The evening world. Newspaper, November 18, 1905, Page 1

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PIL T ARRESTED MN OPIUM ONT Tee PAID THEATRE WITH POLICE) IROOSEVELT, JR, KNOCKED OUT IN ROT GAME sigs s Me Me Shiel de He More tn 400. 400 Children} Winded, ‘Met Is Ordered Says to Roundsman Who Made Raid, \ ‘IN TROUBLE BEFORE. {Accused by a Woman of Tak- || \ing Earnings of her Dis- < solute Life, \ Pobiceman John F. Gilmartin, of ‘the ‘(West Thirty-eovemth street pnocinct, “Rtea captured to-dmy in @ raid on an (Septum joint. When caught he remark- wed to Roundeman Maher, who led the raiders { “Here's me shitid, I never did care @bout being « policeman anyhow.” {Guimartin i an ex-bouncer In Mo- jh@urk’s dance ‘hall on the Bowory and i how he ever got on the police foree is ym mystery, His grade of morality was Detrayed a few weeks ago when & wo- man named Mary Meister walked into ‘Commissioner MoAdoo's offbe carrying bis bebmet and shield, She said that whe was dissolute and had been turn- tag her earnings over to Gilmartin for months, He lived with her and treated her #0 brutally, she declared; that she , stole his helmet and shield while he (was asleep and took them to Heads quarters, . Charges were preferred against Gil- fiartin, who was attached to the West Mpirty-seventh street station When the case was called the woman failed to appear. Detectives were unable to find ner. Four postponementa have been taken In the trial, Meantime Glimartin has een patrol- Mog & beat in the Wes Thirty-seventh Btreet Precinct. For two weeks his ‘every move when off duty his been matched by Roundsman Maher, who wwas detalied io seafoh for the Motster women, Giimartin went off duty at & o'clock this morning and changed ois uniform in clothes at the abee-pour. ker pin sr was ou. watch and followed hin toa horse ato. a Storveauat street condultal by ‘Flaasle Wille ¥ for Capt. weve ‘ats ergs ior Rounds- . Halt ith Ke, Preparing to sinoke. As Maher ¢n~ artin Rave vent to mm ‘a desire to leave the en ‘lider arrest with Flos. the proprietress; two id another man The wrt, token to the Wifth street Xana Joched ap. Gilmartin te doing an fnmate of an (BIKE SUL BY ~ WLLL : he Tris to End His Life, 4 est aon “Anthony” Vulpe, who was nold, prin- at the Reymond Street’ Jail, ovarged | with — shooting oh ae do Millio, to-day dived from 0. enibilange revolver iL ow pil a room toy for rimen| hema for Shooting Are Driven. from the “Palace”. Performance. MOTHERS , COMPLAINED. Performance Not Proper, They Said—Special “Cop” as Doorkeeper, — Gerry Society agents, aspisted by de- tetctives from the East ON€ Hundred and Twenty-sixth Streeet Station, this afternoon drove 400 boys and girls under axteen years of age, out of the Palace dred and Thirtieth strees, For several weeks mothers and nelgth- j bore have complained to the police and | the Gerry Society against the varlety | performances at the theatre, An ad- mission of five and ten conte was charged, and it was said children fre, quently remainéd away trom, school to attend, Ty Agents Bartley and Calhoun, of the sootety, with Police Detectives Kammer, Pnrigivt and Mahone, wert to the pince during the performance this afternoon otal po! keeper, toa ‘Then na went bye | and compe! believed to. te “ind dee: nae $205 yon Are Bhtoe. twel oa Boat rg. Sindee and ee Cin rt ene ee ani in ee was Bent ae Gary ocal PAI CLE. | EXPERT A SUICIDE net Charles, Cuttriss ah Invalid Since Living a Year in Philippines, Charies Cuttrias, for twenty-one years electrical expert for the Commercial Cable Company, shot himself in the head to -day in his apartments at No. 29) Seventh avenue and) died an hour Mater in J, Hood Wright Hospital, Aitor superintending the laying of the Pacirio cable Mr. Cuttrins apent a yt in Manila, Guam and the Orena and there contracted malari, from Which he had suffered ever since, He been seriously il for six months and for two weeks had been confined to his bed. He told his wife thie morning ¢hat Theatre, at Thi] avenue and One Hun- | ) | OMY | the Mahtest man. on eithe Off After Many Swift Plays. | DRAGGED FROM FIELD. | Though Light in Weight i Proved’ Spirit in’ Yale- Harvard Contest. FIRST HALF, Yale Freshmen Marvaril Freshmen . SBHOONOD HALF, Yale Freshmen ....+.. ., Marard Freshmon FIN. Yale Freshm: 6 Harvard Fre ® CAMBRIDGE, Nov. After many | swift and sensational , Theodore | Roosevelt, jr. of ‘the Harvard team, was carried from the eld thie after- hoon during the game between the Yale | and Harv freshmen. Young Roosevelt played left end tor} Harvard, 9 Bxcept for quarter-back Simons, whd weighed two pounds less, pounds. byron dn wo played right end for Yale ee, pounds, and Ronnie dinyed. the opposite exttemity “fdr the Criméoh youngsters, tips the beam at exdotly 187 pounds, In spite of this the ae dent's #on put Up a game that aston. ished everyone. Kvery scrimmage found him fighting and ho made @ number of sensational tackles, At 2 ofetock, wiien the two qwama Hine UP, & large Crowd of freshmen, under- graduates and outsiders who imd been Attracted by the novelty of seeing 4 Prewdent’s son fighting of the gridircn, were guthered on the feld, Teddy, | erouching, drew ali eyes from the vary Downed by a Tackle. 'y down the field Yale shoved ee ly got his crance. the end and was i tat Centre was tried for the fest touchdown by Tale | Yale kicked off again yn Teddy got | imto ft. The quarterback tried # feft- | end run. Hoosey It circled the team and like a flash pulled down the who dropped the ball win The back was sent at Teddy. while ie a pile ‘quer bt ot ‘eam him, go. tenting’ bu but aniitiog, he itched" ‘Up his trousers and few at the mie wot 4 ae foal, then aap started Roogeve! weir. as he played to-day, Cee the brougt 1. head on Suburban day, est of the Bennings events and is ratiling good Meld of two-year-olds was ‘balanced and keen and exciting, YORK, GATURDAY, NOVEMBER Le, 1008, FOOT BAL At Cangbridge—Harvard, 6; Dartmouth, 6. : At A. L. Park (Freshmen)—Columbia, 6; Pennsylvania, 6, At Annapolis—Navy, 225 Virginia, 0. At West Point—Army, 34; Trinity, 0, Mt Philadelphia—Pennsylania, 425 Villa Nova, 0. At Syracuse—Gyracuse, 28; Rensselaer Polytechnic, 0. At Providence—Brown, 56; Vermont, 0. At Worcester—Holy Cross, 12; Tufts, 2. (At New Brunswick—Haverford, 27; Rutgers, 0. At Schenectady--Unon, 12; Hobart, 5, At Middletown—Wesleyan, 23; Susquehanna, 0, At Bethichem—Ursinus, 12 Lehigh, 0, At Cincinnati—Carlisle, 34; Cincinnati, 5. At Wastiington—Georgetown 0} Bucknell, 18, At Olympic Field—De Witt Clinton, 0; Boys‘ High School, 6. —_—o 2 - —- LATE WINNERS AT NASHVILLE. Fitth—Awawegang 1-1, Marvin Neal 4.5 place, Utah:T Sixth—Savoir Faire 8.5, Little Roy 5.2 pl., Dr. Hart.T ee HONEST JOHN KELLY’S OLD PLACE RAIDED. Police Inspector ear al with seven of his plain jiothes men, accompanied by Capt. Dooley, of the Tenderloin tation, this afteriicon raided the house.at No. 139 West Forty. firs sree. Forty men'were found playing the races. The place Roogevelt wemwas formerly i my kept by Honest John Kelly, (CONSOLATION STAKES GO TO FLIP FLAP. IN GALLOP. BENNINGS WINNERS, __— FIRST RACE—Jack MeKeon (20 to 1) 1, Flour de Marle (6 to & for place) 2, Thistle Heather 3. SECOND RAGE—Rickey (8 to 5) 1, Nellie Burn (8 to 2 for place) 2, Edict 3, Jack Neko, i Medium _ Plunger, Scores in Opening Dash at 20 to 1. BY FRANK W. THORP. BENNINGS RACE TRACK, D, C., Nov. 1.—The rise in admission price at| Bennings has not ud the slightest, @ffeet on the atterdances. ‘The crowd that came out to the course to-day was one of the largest that has ever vis- fed the track. Fully eight thousand! people were gathered on the lawit or | Occupied space in the grand stand, Eighty bookmakers attended to the wants of the players and the crush in the ring was akin to that at Sheeps- THIRD RACE—Expensionist (3 to \1) 1, Woolgatherer (7 to 10 for place) 2, Tom Cogan 3. FOURTH RACE—Flip Flop (6 to 5) 1, Disobedient (9 to 10 for piace) (2, (Monterey 3. FIFTH RAGE—Race King 5) 1, Merry England (2 to 1 for Place) 2, St, Valentine 8, SIXTH RACE-Loule H, (13 to 5) 1, Peter Paul (3 to 6 for place) 2, posit Boy 3, There was an excellent feature on the catd In the shape of the Grand Con- @lation Stakes, for two-yearolds, at seven furlongs. This stakes Is the rich- Worth about $400 to the winner, A URAC RS ‘There Expansonist clog up and in Peased dv by Bal a head Thead trom wv ook herer, om Lert ‘owan alopped on the Flip Flap Easy Winner, FOURTH RACB—The Grand Consolation; snl yearolds; $3,000 j woven fur: Wat Fi 6 2 oa) engoged, The other races were well Sport promised to be The weather was mild and pleasant and the track fast, _ bong Shot ig oe CLIN WINS IN SECOND HALF, With Score of 6 to 0 Against They Pluckily Beat the Ithicans Out, FINST HALF, Cornel .. Columbia SROOND HALF, SeIRAPS sents oer FINAL SCORE, THE LINE-UP. ty Erase Pam, ‘of Brown, (apeciat to the Evening Wort) / ¥., Nov. 1k—Cornell and iron of Percy Fi0ld this attefnoon, each determined to wronk revenge on the other for resent galling defeats that both teams have wuffered. Nelther eleven was in its best fighting form, but the injuries on both sides were abour equalized, For Corel! Capt, Costello was un- able to piay his position at right tackle on account of @ broken hand, and Lyon, ® green man, had to go into the Ine Instead, Halliday, Conell's stat full back, wae alo in bed haps, although ihe #arted tie game. Columbia was handicapped ‘by the loss, ee Sronne, right, and Carter, left half ter was counted in Klekin Hoth" wate. kept the Columbia Vea out of Th town of ithaca overfow At noon with @ holiday foo! juries, otha crowd, among whom were hundreds of | Columbia supporters. The day was cold |and cloudy. The gridiron wa muddy from Friday night's rain, This gave Go. jumbla the advantage of her six pounds excess weight, The Cornell eleven aver- | aged 170 pounds to Columbia's 18, FIRST HALF, After keeping Columbia at bay for %4 eninutes Cornell scored a toucelown | in the Inet few minutes of play. Corn ad worked the dail down to Columb Ws-yard Une, but clearly there was | time enough of he halt lett “for a chdown, Coagh Warner called out | (8 to!ftignt Halt-Back Martin, who had Been | playing & wohderty line-smashing game put In the fleet-footed Gibson, In instant the little general, Poll sent a quarter-back just behind Colum- bia's goal, and Gibson was right on tl spot and downed on the ball, [tw Cornell’é touchdown. Columbia alded Halladay to kick to goal, They reached but it bounded up from de and over the bar, Score— Cohenhia, 0. * SECOND HALF. Tu the second half Columbia won the game by more dint of bard playing, | Cornelt was forved to kick on het own S-yard line. All three of the Coum- bia's backs broke through, bdlecked Cornell's kick and got the ball, This took phe life out of Coach Warner's Lmen, On the next Aon prmey made © Yards and noon Oapt, Fi {went over for a touchdown. which te | soon turned Into a gol and the score ee uss! TO WEDDING BEFORE JAIL. BY WILLIAM A, WILLIS. YALE MELD, New Haven, Nov. 18.-¥Yale won her ennual football game with Princeton this afternoon by | & score ot 2% to 4, in a game which was | jy, drive, drive, dfive from beginning to | The score would indicate a crushing | Gefoat for. Princeton, but as a matter of tact the Tigers were in the game trom start to finish, and there was ney: time when they did not serfous- | Ont ly mongeg the Yale gon! line. ‘Tigers finish, them, Marveltous Plooe of Machinery. The Yale tepm is a marvellous pleoe of football machinery, But in spite of |, Piinaeton repeatedjy ‘eld for) downs, and when the ball was in the centre of the fleld had mo alffioulty in | naking big gains. Princeton got the bull inside the twenty- five yard line Yale took a brace, and | thelr Hine became a stone wall through which the ‘Tigers could not penetrate, Ditton'’s bad fumble of Veeder’s punt. This gave Yale that Aret score which is always so important an event in a toot: | ‘all game, Owislde of this play the Princeton quarterback played a supe game and with Tooker, Cooney and Me- Cormikk dit the star work of the day | for the Orange and Black, After to-day's game Hutohingon must | ba acknowledged one of the best “quar: terback/ on the football field to-ta; His tacking, running back of punts a) headwork, was superd, play marred his performance, Instead of kicking out of bounds from punted to the centre of the feld, giving | Princeton a chance to heel the kick, In| spite of the fact that he was on the \frty-three-yard Hine and at # pad angle, Tooker gucceeded in booting the \pall between! the posts, When he made this soore the betting was 6 to } all over the fleld that Princeton would not poore, After the players left the field the Yale avd Princeon crowds joined tn remarkable demonstration winding wp In front of the Princeton stand where the Yalé men, cheered Old Nas- eau uproarlously. Bor the game {t- | self tt can be eald that the frat halt showed no marked. supectority on. At noon the fun began, and it raged fast and furious for two hours, 4 benutiful weather brought the people | fm fhe ball ih ae PARIS, Nov. 18The Minister of | Aeros to Frineoton and Princeton War ee bape that the fitioen da Ge, ragere, te ae iand reat of feces Be ae bye Oig's ara Ss is to's tor place) 2, ce a pte in ee with the famous dust before the teams came on the fleld Yale sang EATS PRINCETON: 2310. ELIS’ MARVELLOUS TEAM PLAYS DEFEAT TIGERS Tooker's Drop op Kick tron from the Fie Saves Game Princetonians from Shut: out in Hard Fought Struggle— i Conn’ | Bigelow Bhoviin Vooder Morwe Fitin ‘Phe | Cracken, it gamely from start to not only was luck aaaln also & wystam of team play ly developed than their own, man, ©, dental plyyed of the }on the But every time} beautit scones Princet first palit would qurely have without a écore tut for E. young by the Used Bad Head Work. Then parting and only one} to the signals elected Fun Raged Furious, : The onvotive cheer. her “Boola” nex Fino who Teams on the Field. the dog from Hutchinson . pire, Hverts Wrenn, walved chrysanthemums, Just a few minutes before 2 o'clock there was = east corner of the gridiron, then the | Crowd parted and some thirty stalwart in, and Veeder and Morse, in ty Li Mt yard line. The Yale stands farly shook when a! perate charme to make ferocious bulldog with undershot jaw wearing &@ coat of blue trotted out on ate Moy. %—The Taers| o, qeid. ‘Then came a brass band. | af y play, which went phrough the entire reper | yards, forcing T-\ colre of Yale songs, each one being fol- vce Maia ath mamta & Hutchinson’s 65-Yard Run, ‘FIRST HALF, t 6 ARORA TEER TEN RR ETE ICL oY bo seman | PHUACHROR oii. v'e sviecneatielee se eevee tes.) eee vwian san SECOND HALF, . , a Princeton i. .....06> 4 ; FINAL SCORE, PROMO spike casicswcnccd orcs sien ciphers acetal | THE LINE-UP, (CADE) eB o University. of Mennsylvat Harvard, Chist) Liven A, Daly, Harvard and Wost- Point Assletant Linesman, A.C. Whiting, Comelf, hvon negro radiant in orange and black and looking for all the world likesthe card passed at the door of a palniess establishment, As the band | old Nassau to the gesticulation negro, every man. and woman Princeton stand syood up and +, It was a ul sig, one of those stirring which are seen only at) Yale, | on aad Yale-Harvard games. , Yale Enters the Field. disturbance at the norte i men shot out on the field, led redoubtable Sheviin, Then how those Yale stands did oheer! It was one for Shevitn, one for Veeder, one for Blinn and #o on down through the end squad winding up with three row. ing ones for the team iteelf, Princeton gave a locomotive winding up with three’ gtentorian Yales, at about which thme there was another ot the crowd and the Tiger squad suddenly appeaied. Cooney led them and Yale and Princeton stands allke cheered this lucky football player, line, he foolishly | Jim Robinson came behind his changes nis. own ten-yard |und the frat thing hp did wns to walle foot of the main nd and tell everybody in sight vy t 1 the. kee were fit for the battle of After the teams had had less five minutes of passing and Cooney and Sheviln to: Bho tan and the whistle blew for he teams lined up at the start ag FIRST HALF, oe The game began ab 215 o'clock ideal weather and The toss was won cat to defend the north wave her ay fareaiens ot ickcst oft te for Pat to “Pon came back firt either side, The second holt howeveb, P ‘On 7 Mmnle Phas) : demonstrated the adyantage of @ per-|a yard, but’ Princeton Was penalized 0 fect football machine over a lees ¢o- yetde for oft a ply Hute) 4 | hesive style of play, HS yess the. ball, a and Unyire Wrenn wanted to call the ball back for a Yale foul, but McCracken that Princeton should not sufter for Yale's einen olny and gave Mia: the centre of the field. in two tries, Princeton to the field aarty and they had to be | Kloked 10’ Vouder, wha ‘a downed 1" amused They followed the usual ous- |} Be Se gh ‘pola th iy stoied bine a tom, Yale. ottiging ite battle songe | Diunging. Morse going through jaan tae ‘ j right wing for two ra: Ry shouting back its new “Wow, wow, | three yards througit centre an wow" song, and foll Goh verse | 02810, hit: the Princetan lett wing Princeton Again Pensiized. On the next play Prineoton was 1B" GOK. | natised five yards for offside Whereupon Princeton got buay with, Pitun got through Cooney for a nf arf old Nassau, perhaps the most stirring | sates of all college songs. * eiried the ball to Pringes Yale took a des roe yards of was gord tween Hors don Lon i down, but FI sated the oul ttii ie Na was ENS ie and she, advantage lunging at the Prineeon When the band was cee sto trom i es ture, It’ Meant ino ok we wal i

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