The evening world. Newspaper, October 21, 1911, Page 2

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pentils and set to work counsel and he was preparing for bim an elabor structure of his defense from his “MUSON MTFARLAND HELD neing He expected a visit record to furnish to the public to-morrow will have to he mighty eloquent and con to soften the denunciation that is being hurled upon him throughout New FOR MURDER the murdered girl, as was the srime, Was BoON-to become , ory of the police that Richeson gave ber the deadly ionged-for change PASTOR HAN +ED IN F complete revelations to-day that case with (he hapless victim of the Adirondack & mother, and drug with the assurs in her physical condition, has made the case ‘he most sensational tn the history of Massachusetts, | The public horror which this singularly brutal crime has aroused - found expression in Myannis last alght, when the young clergyman was | tree in front of his own chureh. The police were first led to assume that (he accused minister and his ale , and that at chis meoting Richeson gave the Formai Cha the little singer a packet of polson, telling her that it would bring about a 1 change that she desired, by the evidence furnished in a letter. This letter was written by Mies Nell Barkhouse, who lived with the —_—_ murdered girl at the Y. W. C. A. building, to her sister. D WRITES OF MEETIN would bring banged In effigy to alleged victim met Ja GIRL FRIE} all terribly shocked over it. § but it’s just as weil not to relate in I can tell you when you come up out to unch yesterday with Ric! She went | she spent the) Arieon day with me, Ta Then I went out pi to Opra’s and had dinner: ts just like a hotel there. So. Station to mee! Now Lam golng into the pyisteot cp BARKHOUSE.” wife had heard Rict urday. | tie The testiinony of 4 away,” sald Miss Hansea t I said, but I retorted: she didn't say anything before she dled but she sald something this afternoon. ‘sation came to an end.” | “I did not kill my ¥ under suspicion. | ‘and never desired to During the Sunday morning Bervices he | oy anide mentioned the death of a dear friend He went from the church to the home of Frank Riley in Somerville, according to the police, Mr. Riley sald to-day of | “if “LE hardly ‘No, There the con Richeson was soon HEARD OF “DEAR FRIEND'S” | cine closet among other bottles not use “Mr. Richeson went into th lor, and I found him s few minute. later |!¥ in the bottle was used by T saw that he|occasionally took a dos: Je, and I aaked him if he| “There were other Pp je said that he had received | shelf, such ax carbolic, disinfectan very dear} all that. If she got it, it was simply t him | to) ason not clear—a mistake of Taek him | for some rea c lying on the couch. news of the deuth of a 1 asked him if I could something to relieve him. me if 1 had any camphor in the house. a ages sy Moor iaie ant nce sherhape |r quarrelted occasionally, but there was agreed, and I got them for him. not served until o'clock, and Mr. Richeson ate hardly a| mixed up with any other woman, and He seemed to] if I had been my wife would not have be suffering from a nervous break-| known anything about It down. He spoke further of the 4 6 his ‘dear friend.’ Tecelved word by telephone in convulsions and that had been asked if he was with her on| The labe the previous Saturday afternoon, He|on when I put ¢h said that he was not.” Sunday night he went to the home of | Richeson told Hahn that he wanted that he had a dog that was about to have puppies and that she was making such @ ‘nuteatica of herself that he wanted to get rid of Hahn was surprised to hear that the young pastor had a doy half dozen mouthfuls th of He said that he had 4 that he had never had a dog. There was a male dog in the house Richeson hid never had a dog during the elght months boarded there, but Mr. Canter is Yeged to have admitted he complained Canter dog and thr that he would elther have to vacate his rooms or kill the dog, CALLED ECCENTRIC BY MOTHER from pertodic . emphatically | Morning at 10,30 o'clock, Me his physician, Dr. denied to-day by M. Gardner, who said “T have treated Mr. Richeson for about] and had found his wife dead on her bed ly allment ts a case] with her two-year-old daughter playing I have} about the room The only medict cribed for him 1s what Is n iN cases of nervous break-| gaid h and down, and his affection was wholly duc these may figure in the defense should to overwork se reach @ hearing before a {tra | RICHESO. She then ex-| ‘The mother of the dead girl may be called on to testify as to the all eccentricttles IN WROTE PROPHETICALLY OF |in the aark. vr. Gate asked for the| LOVE AND POISON |". “He must have been out of his mind, she tearfully declared. plained how when he first became en- od to her daughter he had fits of LIBERTY, Mo,, Oct, 2.—An examtna- SMALL LETTERS. | tlon of the 195 volume of the Student, He was shown @ bottle which bore William] @ printed la fe, to-day disclosed the that the Rey, C. a student at the college jlons treatise on (he relation of love and | Potassium.” ison under the Utle “Love's Tragedy.” Dr, ¢ article was primarily a dis-| went to his home and te the em-| polive. Aoout four hours minister dwelt particularly on the|Kenzle, the City P scene where Juliet, supposedly deadly its influence by whose death—also by the deadly | follows soon after. says the article, “always leave the table at meal time, ave his physica! condi “cause of breaking the engagement though this was supposed to have been | ; renewed later, ‘The suspicion of murder came when | aminer was called te the V.'T. Richeson wh: ath of the nine- ten-year-old found In a chair tomeo and Juliet, in the Yathroom, feet and ankles immersed in hot water, unconsctous and nes paper that bad ‘was on the floor. now for the first tm Patterson, superintendent of the as tation, had Dr, Mary Hobart gum- | gives pain, and nowhere in life a more sorrow premature stage drinks Romeo, followed {s told when love's Inovitat possession of the he both boys and girls, young folks e jbelng molested by aunt or fanatical uncle who ha In a few minutes, how- rts of] vist of Dr, MeKenzio sor girl's father had been wired | put tow t the request son, finally got the Rev. on the telephone and, been of course, they | tog work's standard by thelr own She | experience. that Miss Li wanted him to come. immediately. says the following conversation took | ft 1s to think ‘Miss Linnell ts dead? But why 4} # Linnell near at hand and be- we felt that you should know of amie ss FOWLER MA |ON OCFAN SHE SAY ANYTHING?” WAS! ASKED OVER t I baptized Miss Lin. | that consumes the ortal tt touches > KES NEW START) WIFE WAS ILL. TO OCEAN FLIGHT : Aviator, Unable to Cross Mountains, | Will Follow Southern Pacific Route to E. not know why regard to the! Aviator | start | Might ) with you to-day it was right of the desert who found it imposstble his attempts, Mis# Linnell to-day.” medical examiner Will soon but little time tor you to get here if you are coming.” say anything before she Night ee 20,000 More ¥, Italy, Oot. It js underst here that the Government 00 additional troops to “The question took entirely by sur- prise, coming from a rgyman and the wis) —>— — Arraigned This Afternoon on > and | Sent to County Jail IMAKES STRONG DENIAL. “Oct. 15, 1011. “Dearest Eunice—You probably have heard of Avia’s death. he died of polsoning—thereby hangs a tale; ; It will be in all the papers to-| Since Arrest That Wite This much ts aafe: eson; she ate her dinner here; after that | she went in the bathroom and was found there unconscious. It certainly | the stairs yesterday morning; sorning we went to Tremont Temple. She is at the Franklin Square House now. 1 came back about 4.15, She asked me to. Danskin of Cambridge reported to the police to-day chat his son telephoning to Miss Linnell, calling ser up at the | Young Women’s Christian Association Building, to meet him on | ‘This statement is backed up by a young woman friend of the slain girl, who |* heard her talking to Richeson over the phone, promising to meet him. As the young girl left the phone she sald: ppointment for luncheon with a friend.” orge H. Baker, a brakeman, who stated that he | with intent to polson and kill Mer. ‘The saw tho Rev. Richeson meet Miss Linnell at the South Station at 5 P. M. theory is that the wife, not Rowing Friday (Oct. 13) afternoon, has met with a serious contradiction, Richeson |the reai contents of the spent Friday and Friday night as a guest of the Rev. George F. Harvey gt | tingly drank the poison, w He did not leave Pascoag until 8 o'clock Saturday morning, to the Rev. Mr. Harvey. Miss Edmonds t« prostrated at her} fiance of a girl who had Just passed | rst staten: the care of a physician, but lieve in her flane ut Edmands, has his determination to stick prospective son-in-law and ald him as much as possible with nis weaili ot believe such a thing 1s po be said when “We have had, and still hav every cohfidence in out future son-in- will stand behind him until is proved, as I believe it will be proved, that he had no connection with the death of Avis Linnell mony of Druggist Hahn of who sold @ vial of cy- anide of potassium to the accused on iy the most damaging feature of evidence furnished to the structure we are Declares in First Statement Knew About Poison. it terr murderir night from the effect otasstum poisoning r 1 McFarland without bat action of the Grand Jur The accusation of the Newark aw es i# that McFarland placed cy potassium solution in a bottle wh wife supposed contained bromide tle unwit h killed in @ few moments. MoFarland, while being taken from t court to the Essex County jail made the nt he has uttered for the publi » his arrest. He was quite ipoxed about it and expressed his conviction thatshe will soon be freed, 1e declared, | of her. The | solution was procured at my wife's suggestion for cleaning Jewelry") nd such, We have always used It ent cities for that purpose. ‘Ti bottle was on the top shelf of the medi- | for any purpose, She knew I put th cyanide up there, The medicine origina ne, but she f it sons on the an? ome kind. Like all married folk, my wife and never any serlous trouble between us. 2.9] Her life was not tnsured. I wag not “T am told that tt charged IT changed the label on the bottel after finding my wife's body, I didn't touch the by on ft now is the label T put cyanide solution in wife knew what it @ he the bottle and m) Dr. Gale of Roseville and Park ave- nues was called to the McFarland home at No, 26 Park avenue Wednesday ‘arland H,| had just returned to his house, afte: spending Tuesday night in New York M-] In summoning Dr. Gale, McF: was afraid his wife had Dr. Gale found the woman's body. stiff and cold. The doctor made the usual Inquiries as to the cause of death, Me- Farland said he thought his wife lad taken cyanide of potassium by mistake | and inted, no NAME OF POISON WRITTEN IN indicating that the con- tents were harmless, Written at the bottom of the label In pencll in small ed al characters were the words “Cyanide of fac ale left the bottle in the how honed to the ater Dr. Me+ ysiclan, vistted he Marland home, He asked for the is) bottle from which the woman had taken he poison eup—| McFarland produced a bottle which bore a large label reading in written acters, “Polson, Cyantd lution, Apparently it was the s% 1 been shown Dr. Gi fe | Interval between Dr 3 it that But, tn th e's visit and the e one had {would send my tw walt | to ‘ jhe went to Philad hottie that | that | ¢ aged the label r love without] Jt was found today that the cyanide from: the | A} of potussiy room ayy Was procure arles J. Byam loyed by Crocker & of Amphers, N. J, the com- with which Mg got the denies saying he gave ho cyanide to M land, but that MeFarland might © into hiv dark room and helped k TELEGRAPHED FATHER-IN-LAW atch from Roe Maine, states that George A. Crockett, the father of Mra. McFarland, says he a (telegram from) McFarland on lay afternoon stating that Eve! McFarland) was seriously i of 1 failure. Mrs, McFarland was alive and well at her iu Newark Tuesday afternoon and McFarland wa in Now York with his six-year-old son, Robert McParland, when seen in the Pitt ecinct Pollee Station in Newark to: lay, positively denied sending a tele- gram to his father-in-law on Tuesday sent the telegram, he said, on Wed- day. Vhen T found my wife was dea sald McWarland, “1 had to notify her father. 1 did not want to shock nim with the bare statement that, Evelyn was dead, 89 1 sent him a message that she was ill, Later on, from Ppiladel- phia, 1 Sabre statings that 1 ” er, a pho- | ‘arland is em-| of such a| ployed, MeFarland sald love as thie ending tn so cruel a trag-|polson from Eymer, but I Romeo Just when toetr | trequer OF HS WIFE IN NEWARK POISON MYSTER kland.” wrland wa Mc on Wedn ent dead, James H. Brom are of his boy. ‘ed his He said he went to ask Mrs. put she refu lad. Mrs. Br dress is No. 4 No, 4 Philadelphia Newark from Philadelphia Thursday af- ternoon at four o'clock and was arrested as he left the train. | POISON Vic7TiM HAD NO STREET CLOTHES IN HER HOME. In preparing the body of Mrs.‘ Mc+ 1 tho Newark under- tite police made a pecullar They found that the wom- ing whatever except Warland for»: taker had no clo house wrappers and a torn shirt waist. he had no street clothes and no hat. | 1 that they never elghbors now re saw Mrs. McFagland on the street and hat in took the air on the plaza homes in the evenings Mr: | Was never seen outdoors, In his first statement to the police McFarland spoke of his wife's extrava- wance. The condition of his wife wardrobe does not bear out his charge. Some information of value*has been gathered by the police from MeFarland's old son Robert. The boy is in six-yeal re of Mrs. W. C. Carlisle at No. ‘orth Eleventh street, Newark. BOY TELLE OF HIS EVENTFUL TRIP TO THE CITY. The night of his mother's death w: a great night for Robert. While the mother and her two-year-old baby, Ruth, were at home Robert was at a} vaudeville theatre in New York with father, drinking in with childisa agerness all he saw and heard in the strange new world Into which he had been ushered. He had never been to a theatre before. Though ordered held incommunicado by the police, he told to a reporter for The Evening World to-day of his mem- orable trip to New York, and revealed slso that bis father and mother had been separated for @ year and a half before thelr coming to Newark, thrao months ago. "Oh, we had the bestest time at the show, Robert said. ‘There was ali kinds of things—a whole lot—all jum. bled up, for us to see, an’ music an’ lights, and pop bought me three te m sodas! We left home early tn the afternoon, I Kissed mamina goodby, but I guess pop Yorgot to, We went to New York We walked around a whole lot tn. the ifternoon find went to the He sh a while, ‘Then, when tt ‘got dark, we went to a vaudyville th show sure Wag fine. And then we went An to a big hotel and I went to b when pop woke me Whe to New “Mamma i you live b Kobert was a Ame lived w Ke. hom f Robert did not know what caused n. He said he thought tt his father “trave ql t deal. While Robert te this separa 1g because elf on the bed nearby And now J suppose you will have to |take care of Uttle sister?” Robert was os, an’ I will take care of her, too," he replied man rm hig brothe The theory have tntention ended her life was | advanced to-day Mrs, Charles Lush, | friend of the dead woman. Mrs. McFarland always seomed to be very ur y," Mrs, Lueh sald. "she he Was fearfully lonely ax M and wa y from | he lid mingle much with her neighbors and few of them cal hue T belleve to When he: aad MRS. PROMLEY DENIS PART OF M’FARLAND'S STORY, | to The Evening Word HILADELPHIA, 0: In deny. ng to-day that All McFarland ha called upoa thesda = to leave with her his six-y » Mra. B. Brom | declared that ad nelth Javon nor heard of the MeFarlands since they moved from the house boside ner wn a yea Mrs. Bromley was in her name had been dragged into affair, Sho ts the wife of John -year-oldy daughter | sked to explain why | nin with his son day, a few hours after he me and found his wife an old friend, to ing to McFarland he called on ed to take y's ad- Viola street, ‘arland retuned to THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1911. Allison McFarland and His Son of the man accused in the Newark poison mystery fe from a to-day for The Evening Wor Bromley jr., tlie Protective and Assoclations of “The McFarlands occupied the louse | adjoining ours on Viola street for more than @ year," she said. of the Merean hot days of last summer when everybody In the neighborhood of their: McFarland | parents’ home at Rockland, , Me., after a while Mr. the house and went a’ e with them and I cannot un- he showld think that 1 would take care of his young son. Philadelphia night he did not call at my home, nor did T hear that he was in town “The McFarlands apparently had no McFarland gave uj Lis business was, prospered at it sald thelr farewells, expected to see or near them again.” but apparently the Crocker- ctrical Company It was re- iterated to-day that McFarland, who !s the company’s offices at Ampere, there during YALE WESTPONT (Continued from First Page.) West Point back a few and Dean kicked was nothing but a Myatt caught the slippe play was in the middle of a kicked to Spaulding, ater and fumbled. all West Point unable to run, teame were Uke overheat sipped in the Dean kickd, atre. Say, the punted back vou kine who fumbled and recovered Time was called while attendants went srand- pa in Rockland, Me.,” he replied, “But |pop didn’t Hye with us, He was away a year and a half, and then we came mud from their -eyes. called with ‘the ball in the Arm: Score first 0. second_pertod ball on Weat Point's 45-yard line. ‘as downed by ked his Ittle sister, Ruth, lay chuckling to her- ‘bin kieking to Dean on the Dean slipped in the mud and fell on the ball in a puddle, an, from behind yards. After the goal posts, kleked out 5 much diving and wallowing in midfield time was taken out again while Trainer rs. McFarland may Tuthill swabbed the West Point his hands and dean retired to the Ine for but fumbled the wet barely managed to revo at first {t looked he punted to midfleld. » to New + and knowing the goal lke a mudhorse, before he be- Alclne cabinet, she | must have been, I Me covered 50 yari n by Phitbin, score now, b Yale blocked and got ne Was called. 0; Army, 6. First Half—Yal Changes In Line-Up for Third Period. ‘son Went in for Spalding, Free- Dick Merritt for Howe. es the Army brought Viola its great black and yellow flag and car- rjried it the length of the fleld, Dean kicked to Freeman, who came | hack 40 yards, almost-clear of the Army | he “EPLY TO UDR New York Sportsman Explains ‘His Action When Motor Boat Met Mishap. Frederck Kk. Burnham, the millionaire New York broker and sportsman, No. % East Seventy-elghth street, who was charged by Dr. R. A. Toms, Justice of the Peace at Tonowanda, N. Y. criminal negligence and cowardl 1» toe day indignantly denied the charges in| Words both forceful and expressive. Justice Toms's charges came about through the investigation into the acct- dent in Buffalo on Labor Day when Mr. Burnham's speed boat, Dixie IV., ran ashore Into a crowd and killed a boy. Dr. Toms conducted the inquest into the death of the boy, Harold W, Bell. He charged that the aceldent was due to lack of signals between Mr, Burn- ham, who wes steering the boat, and his engineers; that Mr. Burnham was guilty of criminal negligence in not sig- nalling to oop the boat and that he was | guilty of cowardice in deserting his post at the steering wheel and Jumping overboard when the boat was within 9 feet of the shore and might have been brought under control, ‘It ts all untrue,” sald Mr. Burnham “It is a lot of les. They have been sadly misin.ormed. Tam not a coward, ‘nd any one who knows me knows that Tam anything but a coward. ‘I did signal to my engineers, 1 signalléd to them to stop. They stopped ohe motor, but travelling at the rate of 75 feet a second it did not take us Jong to travel the 300 feet to the shore, And T did not jump overboard at a distance f 300 feet from shore. I stuck to the boat to save the lives of those in her and afso those ashor “It was when we had struck a rock about forty feet from shore that 1! Jumped. I have photographs taken when we were about forty feet from shore showing me at the steering wheel. 1 did my best to avoid the accident. I am not a coward, never was a co ‘d, and never will become one. “Tam going to Buffalo on Monday and wil) see the District-Attorney and stand ready {0 present myself before tue Grand Yur: ——$————__—— What It Is, Chicago Record-Ferld,) . What is artistic temperamen ‘oolishress that has succeeded in get tng itself tuken seriously.” the full Yale lineup before he was pulled down, ‘There was an exchange of puats, Rowley went in for Gillespie. Gallau went In for B, Howe. The Army began plunging Into Y line, pushing it back at every charge. At least 20 yards GROSSCUP IN A HURRY IRLFOUND DEAD AFTERMANT -HERHE ) Four Shots Heard Before Body £ | of 17-Year-Old Poughkeepsie Miss Is Discovered. CHICAGO Cet Grosseup of the United States Cfreul\ Court to-day forwarded his resignatio: to President Taft. He a come effect! Judge Grosscup’s resignation nas bee Aelased several weeks in hope of reagi: jing @ settlement in ¢ ceedings of the € trie Road, To+d: TWeO | plans for the future,’ cup, “except tha: Twill resume my pri- ; FARMER IS QUESTIONED. Says Lois Van Deveer Asked , {f He Would Marry Her—- Suggests Suicide dent Taft w morning to make the first speech of his f South Dakota, the versed The President Neweaatle, Wyo. and lef: there at 9.30 A. M. for this elty ‘* programme calis for stops Deedwood, Lead, Sturgis and ial to The Evening World.) POUGHKEEPSIE, N. ¥., Oct. 21.—Lols three-days’ tour year-old girl of Ansis avenue, this city, *ince leaving California § found dead enrly to-day ina ditcn #Pent alongside th port, five miles up tie Hudson. Seaman, son of a farmer who lives near Rayld Ci DONT LOSE YOUR HAIR questioned at length by the police, and his story is being investigated her, home yesterday Seaman says she walked in he was at work ather’s farm and asked him if he would keep his promise to marry her. | bara on ve he refused, but asked Miss Van De and talk th mted and he we ple about finding h said she had threatened to kill him. His mother fainted, and after some excite- ment Miss Va This morning abou says, as he was driving toward Poughkeepsle, an electric socket amp was flashed on him from the road- | and Miss Van Deveer stepped from | behind | ho: in and told his peo- behind a door, and 4 o'clock Seaman he saw who it was he whipped up | his horses and drove on | FIVE MILES FROM PLACE WHERE BODY WAS. the point where was accosted by: Miss Van Deveer, “TM NO COWARD,” | | to the spot where her body was found ’ " {s about five mil It 1s a long walk tor a young girl to accom, ish in two {t could have beens done, the authorities think. SAYS BURNHAMIN |: The death of the girl occurred at 615 o'clock this lished by the testimony of a man em- ployed on Waiter Gilbert's farm, which adjoins the road on which the body wap discovered. ‘This farm hand passed over the road at 5.90 o'olock this morning, The body He must have seen it had it been there, for he entered a cornfield through a gate and drove @ team of horses right over the spot where the body was found lying later on. ‘Mr. Gilbert and others in his farm- | house heard the sound of three shots fired in rapid succession at 6.15 o'clock. After an interval of five or six seconds | they heard a fourth shot. Thinking she shots had been fired by a hunter In the woods they paid no further attention. the driver of a delivery wagon stopped and said there was @ girl lying beside Mr. Gilbert went down and saw that the girl was dead. fled the Sheriff's office at Poughkeep: Sheriff Townsend, District- Attorney Mack and Coroner Selfridge went to the spot. Dr. Weaver of Hyde Park arrived be- He satisfied himself was not there the! | Poughkeepate with | fore the officials. that the girl removed to Poughkeepsle, 7! they were taken to Coroner Selfridges FOUR SHOTS FIRED; ONE BUL.| LET IN BoDy, The Identification of the girl w: immediately after the body was bro Poughkeepsie, Seaman was located within a short Ume. His relations with | known to persons who | were reached by the authorittes. The revolver with which the girl was da few feet from her ‘e four discharged cart- ridges In the chamber, but only one bul- let wourd In her body. was burnt over the bullet hole in her breast, showing the muzzle of the w pon had been held against the goods, The clothing of the girl was wet and her shoes were muddy, indicating that she had been out time in the rain, the giri had b killed was for body. There w ‘The girl's drt The Army of Constipation le Growing Smaller E: CARTER’S LITTLE In a pocket of her ound an electric pack EEL bi*4oou! t TO LEAVE THE BENCH. Judge Sends His Resignation to President Taft Asking That It Take Effect Next Monday, Judge Peter next Monday. leago- Milwaukee Ble have nothing preetice. a TAFT UP EARLY TO TALK TO DAKOTA INSURGENTS. President Makes First Speech Be- fore 7 A.M, Then Moves Along for Other Stops, EDGMONT, S$. Dal, Oct. 2L—Prest« o'clock this up defore te he has Insurgent § tast night in CUTICURA ‘SOAP SHAMPOOS | And occasional light dress- ings of Cuticura Ointment will prevent it when all else jfails. Let us send you a liberal sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment, free, if you have doubts about it. Address “Cuticara,"” Dept. 1D, Boston. Catloara foap and Ointment are sold throughout the world. Try it To-day Lvery kind of foot trouble is relieved by a aingleapplication. his ie the time of year you need it for burning, smarting feet, corns, bunions or. callouses, erasea' teas 2oup, 200¢ilia Ary NY, SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE | Genuine mute Signature Sheard PEELE F you think the costliest, you'll find y Wrong, Try Beer. finely-flavored and nutritious than any other beer. CRUACH OF Tara BO Diduse Mad, Ay ii Boney “Png geen ig in front of Yale posts Dean Kick a goal, Yale blocked and got the ball, In the scrimmage Freeman was | dumped into a mud-puddle head first, | He came out with his white halr turned to a muddy black and the game went) | ; | with little to choose between the sid | on, Dean punted to Philbin and Freeman nted back, There Was @ punting duel Merritt made a 90-yard run and Devo Hyatt Jumped fairly in front of him and brought him down. The Army nant because | i¢teked, Hack came the ball in tye} turn punt and Hyatt caught the ball pn the run and went % yards through caught him and threw him #0 roughly that he was warned by the umpire, ‘Phe period ended with the ball in Army's territory and no more scori Score Anny, 6; Yale, 0 PALE RIPE RHEINGOLD Brewed byS,Liebmann's Sons, Brooklyn, Alldeal- ers. $lacase—24 bottles in Greater New York. | GiOUS NOTICas. ‘Acworth ta" ervcheee APARTMENTS If i vertised in The World, At least that would oe, to be the case: $1,028 “To Let” Adver- tisements were printed in The World tas.” “ month—1,851 More Than Herald, Times, Su: Press COMBINED, 4° nd, Nearly 2,000 “To Let” Ads, In Sunday World To-morroy, —— that it be foreclosure pio iy he declined to awalt yer developments, and transferred her hearing of the case te Judge orge A. Carpenter about my sald Judge Gross- Sn ee es vacant you will see it ad-

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