PIPGRAS HURLS WELL AS YANKS POUND OUT 6 RUNS IN SECOND SERIES’ GAMEHe Aldridge, Curve Ball Artist, Fails To Check Ya.ike* Batsmen—Scene Will Shift Today To Yankee Stadium In New York.BY ALAN J. GOULD Associated Press Sports EditorPittsburgh, Pa.. Oct. 6.—A tall, sturdy-limbed youth, wirling his first World’s Series game with the coolness of a Uexander and skill of a Mathewson, tied the Pirates into ariety of bow knots today and pitched the Yanks to their sec nd straight victory.Just as though he had been doing this sort of thing all his ife, George Pipgras, of Clayton, Minn., stepped into the spot-ight glare of baseball's greatest classic, held the slugging buccaneers to seven hits scattered through as many innings, md subdued the National League champions to the decisive une of six to two.Behlgd such brilliant mound work a* this the Yankee steam roller lldn’t need to do mnch. There was no home run force to ita drive but It truck twice. In the third and eighth innings, with sufficient power to bring n three runs and move the Yankees into a commanding lead as the battle cene shifts tomorrow to tbe home field of the American League cham-dons In New York.Vic Aldridge attempted the task of checking the Yanks and putting he Pirates back into the light, but met the same fate as Ray Kremer. )utaide of two had innings. Aldridge did a faJrly good Job. but these two apses were enough to convince his as well as the Pirate board of strategy hat curve balls are not as much poison to the Yanks as they had figured.Aldridge Knocked OutSeries Statistics; Second GameAttendance ........... 41,634Receipts .............*U«,9/B.0UPlayers' peel ......... 893,31878Advisory Council .....127.446.70Each club's share ... 815.563.13 ; Each league's share .. $15^53.13 TWO-GAME TOTALSAttendance ......... 83,101Receipts 8365.456-00Players' pool 8186,382.05Advisory Council .... *54.816.*5 Each club’s share 831,063.0/Each league’s share . . 831,063.67ESKIMOS SOLVE DIVORCE EVILS IN EASY MANNERiVoman is Subject to Man’s Rule and Result is Whole Race is ContentedNew York. Oct 6. (IF).--A new olution for the world’s divorce prob-ern was brought back to civilisation oday by George Palmer Putnam, lublisher and explorer, home from our months in the arctic wastes of lafflnland.The solution, he said, lies in emu-stlon of the primitive Ksklmo, who iss made divorce non-existent for ila race through the development of perfect economic partnership In irhleh woman’s place is in the igloo -chewing her husband’s tough seal-kin boots into proper softness and lexiblllty for his next hunting trip.With starvation always Just round the corner, Mr. Putnam said, he Eskimo still remains one of the tapplest races on the earth. His rants are few, his tastes simple and it Baffinland he is a whole soulei nonogamlst, devoted to his wife nd children.His is a nomadic race, constantlyVic's best looking curves weft shelled for three runs, enough decide the game, in the third inntng on four hits, two sacrifice flys and an error by Lloyd Waner. finally knocked out of the box In tha eighth as he lost control completely, sending one run In with a wild pitck and filling the hags with two l stve passes before yielding 4o Mika Crengros.The sttnatlon was anything but encouraging here to the little south’ paw as he faced the top four of the Yankee batting order but he escaped with only one hit and two runs being registered, forcing the home run twins. Ruth and Oehrig. to rap I weakly to the infield for force outs.1Pipgras Very Effective While Aldridge was erratic in ths box and the Pirates again displayed defensive weakness. Pipgras stuck steadily and effectively to aa neat a pitching Job as the World’s has witnessed in some time. Except for the ubiquitous Waner rvtkeva and the stolid but heavy hitting Clyde Barnhart—the Pirate outfleld trio—the Yankee twirler, had 1 foes baffled with a clever change of pace and exceptionally good control.Lloyd Waner Stars Lloyd Waner tallied both of Pirate runs. He tripled In the I Inning to score on Barnhart's sn flee hoist and scooted home In tbs eighth on brother Paul’s sacrifice ffy after he had walked and raced t* third on Barnhart’s single.Outside of these two brief i the Pirate attack was chiefly coni sptcuous by Its absence. The Bucn no more than one hit In any I nlng. Outside of the first and eightk they didn’t get a runner beyond i ond baae.Fana Ask For Cuyler George Grantham reached secoU^ in the second inning on his single* and Joe Harris’ out, but was strand ed by Gooch. Grantham opened tkl seventh with a rattling double i _ against the right field wall-barely three feet short of a home run Harris was thrown out by Koealg; after Lasseri broke up the rally by grabbing Gooch’s drive and doubling Grantham at second. Traynor doubled in the fourth with lt;but neither Grantham nor Harris I(Continued Fn'■H 10