORY do with the decision than any other spectator. The hotel lobby cohorts were rather philosophic, however. The grievanc of the day, while it by no means dis appered, was not s0 pronounced as the evening wore on, and the cry of the optimists, who said that every one hdd his money's worth of base- ball, was apparently heeded. Tickets for the third game, while unobtainable from legitimate sources, CASEY STENGEL LAME, SO WON'T BE According to Manager McGraw of the Giants, Casey Stengel, cen- tre fielder, will be out of the game to-day and may be missing from pea aS} ae Beha Teonee, onan ts the lineup for the remainder of | were not so expensive as on the eve ied ie pve. the series. He has been suffering | of the second struggle. Some were u ayer $9 from the spe 8, Though Umpire Hildebrand we from a ‘‘charley horse’ for the last | vsilable at 38 from tne ae casita ittle lacking in judgment and ima week and pulled up lame yester- ie a ag ji Pibeo before the firet Paiadat aie, Wie GAGhe eke oh day in the secand inning, after | Which was in fore tenor doaters,’* precipitate action than the fans knew. beasing ous a nit to Seotts NVLST eer teat tne hotels by! (home, wae The crowd was looking out of they Snyder banged a tA aia de avgon ty * tands Into the light while the} Pipp’s head, Stengel limped to | Were sore at the Phdanaraaa agers 5 , game, permitted more sanguine f second. Then McGraw sent Bill Cunningham in to run for the in- jured flychaser and Stengel left the field. Manager McGraw said after the game that he did not know how players were looking into the crowded stands—a very dark background. Two of the players had complained ot naving difficulty in seeing line hits hat came straight at them. This is not the first time a World's to get tickets at the correct price, plus tip or commission. Belated fans who came to the Astor in time for the game y David B. Fried, Vicksburg, Frank T. Halswit, Series game has gone to a tie, It] serious the injury to Stengel is, Grand tia 7) lappened in the Red Sox-Giant] but he declared positively that th Mich.; a M xandria, Va. dérlea arid inlthe weries at Detrait |. centre fielder’ would not play to: | James P. Comett, There was just as mu \tusion} day. In the clubhouse Stengel Mr, and Mrs. J. Boston over the t | wes quite obviously depressed | and Mrs, Robert Burn nsile next game, But it wa x ogwen| when asked about his injury. He |0.: Glenn R. Wilbur, Grand Rapids ‘ov the game to be called then It was} talked only in monosyllables. Mc- . Rice, Providence: F. C, Refi not yesterday. Graw has three outfielders to | Reading, Pa.; Harry N. Jacobs, Ha To-day's game, therefore, is the| cheese from—Cunningham, zieton, Pa.; Henry Kahn, Wheeling third game ‘of the series. Tickets| Goberteon and King. It Ie. W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs, Ds Taylor held for that game will be hono-e.| garded as likely that Cunning- and Mr. and Mrs. I. S$. Dresbach, Tif- just the same as if no tie had been hemi xelh get oe assignment. MCs Goniaoders were Eaeeeaeee Ce ne ere ee teas tale er Sullivan, Chicago; Charles McGowan~ same will become the seventh CUBS TURN TABLES ant 4, 1, Garvin, Cleveland, eng 7S edieteni Lai following from the same city: Ed F ON THE WHITE SOX| bang, c. w. E. 8. Bernard, Dobie Makes — ft in the Cornell , Walter Mc N. E. Cook, Jo ei CHICAG fj sc h Larange. ITHACA, N, Y., Oct. G—A shite at] CHICAC Das for the eity| The fans who are ‘farthest trom ntre yegterday and an Injury to Floyd) “18 vere 2 yom home" are J. P. MacDonald and Ed Ramsey, right halfback, were among} hamplonship with their Ameticany crimsdick at the Commodore. ‘They t features Corr hard gue rivals yesterduy, winning by @ re here on business trom Calcutta. workout of the w core of 10 to 3. It was the first game] india, but they also hope to see the he atakanori hat 4 ng in| the National League a med won since] rest of the series. hard luck, having first suffered an at-| 1815, the junior organtzation baving won oo “ feck. st lonpilliie Vandi apes « cUrvleea ee acpi $s ge ena BETTING IS NOW BACK AT der. Yobie ordered him to take ‘The Cubs launched a heavy bombard- Faoaer ay and he wont get into the| ment against Ted Blankenship and drove EVENS ON THE SERIES ne-up right away. Wade, a sopho-| him from the box in the seventh inning, cvsraina nese! more, has been moved up to that po: sition from the second team, COMPOSITE BOX SCORE YANKEES ( American ‘after which Gleason tried out a couple nl Broadway betting commissioners re- of his young pitehers. ported last night that odds on the series were still around even money. Jack Doyle declared that he had never before scen such little betting ‘They talk of wagering thousands, said Doyle, “but sonie one comes along, vith the money and they hedge,” ‘he added One bet of $2,000 against $1,800 was made last night that if Mays pitched to-day he would win against any pitcher McGraw might select to oppose him. Another man offered to bet even money that if Bullet Joe Bush pitches another game during the series, he will be re turned the winner. League). 4 YANKEES. yt, P. Shawkey, 0. | ecoeeescooe= gl woomerocon-> 08 5 Totals b NEW Y 1 Lgteaey THE ONLY DEPENDABLE BOARD ami ‘ mA See the WORLD SERIES 6 i} At the 7ist Regiment Armory 34th St, and Park Ave. Admission 50¢. Doors open 12:30 OnRNS GM'7< on ‘3735 eye Inuing of f 53 67 6 Wf “A : im in ninth inning o ait aaa game and Cunnt SCORE BY LNNINGS RHE Giants Boo OOH OB ” 4 Yankees ye Wah a | bo Bush 3 et Kelly); by Host Perle ae 4 Barnes) y Neh Ruth. Met 1) ———_—_—_—_——_—___— Bree it Groh) Scomp ' \ i a i aa ae ah eed| TO - NIGHT ang te Frisch, ie A Wee shawker, P we Hi ORE Burke At ie T innitee Aly; git] Madison Square Garder: eighth Haag of first game); f Hoyt, 0 in t tnnipg; off Shawkey, 8 in 10 innings: | BOB MARTIN, A. . F. CHAMPION, vs, oft Nehf, 6 in 7 inning ff Ryan, t in @ my rine 8 in 10 innings, FLOYD JOHNSON. 15 ROUNDS. Bases—Yankees, | ) iidebrand and First Game Second Ganie Shawkey aud Umpires—Klem and gue) Me ———— Earrthing. for