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PORT i Cacti fap) ¢ EVENING W ULRESULTS EDITION | (*cirstetin Boots Openvoan™| PRICE ONE CEN’, iS Rey 4 [« Circulation Books Open 1 to. All” RE § H] LTS EDITION NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 95, 1906. / LE DEFEATS HARVARD 6 10 HERAUTOWRECKED, SLUMS HALPI 7 PRICE OND CENT, — HALPINOUT, — LUCK ALONE GAVE BLUE. . PENN 23100 © BE CHAIRMAN ' | KILLED IN CRASH... and White Eleven’ ‘Harvard Eleven Clearly Outplays Elis in Second Half, “Pina d Wiliam Halpin this afternoon resigned as County Chairman | ; ‘ ; i bares i th of Une Repubiloan Committee. By a vote of 27 to B the diatriat ‘Tearing Her Line Into Shreds, and Nothing Short rubbin enn, ‘ ' M nd is of Nichols’s Unfortunate Fumble Could Wife of the Former Congressman, Who Was Miss Mary Crocker, Loses Life at Steep Hill in Moreley’s Men Fought Valiant-| ly in First Half, but Superior Strength Finally Told. While attempting to carry the ball throug’ the New York’s dine in the New York University-Union College game at Ohio Field to-day William Moore, halloack of tte Schenectady team, sustained a cerebral concussion and wa» taken in an uncon: scicus condition to Fordham Hosoitai. At Haverford—Haverford, 28; Trinity, 21. At Washington—First half: Georgetown 0, Washington, 0. At Bethiehem—Lafayette, 53} Lehigh & At Ann Arbor—Michigan. 75; Oberlin, 0. Long Island City. Mrs. Francis Burton Hartson, wife of the former Representative in : Congress and Democratic candidate for Lieutenant-Governor, was killed He to-day by the overturning of an automobile in which she was riding in| cor Thompson avenue, Long Island City. Charles Templeton Crocker, leauers ¢euted Congressman Herbert Parsons Chairman, eed T HIO FIELD GRIDIRON, j LOCALS LUCAY-AT THAT. ait yc ‘ Have Prevented Tie Game. NICHOL’S FUMBLE P| FIRST HALF, 4 EDGREN GRAPHICALLY COST THE BATTLE | Yale wees sesseseses9 9 DESCRIBES HARVARD'S WILLIS’S OPINION, SECOND HALF. FIGHT FOR VICTORY, anna aie Vole hss vue BY WM; A. WILLIS. |Harvard ......s0eeeeses O)BY ROBERT EDGREN r erative) oeltaleete hg. FINAL SCORE. | STADIUM, CAMBRIDGE, ‘Nov.’ 2i9 her brother, Laurence 1. Scott, of | Cermmoin . ‘The hardest kind of tuck, nothing elde,|YAl€ ., sss sseceeeeeoees |eotting thee’ tho. taleGtarvid ae ll rieon five years ago, Invited the Scotts and her brother to take a trip im her French touring car to her country plac. on Long Island to-day. Mr, Crocker came down from New Haven last night And went to the Harrison home, at No, 16 FY avenve. Start On the Trip. The automobile, driven by Ravact, called at the Arlington Hote) for My. Sick Man a Suicide, WHITE PLAINS, N, ¥., Nov, B.— ree, W, MeClave, a . : BY BOZEMAN BULGER (Special to The Evening World.) AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK, Nov. %.—Playlng (rue to form, Penn defeat-| ed Columbla tn an old fashioned drube| bing this afternoon by a ecore of B to! ® The score In no way iniioataes the real strength of the Quaker team, as the rd-and blue striped Miows could 4 100 TO! SHOT TAKES second half. ~The fatal moment came when Nichol’ made his muff. The swift Crimson half-back bad just come in the 9 terete atria ne ee eee Gin Ent Had had ho oitortunity te warm up. It was the toughest kind of luck that hé should be under the punt At such a critica! point, Whem Yale Took Hope. Squires carried the ball ten yards more on & tandem play, reqoning Yale's forty. five-yard line, ‘This made twenty-five yards, approximately, for Harvard on straight line plunges through the Blue Carr tried a hurdle play and made a yard, Foster tried the centre and also of an invading army, At 1 o'clock the | streets were packed ¢rom wall to wall, Crowd Swallowed In the Stadium, Any other athletic Seld in America would have been overwhelmed in the flood of humanity that poured upon Harvard's stadium, But thete were cores, of gates. All arrangements had mude a yard With one yard to Brill made a desperate try through Forces, but Yale held ke a rock and the: bali went to the Blue, Roome made two been made to handie the greatest crowd “e San Francisco, and his wife, and Constant Ravaet, the chauffeur, ue FINAL SCORE, + At Pittsburg—Car''sle Indians V1; W. and J., 0. Sd shine A Hes te with | Harvard ewes Oj to-day, ‘The great Adium, he Gia were the other passengers in the car, Mr, Crocker had two ribs broken, | Cen At West Point—Army, 17; Syracuse, 0. afternoon, ‘The much-vaunted Yalo Drea ean ayn bere fom suy, es I ae Mr. Scott sustained a fracture of one rib and internal injuries, Mrs. Scott | | ne h, 24; B 6 ER Lree DATES to simancnt by the | x THE LINE-UP. 4.000 football worshiping pligrims. Aa Wwas painfully bruised and the chauffeur w At Springfleld—Dartmouth, 24; Brown, 6. Crimeon, and but for Nichola's. untor- , nope’ thougahe :aiaany baie A as painfully bruised and the chauffeur wrenched is shoulder THE LINE-UP, At Annapols—Annapolis, 12; Virginia Polytechnic, 6. tunate fumble of Hayts punt on the | / | sta: | takin Wee Chey arhos teora ante be dane Francieco two days ago and registered | Da Tt | Naseer aie Putting! At Philadelphia—Swarthmorp, 50; Wesleyan, 6. Tetioee, es Pie ask tive tareos. iteety he Sol Maglite seg ser Bo of the cota dado Rote thee | Roam Lg. At New Brunswick--Fordham, 17; Rutgers: 6, The Yale tine was torn to shreds all | o” ridge long lines of spectators could be Pn taeay a Tanpkolacte. at or ren Beha ie ——— —+¢e——- peabiy the second half and the few seen winding down the streets and ‘coker ; “ Ww . - 7 ms that it did hold and get the bal) i of Cambridge, the college towa, ee ce ok eee shine’ aa LATE WINNERS AT NASHVILLE, | Harvard developed a detense which was They looked tke black ents, ey, Bareiedh, J. his. Wore Mas NEW OF Eg oe Hn ; Fifth—Little Elkin 6-6, Double 4-1 place, Steel Trap. Pes cog heh bale Ceara rrapie ibm Meier ties 2 ost tle wy Webinhtied, tant; q volact ie 4 x + : “ ny ances. It 16 no exaggeration to shy that 4 prs a lib seo =F peat ‘Soe alg, war Sixth—Nine 6 5 Sincerity Belle 1-3 place, Sam, Weirthseibviphaned Yale 6i\ iteouwy the over ‘woldh, Wasa cosntlees Saga Xf in the history of America’s greatest — and Mrs. Scott at 10 o'clock to-day and| Sydney Hull Chambers, | twenty. from there went to the Harrison house, | Years old, was found dead from Where Mrs, Harrison and her brother | fae Joined tie’ party. Mr. Harrison had left the house but a few moments. before, promising to run down to Long ! ad this afternoon. As the big mac™.. loft have made the count much larger, but 885) cor an irresisunble desire on the part treet, tube | Of Shable to exchange punts with Col- fastened in his mouth. Chambers had | lina, of Columbia. The Penn punter suffored ® great den! from indigestion. | was much superkr > the Columbia maa and would frequently gain as much as ame, Tho wide entrance swatlowed thélr tens of thousands, and, once. inside, hundreds of passageways like Chose im the fanciful Coliseum of Rome carried them to their seats, when for the frst “ime in the game she fi 7 ~~ aw as little as twenty yards betweon | the” Ba fay Quel Dilawar Bail BENNINGS WINNERS. bi ohv and @ noore and hurled her |/@nd Barr for three yards, id heaviest men, most of them freshly in Th " @ Elis Rip 'Em Up. FIRST RACE—The Cure (8 to 1)\ pao nate yhige i ste folly Quit! wot through the Harvard left ‘| wing for 14 yards, and Bigelow made 6 Fancy Bird Scorches the Lay- ers at Bennings—McCor- the Harrison mension Mrs. Hartiaon's wo little children waved a good-by saiute from the window of their nursery, ‘The trip through Mantattan ond “} aeross the ferry was without Incident, $7,000,000 Wil! Sustained, MILWAUKEE, Nov, %—Sudge Car- penter to-day In a lengthy decision mus- tained the will of Mrs, Lasette Schan- twenty yards in one interchange of kicks, Shortly after midday the hundreds ot flag and button venders around the outer gates began a rushing business, mack Won $10,000, Sun Ray 3,, 1, Eohodale (20 to 1 for place) 2 Inst twenty yarde unth she got the | much sought-for touchdown. Harvard put a team on the fleld to- SECOND RACE—Fancy Bird (20 fay which was the equal, if not the superior, of Yale, and rhe worst she | More in the same a ut left wing seemed powerleas to toon the plunges, and Quil idived through’ Brill} for D> yards, putting the hall on Har- vard's S-yard line, Harvard held better on the next play, and Quill barely made Under the grand stands the main ¢me trances were pobring thousands toto the lower end of the fleld, where the new bleachers stood. In silence the «ray wall to the east gradually tumed to ‘ teeta Cee iy ie, | Selm And adenitied the Inetroment to! and by 1 o'clock the west stand, whicn| “BY FRANK W. THORP. to 1) 1, Nellie Buon (1 to 2 for place) anciia have got wan a tle. Bill Rold| 4¥arUs between Parkerand Rorabure | blue. In the woot Harvard's crlmeon Ra the car slowly out Jack-| probate. The will makes Mrs. Jacob y " } | Harv 4 * gon avenue until he reached ‘Thompson | Heyl the chiet beneficiary of the $7.00. | had been reserved for Columbia, began (Special ta The Bvening Work) | @ Royal China 8. bins proved himeelt one of the greatest | oftaide pliayy Wale wat ink aa trae {oF | banked up like a Cambridge sunset. The F Avenue junction, where the Queons |™ state, "| to aasumo a tinge of light blue, made| BENNINGS RACH TRACK. DP iplok! THIRD RAGECPure Pepper (8 to |ftanshal! Meatogints developed in the hin- | ahtning “ana QUE wrigelod Hon UKE | vell leaders came out, and stacked thelr O im centre to the tw AVe- yar = nh County Court House and Bt. John's lighter by @ liberal sprinkling of white, Seeplech nd the Bennings Special opp tory of the game, His optimism In the | Site to Hecvekt pity ree tne, Pi cept mekaphones near the walt Hospital are located. ‘Thompson avenue | Marshall Fleld Not So Well, ull] made a desperate effort to make The Philadelpila contingent, which had |wore excellent features. at the track 1) 1, Knight of Elway (7 to 10 for) face of ive Crimson’s bad record Is now @ understood, Sull the crowd was silent, Harvart ie @ wide, smooth thoroughiare, ran : sov felectid the east sland, was A little slow lace) 2, Palm Room 3, a fest down and got R iby an inch Tine AAS Bounty aete CHICAGO, NOV. %.—~The phyeislans { vd oo | thls afterroon, making part of what) P ) edt He hid the most powerful football], The Harvard rooters yelled lustily tor | @lfix, patelotically ribboned and gowned ning out into the Country chrough M/of Marshall Pield. fry iasued a bul {n arriving, and for some time the Co-!was the most attractive card of the! Ap the Crimson to hold, as the ball was] tn crimson, waved oMmson. flags, Bi Mparssly wetted neighborhood, It is u) to-day in which they declare that lumbla rooters were faced by long,| meeting. The Bennings Special had a FOURTH RACE—Banker (7 to 2)| team that jae represented the Crim-)on the twenty-yara line, ‘On the ‘Arat 5 ed offmaon flags, but favorite speedway, for/motor car drivers, | teneral condition, ag far ‘wound | gaunt rows of empty benches, lendid fleld, including Jocind, who, 1, Louis H, (2 to 1 for place) 2,807 In yeargaamd ne knew it. try Harvard held MWke a. rock and | tho timo to yell had*not'yet come, And hr concerned, Is cord. but that a, par TL} opened se . LA fo in whieh Har- | Bigelow couldn't make an Inch. Yale | still, lke the endios# and dnehanging About a mille beyorl the courthouse | rue'Of the howele land lower Umbs, due}, At 160 the blasts of @ brags band eave|had never been asked to go this route! Jocund 3, Some Mea of the panic @ fy. | then tried Quill, and he went through | tide o¢(a great river, the 44,000 streamed fe the crossing of Hulse street 84 }ig an injury of the spinal cong, "makes | life to the occasion, and presently 1,60) pefore. Banker and Peter Paul looked vard's persistent omashes through the Baulres for thre yards, putting the ball |), throust. she: watte i’ Mhompeon avenue. Ravast approached {a promnteis extremely grave. Columbia students, headed by vhe horn |the cholce of the others. In three of] FIFTH RACE.—Ormonde's Right] Ale line threw the Blu» into may be/ ihe Htteen-vard tine this crossing at high speed, having just @ long ap-hill oltmb from Junction of Jackson avenue, At Last the Noise Begina, suspense ends at last, the races the fields were enormously hore blowers, came into aight around the east Stand, Across the field the procession appreciated from the fact that Yale first down, and Quill was tried for the put ten substitutes in in rapid mice play. His effort was blocked by Brill, wh: natled him before he had advanced (7 to 5) 1) Bad News (9 to 10 for Schooner In Distress, place) 2, The Clown 3 But Over marched, playing and singing “Glory 60 to 1 Shot Second. cealon in the last eighteen minutes of {5 in Yalo's band stand hi Heth the front |, NEWPORT, RB, 1%, NOV, tA two~ ” to sh taheinse oO |@ foot, Harvard's kamenees in hold |!n Yalo’s and 6 huge brass Geek tac toe Nar hand Ot ihe chmatiour| Rated’ eonconér, wth “hee, iaainingen| SELB Aroma the fun! pinst RACH-$40 added; selling: three: | “SIXTH RACE—vane Holly (8 to 1)| Pim: Harvard used but four aubst!:| tne for downs on hor own Li-vard line | trombone rose on end and glenmed tn soured he left hand si , | one, was dlahited cant of West pend, he? fal rene. and upward; even furlongs, Co- tutes throughout the game, and man|set'the Crimston stands wild with en-| (he euhshine, One second more ands ot aereee tanta mates Wecks te | REM toe help, Lo-day,. The Untied El: We ovag none Penauylvania | Kinbie courte petting, | 1 Northvilie) (even for place) 21 ror man tier ream outplayed the Blue, | Mit OM ist. neue her own goal | blare drowned the ehaiter in the otowd. b her abeiwtan PH es ts a hy Pel ce ae nasa aeads al FL | Gambler 3, Yale owes her viotory as much to Bis: /line, Harvard decided to plunge. Forbes | Yale flags fluttered and waveds Yale with her back to the right hand | to 4 of the car, Mr, Scott sat between | fouRh she had to return them, facing the front. Steering Gear Falls, ° Collision in the Sound, “WPhompaon iavenue 1 not ourded at] GREDNPOINT, L. 1, Now ~The Mulee street, There is an asphalt oi was real football, Colum’, headed by Capt. Fischer, trotted on the field ‘ followed immediately ‘by Lensndventse Vania. won the toss-up and Shows south 1, Carter Kicked nayivanks yards line, rose , the fleld| was split off for a tandenm, but Morse ome sone {i SAS eee ‘through and nailed him, without ng the ball utter Nichola or, MURNED MMthen completely” tooled , a Harvard owes her defeat fe ‘entire Yale eleven on a fake run, to this muff, For the game iteelf it) Wendell smuggling the boll around can de anid that it was cleanly played | E08 cea. Pr tried a quarterback rust from e#nrt to finish before the greatest but lost a yard, Roome getting through crowd that ever gathered In one enclos-|and downing the rurmer. ure in this country, Yale deserves all Harvard Forced to Kick rooters piped up & feeble root, Haryard, acrows the way, wat in dig/ nified silence until fourteen yell lead. ers, carrying gay orimson badges gal- lantly on. thelr coats, stalked down along the side lines, Yale’s band struck up a Yalo tune, and In a ment thousands of rooters were from Ki of Biway, who beat Pal Room yf for t bs A agg sng Loule H. Beaten a Nose FOURTH ‘tow ne, Special xards \ She est racine Soe dle wy } te i credit tor her victory, but it ie & sory ing: ore tebe 7 , oe Fehon one atter all. By no possible Tine of| Wendell made, ® ote and centre, |e on «fn te wot that cn i ‘ r It be that she wes) decided to @ no chances preva! Woman Burned to Death, oe also ~ Vanites al Laine pit pend hints te ig ar back for @ kick, He| Against the mighty battle lin of Hii Yale, NEWARK, N, J, Nov. %—Mre. Annie / sixty yards to For Yale can wipe the arth with Mare ul made the running in the crowd supported its| Dunted to Yale» fomy-yare line, Jones . nine leap jawed by Jocund and Banker, |, Th? Harvant grabbed the ball, but made no effort to vatdieny éa9, med ‘to death’ ad tar, Nomar to, ae | Hurt Funning saaily for the team loyally and out-cherred Yale #1) come back. Roome tried Lenry's end DUt| xy yearn to play good Cootball Just wate ic avenue, at ‘noon the pace quickened through the day. The Crimson team of! fatied. He made a half-ba: ok and | Bil pla ji while preparing dinner. Up to the leaders. | 1905 will go down In football history as| Starr was downed on Harvard 9: yard play, \ - ‘ topped, and then Jocund|one which got the roughest deal dame| line. On the exchange of punts Har Yale, Yale, through the line she goes, \ Yale, down with all h # foes, her fame by viecory ed McCormick Won $10,000, ‘dhe from, and ; drt a nose the post. Jo aan eta? ie pethana” va Rod! alt" tcRonee: be wea third, shires vard guined 12 yars | ‘Wendell was split off from the tandem | but Ronme got through and nalled him. Burr kicked to Jones, Bril was down shot downed the fortune ever gave the Crimson, FIRST HALF, Yale, You can rely on Old Bi, Bit Yale, Eq q Bad News Bad Favorite Tt was 10.02 when the oMotals, Mo-|the fleld Wke a Y -backer on the X-yarl line, Crimson rooters sat etill and listened longed tts St, for i for bere: Clung and Dashiell, called Captains | ttle quarter 8.) Crim ‘ { leased Ita Bt, oul for ninety. ealetndupoard: fi and Seventy yarta'sa| Knowiton and Shevlin to the centre of | Zones ried m qugrtar-BaGk. run, bul /reaneet uy ae tho iaat word Med away, rental Tantei ere tng. | the field and warned them that: thelr |ngok ‘tothe Vale Atteen-yad line. Yale answering defiance. By thin time patehea | 2 Wehaeten ear ‘Gh: ‘and Jockey. wat In, ¥ Aecisions would be basden on the strict) was forced to kick, and Starr caught ‘ay In the huge bowl-like stadi : Bad Flood in| ‘ MO waaay 4) etter of football law, the ball on the fifty-one-yard line, On Tew and far between. It ip ful A is in Italy, & Ma Bhat et ° | 4 the tone and wiected (o| this exchange of punta Harvard gained 20 vars end ty end of the gran f : . i 5D ‘aay Harvard wes, the f. Starr claimed that heland 1s yards across ‘ Nov. flood hires ge! Won easily, hi th goal, putting the sun fifteen yard: ; . . BM bs a : ; Fancy ‘Bird raced to the front at the The penal alin ppench pricy ‘there i teemendour bre ba Pe cor vel dpa ines Harvard's Answering Chorus. } 7 4 way to the|in } claim war a A whowed the the start, made ali the rinning in the ] ond, ant won by tha With Start holding the ball Burr tried for a place Kick, but went Just to the |t left of the goal post. It was a superb try from the distance, and Vale stands cheered Burr, Re gut for Yale from the 2-yard Dall golng out of bounds in the centre of the feild Yale was off aide on the kick cheering from 40,000 throats as the teams lined up for play. Bigelow Kickal off for Yale, to the ib-yard line, where Pa foe ye d came baok, 10 yards, Harvar Tia“ up ‘forthe tandem play, Brit split off, but Only mado two yards, 80 ure dropped back for a punt. The bab e, back stretch In fth, where Bad a a ech aN stretch, Is monde’s Rig?! and Debar {n behind. In i Mie atrete Ormonde's inh ¢ and f® drive won, by "ye. evaths from News, who beat The Clown three engthe for the mlare dane Holly Galloped In. ¢ monstrous crowd rose, bet | mytiad. fags, when the Hf vg section stood and sang: Hard liek for poor Old Bll, Tough on the blue, Now ali cogether, Smash them and break through, ‘Gainst the Line of erimson tava was od 4 en ey ean" i, * Salar Poe Acro a ed eC A make Gresd| \aic Caste ee mala . ward; ‘And & elateonth. was downed in ie ya ik: aught It. 1 Kling bim, Quill And di wh Yale, Telifare Had Tumble. : Morse tried and was also downed, with-| Buys ought. Ih 1m tiene ands eT oe Ae» craaliabl Aarbnncan’ anil Papie the Yalo: Suliepaek ig" Fin, it’ * e Ms Harvard Guard, Burr, Hurt. iS oy Roome pimted to Marvanl’s %-yard ‘ Rt hoor, Wan sanity. Ar line, Rquines on a tandem play Went! py, so badly tnjured that the id Meijer Bre 4 el aty Bane Mh + te through Forbes's for eiaht aie Bw up for several minuten. Yale, Yale, Yalet i UC totip | Sances was used agin and made two} sumed play, however. On a, tan- — i ba ye it off play worked | nlav Houlres went through Tripo Rah, rah, rah, Holly ‘made t p ‘under ite al yards, Carr g through varie 4 . meno vinths nathan fare Forbep for chat distance, Squltes next It the Yale cight wig for two Rah, rab, | They hetd t Jo's Mex wing and made Squires then made it first down Rah, rah, 1 wid team b y lng _b; tting through two. ganda On bes dourie pee eat ral. toe tart ae Pe gee Harvard Harvard, Morvarat