i^-? r Dodgers MaJ^e CRYING NEED !! I OF TIMELY HIT ; ! BY DODGERS; National League Champions Helpless Before 3Iails's Pitching, CHANCE TO TIE IN EIGHTH o i , / i r ?> Cn.iti, IC5|Jt"UKfl" > uu cmiiu, Followed by Burns's Doable, Decides Contest. By WILLIAM II. HANVA. Special Despatch to Tns Hbraid. Ci.KVn.ANi), Oct. 11.?One run was all the Cleveland baseball team needed to- i day to win the sixth game of the world's series. One run was all the Cleveland j baseball team made, and the high flyers of tho American I.eague defeated the Brooklyn Dodgers, 1 to 0. A single by 1 Speaker with two out in the sixth inning, | followed by a long, cleanly hit two-base V drive from tho bat of George Burns, ' I rounded out the run, and it placed the ' Dodgers, who left their native heath last. week In the lead and full of cheer and : hope. In a desperate plight. Tho series I stands four games to two for the Clevet lands. If they win to-morrow the contest will be ended; if they lose the fighting will be taken to Brooklyn, where the Dodgers will have to win both to take the prize. The Brooklyn batting has thinned and shrunk so much here that the National League leaders have made only two runs in the three games. The Brooklyn pitching stuff, praised skyhigh and reputed] tho best in baseball, has not delivered pitching as consistently effective as the Indian pitchers have, though there had been much of excellence In the pitching | of the Brooklyn mound workeis. | *To-day Sherrod Smith pitched for the Dodgem, and the lustre of that mastodon lc southpaw's reputation was nut dimmed even If he was beaten. lie held the Indians, a wicked entente with the I) mace, to seven hits and one run, and as Ki his coworkers made no runs at all he | couldn't have won had he held the home bathers to no hits at all, not In nine h innings anyway. Mail* Steady and llniiitnK. ' v.. Well as Smith pitched, however, Wal- I ter (Duster) Mails, the left hander who a few seasons back couldn't keep his Job as a Brooklyn pitcher, excelled the Btooklynlte. A left handed hattle of the hillock, with both doing admirable work was waged by the southpaws, but Malls did the better work. He was steady, un- j ruffled, baffling. He had control, speed, and he bent and broke his curve In nil sorts of mystifying undulations. HI i control was unllmbered often, he held the Brooklyns to three hits, and for the most part the witchery of his smooth portable shooting cajoled easy outs from the Brooklyn batters. The Brooklyns had but one man on third base and but four on second base. They had the Junctions filled once, but with three out and the pitcher up. Only ones did the first batter up In an Inning push Into enemy territory as far as first base. That man was Bernle Nets, who arrived at the gatevycy on a base on \ balls. He took too big a lend off the haven and was thrown out hy Steve * O'Neill, the hawkeyed and the steel- 81 armed. M Nels may or may not have scored, but b; Is was a costly nap on his part, with si Wheat and Myers coming up, and the ef- tc r' feet of his untimely removal w as bad. bi It was discouraging. Numerous fly halls sapped the batting strength of the t! Jtrooklyns and made It evident that tl Mails hud right smart of a hop on hia ci fast one. They were pop flics, soggv h flfts to fielders, and not the hard driven a kind which require some hustling to b> h caught o One hit In the second Inning with two j, out, one In the eighth with one out?a i, team cannot gorge Itself with tallies on that anaemic endeavor. And yet In the j, eighth Inning, when Olson doubled with w one out, the Dodgers had a better chance ' g| to score than Cleveland ever did. Ma Is rnuvteu nia qu.ituy iu<--ic us uu every . ^ other occlusion when men were on base*. q The succeeding batsmen didn't do more ,| than graze the ball. w Plays Well Despite Errors, p Lively and clever shortstopplng was w done by Bewell, notwithstanding two u errors. Burns played first base skilfully, and Kllduff, at second, handled hard chances without a qulVer. It was | a businesslike game, but prosaic, lack- ; tng In slap-dash feats and but little touched with color. These Indians, j however, are an adaptable lot and have > a get there way with them whatever j the nature of the game. The Dodgers started with becoming modesty. A fly, a strikeout and a grounder retired the three men who came up, but for Cleveland Evans hit to Hheehan and on the flintlike ground hare tho ball went through him for a single. With nobody out. he tried to steal and was blotted out by Miller's* throw. Warn by lifted to Nets, and as * Speaker fouled to Miller the Cleveland half was barren after all. A called third strike on Wheat In the ' second Inning brought a kick frosn that able athlete, and It wasn't until Koney's | turn that a Dodger started touring. , p Koney singled to right and moved up ! -when 8ewel! fumbled on Kllduff. The' Indians had the fumbling hablt^ Oard-'g ner was guilty of that manual offence when Miller grounded The tabarets being filled, Sherrod Hmlth had a rosy ohaace for renown, but filed Inglorl- r eurly to Speaker. * * The populace roared when Burns1 banged one to left In the Cleveland bn'f hut wanted the rnnr fr>r It u*ae n foul. A base on balls served, however,' j, tc start Burns along the highway. He } was forced when Gardner dribbled to j Koney. Shoehan deflected Wood's poke c so that nobody could (ret It, and Gardner j reached third while Wood went to sec- j, ond. Kllduff snapped up Sewell's j. grounder and flung out Oardner at the , terminal Kllduff also made a fine scoop ( of O'Neill's waspish hit , r Olson, Hheehan and Ortfflfh sent t spouting files Into willing hands in the third Inning Cleveland's reciprocal sero t was Just as big and vivid, though Evans c made a hit, only to be forced by Wamhs- T ganss ? In the fourth, after Wheat had dla- 11 ttsrbed the clouds with a fly which j sank Into Burns'e mitt, MyorB laced a j Single between Wamby and Burns, and i Jfoney took first on s ;>.**. Thnt In- vltlng situation had no charms for Pete , Kllduff. He filed to Wood. Mlll?r Tiled to Evans. The 1 lodgers were In crying need of a timely hit. Connolly gnve a had derision on ; Smith In the fifth Inning when he called a wide ball a strike. nnd Smith threw his bat all the way to the Brooklyn . dugout. Nothhig lu that Inning for , Brooklyn, not even a pilgrim on first base, and a tame, mec hanical game so , far. . j' Hewell opened the Cleveland flfUi # 1 f, . \ > Only Three I Hero? I~ ?I '-Ite'k walter v* w*>< (Duster) / , if Mails / More Than 150,000 ; at Firat Six Games OFFICIAL FIGITEB8 FOB YES- < TEHUAY'S GAME. ( Paid attendance 37,194 Total receipts 582,969.00 National Commission's 1 share 8,298.90 3 Each club's share 37,336.05 , TOTAL SIX GAMES. 1 I'ald attendance # 150,832 Total rece.pts tfTTj480,800.00 National Commission's 1 share 48,080 00 Each club's share 108,Hi8.68 I Pla>ers' share 214,882.74 < Players share only in receipts of ( first five games. If Cleveland wins 1 twenty-two men and Mra. Kay Chap- ( man, $4,204 each; if Brooklyn wina twenty-seven men, $2,951 each; If Cleveland loses, $2,930 each; If Brooklyn lores, $2,887 each. t Share of second and third place teams in American and National < leagues. $53,717.68, to be divided among players on basis of 60 per cent, to second teams and 40 per cent, to third place teams. Players' share in 1919; Cincinnati, $4,881.55 each ; Chicago, $3,354,87. ?? ___ dth a liner to centre and at once tarted down on a hit and run play [illcr completely outguessed the Indians > calling for a pitch-out on which he ?llced lite Tribe's guns with a throw > Olson which erased Sewell from the use path. Ncla gave Brooklyn a good start li le sixth by waiting for four balla len nullified It by allowing O'Neill tc itch htm napping, SeweU clapped hi and* to Wheat's hard hit groundei nd his low throw was splcndldh andled by Burns. Sewell went back f second and plucked Myers's fast lmper out of the air. Tidy fielding i that half inning. Two men were out and nobody on i ase In the second half of the sixth hen tho Cleveland* started a rally? aoft but eventful. Speaker singled to ft and Burns sent him home with a ,vo base hit to the fence In left centre, ardner filed to Nets, but a tally was ?, and one tally In a game so tight as full of portent. The eighth Inning developed an oportunlty for a Brooklyn run which as not accepted. uuson, second man p. lined a two bagger to the left field arner. Sheen an fizzled with a weak y to Gardner, and Kruoger, sent In to at for Neis as a forlorn hope, wn a orlorn hope. Ho rolled a ground ball a Gardner, who tagged Olson. The later made no effort to get back to seend, ami tn consequence could hardly bo a.d lo have played the string out. His nu not a case of fighting for every foint. Evans was caught napping by Smith n the eighth after delivering his third Ingle. Wheat's catch of Wamby'a long Iner was neat work. The ninth Inning, a blank for tbs )odg?rs, was, however, an Inning of deems Ined effort by them. Good batters vert up and Wheat hit hard to Wambsansa, who threw him put Sewell's jw throw placed Myers on first The brow made Burns stretch and take his oot off the bag. Koney didn't do much, le hit to Sewell and forced Myers, and Ivans's catch of KIldufTs fly ended It iARQUARD HEARING PUT OFF BY JUDGE troohlyn Pitcher Must Stan J Trial on October IS. Clkvslamd, Oct 11.?The case of Rube farquard came up this morning before udgn Hiibert, but nothing was dons. S.oause of the fact that tha Hrooiuyn lub Is In the thick of the series, the cdr? thought It beet not to hold the leering Into the charge that the pitcher lad been cauttht In the not of scalping c.i.te. The i.iic was Adjourned until >ctober 15, when the Hube will have to nake a trip back to this city to stand rial. John Heydler. president of the Nalonal Xjraffue, was In court when the am cam.> up thle morning. "I am mined and Astonlahed that Marquard hould have bnen Implicated In this mater. Of course, there le no ground for milling that he 1s guilty. That la why am here." "What will the National League do If dirquard Is found guiltyT" Ileydler was irked. "I cannot say as yet," lie replied. I 'That question will haye to be taken up *'hpn we come to It. As t said before, Sterquard has not been found guilty." The Rube still maintains that It war. ill a Joke and that he did not olTrr the seats In earnest It may be that the "ourt will take this view of It, but the National League may make an esample of the pitcher and atop a practice which ball players, above all others, should shun as thev would betting on games. I THE m Hits Off Mail. is in Victory of the Inc " by s -_ -. ---r--. ..?< )L^>-.l'i I? v Notes of the Game j Clevbland, Oct. 11.?Just before tolay's game Mayor FiUger&ld, acting for Cleveland fans, presented Elmer Smith ind Bill Wambsgansa with diamond Uudded medals for their great work ,-eaterday. Wambsgansa made an unsLBsistod triple play and Smith hit a -lotner with the bases full. Trls Speaker Is the only player now n the game who witnessed the two tinisulsted triple plays made in the big eaguee. Speaker was with Boston vhen Neal Ball made hia play here In .9t>8. and was in centre field yesterday. ?v Young, who pitched for Boston i gainst Cleveland when Ball put out hree men unassisted, was In tho stands .-esterday. The Cleveland playera chipped In and )ought Jim Dunn, owner of the club, f Composite Box Score < Games CLEVE Plaver ab r h 2b 3b hr tb Evans,If 10 0 3 0 0 0 3 .?cirJe*on,lf .11 1 4 0 0 0 4 Wambs#anss,2b22 3 3 0 0 0 3 hpeakcr.cf. ... 22 6 7 2 0 0 9 Puma,lb 10 1 3 1 0 0 4 EArlth.rf... 10 1 4 0 1 1 9 f-nrdncr,3b .. 20 0 4 1 0 0 5 Woad.rf 10 2 2 1 0 0 8 W.Johnston,lb 9 1 2 0 0 0 2 j Sewrll.ss 19 0 4 0 0 0 4 I O'Neill ,c 17 1 6 2 0 0 8 (bvrlesikie.p.. 7 1 1 0 0 0 1 funic,2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bagby.p 6 1 200 1 2 C.raney,rfjf... 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 llhle.p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Kunamaker,e. 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 Thotnas.e 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Caldwcll.p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Moils,p 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals . .182 18 46 7 1 2 58 BROO Flayer a r h 2b 3t> hr lb Olson 21 2 6 1 0 0 9 J Johnston ,3b 14 2 8 0 0 0 2 Sheehan4b... 7 0 1 0 0 0 1 Griffith,rf..... 17 1 4 2 0 0 6 Wheat,If. 23 2 7 2 0 0 9 Myers, cf 22 0 6 0 0 0 6 Konetchy.lb . 19 0 3 0 1 0 5 iiilduff,2b ... 18 0 2 0 0 0 2 Krueger.c 6 0 1 0 0 0 1 Mar<|iiard,p... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 'Lamar 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mamaux,a..., 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mitchell,0.... 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 Cadore.p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Nels.rf 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 Miller.c...... 12 0 2 0 0 0 2 Crimes 4 1 1 0 0 0 1 Kmith.p 6 0 0 0 0 0-0 Pfefler.p 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 tMcCabe 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals.... 182 8 89 5 1 0 46 "Pinch hitter. tPineh runner. Scores?First game -Cleveland, 8j 3; Cleveland, 0. Tliird game Brook Cleveland, S: Brooklyn, 1. Fifth gar game?Cleveland, 1; Brooklyn, 0. CLEVELAND 6 2 J BliOOKLYN 8 0 1 Stolen bear?J. Johaaton. I NarrifW file*?None. Double plnjm?Kuiietchjr, Krnafar and J Johaaton i Oardait. O'NrUI, W John.ton and O'Neill; M*ila and llurna; OUon. Kllilutt anil Konetclir, 3; Wainhxaaoaa, fir well iiid Hnrna; Johnaton, KII duff nml Ko nntchy; Hawaii. Wambofnnts and Hurna; liardner, Wnnibaaaiiaa and Itami, Mtcra, Oleon and KIIduff: Jamiaaoa aud O'Neill; fJardner, Wanibe?aer?>| bf Cwdare tni'(|U(vr.| (Wood, Kvnnr nml O'Neill); off I'felfer (Itnma and O'Neill); off Grime* (Jan.iee.ori, Siieaker. tVonibeynnsv Gard tier nnd O'Neill); off Daghr (Wheat); off i t ide, none; off Caldwell (Olaon) | off I I II I ?? r IW YORK HERALD, T s, and Indians ) mm wMk "' a pair of diamond studded cuff links and Speaker a cold watch. x Newton D. Baker, Secretary of War, and former Mayor of Cleveland, occupied a box In' the upper stands with a party of friends. He was rooting for the Indians. Miller, the Brooklyn catcher, twice outguessed Cleveland. In the first Inning, with Kvars on first, ho called for a pitch out and jutsVy caught th-i Cleveland outfielder trying to steal. In the fifth, with Sewell on first, Cleve land tried the hit and run, but Mills'again called for a wide ball. O'Neill thiew his bat at It but missed, and Sewell was easily trapped at Second. With four games to their credit In the world's baseball series the Wall Street odds on Clcvelund winning the pennant shot up to 3 to 1 on. following yesterday's victory. According to W. L. Darnell & Co. 41 Broad street, Brooklyn, however, was a favorite to capture today's game at 6 to 5. )f First Six of the World's Series 1AND. I Bat. Field bo bb hp sh sb avg. po a e avjj. 0 1 0 0 0 . 300 7 0 01,000 0 1 0 0 0 864 SI 01,000 1 3 0 1 0 .136 17 15 01,000 1 2 0 0 0 . 818 15 0 01,000 3 2 0 0 0 . 300 88 1 1 975 1 0000 400 40 01.000 1 1 0 1 0 .200 8 12 2 .909 2 1 0 0 0 200 7 0 01.000 1 0 0 0 0 222 16 5 01.000 1 1 0 0 0 211 11 21 4 883 2 4 0 0 0 . 353 22 7 1 967 2 0 0 0 0 .143 2 4 01.000 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 333 2 3 1 833 2 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 . 000 0 0 0 0 0 . 000 0 1 01.000 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 . 000 1 0 01.000 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 000 1 0 0 0 0 .000 1 4 01.000 18 16 0 2 0 .253 186 74 ? .962 KLYN. Bat. Field ao bb hp ah ab arg. po a e avg 1 3 0 0 0 .381 11 30 01.000 2 0 0 2 1 .214 2 8 01.000 1 0 0 1 0 .143 1 4 1 833 2 0 0 0 0 235 7 0 01.000 2 1 0 0 0 304 13 0 2 848 1 ? ft 0 0 273 11 1 01.000 2 3 0 0 0 .158 62 6 1 986 4 1 1 0 0 .111 14 23 01.000 0 0 0 0 0 .167 9 2 01.000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 1 01.000 nnnnoooo oooooo 1 0 0 0 0 .000 0 1 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 833 1 0 01.000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 1 1 01.000 0 1 0 0 0 . 000 3 0 01.000 1 1 0 1 0 .167 16 5 01.000 0 0 0 0 0 . 260 1 6 01.000 2 0 0 0 0 .000 2 6 01.000 0 0 0 0 0 . 000 0 0 0 . 000 0 0 0 .0 0 .000 0 0 0 .000 IB 10 1 4 1 .214 153 82 4 .983 Brooklyn, 1. Second fame- Brooklyn, lyn, 2; Cleveland, 1. Fourth fame? tie?Cleveland, 8} Brooklyn, 1. Sixth 2 6 12 0 0 0?18 I 1 1 0 s 0 1 1?8 Mitchell {O'Neill end Speaker) | eft Melle (Net*. Konetch). ; Miller end OI?on> 1 off M. Smith (W*rab?feu*M. Hewell end Hare*). * Itque belted In-lljr O'Neill, ?? by Konttehy, 1; by Griffith. Sj by Wheel. ; by M>en, lj by Kteue. It by E. Kinlth. I; lah~'1 I'tril bnee on error?Hrnoklyn, 1. fee?rd beiU-MUIer, I. left on baeea?Brooklyn, 231 amInnd, S3. 1*1 trhere* record* Off Ceveleekte. IthHe end S rons In eighteen Inning, j off Begby, M kit* and I ran In rifi.-rn Inning*; of <>rlmr?, If hit* Mid 8 run* In twrlv* and ona-ihlrd Inning*; off Caldwrll, 8 hit* and 1 run* In on*-third Inning; off I'hl*. I hit In Uir** In nine* i off (adora, 4 hit* and ran* Id ooo Inalnf | off Mamaai, t hit* and 1 ran* la on* Inning | nff Marqnard. hit* and 3 ran* In alno Inning* i *f Pfrffrc. 4 hit* and t ran In thrao Innings off Mltrhrll, > hit* and 1 ran In four and two third Inning*; nff fl. Smith, 10 hit* nnd I ran In miiiiW* Inning*; nff Mall*, 0 till* nnd no ran* In flftrrn and twothird* inning*. Winning pltrhrr*?forrlrrkl* wim flrat nnd fourth gam** for tigvrlund, Orlmr* n on w< ond gam* for Brooklyn and N. Minitli won third gantr for Brooklyn. Hagby won flftyi gamr for ("laveland. Mail* won lilli gamr for Olnvrland. losing pltrhrr*?Mnrquard. Brooklyn t ' 'high* and Caldwrll, ririrlnnd: ("adorn, --ooklyn; Orlmr*, Brooklyn; Smith, Brook_!H 'UESDAY, OCTOBER ? F^'n 5/at/A Gc Indians Win 1 Lead Four G Continued from First Pago. , chances after Konetchy had made his hit In the second, and Brooklyn filled the bases. But that la all It did. It failed to send anything more than a monotonous zero Into the score. When the Dodgers bristled up Malls reared up too and hurled failure into their ranks. Malls Settling a Score. This man Malls was out there pitching under a sting which, after the passing of three years, still smarted as if It na saw It fleeting. Robinson saw the hoodoo of the old Orioles mocking hliA as | it had mocked John McOraw, Hughey Jennings and Kid Gleason, and as it had mocked him in 1916. Of all the old Orioles who hold positions as major league managers only McGraw has been able to throttle the Jinx which has followed them into world's Buries. And I that Jinx has beaten McGraw far more often than he has beaten it. Only in 1805, when the Oianta won over the Athletics, WR8 McOr&w able to crow over tho malignant Influence. It was not in a very strong frame of shind and position which Brooklyn found itself when it took the field against the IndlAns this afternoon. It still was In a fighting mod, but It could not be denied that Its morale had been shaken up a bit by the beating of yesterday. And on third base It again presented a makechlft, whose presence not only weakened the olub that one position but unbalanced the entire Infield. As Jimmy Johnston still was suffering from a bad knee, Jack Sheehan, the rookie who had gone Into the field without warning or preparation yesterday, again was sent to third base. There he again failed to cover himself with glory. As Cleveland fought to Its victory there sat In a box two men who had led It to many another great success, but always ware denied the sweet* which come with a pennant and participation In the world's cries. The two Tltnns of other days were Larry Lajole, once mansger of the Cleveland team and for many years the leading hitter of the American League, and Cy Young, tha pitcher. Young Is regarded by many as the greatest pitcher of all tlmo. At any rate, he ranks among the greatest, and his best work was done for Cleveland. Young had scored many a great triumph In his long career, but never had he heard the plaudits of S5.000 In appreciation of his own efforts in a world's series. lie had been far greater than Malta, and yet not bo great. Secretary Raker Preaent. Among the multitude which Jammed the park to overflowing there waa many a notable, both In bnsoba'l and In public life. .Among these wan Hecrotary of War Baker, who halls from Cleveland and Is a baseball enthusiast. The gathering this afternoon was practically an all Cleveland affair. The delegations from Handsky, Palnoavii'e. Ashtabula and other lesser metropoll of the State, aa well as Detroit, Buffalo and way stations, had scattered In response te the call to work that en me with Mont day and perhaps a shortening of funds ' The hotels here are not very modest In ' their demand* In fact, nobody seems to ] be very modest In Cleveland In these 1 piping dnys. 1 It waa a crowd which was intense in Its partisanship, it wns always readv to cheer If a Cleveland player hit ot ' fielded or stubbed his toe or blew hh nose. It was anxious to howl ltsell hoarse If a Cleveland man adjusted hii cap. But for Brooklyn It had nothina but disapproval. Nothing which Brook | lyn d^d waa worth while. The first hoot * t I, 1920. ime of Series 0; Now in tames to Two ?J Nunamaker Looks Under His Pillow Bptctal Despatch to Tup Heeau>. CLEVELAND, O.. Oct. 11.?More baseball , scandal developed this morning; when It became known that Leslie Nunamaker, second string catcher of the Cleveland team, found money under his pillow Sunday evening. Nunamaker Immediately reported the matter and an investigation Is being made. No one had offered money to j Nunamaker and he did not know whether the roll of bills was meaut for himself or. whether the person that left It Intended to have Nuna- , maker distribute It. Nunomaker's story, tqld to Ban B. Johnson, follows : "1 ontered my room Sunday evening and thought that tho pillow looked mussed up. A friend came i In the room with me and I turned to ji him and said, "Some bird has been monkeying wjth this piuow.' 1 i picked up the pillow and examined it. and as I turned It a roll of hills fell on the floor. Hero they are." Jolinson- examined the bills that Nunamaker turned oyer. There ( were sixteen Confederate dollar j bills. s _/ inn of the scries was heard in the second inning, when Wheat wop called out on strikes and protested that he had not struck at the third strike. It looked us if he had tried to gel out of the w ay of the ball. When he appealed to Connolly, the umpire behind the plate, the epowd hooted violently. It hooted with gusto once more when Smith fanned in the fifth Inning. There was no tendency to become generous to a beaten enemy. The day wus the warmest of the series. It was sultry and dark clouds rolled In from the lake and threatened rain, which came In the evening. To-night the local weather forecaster says that by game time to-morrow It will be fair. Let us hope bo. Before the game the local club saw fit to have an announcer Implore the fans to stick with the Indians to, the finish. Evidently It feared a defeat today. Evans Opens With a Hit. The game broke Into being calmly enough In so far as Brooklyn was concerned, for the Dodgers went out In order. Sheehan giving Malls his first stilkeout. Cleveland was slightly more demonstrative In Its half of the Inning, Evans opening with a hit through Sheehan whlcdi a firm, class infielder probably would have mopped. But the safety gave Cleveland little sustenance^ Nothing materialized beyond It. Brqoklyn had a great chance in the second Inning when, with two out. it filled the bases on Konetuhy's single to right, Sewell's fumble on Kilduff and Gardner's error on Miller. The stage was set for Smith to emulato his name- i sake of the Indians, but again dame fortpne took a sharp swab-at the Brooklyns. Smith sent a fly to Speaker, and so another futile Dodger effort went into this scries' history. Ttie breaks surely were going against the Flatbush fuslliiers. Cleveland got several men on base In its half of the second, but wfthout result. And ?o the gamo rolled on Into the afternoon, while Cleveland fans sat In subdued attitude for the first time since the series came to this city. They sat in some trepidation, too. They did not like the way this game was going. They showed that they were particularly apprehensive in tho fourth inning when, with one down. Brooklyn got Myers on base through a hit and Konetchy on through a pass. Hut the tension was reduced when Kilduff raised a fly to Wood, and was broken as Evans planted himself under Miller's fly. Soon canrq for Brooklyn the fata! sixth, in which its efforts with the bat I were balked by great fielding by Seweii, ind its defensive strength in the lapsed to give Cleveland a run which loomed up large as the field itself, l^ was a happy crowd which rose to its feet to stretch in the seventh i I ning. That look of unoertainty had Lcen displaced by a brond smile. That I tcelihg of anxiety had given way to one .if renewed confidence. Tho seml! doldrums had roved away into elation. | Even the clouds began to float away ' and Old Glory out In centrefleld flaunted ; more proudly than ever. Olson Doubles In Elgkth. Brooklyn flared up for a short spell I11 the eighth, which Olson punctuated with a terrific two base hit to the extreme corner of left fleld. But nothing eamo of it. The Intense partisanship of the crowd was demonstrated when it sat as mum as the old 8phlnx Itself when Olson made that fine hit. Almost any other crowd would have forgotten its partisanship under the stress of appreciation of a good effort. But not this Cleveland gathering. It had bouquets only for the home crew. In Brooklyn there was not even a sprig of anything with the exception perhaps of poison Ivy. As the shadows lengthened across the Held Brooklyn fought, and fought hard, nut still that one run stood alone, a monument to another Cleveland achlavement To-night Cleveland Is Jubilant, as well It might be and should be. The fans regard victory In the series as 'already assured. They c'alm tho title without reservations of any sort, and Brooklyn eympathlxers are forcod to confess that their claim Is a strong one Indeed. Betting on the. scrlea, which stood at 4 to 5, with Cleveland the favorlto, thla morning and even money on tho game to-day. came to a dead etandatlll thla 4Oh, Mr. Mailt!' Hat No Effect on Pitcher Special Beepatck to Tits Hcbjua. CLEVELAND, Oct. ll.?Managti Robinson found a note In his , box this morning signed "Well Wisher" and telling that on the l a Iflc coast Duster Mails was very sensitive to such verbal allots as 1 "Oh, Walter!" and "Oh. Mr. Malla!" | "Well Wisher." who made It known she wae a feminine fan, was eure that sort of treatment from the Brooklyn bench would "get the goat" of "Oh. Mr. Mails." It may have been poor advloe, It may have been the Dodgora didn't try It and It may have been Malls had cotton in ma onrn, ror he failed utterly to *0 up In the atr, and the feminine fan made & had Kuean. | -V HORSES AND CARRIAGES. r p I llendaome rcflatored trottlni . rortj3lC"'n,ll"n' h**t 2 y*er?, i<] Mokn. dam llnlen Hal*. Hand ' noma rc*t"terii1 Arab stallion, bay, 8 yearn ^ 1.1 1 by Haurnn. riain Dutheyna. 4 ??#' ? J' Mvalry ehargor, stallion, ri ti . WantCflt vr-ara. 1V8 to 1V3. Baddli c ff a,"v fnur, ?r ?.idinf. 5 or 8 y?arn " I HS^&UT&i Broad St. Phone Breed 748 on Burns's L Official Score of S Game I BHOOKLYX IX. I..) AB. R. H. IO. A. E. Olson, 88 4 0 1 4 1 0 Sheehan, 3b 4 0 0 0. 3 0 N'eia, rf 2 0 0 8 0 0 Kru<;|fer 1 0 0 0 0 0 Griffith, rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 Wheat, If 4 0 0 2 0 0 Myers, of 4 0 1 1 0 0 Konetchy, lb .3 0 1 9 0 0 Kilduff. 2b 4 0 0 2 2 0 Miller, c 3 0 0 3 8 0 8. Smith, p. 3 0 0 0 3 0 ttMoCaba 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 0 3 24 12 0 ! Batted for Mela In eighth Inning, titan for Konetchy In ninth inning. Brooklyn Cleveland Two base hits?Burns, Olson. Left on bases?Brooklyn, 7; Cleveland. 4. Umpires?Connolly (plate), O'Day (first), Dlnneen (second), JClem (third). Tims of game?1 hour and 34 minutes. evening. Cleveland was offering all sorts of odds, but It offered them in vain, for there was no Brooklyn money in sight. In view of the situation Brooklyn backers hardly could be blamed. It Is a forlorn hope which Wllbert Robinson will lead onto the field to-morrow, and the chances are altogether agalnsfthe Dodgers, not only for the series but for the seventh contest. Cleveland's hitting has attained great momentum, and that. It Is figured, will carry It through another game and victory. TJhere was a bit of a lull in the Indian artillery to-day, but when the one run had to be made It was made. And Brooklyn could not get the breaks. The Dodgers did not play Intelligent ball all the way, either, for at times they fielded erratically and at' times they batted without great use of their heads. The hole at third base Is a big one. Jtmmy Johnston said to-night that he would try to get back to-morrow, but his knee is swollen to twice its normal si7.o und it is feared that Robinson will have do call on Sheeh&n to-morrow for a third time. Shcehan .may be a fine third baseman, but In a world's series he has shown himself to be deficient, so to-night the Dodgers stand on the edge of a precipice. DANIEL. f i ROD AND < V HIGU WATER FOR LOCAL ANGLERS Handy I look Princess Jamai (The lforM?lioo) Bay (C* Date. A.M. I'M. A.M. P.M. A.M. October 12 7:3(1 7:53 7:33 7:88 8:13 October 13 8:10 8:35 8:15 6 10 8:54 October is!.! ! phi 9 oH 9h(i 10:03 ll>:14 October 10 10.11 10 il 10.10 10:40 10:f>4 The time given In the above table Is Easter o-ie hoar. Fishermen's Euros and Game Fish Food." I Louis Khend's latest book. Just Issued by Charles Serlbutr's Sons, is something entirely new and should bo of service to salt and fresh water anglers. The main object of the work?conservation of game fish food?is tho result of several years of study, mainly on the lines of his previous book, "Trout Stream Insects," but treating exclusively of minnows and other food consumed by the trout, bass and pike species. HIh theory Is exactly opposite to the United Anglers League agitation for more hatcheries and more gatno fish planting, and Is rather a plan ut discouraging the use of llvo bait that game fish may not be robbed of tlidr food, to thus attain a larger growth and abundance. His slogan Is "More roodmore and bigger fl.*mm^";i: I * heart Bar. AIFRT Wllaon a Dock. Wren* , nLLfl I ^'h **r Mon. and Krl. ?: A. ?>.. *xc. Mon.. il.n.lMX'{. ffWVinJir PEERLESS Irnvr* Olasona Point 8 A. U. Tuaaday. Capt A. f.ANKEMATT. ! fir.A BAffl AND BLAr&FISB. j SHAMROCK flip liuhbdT Hoot*. H,'nt'0*t'r E Army Loathar Jarktna, * 5! !: I3?* Wool Underwear, I1 1?. Bhoea, |..#V ROSB, 3*3 Urldft St., Brooklyn. A... . liH.I KIl ill> fSS BA*S. RflCfl i lll.v. ' nnarala 7 A M. dally, " ' 11 >?v DICK PKIWON. -ST,"til- COM Hit s "AV,,n {{' [Jivee imeepel'vad ? ' UEL0C1TY S^VoAar b^tVllKKHB. V* rvr ~SHSJpEn?aa :l*"f _*" Captain !ob ii V""- ?'g?aiL ANWVX ?yr%?srnr?v?,? BROOKLYN ,, j ?' * " XfctlUtf gh".yp.*V.^,nH?rl_J A,"-h"' ' Var.veedood. ft ^"ya Vk^fc^-'To" 00]QiE TM' r?A>fy nn^&Atfe : MJoi Bryan?O^brtrn n7 3d av., nr. 128th. Sec. hand tackla Croaa, 8th av. and 34th at. Sec. hand tackle. Hlrrch, L... tWW Amit'dm av., SO-OOth ata. Tel Hochgraf F..307R'Uthat. Tel. Vandvrbllt 2850 J. Mtrejovaky, 11180 2d av. Fishing tackle. Kellerman,3O30 3dav.,18dtb. Tel.Mel. 1000 llalt Klffe, H. 11. Co.. 823 B'tvay. Tackle only. Klrtland'a. 00 Chambcra at. Tackle Ilelgra'na i.unrus. moi., sin iu. twin at. rso oaii. Revltens, r>.".l E. 138 at. TackleAbalt. Moi. 3988 Mary It. H. A Co., B'way A 34th st. No bait Meeker,H.,141)2 Amst.av., nr 134. T'kloAbalf. Metropolitan Hdw Co., Church A Vceey iti. Hudsot Terminal, Grand Central. So halt. Ogilvy, R. C., 79 Chambers at. No bait. Pattarson Gottfried,Hunter,170Fu1.st. No bait PollmeIII.t?.,::h..ICI kerrorlVrry, I'nckh- only Relf. J. H.. 309 Third aV. Fishing tackle Roue re Pert Co., It'way A 13th ?t. Tackle Rogers Peot Co.,B'way at Warren at our Roger* Peet Co., B'way at 34th St. four Rogers Poet Co.. Rth av. at 41st St. store* Rosenbaum, grift E. 1.78th *t. 3d nv. "(/'station Schoverllnst, I >aly A Calcs, Wi2-4 Broad v. ay PchuhachAKon,3012 3d av.ou.1RR. Halt *1-112.1 Vom Hofe.R.ACo.. 112 Fulton st. Tackle oily Von In>ngcrkc4 Detmo1i1.Ino.4t4 Mad av. Tkle Walr-.U.KO lata*,nr.10th. MMTOrch BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN. Abraham A Straus, Fulton st. Tackle only. ^ Consrn, A. R32 Crnnd st. Tel. 801R Ktagg. Doerlng A Co., Rlborty av., nr Schcnrk av. Epstein, R. A., 1118 B'way. cor. De Kalb av. Johnson. P.. 239 Wyckoff av., 092 Evergreen. Kingston. 1400 Fuuiton st. "M* Bed. Repairs. Hummer, H , 1730 It'way, Rkl.vn. T'kW ha". Marsters. J. F.. .33 Court st. Tol. 2123 Malu. Mlchaelson, H. 11.. 1274Rcdford sv. Tkle only Mbbselson. N R., 914 It'way. Tnokle only Morris.A.,1737Kulton st.Rold av. 1833 Bedford P.ovpet, M. W., 777 Woodward av. T'kle only Srhaaf, 193 Flatbush nv. Tel. 2319 Sterility. I srbebl-r 231 \\ ?. | M ; ADMIRAL X!dah!,v"1" 10 A. M. . Bun. T:80. Lightship. ('apt. CHARRIE.