Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
, ' toenluht oF Sunday. PRICE ONE ‘CENT. « ht O11, pate) Tue’ New ‘The Frese banal Naoto AI “TIERS BEAT MRIMOUT IN FLUKIEST PLAY EEN ON Quarter Great Game EVER ANY GRIDIR Would Have Ended Without Scoring on Either Side. QW. FINAL SCORE, PRINCETON, 3; DARTMOUTH, 0. FE BY ROBERT EDGR: N. Special to The Evening World.) PRINCETON, N. J., Nov. 1 Princeton Field to-day by the most griliron, 1.—Princeton beat full of sympathy last quarter, when De Witt’s try for a tield goal sent the ball so low that it rolled along the ground toward the goal posts. line it suddenly bounded straight into the air and went over the bar. Except for this accidental scor final result would have n ne to nothing. Dartmouth played a mag: | nificent, snappy Kame atl the way with out slackening speed for an instant, In everything but punting she had the best | of it, and in handling punts she entirely Outclassed the Princeton backs whose | fumbling and slow starting after c tng punts was a feature of the play in| every quarter, Except when driven into danger the ‘Tigers seemed willing to play on the defensive, and even at that they often} Hogsett through failed to stop Llewellyn, Morey, and Barends, who could dive the eye of a need! Princeton didn't s as she did against Harvard. no injuries worth mentioning, throughout the game the play was fast and clean Way down in old New Jerse n that int Tiger who will | eat right off your hand | n battle with thel f pre 1 \ | beasts He frightens ¢ > nin this pecu (CHORUS) Wow, w Wow-ow-wow, hear the Tiger ron ' Wow, wow, wow-wow-wow! rolling up| the score | Wow, wow, wow-wow-wow! t move} song! r When you hear the Tiger sing his Jungle | . | That was the greeting Prince | ers gave Dartinouth j Dartmouth rooters cane with a voaring cheer Kefore the ary battle ertes'| were over Prince nd Dartmouth came trotting out. Princeton was} first and Vendteto " 1 again at quarier FIRST PERIOD. | Vaughn kicked of = fo: After a few punt ady Mage on olean around Prir cleared a full twenty-fl he was driven out 0} Dartmouth wildly « 1 at yell, "Mb Loomboom, bing bing Ag if encouraged weird com: | bination of sounds, Dartnout an twisting the Time 1 again on punts t back tackled before they could gain a Dertmouth's. ends were lightning fast and the Tiger Ine was so leaky that Morey, sent through Phillips, evaded | ae eager woult-he tacklers a crowded fe wong twent 0 yaxde hefor after an slipped « and took eight newly end of the firs wl the ball tn mid fleld, wit SECOND PERIOD. De Wilt Kicked. More punts, and | then Llewellyn Pana esiGd Dunlap. for seven yards. Dartmouth was play. | ing the swiftest and snappiest gind of a gam, &he risked getting the neede three yards thr the line and ba failed, De Witt Kicked, and now hap- pened a surprising thing, The lght- | looking, gre boys began punching the full of hole, Betore they hi ers had been | @riven back to their 2-yard line Here Dartmouth lined up tot a field goal, The ball rose beautifully and while every Princeton heart stopp beating, sailed slowly along toward t joa! posts, Hut it missed by a foot, A moment later Princeton was safe out fn midfield, Here Pendleton had his chance, and it looked like another jonx um with a score at the end of it, but Ped Ea Mele » Ganrnuee ‘on Sixth Page) dead, Cornell LINEUP. r Princeton Whit A Hort hy Hn Dartmouth, ‘ Daley via, Teal’ Knewma = $a 000 FORTUNE = INABOX LEFT BY ODELL’S RELATIVE Police Find Recluse’s Papers | Allotting Property Which Ex-Governor May Share. iN But for De Witt’s Accidental Field Goal in Final] Dartmouth on 1Stonishing fluke ever seen on any Even the Princeton rooters were game team that had lost without being beaten. The score came in the Lieut, STOLEN $422,000 SOUGHT. ON STORY Bank Funds in Vaults Here, | | | Former Wife Declares. |ONE BOX FOUND EMPTY Prosecutor of Bank Wrecker Says No Such Sum Was Ever Missing. When District - Attorney the story of Mrs, Eugene Batten, that her former ee David Rothschild, | had “plante two metropulltan dis- At the S-yard {ict banks #22,000 of the money looted | from the Federal Bank and Glove Se- curities Company, they ran squarely Against a snag. Rand & Kresel, who fhe. Assitant Ditriet-Attorney prosecuting Rothschild, id: “I am not inclined to believe the story. I went through the pape! in \that case from A to % and as far I | went in the investigation of that case there was no such amount of money unaccounted for," A second stumbling block came when, tewase toni tut Rothschild had only left his loot in the Corn Exchange safety vaults it Seventy-second street Batten in her story said her husband Placed $237,000 in these vaults. Stanley R. Walker, superintendent of the vaults, “On April 11, 194, two men, giving their names as D. and L. Levy here and rented a box. They sa had an account in our Astor place branch and did business on the Bowery. We rented them a box and they placed | two packages in it. They came back next day and took the packages. They also took the keys, The receiver for the failed Rothschild Institutions opened the box in January, 1909, and found nothing tn it." ‘The assets of the Rothschild compantes have been shrouded In more or less mys- | tery for seven years. Rothschild died in ANC Nov, ILA small! Sing Sing while serving a sentence for | ne nd box found at the head of the! breaking the Federal Bank and the be whiel . a rectuse,{Globe Securities Company. His widow, tity, of former! Who had sold many of her rich Jewels was fo is held to-da by the poll tis belleved, contains papers dive posing of $500,000 wort! of property It, wi b wed by the public ade ministrator, 1 relatives of ad the Kast, who were fled last nts death, reach Los An 1 urvived by two Peekskill, N terville, Kan, W Veinceton. | FOR OTHER FOOTBALL GAMEs | “hie dying in the prison hospit SEE PAGE 6. ‘;TCLO HER OF Two PACKAGES City and with miles of streets piled high with decomposing retuse, Strike | sustain the validity «fa prohibitive ordi. | tens sort of way last Monday night. ant | Hay ,q} {9 Pay for the last prison attentions to {the man, married Eugene Batten two years ago and went to St. Louls to re- | side, They have been living for two | months at the Buckingham Annex, West | Pine Boulevard and Kings Highway, St. Louis. | OF MONEY. | Declaring that a mental haze had de- d her jterday, inf St, Louis, told that h band had taken her into his ¢ hus- nee and (Continued on Second Page.) “ RESULTS OF FOOTBALL GAMES Dartmouth - - ‘0. ri 0 0 ‘Princeton - - 0 0 0 3 «Brown - - - - 0 0 0 0 "lYale --... 9 3 8 15 Indians - - - 3 3 9 18 ‘Harvard fon! 6 0 415 Lafayette- - - 0 0 6 6 Penn - -- - 5 6 0 23 (Rutgers - - - 0 - 0 0 N.Y.U. - - - 0 0 0 Michigan - - 0 0 0 0 -2-- 0 o* 6 6 | | Mrs. Batten, Who Says Her Form er. TOLD BY WOMAN David Rothschild Put Federal | Whitman's j for the staff began an investigation to-day of Isidor Kresel of Jerome, | and Columbus avenue for one day. Mrs. | NEW YORK, SATURDAY, "NOVEMBER 11, == 1911. 12 PAG Husband. Hid $422,000 of Stolen Funds MF syatet WHITE VILNGS STRIKERS PPEAL TO MAYGR GAYNO ote |Riots Renewed All Over the City) When New Drivers Start Out | to Clean Streets Under Escort of Police. | sonal conduct or habits which might ve | With mobs assaulting and stoning drivers and policemen all over the Organizer William H. Ashton proposed an armistice to Mayor G ynor of citizens to hear the grievances of the striking Street Cleaning De- partment drivers. | Ashton sent his proposal to Mayor Gaynor at a special messenger. Its ran as tlk WS James, L. L, by nd legislative minds aimee oni ant subjects. Unreasonat | been declared by the United States | preme Court to be an error. | “Commissioner Edwar as $3.75 each which is $11.25 per day, and | i ) they work days |attempt to, while our voters and cit | zens who have worked taitur tor | our elty for many years are « the | Mght of day and the su , or at t make | make their a little bright ing the long winter, —pe “You say there is no strike and 1 —- F ‘i |nearttly agree with you, but we most’ Pavilion Closed, Jurors With- jagree th: there tlon of work ne solely due to able order off — drawn and Exhibitors Are the Street Cleaning Commissioner. On behalf of the employees I re Denied Prizes. | request Your F as our chief exe cutive to have day collections resumed! “ by our cltizens and not Imported Jatrike breakers at enormous cost to our! ROME, Nov M—Difference among the muriainatie managers and pairo he Interna: WILL DECLARE ARMISTICE IF | tio bs n have resulted In| HE WILL AGREE. the ry e ¢ American pavilion, |the wi: wal American jurors } “An armistice will be at once declared |“ ‘ 4 jand men or to report f work if, of awa ision of Ameri- uch A committee as suggested ap: y from the list of those Pointed, and we will clean the streets In ) ve priges @ few hours for $2.48 per cart, instead of " e tie dhoublan in $11.%, = which being paid to im! volving American pavilionfi Jos parte strike breakers and non-citizens. | penpell, the American artiat, waa “As an adviser to these poor men, Ferien Ge RBA BRna Ciera with families to support T want to ap.) ¢unlms ul OH Met Of peal to the humane side of Your Honor tah dae HE and ask if you realize that your action Ler Jones yetpon nd oti eet has placed many families in want aiPtusuwne, Ceatel” th Ripe teva’ alee seu Whose providers h tolled many years | ti yap aye *awsloab See a Hire ali Wor (Continued on Second Page.) ss ek tee. ia alae Wasa i IG cca, ss sell ry Be al | would attem® | auc WOMEN MAY SMOKE IN PUBLIC PLACES, SAYS CITY COUNSEL Declares Ordinance to Pro- hibit It Would Probably Be Turned Down in Courts. ONLY O} 2 STRING TO IT If the Woman Disturbs Public Peace by Smoking She May Be Arrested. | Women may amoke tn public, provid- | log their performance in that respect does not bring about a disturbance of |the peace. ‘They may smoke even @ | clay plpe-a dudeen—in public if they wish, but If public peace ta ruffled by | that act then the woman smoker may | be stopped by a policeman, and if he | persists, she may be arrested. | An official opinion along these lines was rendered to-day by Cofporation | Counsel Watson, who himself uses to- ‘bacco sparingly. Recently the Alder- |men asked the Corporation Counsel to advise them If women could legally | smoke tn public, Alderman Dowling in- troduced the resolution seeking to pre- vent women from smoking in publi¢ places, “Tr wé' don't stop tt now,” ne sald, “some of these fine days we wilt be seeing women going down Broadway or Fifth avenue hitting up @ ble clay pipe. How would that look?’ In his opinton the Corporation Counsel the authorities, in order to in an ordinance as a proper exer-J cise of the police power, the papers, to be effective, must bear a real or sub- stantial relation to the public health, morals or safety. | “The validity of an ordinance such as you propose depends upon whether the | Court would consider such a prohibition | to bear a real and substantial relation to jth ects of the police power, and whether such provision would con- stitute an unreasonable discrimination on the ground of sex. ‘The question not be answered with absolute assur- ance at this time, because It is one, per- haps, as to which reagonable minds might differ, But I may call your at- ten tlon to the fact that the prohibition pt to control personal con- which 1s no way encroaches upon the rights of others, and which many might consider to be not subversive of public order, health or morality, Per- PAN N SUBWAY FIRE WHEN UGH AND SMIOK for Twent FIREMEN AND All the trains in the subway wei car in a ten-car Bronx express just left Grand Central Station, going LOST HIS BRIDE AT CHURCH DOOR: Cockrell Lesster, Son of Lum- ber King, Stopped to Light Cigarette, She Vanished. Has any one seen a lost nineteen-year- old bride? merely vujgar or indelicate, In the opin- | ton of your Board, or involve bad taste | would not necessarily be sufficient to nance. | “My opinion 1s that the courts would! more likely hold an ordinance — pro-| veure, Mrs. Batten yes- this afternoon, providing the Mayor will consent to appoint a committze | nivtting public smoking by women 4q| Uvew atv the: Aneoals, | be void than valid. “It is possible also, that such a) | ordinance might conflict’ with Sectton| 40 of the Civil Rights law, providing! Fougary appeared before the City Clerk | that all persons shall be equal accommodations, | facilities and privileges tn taurants, hotels, &e. confiict the ordinance would give way entitled advantag Inns, res ‘all, ? Samuel Haller, thirty-for years old, was | killed here last night while making | n balloon ascension. When his bi loon was 3,000 feet high He ¢ the parachute, ‘The sud . the brass bar to which he was ding, Heller clung to the broken MEET UA ne Rees Msclean from the ground, He then lost dle arip and fell. —e New Justices Swear Jobs Cost Nothing } | Affidavits of election expens- es were filed to-day in the County Clerk’s office by Jus- | tice Francis M. Scott and Jus- | tice-elect Henry D. Hotchkiss. There wasn’t much to the | sworn document, as both Jus- tices took solemn oath that their election had been ob- tained without the expendi-| ture of a cent. Ir ® The affidavits apent nothing directly or in- rea | directly, “by myself orthrough any other person.” ate that they| eee In case of such! © | as | because nobody by hy Thin inquiry 1s instituted in behalf of William Cockrell Lesster, 2nd, who says he lost a bride in the most care- Lesster, who is a wealthy lumber jdealer and only twenty-two years old, from which resl- we his plaintive plea for the return of his bride ts sent out It seems that Lesster and Mis s Betty | Monday afternoon and got the last mar- riage Meense issued that day. t, naughty child, gave her address No, 664 West One Hund nty-ninth street, which was a story xe bride- and name or deserip tlon is known tn that But anyway, Lesster says, they y to the Little Chureh Around the ¢ ner and were spliced hard and fast into a combination. ‘Then, while w away from f 1 him ' ' rid Ww Fougary, a na Willow Van 5 ' CHATTANOOGA, Tenn, X Wilson Vance, of New 1 we MeN writer of aome note and had been co nected with various newspapers in an editorial capacity, He had also acted as Washington correspondent for several New York papers, @ouls Joseph Vanve, a New York aut fa his son, His body will be taken to New York for Mourial, WEATHER-Light rain Fi EDITION. WHO'S SEEN HER? ‘THOUSANDS IN PANIC OVER SUBWAY FIRE INDIANS SPRING SURPRISE, BEAT HARVARD I8 TO I5- to-night of Sanday. PRICE “ONE OENT 13 GO OvT E FILLS TUBE Short Circuit in Express About Forty fifth Street Stalls Crowded Trains Along Whole Line y Minutes. POLICE ADD TO EXCITEMENT. Passengers Leave Trains and Walk td Nearby Stations When Power Is Turned Off. re halted for twenty minules at noow to-day when the burning of the insulation on the light wires of the ninth as the train passed: Forty-fifth street: « filled the tube with dense smoke and started a panic. The train had just . north, when the short-circuiting of wires under the ninth car put out every light in the train. Some excited person cried “Fire!” an@ the smoke, percolating into the cars, with its greasy odor, thoroughly fright- ened the passeng The station at Grand Central and nearby stations were filled with early matinee crowds, to whom the panic was conveyed by d+ grees. When the cry of “Fire” went ringing through the.cars the guards hurried through the aisles assuring the passem- gers that nothing more cireult had occurred every one would get out in safety. The guards closed the doors of the train and refused 40 allow any one to leave. A woman with @ baby broke the chain of guards and insisted upon being allowed to leave the car. The baby cried and the woman demanded her rights. The current had by. this time been shut off in all lines of the subway and it was perfectly safe for Passengers to go into the tube, FIREMEN STRETCH HOSE INTO TWO SUBWAY STATIONS. An alarm of fire was turned in under the idea that @ train was burning, aad two engine companies came end j stretched hose into the tunnel at Fit- tleth stret and Times Square. With ithe firemen came police reserves from the Weat Forty-seventh street station. ‘Tho arrival of the firemen and polices men Increased the panic among the matineegoers, who thronged the sta. | tlon platforms. With the arrival of policemen and @re- | men the subway employees agreed to permit the passengers to leave the cars, They opened the rear doors of the train . firemen and policemen formed @ r from Forty-fifth street te Times Square and escorted the terrifie® ssengers down the tracks to the Times juare station, There they climbed to the platforms and went into the outer alr In the meantime all the other traine < on the line had come to @ dead stop bee cause the power Was o! Unk off of the power With the cute the loss of »/ all lights on the system, and the passeme gers on all local and express traine Were lert stranded in the dark wherever » their trains happened to get caught, Im - | the )/ ble passengers could smell the emeke trains nearer the scene of the treu- of the burning tnsulation and many alarming reports became current, AMBULANCES CALLED BY PAN- ICSTRICKEN CROWDS IN STREET ‘Tho guards had Mttle trouble jn gete the passengers to maintain onder, and (vere Were no Injuries, The pante ju the fmmediate netghborhood of the accident, however, was great. It ex- tended to the ets, where excited per- sons called not only the firemen and but sent ambulance calls to carby hospitals for ambulances te take away Close overcome by smoke, ho firemen turned @ Mune of Rese om ing Insulation when the pasa vad been taken from the care, was little use €or the stream the fire was out when the power was taken off, and the water had only the work of putting eut the smouldering tmsulation, ‘During the half hour eg puble the express in astoniehings pay crowds of holiday vs vd Up