The evening world. Newspaper, November 26, 1908, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

\ - ——— = MEN AND WOMEN LEAP IN SEA AS LINER SINKS The 10, [F To-Day's Wweather—PARTLY CLOUDY. 1 | | “Circulation Books Open to All.” RESULTS EDITION errr = SSS acne epee ene ecoeeae Termes | PRICE ONE CENT. NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1908. PRICE ONE CENT. PENN BEATS CORNELL FOUR DROWNED IN WILD PANIC 17104, NHOT CAME AS GEORGIC RAMS THE FINANCE es eee and Diagram Showing How They Collided\ ° C0!!0> Off Sandy Hook. Half Dressed, Passengers Scramble for the Rail, ON QUAKERS FIELD White Star Freighter « and Panama Liner, Thrown From Their Berths by Force | Ithacans Get Goal From Field the First Half, But Fail to Biock Hollenback’s Speedy | Offense ) | THE LINE-UP. WOMAN LEAPS OVERBOARD WITH CHILD IN EACH ARM. Crew Under Perfect Discipline in Crisis Would Have Saved Ail Had They Remained Aboard—Survivors Picked Up by White Star Ship. (Special FRANKLIN was too fast for Cor The score tells the story. Cornell got a { goal from field and that was all. In the second half, while Pennsyl- vania outplayed Cornell in nearly every department of the game, the tai Blue did not put their vsual dash into | Me their play. Cornell was unable to make / any impression on Pennsylvania's line | and their attempts at forward passes were ludicrous, not one reaching the ob- fective player before touct they Bat iol ee iter angen baton, ground. hur for aA Cornell must have been pleased, how- ever, with the c itions, which meant the slowing up of Penn's fast backs in the lightning Work of the open game the Quakers have been playing the past month. Penn's players had prayed for a dry field so as to prove their claim to } the college football championship this | ¥i-}ard line, Sc / year beyond the question of a doubt inj failed to pet a (a the minds of even the Crimson players | ference failing to form and he themselves, and thelr coaches, most of a foot”, Hollenback punted ‘ whom were present ood ad- The Yale and PHinceton teams were “also guests of Penn on seats reserved | ON # fake for them on benches along the side | {yntm forth lines, as were members of present teams Manler was and former stars from many other col- resumed play , DROWNED. W.H. TODD, third assistant engineer, CHARLES W. SCHWENLER, passenger. | MISS IRENE CAMPBELL, passenger. HENRY MILLER, passenger. n Mear Draper failed * ound © ‘orne! W's left end. Ie booted to the ls-sard: ln Wood advanced ten yar 8s beore Gas. t ot him. Shearer now took Mowe's The Panama Railrozd Company’s steamship Finance, bound Ide ross the fleld, but failed, Hee} baron i fe i x F ster emia no a out of the harbor in the fog this morning for Colon, was run down and is in addition for holding. Walder ed over Hoilent "sh n sunk off Sandy Hook by the White Star liner Georgic. Three passengers aad one of the ship's ofticers were drowned. Following the collision an ammonia tank near the engine room of the | Finance exploded. William H. Todd, third assistant engineer, fright. ‘fully burned and wild with pain, rushed on deck and leaped overboard, sinking before he could be reached. fe yar fd out in this plas leges. In brief, it was football day for Miller's Run Futile, | Miss Irene Campbell, a passenger, caught suc! mg ) football players all over the country,, Tydeman failed to get through Draper ee F f : f 2 ene i ,ap er, caught such a strong hold of the hundreds of them being here to see to- |r even an Inch. “Walder Kicked to i . ee ; after rail on the main deck that she could not be released and she was day's game. I bound 1 rty-yard line and do : vit é 7 F 7 A A ae Dee maried tolaniie Ie Roan eranine and aodKea : jdrowned clinging to the rail as the stern of the ship settled into the than usual on account of the fickle in to » yards of the ‘ : weather, but by the time the game had Hi seeth AA es CEE ify aie . : water. . * gotten fairly under way all the seats off tackler a kl being ¥ ass 5 ‘CAP 57] "S Se s earoan i . CAPTAIN STAYS ON BRIDGE in the + inclosure were occupied Peta TORO ORan Ret Fanaa ee i . nasa Re es % 7 4 AL 4 J 22 Many were also lined up along the TSowarde called the pall back tote 3 ay ay Baas i : 3 | The Georgic, twice as big as the Finance, which was a twenty-five- running track surrounding the arena, s fi ) where he said \ id 3 i: - F a | + . oper where they were glad to,find standing | t! ave year-old patched-up iboat, escaped serious iajury. room. The attendance was about 2,40.) hf fake flollenback failed to gain : iy ay 5 # pilin Penn the Strongest Team. Te .fpeh ave ule pln ate I ‘ : { ral : | The survivors were transferred to her decks and brought up to the Penn clearly showed the strongest | ania, kicked to Cornell's - its : eed arriving late this afternoon. offense and dotnse but was placed! ha gain, Franke took Bayer's place for | 4 : Pate ays at a disadvantage by Hollenback’s poor | Crooks went in at left end | Capt. Mowbray, of the Finance, refused to leave his ship and stood Kicking. The wonderful punting of {.7) Hraddock on Fer nibs CONS LPLE. GEORG/IC. PE Crr Hy i ‘ cee = Walder compeled Penn to make up of hou hy eal ee eye on the bridge as she went down. Only the bridge, the upper part of the mantiearae anier fa on an end run ai | deck houses, the funnels and the mast of the Finance were showing above Right at the start of the game Hol- ‘the surface when_the Merritt-Chapman wrecking tugs reached the scene { lenback, usually about the best punter | Santa on & tumbler Gardnee tan . in the business, made three very bad] tha ball oS seven seconds, but Nazarro was. still z bea i i kicks which had no distance to them] corell’s. goal bs Aaaler and a seeiiek . s)plost tie Miniter ta; the gaed and Capt. Mowbray and three members of his crew were on the bridge, or went out of bounds, This enabled {tater the sume player carted the hel : SEM INEAN Se NAME TAD RUE MINEO re contain aud enw of the! Sinance ibebaved with admirehia onal Cornell to get the ball into close fe m touchdown Score: Pennsy!- | -= 1 every ounce of i ‘ proximity of Penn’s goal Hne and make | ¥ Ore. s He pas ne Hemery ae mace ® ness and there would have been no loss of life but for the terrible panic on h “ slight gain, increasing his lead over , ® try for a Meld goal which succeeded, | Wagner to fifty-two seconds and draw-| board, following the collision, There were nineteen women and fourteen Mowe kicking it from his 30-yard {ing up on Nazarro unt P was only 0: rer ae vy [made four 3 | sp a teren te ANE sacra : Une, Cornell could make very few | Nanier gained lis distance th Dugh cen= ean oa A sae ee iyng children among the eighty-five passengers and most of them were in their gains on rushing the ball, Penn's de-|tre. Hollenback — gained \ ia Neate, PEPIN Pan aS fense being too strong to be plereced, | through left tackle and then punted. to i Res Peat On the other hand Penn, principally alls ie Honman wi \ Benz Car Was Wrecked. |GOES TO BOTTOM IN TEN MINUTES. ; due to Hollenback's great runs, made | nell was per for a forward pass The only seriqis mishap of the race : = . 8 > Mahan sii many substantial gains, once taking | which failed. ay “he ball was now on her mp} (iy. ars ye TNAMene NAOT All were nervous because the ship had been at anchor inside the Hook, the ball down from her vard)|evard on ie. eornell nunted “Out jwhich Fritz Erle, the driver, was ser-|fogbound for three days, When the Georgic struck, her bow pushed Into lously “hurt stecl-studded thread 49 inance for a distance of ten feet, making a hole wide enough to sail line clear across Cornell's goal without} “On a fake forward para Miller . losing \t, for a touchdown. ny yard Hehe “TV es ie fe, See Pie ee eee Ee | of a front Hew off as Erle was A great farward pass from Miller to | Pennsyivania, f ang plunging ere , kicked goal’ Seore a, 3 | Draper, which gained 20 yards, helped | Cornell, 4 | eaten em Penn materially to make this score,| On i punt out fron The work of Hollenback, Manier, | {ie the ilk 1 ( ‘ i fl mnalizi y Ka straightaway at 70-\a yacht through, Then the big freighter fell away and the Finance was resting on the bottom of the north side of the ma o ship channel within eo struck the driver in the ng him to lose control of the|ten minutes. Draper, Gaston and Scarlett for Penn, al hit Before hi throw off the] TR he + | aKod ine re he « row off the | Jomen an¢ dren, thrown from their berths or tossed and of Walder, Hutchinson, Wood, | for sideline andy oak | omen and ehildr 4 P Eber r tossed about their Cosgrove and-Hurlburt for Cornel) waa) icked, Of from thelr di-yard ‘ | * crashed into a tr paring off a :| staterooms’ by the force of the collision, which hevled the Finance over briliant, einath, Penn's great, butle, Hope raph owen orca ¢ wheels and turning tur /until her de .s Were aslant, rushed up to the open air, Many of tnem were adly crippled quarter-back, didn’t last | ce: failed and Hollenback kicked Win a _ Both Earle and his a ly ip their night clothes, Fully wenty per: 8, a ow | | SAVANNAH, Ga., Noy. 26.—Wagner, driving a Fiat car, won the thrown out vio! dr 1 only Ip th B 4 ¢ v of them very long before he had to be replaced | 1 Cornell's 40-yard line, where Tyd eit 3 a hrown 1} by Miller. Score first half, Penn, 6;);™*" “#8! Cornell, 4, Bs 28 Townsend in Game. ence en aac bejng men, jumped overboard may result fatally, On wo: leaped into the a with tivo children i, ber ar -s, ‘his —_->— 402-mile Grand Prize auto race this afternoon, nosing out Hemery, who it rle's injurt No Changes in Last Half. nGaldwell went in at .|Men Weigh in for Champion- Piloted a Benz, by the infinitesimal margin of 56 seconds. Nazarro, re gan away) BOATS LO WERED AWAY QUICKLY. a back kicked to Mowe on Cornell's ten-|end for Penns van eta*punce’ ak lal pees | Nazarro was beaten in the last lap, wh voked to be savilneanecit ner ene cass é york with admirable celerity. Four Mfeboats and iwo life nen e Poor Ae er trou Feng Saat a Vaile Hae winner, with a margin of almost two minutes to the good when he | ied lsced thelr | anon blew up da the | 9?) pal AT TEP EEN ET APT PP rt os pieet Aeeming’ a from behind, [elle “pawseasion, on her Srverd ine SIDE, BAN FRANCISCO, Nov, |Pa8sed the grand stand. The tremendous strain told on the car, and | Mv4, iAP, lawwed slong for two more ‘Phe Georgle stood by, dimly visible through the fog; and Iifeboats were then Mowe got through right tackle for ———— .—When “Billy” Papke, of Jiinols, | the engines suddenly began to gasp and wheeze, and he was compelled | BY that time the five other American lowered from her decks and sent scurrying to the Finance, These boats cars had been lapped and lapped. 'The| aig great service in picking people from the water. five more. Walder iit Li ers ‘0. 3 Setchel, o ie oO} { q five more, er Mit Lamberison for al FIRE AFTER A SMOKE IN BED, | #04 Stanley Ketchel, of Michigan, who |{o slow down and stop. Logier No. 2, driven by Mulford, cut When the survivors of the Pinance,were finally lined up om the Georgia Hutchinson got past Dra fought for the world's middleweight! syemery whirled past him and crossed) th + NTT out a 6i-mile-an-hour e for the first rf per for] . e past him and er an sixty-five miles an hour through = the we Ak n i hay pape 8 ng i , three yards, Walder shot over Lam-}, George J. Ue an aged man wholchampionship at the Mission Street the finish line first, but ax he had six| out the ar SE ane SOEUR ;|lap and pounded along in the second | few of women had clothes enough on to cc them, One little girt berton for two yards, and Walder punt. | Hes alone in an old-fashioned two-story | song, this afternoon, welghed in at |minutes’ start over Wagner the Plat| thelr spurts they ate up the allet rouit at 70-miles an hour, with De entirely nude and the other passengers wrapped her in a blanket. She ed out of bounds on Penn's 20-yard house, No. 0 Weat One Hundred and | Was awaited with bréatiiless interest t n 100 Palma, in Fiat No. 1s, thundering aid her night dress was torn off in the rush for the boats. = PA EOP Myard Une. |aintmy-mixth street, . voke early to-day, |@ local resort. Neither figure budged as aaa Wit tl etn more than 19 miles an hour, ‘Time | wake (Raaslig lle grand at {sale ck, Manter got through |curned on the ent and began to read f 2 set 58 pounc eis a re Was SO minutes) and again the three leaders crashed | fe (ye oi bee tN TO BA N WOMAN, Cosgrove to the 40-yard line, Ateang|in bed. He filled his pipe and puffed | Me beam which was set at 158 pounds. | 34 seconds, past the cheering grand stands fenced Tfor the second tune. the Loser blew | MEN HAD TO ABANDON WOM. awoy until he began to doze. Tyen the| Papke ruled favorite at odds of 10 to) Hem a tire, whereupon Palma ju Not all of the buats of the Finance could b» lowered before she sank, ry's time was S71 minutes 27 sec Swice in succession hit O'Rourke for g |AN7* unl) he PARAD lo case. Then | " ' i total of six yards, Hollenback then|he was back in slumberland the bede|7 12 Layers of odds were kept busy. | on¢ end of the thirteenth lap Na-| head lke @ power-driven projectile, | go rapidly did the water gain in her below decks, Because of the gaping Kicked out 0: bounds on Cornell's Lie d caval fire. Advance sale of seats indicated that the; Na&sarro’s time was 378 mniutes 47 sec ta lead rearly four minutes! At 100-Miles an Hour. | hole on her port ide the boats on that site cou! not be uns’ipped. One Yard Ve, Tydeman now displaced sarete Sow amoke coming Re tet eat a aconen a | one me eee Fe ver Hemery, who was second. Wagner| De Palma wasn't keep the lead! of them Was dragged to the starboard side and tossed into the water, where ons nee and hing in found Lutz dashing | Papke was guaranteed $12.00 win, lose us Duel for Five Laps, was third, one minute and seoor jong, however, for Hanrlot was n hit t ce op ing vietime until they could Walder kicked to midfield, where, ebout ne Neos thrag in at the blasing}or draw. Ketohel had a guarantee of The last five laps of t Was behind Hemery. During the running SBR AE Ere arenes did good service in supporting swimming victine y ¢o be east ce mlognds nding neither Ot about $600 dainage Was done beture under similar conditions. | furious duel between Nazarro, Wagner |the fourteenth lap Wagner pulled up of — picked up w caught 1 Th che firemen put out the blese. ee Welch referred the contest. land siemery, All had averaged ettep emery, reducing bis lead to twenty (Continued on Second Page.) Mise Campbell's remarkable death was sven by nearly al! the mem pag

Other pages from this issue: