The evening world. Newspaper, November 24, 1906, Page 1

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_RESULTS ED _WHATHDR—Oloudy to-night and Sunday, FINAL ITION PRICE ONE ‘2 ‘AG CENT. —CARUSOILL, MAY TAKE LONG. REST AND NOT SING Herr Dippel Preparing to. ~ Assume His Role in | = “La Boheme.” FINE IS NOT YET PAID.) | Tenor Paroled Until Monday, | While Lagyyers Prepare Flis Appeal. HIS FIRST AUDIENCE CARUSO’S REAL JURY. Comment of the Messagero, news- paper of Rome. Italy, on the con- yictlon of the opera tenor; "Caruse will appe t the raat verdict will be give the neonle of Mew Y¥ in the manner in which they recelve him the fir time he appears defare an audien after, his condemnatidn* Despite Direktor Conried who was found guilty yesterday of an- the assurances of the Herr that Enrico Caruso, noying women in the Centra) Park Monkoy-house, wit! sing in “La Bo- heme™ at the Metro: an Opera-Houne next Wednesday night, it is quite lke- dy that he will fuil to ‘appear. Herr Herr Con: the role -of Rodolfo. which Caruso Bdvertined (o assume, “Caruso ts ill, although he !s not con- find) to his rooms in the Hotel Savoy. The strain of his trial tn pollee court seriously affected his voice. He consulted a th Jalist to-day, and the ar that a long rest Will be necessary to restofe him to hls _ normal condition. 4 ‘Outside or there is another constd > Op- erate against his appetranco Wednes- day night. There might be somo awk- ward happening during that would spoil toe who! Opera-G There tx no doubt ¢ goers would remaln loyal to Caruso, interviews With Metropolitan box hold era and music lovers show that. But st-woulit be possible for persons who do { ht tike Caruso and wi wullty of the offenses charged aga ——him-to_telac_a_small rot during perforniitice bys ensuring House” at him: Horr Conried hus be having a lot of trouble with the Chorus! One Dashes Into Spectators in sim EIGHT HURT, TWO FATALLY ‘WAUTO RACE Driver Kirk and. Machin- ist Barrett May Die from Injuries, © CARS IN COLLISIO Homestretch at Point Breeze. (Special to The Eeventng fWorld,) PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Nov. 4. mon were Injured, two perhaps fatally, in Elgat when a Apperson running the fifty-mile open race, at Point Breeze this afternoon, crasied through the rail. mg on the home stretoh, plunged tnto~ a acore of automobiles. mowed down a crowd of spectators, Two of the victims were Kirk, driver, and Eddte Barrot, Sis machi, Set, The tatters serioomy injured may dio, also succomb to the injuries he aus- tained. ‘The accldent cratted the most Intense excitement and fir some time {t was impoanible to ascertatna the fut | extent of the mishap. | ——_—.—-—.- i CAR RUNS DOWN BOY AS MOTHER car putate Both Legs of Her Child. .| MILLER STILL IN FORM: the ae | One of the other victims may UNS-70 I HIM lord drem ole { MILLER MAKES. “CLEMN SWEEP OF ~—BENNINGS” CARD Star Jockey Has Remark- able Day—Long Shots in Special. | | .Gets Workman. ,Home | | First and Repeats with | Temeraire. |BY FRANK W. THORP. (Special to The Evening World.) BENNINGS RAC ‘TRACK, Nov. 2 Miller was again the sensation 6¥ the | day at Benning: He put over the first) sinner in Workman, a 3 to 1 favorite. Then he landed Temeraire a Winner lin the maiden. race, and as elimax ne } won with Banker In the Seventh Ben~ ea_Bpecia! Banker was a 10 to 1 jot. In his lart race he wee beaten as) far aa one could shoot a bullet, but ail | horsea are alike t6 Miller and he seems | to rejuvenate -them and throw electric energy into thelf jadei mlacles. Workman has not been in the money in any race this or hay Tem- @raira. nof Banker, yet Miller won with afl three of them. The curd brought, out the biewest | crowd of the meeting, and ax Miller ts | always the carrier of the public money | the victories were wel received. In the Special Miller crowded Cederstrome all through the 1ast furtong, but Doyte’a | cinim_of foul _was waved aside, “This | also met the approval of t track was fast and weather clear and cold. = 2 Jockeys in Seuabble. | | Pretension went to the front and made HT e OX- pumped anda halt ram_Pretension= Ormonde's Tight two and for the pitce Miller and Shit! them concerning th sion was disgualfed, up und aie bumping. Treten- the stewards de- | to save her Running four-year-o}d | | rhe ate ctding that uy) * Arde sia ing reached over and Nov. 24, bits t 1278 Slunipia couree e crowd, The | by Fatheriens— Tho Worl AY, NOV THE SCORES At West Point—Syracuse, 4; Army 0. At Easton—Lafayette,’33; Lehigh, 9. At Phitadelphia—tJefferson, 11: Medico, 0. At Springfield—Brown, 23; Dartmouth, 0. At Minneapolis—Minnesota, 6; Indiana, 6. At Swarthmore—Swarthmore, 21; Amherst. 0. ‘t Annapolis—Nav Virginia Polytechnic, 0, At Phitadeiphia—Pennsylvania; 22; Vila Nova: V2, { Phiadelphia—First hal LATE RESULTS AT-NEW ORLEANS, Fourth—Bélmere 6-8 Meadow Breeze 3-1 pl. Hannibal At Chicago—First half: Chicago, 26; Nebraska, 5. Haverford, 34; U. of N.Y. ate we [ “ Circulation Books Open to AIL.” | _ EMBER 24, “RESULTS EDITION | PRICE ONE CENT, 19006. fense Against Faster and Trickier Yale--Only Score Is Made in First Half, but Final Whistle: Prevents Another in the Second. _o GRAPHIC STORY OF YALE’S BRILLIANT GRIDIRON VICTORY: BY ROBERT EDGREN. — YALE FIELD, New Haven, Now 24.—Yale was faster, trickier and ——¢—__— PLAY BY PLAY AS YALE OVERWHELMED CRIMSON ELEVEN | Harvard BY HARRY BURKE. i NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov. 2—Forty} SECOND HALF, thousand delirfous football devotees this 2 Yale = - GAME BY HALYES. FIRST HALF. Yale = 6 - 0 0 NG WORLD av Star ork. _Owne! Won gually Btartees 1183" Belle Str Lee TISL* Azelina Notter ies Yada Beckman Bon Mot Ba Sohn Sacamdaga De Delphie Plantago: Away fy Hagan . Milse Koehn or Host race snplon Start good Chandler. turns... Christian E— $4) added;-eeliing; threo yearotie amd upward; ‘Time—1.20 1 “Mr. MeMurtrte. Track Fast. seven furlonge, vik. Ww! iy » ae 100 Jou Tme—O, Ne Gi +-——_____—_ __ Eighth Day at Bennings. inner, chodale, Transmute, Scarfell, Incantation, Azelina ran her race. Steeplechase; Won eaally. four | aa men. | the mm) yard aly ‘Whe gates of Yalo Field were thrown, roome Lp esien Re sueda piece tenance nape would ineyftably have scored again open at noon. Immediately-the crowd | —— sie zi {filed in. Before J o'clock the stands ‘bil jout of bounda’ on Yale's. forty. | {1 tte Anal whistle ‘had not cut short were balf fled and all the entran Yard Mne. It was Yale's ball her headlong advance. Haryard was i Veoder made five ¥: we jammed. ade five yards through Jett Yale unaergradumtes sent the the frst! tin rights Munem PL Ae pierce through | Potten but not disgraced, }fah rah challenge across the fleld and folled the Grimson with gn onside CHA? perce ee re ee, famtest ever: played the cclloge duel Was on, Song and cheer |which wade oieay eu oe Mes eK jbetween Yale and Harvard, and demon- feuee A and voile i e trated the complete success of the new fan sages Mauer ie See Fules.-Tf there wan any” libfeeling tween Yale ang Haryard it wore away then made a magnificent t an the battle-taged, and-atter tt was Jones fh the end of the maou | ! p rs, siigping through out- all over th cote: of | spectators. Ike “an'eel, Lo Was Joined’ in. we coloheat Ghent clouds finally down—with a ten-yurd 22ned 1h a lopration, Yale _ serpent Tickets Sold Days Ago. sah : a cated THE BET be fancies -orerthe victory, while Harvard 0 i ine. ‘The Crimso: c d Yale Ol c] The samo was unprecedented: in that | thou proved (utrong! on thoreeet i shouted for Yal from the bleachers, tall the Uckets were sold many days to break ugh, and then] Burt Of Harvard, was | the greatest ago. Scores of Ucket speculators ¢ eomyed a drop klek for gale! of the crimson team. “He out- to New Hu in“ the hope the ball going over the line { dd Veeder —espectally-tn—the—second- autebourds on eve: ts DOURNT at y yet Lots pack: "geon,—Yate‘s-Omen:—— Crimson, Beaten but Not Disgraced, Puts Up Game De= — afternoon’ saw. te “Yale bulldog. kim- betes nut! stronger than Harvard in the great; 0 trice at and menace the Harvard gridiron | Harvard 0 |squad. It was the record crowd of the Serie ee (Bame on’ Yale Wield: to-day-by-8 scote as j year, “drown” In anuctpation of —the of 6 to—-0._In-gameness there waa |Merest and most exhilarating ply-skin FINAL, SCORE nothing to choose. Out pluyed and 1 jael of the age. fe & s it Yale field buted over with enthu-| Yale = = = mm 6| cored Won in the first halt, Harvard ———=— ft ‘slasm. On all sides the crimson clashed came out for the second and put up’ Jwith the, blue in good-natured rivalry Bie eps 0 \ (When Me teams lined up the betting skeen a grand fight. Playing with des- was at even money, berate aggressiveness Harvard kept _ forty-one, Foociat trains beodiht the THE LINE-UP, the ball In Yale's territory up to the owd to New Haven, e first train st 2 RR Naw voc adie fenat walled ied Position. Harve last five minutes of play, twiee com Ee nto Yaletown at 10 o! Every tow | Pigs or nGatora | 12 Within Tve yards of the coveted Fj Jininules acter that long trains of cats | Brides i .. Burr | Yale goal Mne, Harvard played her~ ee unloaded enthusiasts from “Boston and | dockenberger Park. ‘ Le eeteey tis! Sain ghiaae self out to the last ounce of. her ; {Phe collesé town wan swamped with | Lixelow Pierce | S#Fength, and then the bulldog mado | visitors. ‘They overflowed sidewalks into ih. Starr yOne of the traditional Yale ralilcs, ¢ |the st There were as many “ys sraul |foreed Harvard back to her own 12- and-thea Lane Wetted godine. pam Acgirt tna Crimson: cloak climbed Into ing as See {tha Haryard stand. on. Yale-Fteld-wier Pasian * ae F ied Knox as right hait}/the vanguard of the 40,00. She had [Mele squads ready t0 doo “Ttoome made threo yardn through the] (%0 Hours t walt, and shy took a large There wal 6 Indication t and Yule was pertalized five yards, '&4 apple from some myaterlous) pocket would ‘mark te; most ihe play. Veeder dra ‘or! and began to nibble. Other falr_par- Jelevens) havo ever exparienced. 3 ie PEARL elt aa ae sans of Harvard arrived in bevies and Game In Detail: | flocks, “‘Phey ‘did not have any apples, Scores Tonohdown, | but every one -carried a “Harvard tag. SEE CMON, MAT oan TW OTH tap the recent perforin af tbat weapon would scarcely be overlooked. Alm, there are othera who would’ bol Breatly pleased to cco Herr Conried “huinitiated. z Any inaulting imterruption of Caruso in the course of @ perforsAnce would pot only demoralize dln —but_the- prima Gonna and others, The artistic. tem: periment ta extremely sensitive ~o-out- wide Influences, A report that Caruso ve the Hotel Savoy and go Into seclusion until fa) Tho final Gecision ‘of his case could) not , bo confirmed), This is Caruso’. frst (Continued on Second Page.) ; epee CAUGHT BY ELEVATOR | IN HOTEL BELMONT. Victim Falls to the Basement and Dies Instantly—Eleyator | Boy Shocked, Matthew Kelly,” twenty-olght) years | old! of No, East Twenty-seventh nitect, a hovseman at the new Hotel nd Mtreat, tried to UMP oUt. of K pasdcnger vievator as it ded the third floor of the hotel to- A caught by the floor of the car before he could Glear ths door- +) WHY. and: crushed Against the side of the shar. Vie car passing upward, he AEH TO tho agama With a fra sttired ' i his body mangled a 4 eee y ixled and one leg VDte Peter J, Givens, th house. bhy- faiotan, examined Ue body ate lay At the bottom of the elevator shaft. He sald Kelly had been killed Instantly. ‘ne only eye witness to the tragedy the elevator boy, John Grady, who no overcome by the horror geawhat e had ween that the police went Wim to Bellevue for treatment. He je He viet (oner, His Homo te nt No, 405. Weat ' Wity-fourth atreet, reality ioe apt but the childmistook the meaning of her frantic gestures and kept coming. Too Iate the motorman, James Han- latty,) saw..the boy's danger, He grolind down his brake, but the car steuck the chfld and ttung him back~ | Ward aff the track and almost putof the path of perli—almost, but not quite, ‘The Uttle fellow's feet and ankles lay inaide. tie ecastermost rail, He cried out only ance aud then, mercifully, he became senseless, ‘ho motuee uever stopped screaming. Her cries brought hundreds oi pur jons almost instantly.” Women an the crowded pe and in the streec fulton away, or Furned hysterical, Ag dsual, men shook thelr fists at the white-faced: inotorman, but nobody actullly ofered to harm him. ‘i : Policeman Kremer had tteradl drag the boy's body out.of the mother's arms, He ten with the tiny Nttle vie ‘tim to Engel's drug store, at the Six- teenth street crossing, and there he ap- plied firet ald, wi the! crazed woma! rolling upon the ftoor in the peony: 0! her grief and a huge, morbid crowd watching him work, untll Dr, Ray came with’an ambvlance, — ~ to Bese Watt OXFORD, England, Nov. %—In the fleld sports to-day between Oxford Un{- yersity and the London Athetic Club, A-gl! Stevens, a° Rhodos scholar of | Y won the hammer-throw with 140 | foot g lnichka, i 5 ‘ ‘he Londan Athtetlo “Club Wan the | winner of the contest by slx events to four, oe FAIRGROUNDS RESULTS. NW ORUBANS, Nov, 4—The races here’ to-da follows: One-half Fur nad to 0,4 ace), 2; Sheer, ‘Time, Wh 2-6, RECOND RACE-~Thr nlld=—pild (6 to & and Brogaimet @ toh for plac ie; Ld 4-5, Mhind Race—Mile and seventy yards.-- PA Pomt (4 to 1 and 7 to 5); fel (409 b 8) Orly eis 38 Aor, Piney ui ty uarters of/ a > 2, 1; Beau » 2; JoLound, 1982 Ownir—d. Ms 41259) Tindale, Shit Bulwark, Sonoma Jiile, ng ODES, 6 cholgn Relea ine ir H RACE god, Won, handit Tan below fann lds:) mite "inher, tr ze) Te Mt 1253) Orn 783" Noteor 34 Vol 4-; Heckman Pia ‘Oxfont was bo: Orphan Lad, Ing Lenty ts: 3 Ocean Spray 8 BAS 0 Notrer Host thing Bailing | Nemesia hed no speed. and im dockeye Panigue 3 Doyle. Nellie Burn 0) GL urns ? Grand Duehets 7 Momer Cromina, avannes fe Reldmore, ‘Ormonde’n Rlkbt had nd excuse, tlon. Under one corner of the af Lear and stand yard.en downs. | Fracer Takes Parker's Place. of mingled and rims flowed Davin | Whon 2 oft Ik the grind stands marches, ball on ling and made a away gtodually through @ huse brillant a broken fel sae thin pales H of Cr lene them a Reta he Yate impeatte and nd nt thousand: Jast Bulldog on the Ficld. | then went thro veda 12s¥ blue an flew 2. tat t no yards. i oat” fame! t 2k Haryat rd fia der ther triel 1 | on Har $ S-yarst roxvism of | forvard nace ie Orr Replaces Starr. 1 soudy sand now PTarvan re ace Sta e cheered and: wamoed. S put Burr 1s th the | end irr kicked The bay and the Dulldog trotted back for twenty yards i | pack alae again. Tho enthugingm was etarted! ‘Lincoln. then cacried the ball to Har | Veeder then 8 vari's thirty-fve-yand Une, i Foatar feoc aie teeny wanda gour yarda more. A kick sens the | Contin Congnted on Sixth Pagad “5 hy Y i on, Mra, Mathaia 8 11, wit etcen ; - The game-it Getail was as follown d-held-firmly on the first. at-| ; Fons Aare Oe Pa MSDN ITA amet OFF 8 | Oni Onfarcaent te. EERO CE Sy | yalotwon the tows and Harvard had | tea atten tae wre rat At | Acroas the way the Yale stands alled al talior at No. 438 East Seventeenth passing him. Lhe de | Pog 7 3 to kick oft Atte Noonie-eor through the right|#owly, ‘The vast gray expanse of xtreet, to-day saw him knocked down! one. : + 4 Burr kicked to Jones on ft d line, line for a touchdown, er Kicked | weather-beaton bodrds took on a hue 3 Another for Miller. } 20 0 and the Blue took thir yards! | Ui rvand 004 op 33) ADE by 8 epceiling trolley |— tne: sixth /1ynnhoa, raced tole) ear . ip Bore fitted te aitth themsats Bre rar mart geen oe ulae oe car on Avenue A a few doots from her) tront and showed , i abated Riraltvington i 5 rd blocked {Pee Malt | pan satire fs ar ba aia v8 home — ti whenteotctheoar entirety be bantaie tid Sean ae et ae = = = karla con her tne oe isonet Sisiea vaaasiare Tein SaPronTPTTS Ie en Ha anges On tie pinperor fate cally. beat Icirklivington had epeod 2 < 4} fit assmale—seroch—ohanyed-oty pate Amputated tho little felow's leas below } ARENAS 1 Close on 2a yi oss ; India moved up strong and close Rea eon anaes all to Mae tires patito pete balt on] yeliow. COverhend, lead-eelored Aelo: CP ah Ivanhoo in the stretch. Inthe run home! [OR() THIRD RACE me hae seentso +4 : : ae i ‘Tho mother harsele 1 Berepener oe Ee ne ses — Tis Hamburg. OWT 3 ackle, Tincojn carrying the [eres banked teavily, = threateaing ra Son to reach the mangled little body.| if a drive by @ length and a halt. | Tia ptarters we ono Toa apie” Phen Wendail Snowstorm, Then of a sudden the sun. SHTIERITR WT Me TOPO er vornS, BT) MAA A LR UT ENTE SU ETT aaa Temmersize IT Miler ath 5c tr Harvard, 0. broke through, Directly overhead the gathered up the dying child tn her | Rend for the place. Q spc | Naralle esta eet Et. Dickaon’ at i clouds cleared away and the blue sky 2 arms and Wrapped the skirts of her| EE sea ane on | Aniinwton as brick dm ed JO Thinks spt bound: | SECOND HALF. | bexan to show, And wille the first Yale——— fpron about the mutilated stumps of, hint sp 4 Aiosk- and Play. 44g a Bt - Wileon. Lselg offin the second _half| footers were beginning to notice th 3 limbs, trying vainly to check the. red/ Tatton Light Soe ae Supe ean core lee it QM line. Burr prompt-/omen a pigeon floated gently In over streams that joured from. = 4 Be Neooet Ls SMUatone 4071831 a ag slo's torritory.wiara}.y ‘ ant a Sereani # the severed oa aillaione: aor ao £ Pron siea—sent-the-—ball and carried ttt Tera moment ee Soe | EEF PMY or 40-30 10 ie f ila oer Mner “Rooma: mide & yards ight down’ upon. the 8 Rudolph ha “ Any + | APS Lacheats A OF 12 12 1 Fs + ad leftpend, and on a side ete! iddie of the Tite! fe a of his~ moth res tinstest pine | [28h The “Galloper: it boo 13 Beckman’ Bigelow Lost Opportunies, —— | captured by: Newball_on. the Crint- middle “of the. gridiron, w ‘i ; er—ond “with Jt had run Joos ‘atkatlvorrssiisce lor 14 Fas 14 Koenn too Yo Yole Jost a briltiadt opportunity on tha Paon's deyard lino where he waa pulled | Walked about and pecked curiously at Acrosy the avenud to make a purchase. } 1183 Swite Gilet: jor hy 14 shilling "20." 38) 109 [recta erenen owiceoeste SiMe Paps bar reseed EA LL te NS Oitereriee The mother got alarmed oyer his fall- | Pad ya08 Gis Bienes 554) 807 100) bowntooard Hine and pass it Sloatcpigeonaisireeaeh ita: ure to return and went’ to) the comer saat Seater or ert For dinpvards’ wont, ha el mgd sent whirling . ; eat | |. Sheridan, Wire. | ecore rozain dla a ahs 1 ad # one Was of a deep ceruimin of nteenth street to lok for him, ————— : S Mary Hall. Sweet Elleet, fry [akon nase wa regan an Scans ter SS i She saw im starting across the wide ie best strong: | was ponajized Afton HL BAALEOE Tost gea thant tiple talnel ones tnthal wath ‘ay. ame y ¥) Gy pecial: for three | kicked to Rarvard’s 4-ya bunds on.) © i bnSR ALS phe th da y S, highway. At the same Instant she sav! Steyens Throws Hammer 140. 198 mee tart good. Es ‘ | band. be to play “Big Chit 5 a car of the Fourteenth ‘street Mno | Salis frpace RIA Raho t ed to’ Newhall who was lone ite bowling north at a rapid galt, bound Feet 5 Inches in Dual i eaehey Gp ara the Crlmsan's Wavant tne, | He for the East Thirty-fourth street fer- Game ee 2 : gave-the ball to Yale. Roome che) ries, ‘fhe woman jshrieked a warning, ames, eee anaeca =

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