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eer Again made a sprint around the left end for ten yards. ‘The ball was in the centre in Army's possession. Kern iried an outside kick, Dat Princeton successfully blocked and fot the ball on the Army's 3-vard line. McCrohan began bucking the centre | and made successive gains of five and six yards, With the ball on Army's 30- Forward Pass Fails. Greble kicked the ball out of danger, | Dition getting it in hat Tibbott | Smashed through Bessom for eignt | Close G Vatds, with “Oeautiful Interference Close Ge Heui got three more, and Tibbott set Mn a eet ree vd QGOR DY VeATIne Witnessed by a Bi eb right side eight m 5 ‘ ~ AS the Atmy line. and tried a. forward Crowd. yas. West Point got the ball on her ten-yard line, and Greble kic! all way to Princeton's twenty-fi line, It was the longest f season and put Princeton on the de- fensive. phott wi rohan gained cight yards. Read yard line, Tibbott broke through the Army's tackle for six yards, The Army | braced up nad four downs on thelr own 10-yard line, a thrown for a toss, but M Petine he ball in the middie ef the jeld. Princetdn was penalized fifteen + oy +a PAe Sates for heiding “and ihe Army wae} & Big Handicap for given the ball os reble tried for a goal from field on the Crimson. the thirty-five-vard line, but miseed the] Dar and the ball rolled over the Ine. On | the Rik back the ay Kot Geen on} the Tigers’ forty-yard line. Greble was + * thrown for a loss of ten yards, The TELLING Es Army failed on a forward pass, but the | | Harva Positions Brown ball ‘struck the ground and the soldiers | Houston LB. see ennie were penalized fifteen yards. Dean made | Vckay Pe: tee a long punt to Princeton's thirtyefive- | Yous treiivcieccyed Nard line, where Dillon fumbled and] Duniap | Bessom fell on the ball | Fish Dillon Taken Out. Dillon was taken out of the game and | Berger took his place at quarterback. | QUrNat, Kern lost five yards on a quarterback | **™ run. The Army again lost on a for- ward pass, which struck the ground. (Special to The Bvenina World.) Carberry’ was taken out by the Army, | SOLIDERS' FIELD, CAMBRING and Sterns took his place at right end. Harvard's contes: with Brown Grebla kicked out of bounds on Pri Ree ee RLEERPAR TRIS ARERE: a Spracklin MeKay . Mayhew . here to-day was re! ton’s %-yard line. Tibbott gained elght “ Yards around left end. Read. kicked to | ful in the result because of the absence Kern, who fumbled, and the Tigers got |of Capt, Burr, whose injury of yester- the ball on Army's S-yard line. Me-| day, a shoulder dislocated by failing on Crohan fumbied the ball and the Army | the ball, will keep him out of the game got it on a fake kick. for two weeks or more. Greble made o beautiful run, thread-| "Kennard will punt. for the Crimson tng his way through tacklers for fifteen | a wnioa ne is fairly good, thoug’ yards. He tried it again, but, in fall-| otherwise bis playing is weak. He ing, dropped the ball, and Princeton got | hip prevents him from playing, and thus it on Army's fifty-yard line. Princeton | farther weakens Harvard's centre trio was held for down! | “Brown hopes to sc and will pi On the next play Greble kicked over | ably do so if Mayhew succeeds in the line for a touch-back. Read Kicked | ting loose, as no Crimgon man has §| from the §-yard line to Dean, who | sufficient to stop him brought It back to Princeton's 40-yard | ~ first Half—Harvard, 0; Brown, 0. | line. “Here time was called for the end| Both teams triedhard to score tn the | of the first half. first half, but neither succeeded. Brown | Score—Army, 0; Princeton, 0. nevergot’ within striking distance and Harvard only. once. When time was Army Tried Hard to Score. * |talied Harvard was on Brown's twenty- | The first : yard lineinfront of goal and Kennard arent eted tt, gnded, with honors | was ready to try agoal when the whistle the Cadets, but they did not resort to | blew. 7 punting frequently, although Greble| Each side punted frequent y as gained from ten to fifteen yards on| in line were uncertaa, | Sevwr each exchange, Greble and Kern, for | Mayhew was off for a fleld run but was the Army, made several gains of ten|caught by the Harvard backs, He yards or more on fake kicks for the | made most of Brown's gains. White ds or more on fake kicks, and this | repeacedly broke through for long gains brought the Cadets to within striking | for Harvard. Mayhew kicked to 1) distance of Princeton's goal. lap. who ran back fifteen vards. ; A drop kick from the forty-yard line | teams then kept up line plunging and failed, however. This was the neares: | punting with the half-ended when Has- the Army came to scoring. Princeton, | vard had rushed the baN down he other hand, twice carried the| Brown's twenty-yard line and time was on ell on straight Une bucks to West | called. | Bein: Talent line pucks, to West) Stecore first haf, Harvard 0: Brown, 0. | paign downs Read Tibbot and. Mocrohan| In the second half Ver Wiebe went | ee Peasy in for Kennard and was a great help. FOS Oe re team cold and the| BcKay kicked ite Beeytes, and the punt: - breeze, 7 ent © ing and line plunging fight of the first ChE, kigezer fumbling was frequent on) nife"continued. Ver Wiebe proved too pee pe gee much for the Brown line and wit) White they repeatedly broke thr sh ; for. long gains. BY. rushing White SECOND HALF. pushed the bal! over for Harvard, and Dowd took Bredemus’s place at left| McKay kicked thg goal. Brown did not et within striking distance. Her two end for Princeton, Greble kicked off to] Fointc were made on a safety due to Wewd, on Princeton's 20-yard line. | Cutier's fumble on the 4-yard line. When Princeton tried the line twice without | time was caled Harvard had blocked sain, and Read punted R @|a Kick which Crowley recovered on train, and Read punted to Kern, on the |S, qun's s'yvard line in front of tie Koa yard line. Greble went} “Final score—Harvard, 6; Brown, ni on's left ond for 15 yards, { lost 10 on the next try, Dowd mak- eee ing a great tackle Greble kicked to Bergen” on Prince- | ton's fe-vard line, and Read returned | ’ Fl Donn. who was downed on and the Arr Sa penalty for Princeton | riding. Uhr made a grin, but tum and Princeton recovered the ball} afield. ae cae t THE LINE-UP, igen made five yards and Tibbott 0 State d three more. MeCrohan made the | p.Cormell- Foam pate nee for a firet down. Tibhott tore | Taventry °! : ‘ound the Army left end fora beauti-| Cosgrove . jul run of fifteen yards, MecCrohan | Wight pped off five more in two plunges. | Bell ...- ipbott made six more for a first down, | Rourke ‘Che Army Was fighting desperately, but mer °rinceton gradually forced the b to the Army's seven-yard line. tn Army Resists Hard. ATAU Dean was hurt and Brown took his ct The Eventne World) plac for tho, Army. Here the Army| ITHACA, N. Y., Oct. 31.—Bracing foet- mute bucked a and tt was - rae aciornall aan Diener genta ioe tenite ta Fat | ball Weather greeted the Cornell and and got the ball on downs on its own| Penn State elevens when they ran out yard line, after McCrohan had madé| on the gridiron this afternoon to play two vicious plunges. the firat real football game at Ithaca ireble kicked the ball out of danger,| On account of Judge Taft's meeting but Tibbott brought it back to_ th @ later in the day the game was Army's twenty-five-vard line. Rend] cailéd early. Although Co # made five yards through tackle, Tib-| without the services of Siear hotts was thrown for a three-yard loss | Caldwell, the couches sprang a sur} when Bessom him lon the State eleven by sending Bell in rmy get the and Greble kicked This brougit a great in, but the ng wind blew the stands. Wall kK and Princeton got it on visite vA Army's thirty-vard line.” Princeton meade an onside kick, which gained yuld twenty yards and got ‘the ball on the Armes ten-vard line, The Army, again ought desperately and succeeded in State hol for downs ;yewa Riale. 4 Princeton's Lost Chance. Princeton had a beautiful ¢ acore and failed. Greble i the wind blew the out oO. under the goal posts West Point again held fast ana the] Jt, nome t #0 ball on downs.*On the| missed the goal BT ALN, GIBHOLE WHA TION LOr A lOBA | eee FRO BOM Gomell, Th ES , Vithacans rushed the Dall down tin The never played such ball be-| after time, but forty-fve yarus In p fore fe kicked from under the | sities prev a to vn, and O Koa! who held the ball) Hirshman. picked up a fumble on hi nf ne MeCrohan | ¢ yard line. Me and Mu smn for five yards IF for Tydemat ball on Its 25-yard Ine. | f gaat foo with the t her thirty-fi e, Cornell Ked to the gen fumb ed and Brown "inal. w fifteen | State, 4 for: | oe 44° | YONKERS HIGH WINS Vall on | . red. the ihe Tae wee! THE LINE-UP. failed to gain, and the ‘Tigers| yonkers. eA TE ‘unningham took Read's place’ to: | BOO sstayens te vere Gail eplaced him. Metrohan failed | Redeneverg ...... Cette ward pa Ar wot the ball, as] The game ended ball on Arny's S-yard Uni i POLICEMAN’S WIFE SOUGHT eaiaany Coit : | At Cannon rk, In the Bronx, t wheend Harris Hz eaten by the team o! 10] bY a @core of 1 ght during ie scoring, but soon af nd session started Capt. W % recovered Gibson's put nd’s tyenty-yard line, and e Play Sherman went throu tackle for a touc lagistrate Wale! to-day, ordered Detective Quinn to fin Mrs. Leopold Koehn, wife of a police man attached to the West One Hun dredtl street police station, and bring her to court to press 4 charge of felon Ous ussault against her husband, whom | she accuses of breaking her nose an in Morrisania Cou beating her on Sept. 15 last, at thet: | ihe goal No, si8 Hast One dred and! After this the ‘Townsend team wea bird street ned, Napolielio et } n the alled y Jowns on long end ira, Bowlin ‘the complair ae 4‘ IN 6 TO 1 AVS. EP is cdatadtised 2 @ut Of $1,000 bail. She told the Alu je that she wag afraid hed loos Luce Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Wiles position. 3 6 to 14 days of money refunded. Boe %4* ’ ‘ 1908. THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY OCTOBER 381 Lawyer an d His Wife Who Were Robbed by Armed Men in Their Cedarhurst Home MILLION OF OM me on Soldiers’ Field othe |RESULT IS A SURPRISE. | eked and Baehr fumbled. Princeton | Absence of Capt. Burr Proves | repented to- Regnier Beytes | has given # and the Standard Oil machinery all over the United States ts working for the | n. erdashers—Marshall ale Grocers—J, Weston My- 60,000 MARCH IN BUSINESS MEN’S TAFT PARADE. along the Hne of the parade, “TRUST CASH FOR FT, MACK SI Has Proof, He Declares, That Republicans Have Made Corrupt Bargain. HE DEMANDS PUBLICITY. . Dares Hitchcock to Make Pub- lic List of Campaign Contributors. National Chairman Norman E, Mack y his charge that the Republican party has made a corrupt bargain with the Standard Of Com- pany, and declared that the oll trust's contribution to the Taft and Sherman campaign fund amounts to $1,000,000. He went further and said he could prove it, if necessary. “As for the proof, declared Mr. ‘T have had it {i my possession fer ten days. T charge that, as a result Mac jof negotiations between the managers of the Republican campaign and the Standard Of] Company, the Oi) Trust ,000 to campaign fund, Republican ticket. “The Standard Oi1 Company gave $1,000,000 to the Republicans in 1895, in 1900 and in 1904. They have repeated their contribution this year, and ft will be for the people to say whether Mr. Taft is to live up to the obligations in- curred. Mr. Hitchcock's denial of any | Weather, a special train was taken to/ Virgin Oil of E Standard OM contribution only strength- | ‘The Gé ens what I charge. It will be nouced that he admits recelving contributions from individuals in the Standard on nd Transportation Club| Company. He does not dare make his count. The afternoon route by aut Hist of contr butors public as we have | done, for Mr. Roosev Some of the Uorough Business Men Brokers—Anthony Weather Coois Enthusiasm. MSI ABS Exchango—Charles Metal Traaes— hy stiff tingered Professions — Robert Erokers—Oliv; ine was needed full, but the dinner-p nd swouting. Signs of the Times. lined up, and ee Exchange and Low Trade—Will- et and Broadway Manufacturers — H, your cam-| J¢ nign contribut surance Club--Major | tottman He ‘ub—Johng L. stop the panic? not stop it last of the parac district did not open gen: ness this morn Men—Jullus Avehitects and Allied Arts—H. Taft and Sher-| BROOKLYN PASTOR CHOSEN. e. Gredle fated | y was penalized | | » kicked to Bengen In| re West Point was given| . ’ — and Dealers—Walie meeting of the Board of Trustees of De- Nathaniel C. Paper Trade and Leather Was elected Italian-American G WORLD RACE CHART THIRD DAY A Weather Clear. eadquarters a y JAMAICA, frack Fast. Do a Cavalry Test. committee of busi one mile and a platoon | Dutchman y nid im | —= || 3 | ont at OVER TOWNSEND HARRIS. | wn. Koster kicked youd, but Guit. ceping denial from the was discovered later, upon the $1000 each ag: iman, that Pres- | pi t ident Roosevelt had spoken falsely about the contributions mentioned by Judge Parker. Conditions to just as they were four 5 cerned.” + TRICK TO DEFEAT TAFT WILL FAIL, ROOSEVELT SAYS. WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—Following and Allied | up the statement issued last evening | 3i—The entries for Monda m the White House regarding the|as follows : tr announcement made by John D. Rocke: | feller of his preference for Mr. Taft in the Presidential struggle, a second statement was Issued to-day an follows prociamation, jit must be remembered that just for 7 es BcapaveaConlseby years ago, in reply to Judge Parker's SUES HEARST AND LNG ae charge that certain corporation inter- jests had contributed a corruption fund to the Republican party, he issued a r day are rs ago, inso- | State's Attorney for Cook County. y assthe relations between the trusts and the Republican party are con- [ee SE en) | Repwvtionn National Committee from DIE ew York to appear in a case before | the Supreme Court here next Monday. ROCKEFELLER FOR THE TAFT PARADE TAFT ALWAYS, HIS seicsigaliaie RELATIVE SA CLEVELAND, Oct. aw. c. ruaa,|JACob Lewy Overcome by brother-in-law of John D. Rockefeller, Bat tn a S raid to-day that the of! man had strong: Heart Failure in a Sub- ly favored the candidacy of Mr. Taft lever since the Intter's nomination for President. Mr. Rockefeller has always been a| | Republican tn national politics,” ratd | [air, Rudd, “and to best of my |knowledge he has never voted for a| | Democratic candidate for President. He way Train, Jacob Lewy, sixty-five years old, was evercome by an attack of heart failure in a subway train at One Hundred and Sixteenth - street and Lenox avenue haa never made a necret of this tact, | lille on his way down town to Join tho jand during the past summer he fre: | Taft paraders to-day and died before jauently: said tn my hearing. that he 5 could Feacl Kimi |e ee te eee ee ee at use | Lewy was a retired merchant, welgh- Ing 0 pounds. tle lived at Ni iS East. conditio } —~— One Hundred and Sixty-third street. | and | of the | Acticg. on a friend's advice he took a | > Erne, > | With his brother-in-law, John Gordon, HITCHCOCK KNOWS of Paterson, N. od. he boarded the . ord enox train about 10 o'clock. When he OF NO OIL, TRUST toppled over several women screamed, ONTRIBUTIONS |, Several passenvers aided the man to |the station platform, Policeman Ford jst it The ambulanc AS. National Chairman Frank H. Hitch- | tock awayewhen Lewy expired, ales ment, said: ‘ 29000, ‘The assertion that there have been “ Standard Ol Company in reterence to RECOMMENDED FOR campaign contributions Is absolutely there have been no contritutions to our apaign fund by any person connected matter In what capacity, nor has any | organs there {s mone or less consta Buch person been eolicited to con-| mand, consider the non cold) Mr. Hitchcock indicated that he did | in one of the large not wish to enter into any eoutroversy | pe ees | * BLIZZARD FAILS j couple of drops of Vi: Ol of Pine come | MIDDLETOW ¥., Oct. &1.—Defy- | almost immediate reli y the hoarseness. ing a miniature blizzard and the orders | !t is elaimed that s ba of Virgin O11 | ounces: erine and a haif pint of good spoke for nearly a half hour in the open | WES of ee air at Port Jervis early t " | and set the car In a commotion. Jand Peterson then carried Lewy. to the cock, when told of Mr. Mack's state-, === - = negotiations between myself and the untrue. So far as my knowledge goes, THROAT TROUBLE. with the Standard Oj! Company, no People in public life, upon whose pute"? the serious aMic with any campaign managers, TO STOP HUGHE | pound pure on a lump of sugar, resulting ta pf his throat specialist Gov. Hughes | Pie compound pure mised with two day cold every. fou schedule called for an automobile trip) ulckly and cure rales vewbt put ow: othe «| Purchase the In, yan |to Newburg, but owing to the raw | Durciace (he itt ound pure ts a neiples of the this cit. pination of t and Santalwoc s, caret’ led to retai ernor had a large audionee here in. the opera-hous His voice showed effects of the severe strain he |? n the day and | 8! pou had put upon it earlier s address or on nous cits fre this address was short nates | ae eC up only Wirenlt ounce y Gach Vial securely sealed in & round wooden mobile to Newburg included brief (Speeches in| Goshen. — Montgomery, Walden, Newburg and Kingston. ——>— showing. Pine com- cane, W plainly pount and Drugs Al natl, fuixture of Whiskey and OTHERS FOR $300,000, | Siverries with the Virgin, OM of Fite com: CHICAGO, Oct, 4i—Three 5: for cipal, and anes es neeainels How to Cure i the Superlor fourt to-day by Jacdd the Drink Habit. J. Kern, Democratic candid desirous of curing all who are addicted to drink, and if you are the attorney | interested in any one needing Orrine, we Gur correspondence 1 ent In We are honest actions, it is ciaimed } filing the suits, are based on editorials, | invite you to write ui cartoons and storie inted in papers i confide controlied by Mr. Hearst and attacking | plain, sea’ 1 is the character of Kern. Only the prae- the secret treatment 2 for those cipes were filled stating the amount| who wish the voluntar: $1 jot damages. fer box, Orrine 18 sold on an absolute | ~ Pehraniee to effect @ cilre or money will b funded. The Orrine Co, Washing- | JAMAICA ENTRIES, —| £22, Ex, RINE Srensiete indores JAMAICA RACE TRACK —Two-year-olds; welling: st n sland d T President has received numerous | . letters and telegrams showing that this iy = trick of Rockefeller, doubtiess made by Lot? Yankee Daugnce LO as agreement with the Democratic Party, | jest pate Dauencer : r will fail absolutely. It is self-evident on! (10s) May “Rives PATERSON eee its face, as Mr. Taft has said, that if HOBOKEN anar e New | Mr. Rockefeller had really wanted him elected he would have pt quiet abou it, and/that he has come out for him as can damage being the way in which h him most.” public Cleveland, Ohio, Oct. 81, 1908, The President: “The labor vote. wil not be 4 ed by Rockefeller’s politt eal trick. We will bury him with Tom ahoga County 1s as safely Republican as the State of Ohto and the Johnson. Cus electoral collexe ‘A. L. FAULKNER, | “President of Window Glass Workers o: America.” * “| ROOSEVELT SEES | PROSECUTOR OF STANDARD OIL, jisiy’ Wa Kellogg. HINGTOD ‘the following telegram also was made | special counsel in the case of | (conations): or 2 *Trols Temps... -Four-ye: one and. one-sinteenth Newark—Holza eCORNS! CORNS!! “Giad Pheet” sss oe ion, t RD RACE—Three-year-olds and up: six furlongs, rer ) | fel aretha Green F haaae b Metielitax nk need calluses. Entirely new treat oss) mie || meat. (Plaster ani Silve com- ii ".)) Our money-nack { 1s no pay, 1051 Black WORE York a 1038 Mo" soe cl 1084 Eso 0 | te iskra e108 | FOURTH RACE—All ages; handicap; onc and one-sixtesnth miles, (1088) 1088 ) Fal O . | FIFTH RAcCs—Tr and one-sixteent mile 1OR$ Patile Axe. the Government to dissolve the Stand- inet Batis J SG Es ord Oi] Company, had a conference with 1085? Theat fetes DIE. President Roosevelt to-day, Mr. Kel- Bd oe f | Brooklyn logg_aid the case was proceeding as| gixty RACKCTwoyeat-old a RRR Soe rapidly as possible. SRL calancloiee | BRIDGES CHARLES 4., In 1 | When asked whether the Government jor 7 ar, after a HBR ces | would institute criminal procedings 1088 M Funeral from his tate residence, No, \aguinst John D. Rockefeller and other 157 Macon street, Brooklyn, on Sun- |offclals of the Standard O11 Company 1oaae day, Novy, 1, at 21 A, M, Interment after a decision in the trial for diseo- ihe private. futon has been reached, Mr. Kellogg J 5 ie aay ee PRT ay}. tala that as counsel for the Government er ! GORMLEY.~—At dwell, Ns Jo, O 1 ab ja could say that neither Mr. Rockefel- tas 1 ARLES beloved Mary le Wercany of the other oMcials of the! aay Monilit 1 | the late John 1. Gormie: company has been granted Immunity 1U79* *Hoftman | ice of funeral in Sunday Herald, RE, Who is a member of the | pprentice allowanace claimed, iss SOMETHING INT! | Do not throw away your vote b casting It for Shearn, as he has 0 | possible chance whatever of election. heel on this great city on every op- | Vote either for Bryan or Taft, as you| portunity and every occasion, He forget | please, but in the State election yo! \have only Chanler and Hughes t | chooge from If you choose Mr, Hughes you ae} 0." tne pation, 18 proud of New York and your interest tWO years) joves it for its many Interesting features Hughes is an autocrat, pure) whereas this dictator Hughes seeks to ex- setting bac longer. and simple. He is the most coi | | citizens of New York State, No ma | who works for a living, or keeps tion. He has hurt business in Grea er New Yo pante York will suffer still more. Hughes has yetoed doz \career {s saturated and dominate: blooded and selfish politiclan WhO] personal {des has ever asked for the votes of the] drive millions of dolla small store, Will benefit by his elec-| will be turned into @ city of the second Kk almost as badly a8 the) no political axes (0 gl and if reelected Greater New) either Hughes or Chanler, who have ai of bills) DMC wil this time ¥ote for Mr. Chanler, which were enacted in the Interest of| i\heral ma: the people, and his whole polltical| man who by vested interest and corporation | che gi ERESTING ABOUT Teddy Bear Thought He Won CHANLER, HUGHES & SHEARN But Met With a Severe Shock | business interests as exist in the city o} of New York? He has put his tron | that New York must be treated in a liberal, hroad-minded manner, and cannot be con 0| pared to a little country vill io the in terior part of the Stat Every citizen in this great State, as well teud his withering haad to choke its ex {stence and suppress it according to bis own If he is re-elected he will worth of business: iway from New York. Instead of being 0 broad-gauged city, where millions of people come each year to spend thelr money, it n ny | class, ‘There are thousands of peoplo who have - political ae grind, no Interest in | In search of records, a Teddy Bear Threw a discus into ‘the air. Falabt, !14. broke all records and, quite bold, ways voted the Republican ticket for th gow that he 46 @ broad-minded, | Stepped up to get a medal of gold, fheral’ mane with a splendid record, andi THAME a shrewd cub, to all's sure the Interest of the working prisement, arate Severe ang Parsante Threw out, through The World, an and best advertisement 4 | people ang the it the Blite of New York the clea | why should any man| administration ‘hut has occurred in twenty | s, many places ‘control, and why should any fnistration {lu So far and into so many pl | orks for a Mving, or who has| years, and be ts the only man of ail threw) 11°31) his competitors quit the races. who w 8 a id hat | a small business, throw his vote) that the interest of this great city is fool one © nm candidates whom we cap yote for away on this dictatorial, self-mpor-|to bo protected and hot discriminated | The Circulation of The World, Morning | tant bigot, who has no ideas of being broad-gauged, liberal man in his dea! autocrat and narrow-minded | against. Edition, Exceeds That of Any Other a) Ph mat this article owt and send it to i America 1] some frond to rend and nak Bim to please | MOM 150,000 Ca ge | ings with euch immense, diversified | pass it to another friend, —_