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different content
Joe went to the door, closed it after them, locked it, and put the
key in his pocket.
“And now, Mr. Tompkinson,” he said, as he threw off his coat, “will
you kindly remove your false teeth?”
“What do you mean?” asked Tompkinson, as pale as death.
“I mean,” said Joe, “that you both are going to get the licking of
your lives. I could send you both to prison, but I don’t care to raise a
scandal in the baseball world. Jim, you take Tompkinson. I licked
him once. And now, Harrish, throw off your coat.”
The men, desperate as cornered rats, saw there was no help for
it, and the next moment the battle was on. Both the brokers were
big and powerful men and they put up a hard battle. But they were
no match for the seasoned athletes opposed to them.
Joe and Jim smashed them at will, shaking them from head to feet
with body blows and uppercuts. In a few minutes the battle was
over and the discomfited scoundrels lay on the floor whimpering
with pain and rage and shame.
“I guess that will do, Jim,” said Joe, as he put on his coat.
“They’ve found out that the pitching arms they tried to ruin are still
in pretty fair shape. Let’s go.”
They stationed a policeman at the apartment to see that
Tompkinson and Harrish left without, in their anger, doing some
injury to the old scientist or his wife by way of revenge, then the
party drove off.
McRae and Robbie dropped off with Joe and Jim at their
apartment where they found Reggie who had cashed the check, and
the roars of laughter that went up from their rooms as the veteran
manager and coach learned all that had happened almost
scandalized the management.
Only a few days remained until the end of the playing season. The
Giants had the pennant safely stowed away. They were so far ahead
that if they lost every remaining game while their nearest
opponents, the Pirates, won every one of theirs, the Giants still could
not be headed.
Nevertheless, Joe drove his men hard, for he was now within an
ace of attaining the objects that he had outlined to Jim at the
beginning of the season. He led the league in home runs. He led it in
his general batting average, having left the redoubtable Mornsby far
in the rear. He had more stolen bases to his credit than any player in
either league. He had registered more strike-outs than any other
pitcher. He stood well ahead of Rance in the matter of percentage of
earned runs allowed to opponents, and in the last spurt the Giants
had broken the record in the matter of consecutive victories.
Six of his objects had been attained. Would he grasp the seventh,
closing the season with the highest standing the Giants had ever
registered in their history as a team?
On the last day but one of the season the Giants tied that record.
Jim was in the box and pitched a masterly game. But the Boston
pitcher, Northesk, also outdid himself, and the game was in doubt up
to the very last inning.
When that inning opened the Giants had scored three runs and
the Bostons two. The visitors came to bat in the ninth determined to
do or die. The heaviest batters of the team were to come to the
plate, and they started in with determination.
An error by Jackwell at third on a hot grounder permitted the first
man to make his base. The error must have been contagious, for
Renton also juggled a hit from Bailey, on which the runner reached
first while Ellis easily made second.
With two on and nobody out, the Boston coachers got busy and
filled the air with a stream of chatter designed to rattle the pitcher.
Joe was playing center and watching the batter and the men on
bases with the eye of a hawk. Anderson, the heavy-hitting left
fielder, drove out a hit almost on a line over Larry’s head at second
base.
Joe sized it up and knew that he could make the catch. The men
on bases thought so, too, and hugged the bases closely.
Joe ran in as though to nab the ball. Then he hesitated for a
fraction of a second and set himself as though to catch the ball on
the bound.
The moment that this seemed to be his intention the man on first
broke for second and the man on second legged it for third.
Then Joe reached for the ball and caught it on the fly, just at his
shoe tops, putting out the batter.
Warned by the roar that went up, the runners started back for the
bags they had just left under the supposition that the ball was going
to be caught on the bound. But they were too late.
Like a shot Joe threw the ball to Larry, who stepped on the bag,
putting out Ellis. Then Larry relayed it to Burkett, catching Bailey
before he could get back.
It was a triple play, all achieved by the classiest bit of headwork
seen on the Polo Grounds that season. If Joe had run in and caught
the ball in the ordinary way, only the batter would have been out.
But his pretended hesitation had fooled the base runners and he had
caught them both.
McRae looked at Robbie. Robbie looked at McRae. For once
neither uttered a word. There were no words for such an occasion.
But what they told Joe later was plenty.
With that game safely stowed away the record was tied. That in
itself was much. But for Joe it was not enough.
In the last game, he himself was in the box. And the kind of ball
he played that day made baseball history.
Yet, although he was a veritable wizard in the box and cracked out
two home runs in succession, such is the uncertainty of the game
that he came within a hair’s breadth of not putting it over.
For Morton, the Boston pitcher, was also determined to wind up
his season’s work in a blaze of glory, and the men behind him played
like demons, making almost miraculous stops and throws on what
would ordinarily have been clean hits.
A momentary case of rattles among the Giants in the seventh let
two runs across for the Bostons, and as Joe’s two homers were the
only tallies for his side, the teams came to the ninth with the score
tied.
The Bostons were promptly disposed of, and the Giants came to
the bat. Renton went out on a long fly to center and Burkett sent up
a fly that the catcher grabbed.
With two men out, it looked like a case of extra innings when Joe
came to the bat.
Morton, with the memory of those two homers still rankling in his
mind, promptly passed him to first amid the jeers of the fans who
had been hoping for another circuit clout.
Joe took as long a lead as possible. Ralston lined out a single to
left.
At the crack of the bat Joe was off for second. Most players would
have been satisfied to make the bag, especially on a single to left,
where the throw to third was short and easy.
But Joe rounded second and set out for third. Benton, the Boston
third baseman, knowing Joe’s daring on the bases had half expected
this. He crouched to take the throw from left, ready to jam the ball
down on Joe as he slid in to the bag.
But Joe double-crossed him by failing to slide. He saw from
Renton’s attitude what he expected to do. So, instead of sliding, he
flew by, standing up, just touching the tip of the bag, and started for
home.
Plunk! came the ball into Renton’s hands. As he had to face
toward left, he could not see what Joe was doing and had no time to
look. He had to depend on the sense of touch.
Down went the ball on where Joe’s body ought to have been. But
it was not there. Joe was halfway down the stretch toward home,
going like the wind.
Dazedly, Renton swept the path about him. Then realizing what
had happened he straightened up and threw for home. But Joe had
already dented the rubber for the winning run.
He had scored from first on a single! It was a magnificent play, a
fitting wind-up to the most glorious season that the Giants had ever
had.
And above all it rounded out the task that Joe had set himself. By
unflagging work, by matchless pitching and hitting ability, by the
finest kind of headwork he had reached his goal.
And it was a happy Joe who, after the tumult and the shouting
had died away, after McRae, Robbie and his comrades had nearly
wrung his hands off and pounded him black and blue, sat with Jim
and with Mabel, who had arrived in time to see his crowning victory,
and talked over the events of the day.
“And you put it over, old boy!” exulted Jim. “Hung up a record in
the seven things you said you would.”
“You might have known he would,” said Mabel proudly.
“Didn’t I tell you that seven was a lucky number?” said Joe, with a
grin.

THE END
THE BASEBALL JOE SERIES
By Lester Chadwick
12mo. Illustrated. Price per volume, $.65, postpaid

1. BASEBALL JOE OF THE SILVER STARS


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or Pitching for the College Championship

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or Breaking Up a Great Conspiracy
11. BASEBALL JOE CAPTAIN OF THE TEAM
or Bitter Struggles on the Diamond

12. BASEBALL JOE CHAMPION OF THE LEAGUE


or The Record that was Worth While

13. BASEBALL JOE CLUB OWNER


or Putting the Home Town on the Map

14. BASEBALL JOE PITCHING WIZARD


or Triumphs Off and On the Diamond

Send For Our Free Illustrated Catalogue


CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers New York
THE BOY RANCHERS SERIES
By WILLARD F. BAKER
12mo. Cloth. Illustrated. Jacket in full colors
Price per volume, 65 cents, postpaid

Stories of the great west, with cattle ranches as


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Dangerous struggle against desperadoes for land rights.
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The boy ranchers help capture Delton’s gang who were
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The boy ranchers track mysterious Death into his cave.

Send For Our Free Illustrated Catalogue


CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers New York

Transcriber’s Notes:
Printer’s, punctuation, and spelling inaccuracies were silently
corrected.
Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been
preserved.
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