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¥) ia PRINCETON BEATS YALE, SCORE 6'10 3; WHITE’S 65-YARD RUN WINS THE GAME. ~~ WRATHER—Fate to-night and Sunday; co! FI EDITION. ——SSS— PRICE ONE CENT. Tbe Circulation Book Open to All,“ Copyright, | 1011, by Co. (The New York Wee), The Preee Publi ing ~ BRYAN TAUNTS PRESIDENT SEVEN YEARS; i coneigonon Declares the Defense Made by the Colonel in Recent Edi- torial Will Not Stand. POINTS OUT HIS ERRORS. Declares Roosevelt’s Trouble Is | in Classifying Combina- tions as Good and Bad. whose as 3 Willlam Jennings Bryan abil-| ity to put himself forward dential candidate has been p: demonstrated thre not sure that Col, otubreak tn diffe Thi e Outlook ssevelt’s | th n the trust | « jon ts a virtual casting of his glove} into the arena, But Mr. Bryan that the Colonel's position on the trust matter Is false and unsound, | Mr. Bryan sailed this afternoon on | the Atlas Service liner Prince Joachim | for Jamaica, Panama and Porto Rico j@ will not be back before the Christ. | qwas holidays. ‘T have re asserts Col. yan ont sedis ard the Roosev and as t am tim speak first. It might be taken as an indication of his intention to re- enter politics personal sense, but ic ts net neces to place such a cbn- struction on it, and Tam sot willing to #0 construe It QTHER REASONS THAT WOULD JUSTIFY THE EDITORIAL. ave other reasons which lest nine scussion of conn: tlon that in such with a me he wishes to take discussions, ‘In this particular tration charged that he tue Tear Coal tion, and It was no should defend himself, although 1 think it more charitable to believe he was ceived than to accuse him of ha heen terrorized by the Steel Trust 1 not in my in active part cate the Adminis ved tn transac- unnatural that pwever WwW His | Judge | most {mportant thing avout his is that fails to distin: | tween the ordinary corporation ngage, in legit! nda ‘Trust, The term ‘trust’ is apried spec: | ifvaily to those corporations which par- take of the nature of a mond mn seems to overlook this distinet tries to divi nd bad trusts, He wants the people t a trust Iss injurious, wi ought lo be presu: A cow ie presumed harmless and no proof o that presumption red. the other and vicious, ix not sary on ase, Private Mes are of necessity vicious. ROOSEVELT PRESIDENT 7 YEARS BUT DIDN'T REGULATE TRUSTS Col. Roosevelt was President seven years, but he didn’t succeed in regu lating trusts. The commission form of regulation he suggests ix to my mind a dangerous experiment, not only because t is doomed to failure but because it rests or false and dangerous theory— that competition is Impossible in large business. “That is socialistic de not be admitted without ee to face with the ' Mr. Bryan refused to discuss the situ- }atlon in the Democratic party. He said iis views on the recent election and the affect of the election upon various can- didates were well known and had been widely dessiminated, eat -- MEXICO CITY SHAKEN. Midnight Earthquake Drives Peo- ple in Alor: ‘ MEXICO CITY, Nov. 18,—A slight earthquake was felt here at 1 o'clock this morning, It caused some alarm, but so far as known no damage was done. The movement was from west to vast ‘The, audiences at the theatres that were still open at that hour hurried monon»: rine bringing It cans us to Stree TAFTHASACOLD, issue of Socialism.” |4 ROOSEVELT: ULATE TRUSTS <= HEAD IS HELD FOR $3,000,000 FRAUD James Dunlop Smith Arrested, Charged With Illegal Use of the Mails, LIKE WIRELESS CASE, CANNOT SEE ANY OF HIS CALLERS Doctor Advises Him to Remain Indoors and Drop Business at the White House Attack Cievilined After His Western Trip—No Appre- hension Is Felt. (Special to The Brening World.) WASHINGTON, Novy. 18.—President | Taft is confined to his room at the White House with a severe cold. By! the direction of his physician he bes much annoyance th nsion to the Chief Execu- doctor says no serious appre- felt he President uve Jeveloped the return from his W. nticed last night that gly cold on It had be- immediately told drop the rn tour was come exceed varse his physician nm ohe Was called and he indoors and must stay business for the day. It Was announced at White House that the Presisdent did not expect that would interfere with his trip hmond next Monday ng the tour of the President ne gau let of all sorts of weather and it was a matter of comment that his health did not show the slightest ffect from elther the changes in climate | the strain incident to the swing- uround the cirete One time during the swing he was taken beyond the snow ne of Mt, Ranter, and his friends at the time satd that the We ers had taken @ long han) suggesting to him that he make such a trip. But the dangers of the mountain did not seem to make any iu upon the great physical resources of the Chief Execu- tive. He had rain, snow, hot weather and every kin nosplieric condition th. the weather man could dish up for the period of his trip. The cold did not make its appearance until the President reached the White House [HIS AUTO HITS A WOMAN; HE PHONES FOR POLICE. Wealthy Pencil Manutacturer First Fakes Victim to Hospital in the Car, The automo)! nowhieh Phi heimer of No, 125 West Ninety ip Raid sseventh streei, a Wealthy penell manufacturer, was riding to his country place on the | Hudson to-day struek Mrs. Kate Van- lwa One Hundred th stree left wrist and her collarbone were brok- en, Mr, Baldhetmer, with the ald of his chauffeur, Robert Lee, lifted the woman into the tonneau and took her to Har- lem Hospital, From the hospital Mr. Baldheimer tel- ephoned the police and waited until Policeman Dowling from the One dred and Twenty-fifth street static came to tell him that nefther he nm the chaffeur was held in any way to blame. Fae Ss Drops Dead in Street Car. A man dropped dead on a Second avenue surface car at Thirtieth street Jat 9.39 o'clock to-day, He was about forty years old, 5 feet ¥ inches in height, weighing 169 pounds, of light complexion into the streets, People asleep in their homes were awa and ran out- ‘yore in alarm ee wer trained perceptibly and the arc lamps in the atreets were shaken, and diessed in black The body was \taken to ‘police station. There was uothing | identity the man, ‘Alleged SUFFERS WITH arenes | an i all of his engagements for} to-day and is denying himself to all callers. While the cold iy a matter of Hun: | the Kast Thirty-fifth street | Operations Equal Those of United Company, District-Attorney Asserts. James Dunlop Smith, up to a year ago President of the Radio Telephone Company, with offices at No. 49 Exe change place, was arrested this after- noon on the charge of using the United States mails to defraud, Post Office Inspecturs Birdseye, Ente- mann and Greenaway, who prepared the case, said to-day that the trans- actions of the Radio Company would reach $3,000,000, and were fully as large and {mportant as those of the United | Wireless Telegraph Company, for which | President c. Wilson and his atds were sent to Atlanta prison. | Smith was arraigned hefore United States Commissioner Shields and was ‘held under a bond of $15,000, but was later released pending another investiga \tlon, in the custody of his counsel, W. B, Vause, It was stated before the {Commissioner by ° Agsistunt United States District-Attorney Smith that the| case was not only as big as the United Wireless case, but that it covered fully c. as much territory in the stock selling operations conducted by Smith. Smith is charged with having been made the stock selling agent for the| neern and the Government asserts that In getting rid of the stock, he made false statements as to the value of the stocks and used the mails to convey | these statements to his purchasers, The company was incorporated five years ago, Then Smith, it {s asserted, organized © subsidaries—the Lake the Atlantic Com- cifle Company. He is having entered into a Elmer E. Burlingame for stock in the companies, a short time for using the mails to defraud in pany ch, with ract with sell Burlingame was arrested, ago, the sale of the stock of the Sunshine Company, The company of which Smith was the head went into the hands of a receiver | the a year ago, and then the stockholders as d {ts obligations and put it on its feet. The stockholders are behind |the keys to the mystery ADIOPHONECD. SEEK $422,000 LOOT, WITH KEYS ALONE AS AS GLUES, Bank Wrote’ Rothschild’s Former Wife Gives Hope of Finding Funds. VAULT BOX EXAMINED. ‘Receiver Glaze Returns From St. Louis Asking Who Was First on Trail. George W. Glaze, attorney for the! receiver of the defunct Federal Bank, | returned from St. Louts this afternoon with two sets of keys to th safe de. posit boxes in which Rothschild, to) convicted president, who dled in prison, hid his wealth when he was about to be arrested. The attorney sald immediate. | ly he had material evidence that Roth- schild did hide nearly half a million o currency and he belleves that he holds in a Iteral sense. Mr. Glaze will begin a systematic searoh to find the two sets of safety deposit boxes that will fit the: keys. There are four keys in .all—two in each set, One set, made by a noted company, be rs the number “5.” The keys appear to have been little used, The other two made were well worn and showed they had been often used, EAPECTS8 TO UNLOCK WAY TO, $5 2,000. orld. ‘dd Circulation Books Open t to All,” WEATHER—Fa iF to-n! Fi EDITION. ght and Sundays layiecla, TIGERS SURPRISE YALE TEA IN BATTLE ON MUDDY FIELD © NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1911. \Makes Himself Hero Again With 65-Yard Run for Tigers One of the sets, at Irast, the lawyer thinks, stands between the depositors and creditors of the Federal Bank and | nearly $500,000 that he hopes to apply) to their claims, Mr. Glaze went at once to his hom 606 West One Hundred and tenth street, where his wife is seriously il, He made this statement, when asked about his trip “Acting upon a telegram from Mra, Eugene C, Batten, whose first husband | was the late David Rothschild, Presi- dent of the defunct Federal Bank, to the effect that she had reason to believe | $442,000 existed in some New York or} New Jersey bank, I went to St. Louis: | I found her so ill that I had trouble wetting her physician to let me see her. | “She said she had no tnformation ex- | cept that several days before his ar-| rest Rothschild brought home a large sum of curency—pobably half a million dollars—and dividing it in two bundles, | hastily left the house. I have learned that he deposited bundles in the branch | of the Corn Exchange Bank near his home that night, and that he came the next day and took them to parts unknown. the prosecution of Smith. It is stated that the Information upon which the| prosecution is based was furnished to! jovernment by W. W. Thompkins, of the convicted United Wireless lals, Who was brought from Atlanta | prison last hight, It ls expected Thomp+ kins will be pardoned for giving the information to the Distriet-Attorney. Minith has been for some months in| Nevada, promoting several, mining | schemes. His family lives at Mahopac | N_Y., and he was arrested while on his way from the West to visit his} Radio system was placed in ‘aa it made yous tour of the y but it ts rid, i the apparatus as taken off of the ships when it was found to be| worthless In the naval game, Several] experts have joined in the fight and n to have made tests of the system and found that it will not work, | > THREE HURT IN TRAIN WRECK) and Fretwht \° laven Road NEW MILFORD, » Noy. 18—A| passenger exp bound front Hridgeport to Pittsfield, Mass. the New York, New Haven and Hartford | Railroad, ran into the rear end of a freight train just south of the Merwins: | ville station to-day, Three persons were injured, the forward part of the pas- ngine badly damaged and the | and two cars of the freixnt| Slippery rail and tog held responsible eacchtent. — | ne injured are Phineas Clark Jor New Milford, a aboose | train wrecked, M Passenger on the| Jexpress, cuts and bruises; William Seally of Bridgeport, Adams Express messenger on the train, and Charles V. \r mmpson of Pittsfield, Mass of the freight | OE ate | autgeisrene te nme Sadaehal ae conductor ‘The Corn Exchange people an examination of the box was made on Jan, 1909, in the pres of proper legal authorities, and that the | box was then empty. “I have been curious 3 to know at| whose instance that examination was | held. Who was looking for that fund| after the Federal Bank affairs had| injured, a Zw Saw WHITE ES How Princeton Won the Game. le lost through the inability of Capt. jof seven chances in the first three periods, Howe only succeeded in scoring Yale outplayed the Tigers in the first three- in Princeton's territory most of the time. White made a sensational 65- quarters, tel!_me one goal in the second period. the ball being Howe to kick fleld goals. White and De Witt won for Old Nassau, y up the ball on his 4 -yard line rd run for a touchdown in the first ten minutes of play, », after one of Camp's kicks had been blocked. His phenomenal De Witt gained on almost every exchange of punts. punting really saved ¢ |Michigan an hy » for Princeton 12 PAGES when he picked “PRICE ONE White’s Sensational 65-Yard Run in First Period Overwhelms Bull- dog, Who Fights Back Des- perately, but in Vain. FIELD GOAL FOR BLUE IN THE SECOND QUARTER. Nassau’s Line Proves Invincible and Old Eli Is Forced to Resort to a Kicking Game. Pued Pad Pt” Princeton - - 6 0 6 Yale --.--.- 0 3 0 3 Heres the Yaie-Princeton Line Up Yale. Positions. Avery .. +» Left End. Sculley ,. -Left Tackle. . Francis Ketcham = McDevitt .../ Paul Bomeister | Howe Camp . Right Tack’ .. Right End... Quarterback. ° . Left Halfback Spalding . + Right Halfback Dunn Fullback... . The officials: Langford, Trinity, referee; Williams, ‘Pennsylvania, um- pire; Snow, Michigan, fleld judge; Coe , Cornell, head linesman. (Special from a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) YALE FIELD, NEW HAV Conn., Nov. 18—The name of Sam White will go down in Princeton football history linked with |those of Coe and Cochran and Kelly and all the old-time football j heroes. For it was Sam White to-day who picked up a fumbled ball and ran nearly the length of the field for the winning touchdown. With White, Princeton will remember Eddie Hart, who made a stone wall of Princeton's defense, and Duff, the biggest stone in that wall, and of Pendleton and Baker and last, but not least by far, of De Witt, whose 1 © splendid punting all through the game offset Yale’s superior defense and kept the Tiger goal out of danger. It is safe to say that the Princeton team surprised even the ens, thusiastic rooters in the Princeton sections. In former games there have always been holes in Princeton's line and there has been al- together too much fumbling. To-day Princeton tightened down and played the closest and hardest brand of football. There was litte fumbling on Prince-) two they were fluttering banks of blue ton’s side—much more on Yale As for| in the east and of orange and black tn " a nutes to two @ De Witt's punting, he was absolutely] the west. At ten mij sure of protection behind the Prince-| teat cheer rose as Yale went right to Out cere Leena ng st quarter the Tigers were going strong, pushing Yale steadily work on the muddy fled, Sudden; | been settled up and the r r dise| In the last quarter the Tigers were going strong, t ton Hine, His punts were never blocked. | peua" une mniay eld. Suadeny wee | gharuea? That fact we would like | | toward thelr own goal Camp, who punted for Yale, was almost! yurse out with the complimentary yell now. os apenas | r Prt as sure ax De Witt, but at the best| for Princeton—the Yale cheer. |HUNT HALF-MILLION HOA o| ould not « long, clean drives, Brek-ek-e aX, COMX WITH KEYS AS CLUE. " 1 rial ho saved It was Howe, Yale's captain, who sav Brek-ek-ek-ex-coax, coax “Mra. Batten has given me two sets Yale the pain of betng defeated by a D, ¥ of keys, which she says Rothschild gave | ig. th) wabhinwena enon © op, O op, Parabalou to her just before he went to serve his! tempt from the tw d tine He Yale, Yale, Yale, sentence, with the Injunction ever to| r dred a Held 8 Wa tana de / Rah, rah, rah, guard them until out \D " th 0 0 3 3 : yep Rab, rah, rah, - - e Dj more attempts during the game, but “xyatematte vs vn-| Varumou |aiwaya fell short. ‘Thirty-dve thousand] Tah, Fah, rah, der the auspices of the Banking Depart- - 0 5 ae a 1 Princet » t Prince ee as ; 7 mane po Be pees E \r je suw the game, The grand stands rinceton, Princeton, Princeton, MnO CE PSE TE Came eS aCney: ‘Harvard 0) 0 |were packed and at 2 o'clock it waa im-| ‘Then Princeton yelled for Yale with jan we have great expectations cmb possible to Ket a tleket at any price, | the Tiger for Howe, { laud that.no steps have been taken t a = the Kame was over the In the middle of the yell the Tiger Probate any will made by David J d _ = « oO it) 0 ston rection marched onto team came running out and for two , ndians be bag Renee rrp parley Br statement ma ' 6 6 0 12 the serpenting dance, K hats sent thelr deflance echoing back end le attorney aid ee. . the artornes, she ad Roth: Sv PACUSE Hester oat ur atl cercs sarcent Rte: Yalo's end of th p wi! iait him - — — — CRUMBLE boat oe Ginette FIRST QUARTER. healt git, tick to mor Colgate - - - 6 0 0 for once, ‘gloom—d sloom 191 prineton won the tase and Yale kicked effects of eating too mucl is APMY - - - = 6 0 6 gh the 20,000 wa Syard line and only made five yam inet laren |before he was pulled down by Hall, wife took him a large ¢ * and he mae | vas that covered tha yen 0 BAG. 98 proceeded to gorge himsel! it, the Se Fc A ll ety er one ty Ot the hee attack that killed him resulting, say Roy at punted to mi and Dun ap downe The attorney said that a safety de Penn State z 0 0 0 0 SAAYAS ANG. BLA W WOE eds the) ity man on the SS-yard ine, Camp posit box in the Lincoln ‘Trust Company Water was pumped off as much a8 It! yunted down close to the Princeton goad, had heen searched a short time before N ee eee 0 0 0 0 ould be, and dry white sand was} yur pe Witt punted back again end he went to St outs, and that nothing avy dummy nthe ground and spread over | with the aid of a quick tackle by Dun- ¢ bean foun notin hi an an bares x LNs ie c vols To sop Up the mols) lap on the exchange Yale tried the line, hed Wad, 8s W. 1 a oe 6 0 0 6) an noon found the fleld still in bad| up the play and hurled the runner bac! of the Federal Hanh, esieyan ‘ fast play for a loss, Again Yale punted, but the Kerosene on e—Wo Dei N Y U 0 2 0 2 ly before game time the wind| hall flew straight over in the crowd, P e e e . e sharp and cold out of the west,, De Witt punted to Yale's %-yard Mine rn Mary, Lyons, thirty years ol oe a iy lariving away the heavy black cloud/and Phillips downed his man on the stout the {eco ahd body. Yesterday BeBi yg | Banks spot. Camp samme: bees FACS Reetnochtane atleenied ta ible ate Penns r mobbed tie 0 0 | ‘The great wooden stands began to fil | was run out of bounds, Yale punted with kerosene In the range at her homo, y iong before tne game. Hy a quarter to|again to the middle of the feld, where No, 65 West Forty-nlxth street. In tho| | Pendleton slipped in a mud puddle and explosion that followed she was terribly rm) e 0 5 (FOR OTHER FOOTBALL GAMES| mufted the ball. A Yale man fell on ft O} again GEE PAGE 7, After failing to gain the Mne