The evening world. Newspaper, November 25, 1911, Page 1

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—SS———— EDITION. The “ Circulation Books O; Roman Catholic Priest Of- ficiates, but Bride Denies She Renounces Faith. INVITATIONS RECALLED. Plans for Elaborate Ceremony Abandoned Because of Parent's Illness. Mies Mildred Sherman, the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs, William Watts Sherman, and heiress to, many millions, ‘wes married this afternoon to Lord Camoye, « young nobleman of ariscratic Iineage, but possessed of elender acres, at the home of her parents, No. 8&8 Fifth avenue. The ceremony was per- formed in Mr. Sherman’e sickroom, in the presence only of the immediate members of the dride’s family and the DFidegroom's two brothers, Before the ceremony the Sherman's @enied the published report that the beide had renounced her Protestant Pplocopal faith to become a Roman Catholic. ‘The ‘following formal statement, in ental of the rumor, was made by Law- rence L. Gillespie, husband of a sister of the bride, at his home, No. 108 Kast Seventioth street: The Sherman family authorizes Mr. Lawrence L. Gillespie to deny that Miss Sherman has given up her faith and entered the Roman Catho- Me Church, or is even contemplating wuch a step. The marriage ceremony, Mr. Gillespie explained, was performed by a man Catholic priest in the Roman Catholic ritual for the reason that Lord Camoys is a Roman Catholic and has received a special dispensation to marry Miss Sherman, If the marriage was first performed in the Protestant Episcopal faith, a second ceremony, performed in the Roman Catholic or any other ritual would not have any legal standing, the first being the real contract. Nor would an Eplscopa! first marfiage be con- sidered a marriage by the Roman Cath- olte Church. The Roman Catholle mar- riage satisfes the Roman Catholic Church and is also regarded as a proper marriage by the Protestant Episcopal Church. NEWPORT PRIEST TO PERFORM THE CEREMONY. The ceremony was Rev, Father William Ne of St. Mary's Church at Sewport, @ personal friend of Mr. Sherman, a though Mr. Sherman {s not a member of the Roman Catholic Church. -Mre. Sherman, who is a daughter of the late John Carter Brown, founder of Brown University and fifty times a millionaire, fs an Episcopalean. The fliness of Mr. Sherman, hia atrong desire to witness the wedding of his daughter and the fear that he may not live another week were responsible for putting forward the marriage one week. Four hundred invitations had been sent out for a wedding reception to follow the ceremony next week, but these have been recalled, and the serve foe Was arranged to save Mr, Sherman as much fatigue as possible. an, rei Besides Mr. and Mrs, Sherman there Were present as witnesses only Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence L. Gil ple, their son-in-law and daughte Norrie Sellar, the bride's hal Mrs, Howard Brown, NM Sherman's sister-in-law, and Hugo and Edward Maurice Stoner, Lord Camoy's two brothers. Mrs. lespie was Miss S.er- (Continued on Second Page.) Real Estate Exceptional opportunities to buy a home on very reasonable terms will be found among the Real Estate advertisements in next Sunday's World, This is the time of the year to get genuine bar- gains. If your ambition is to own a home be sure and read next Sunday's World. MORE IIOUSES are buuaint and sold through The World than any other source, PRICE ONE OENT. YALE AND HARVARD PLAY TIE GAME: ~~ NAVY 3, ARMY 0, END OF THIRD PERIOD POPE PIUS PAYS SPECIAL HONORS TO) MGR. FARLEY Coors, Tio lie Weahrenrouaine MISS SHERMAN WEDDED TO LORD CAMOYS AT THE SIGKBED OF HER FATHER) i NEW YORK, nhecbrlbndenda dod NOVEMBER 25, 1911. THE ARMY TO NAVY: “GREETINGS” crc BY HANGS SELF [BURGLAR FIGHTS BECAUSE HE HAS | HIS WAY OUT OF NO PLAYMATES) HACKENSACK JAIL and Tells Him He Long De- sired to Elevate Him. ROME, Nov. %.—Pope Pius gave a Private audience to-day to Cardinal- Designate Farley of ‘New York. The reception was attended with consider- able ceremony, but was most cordial, and at its conclusion, in response to the Cardinal-Designa: expressions of Sratitude, the Pontiff sald that it had long been his desire to recognize the loyalty of the Catholic Church in Amer- fea and the meri of the Archbighop of New York. « Accompanied by hig .escretasy, Rev.| Cedric Harrison, the lonely little boy J. V. Lawis, and Rev. William G.|o¢ mystery at New Rochelle, was found Murphy the Archbishop drove in a pri- vate and closed carriage from the Hotel Bristol to the Vatican, The Swiss French to-day. Zeore. presented eetien as the, Aveta (fifteen years 614, had taken hie on because he was tired of standing on through the Court of the ‘Pappagailo,|the outside of the childish world of his stopped in the great Court of an|section, ever looking in, but never per- Damasa before the entrance to the|mitted to join the frolics of the other stairoase which leads to. the| children. Fate played a pecullar prank upon Tt left him with the com- marke of bishop's carriage entered and, passing grand Papal apartment. POPE PIUS MEETS HIM WITH|the child. OUTSTRETCHED HANDS. As the carriage halted the occupants| French's gardener, Harrison, a West were saluted by the gendarmes. Step-|Indian negro, ping down the Cardinal-designate was| wife, met by the Master of Ceremont conducted him to Clementine Hal! he wi recelved by Mgr. Bisleti, the Major Domo of the Vatican, and himself @ neo-Cardinal and by other dignitaries of the Pontifical Court, At the opposite end of the hall a detachment of Swiss Guard was drawn up in salute. Bacorted by Mgr. Tanl, who has charge of all the ceremonies in which the new Cardinals will participate, Car- dinal-Designate Farley passed through the different rooms of the gorgeous Papal state apartment and reached the throne room which was once Pope Leo's bedchamber. From this room he was admitted to the Ibrary, where the audt- ence took place, by an officer of the noble guard and a private chamberlain, As the new Cardinal was being intro- duced the Pope advanced with out- stretched hands and met the prelate at the door. After an affectionate ex- change in which Cardinal Designate ley kissed the Pontift's ring, His Holiness insisted that his visitor be seated ut his left while he himself oc- cupied @ chair before his writing desk. Rain has fallen steadily for the past few days, but to-day the skies cleared and the sun, entering the windows of the library, brightened the Papal work- room, The audience lasted for more than half an hour, after which the Pope and the Cardinai-designate reappeared at the library door, As they parted His Holiness said that he hoped to see the Cardinal-destgnate frequently during his stay in Rome. POPE LONG DESIRED TO HONOR NEW YORK PRELATE, The exchanges in the library were quite personal, but it was learned that after Cardinal-Designate Farley had thanked the Pope for himself and in reach a vital spot. The four wounds he inflicted are deep and deadly, ‘The last stab inflicted by John reached Pasquale's abdomen and Pasquale sank to the ground. John, with his knife in his hand and his ‘fourteen’ wounds draining the fe from him, staggered out of the park across a sidewalk and fell headlong into the gutter, here a policeman who had seen him leave park found him, There 1s another man in the par! gasped John, "He !s stabbed, too.” Polfcemen were summoned: from the City Hall and with the ald of lanterns the trail of blood left by John was followed until Pasquale was found, un- conscious. Friends of the men say they do not know What prompted the quarrel that broke a friendship of long standing and inspired each t> the design of murder. Fes Btatercom reservations and you toutauae Lang, Haidson itiver the | Ostracized by White Boys Be- cause of Negro Father, He Ends Loneliness. hanging dead in the gardener’s on the estate of Major Plexion and physical white race in the hands of thelr child, But the neighbors, al tery of the child's past. up and was found to exhibit an athy to association with the little negro The white boys os- girls of the town. tracized him. So he was left as a ish factor in the town’s life, who had no Pleasant ties and no asscclations that might make one of his years happy. The Fren some property. noted, and many children play the place and on other estates estate is a large, section, Cedric watched them and hun- gered for companionship. Four days ago he disappeared. Police were asked to look for him, No trace was found until to-day, some one went into the cellar of the wardener’s house and found the little body hanging from the rafters, “It was all because he was a Leigh H. The ittle chap, who always eaid his who died elght years ago, @ white woman and little Cedric was more or less given to gossip, had’ made a mys- The mystery was given color when the child grew Is Itallan gardens are Frank Hart Wrests Revolver From Prison Chef and Dashes Into Street. Apevia) to The Evening World.) HACKENSACK, N. J., Nov. Frank Hart, a New York burglar, who said ho Mved in Weet Twenty-fourth atreet, nnd who was to have been placed on \trial here on Monday on three charges of burglary and one charge of highway robbery, escaped from the Hackensack Jail at about 6.15 o'clock to-day when coffee was being served to the prisoners. Hart and several others were taken from their cells and were supposed to have returned. Hart hid in a room ad- Joining the corridor. When the corridor door was opened he ran out and dropped through an opening in the floor to the kitchen. Night Warden Campbell saw Hart and gave warning to Henry Bentel- spacher, the chef. Benteispacher drew his revolver and faced the desperate burglar. The cook declares he shot Hart in the stomach, but no one heard the shot. Hart Grappled with the cook and finally wrested the revolver from him and dashed Into the street. Under Sherift th was aroused and soon the county Poti and detectives were on the hunt. Bloodhounds have been put on the trail of Hart. The burglar {s five feet elght inches in helght, weighs about 145 pounds cellar only ife the Major antip- child- hand- about of the nee, and walks with ringy step. He wore dark with a sult of overalls of white and blue stripes. Valuables found tn his room when he was arrested showed he had robbed The when * | ple. DALTON’S FIEL THE ARMY AND WAANY GATTLE D GOAL 12 PAGES CAMP SMASHES LINE FOR HEAVY GAINS | GAME WITH HARVA Honors About Even in First Half of Annual Battle on the Gridiron Between Yale and Crim- son Elevens. SCURED EARLY LEAD CVER ARMY ELEVEN West Point Started Like Winners, but Superior ‘Kicking Turned Tables in Middies’ Favor— 35,000 See Navy ---- 0 Army - - - - 0 Arnold. Stebert. Walmsley. Littlejohn. Hoge. Hyatt Keyes.. McDonald... Browne (Special to The Evening World.) FRANKLIN FIELD, Philadelphia, Nov. 2%,—Army and Navy met here on Franklin Field to-day before 35,000 peo- The great grandstand and the ex- tra bleachers built for the occasion were filled long before game time. Even the standing room was all in demand. And it was an enthusiastic crowd in spite of the blustering weat wind. The University of Pennsylvania students several residences in this vicinity of several thousand dollars worth of silver- ware and jewelry. Hart was arrested at Palisade a month ago following a trolley hold-up at Fort Lee. lonely Uttle boy,” sald one of the townspeople, He had & revolver and a burglar's lamp on him. His partner, who told the story of the suicide. LAR al Pe pe dat ay BERLIN THIEF GOT $125, FROM POSTAL WAGON. But Accident Threw Him Into Hands of Police and Most of Cash Was Recovered. BERLIN, Nov %.—A bold robbery oc- curred in this city last night $125,000 was stolen from a postal wagon, used to collect the money shipments of Berlin sub-stations, the various criminal got away, leaving no cl his identity behind, Later, however, was taken into custody accidentally and most of the money was recovered, Among the booty found on the pris- oner were 2,96 American dollars, pre- ‘ street, while the driver was making a sumably the contents of registered) Geivery. A passing automobile fright. letters which had been mailed to) ened the horses and they ran north :n America. Avenue A ee Arthu zed the bridle of one of the BANK FIGHTS VAN TUYL. | horses 8 the Mm passed xXty-first * Istret and was draged to Sixty-seeond renee rege lstreet, where the horses swerved to t Sea CUM Directors Declare Sol-| sidewalk ard hur was trampled] veney and Wfll Ask Court Reiter, oof: Lieut. Krauft and easion “Which aid’ ‘ne | Vundt took him to Flower pete. es earn is Beek 14 | Hospital, where the doctors found voth Directors of cided to apply for a Supreme order compelling State Bank Superin- tendent Van Tuyl to explain why he closed the bank on Thureday. ho exceeded his authority, bank is solvent. At the bank Deputy Tompkin: the Sea Cliff Bank de- is in charge, said no claims would be Paid by the bank or the examiners with- in ninety days, according to law. Board of Directors of the bank have ten daye in which te fle objections, 000 | POLICEMAN IS INJURED TRYING TO STOP RUNAWAY. | Trampled Under Horse's Hoofs After Being Dragged a Block on Avenue A, Policen John hur of the Ba when | Policeman Joh he Fast Sixty-seventh street station was serl- ously injured this afternoon when he attempted to stop two runaway horses neing to the United States Express Company, Arthur Was guarding street cleaners at Avenue A and Bast Sixty- fourth street, The express team, driven by Henry Cordes of No, 127 East Thirty- ninth street, was standing at Sixtieth ‘The to he u legs badly hur > GERMAN AVIATOR KILLED. Court They |T4emtenant im Army Service Fell a the who | BERLIN, Nov. Baron yon Freytag-Lori @ mintary aviator, fell at the military aviation ground in Doeberitz to-day and was killed. He was @ son of the chief quartermaster of the General stats of the German army, The | | wold tiags and broke into a filled the student rooters’ suction on the east end before one o'clock. They spent the next hour amusing later arrivals with songs and cheers given impartially for Army, Navy and Pennsylvania, The great crowd poured silently in under the entrance arches, a river shim- mering in Blue and Gold and Blue and | Gray. Even when Secretaries Meyer and Stimson came in with thelr box parties, including high army and navy officials, ‘fas well as Cabinet members, there was no spontaneous outburst of applase, But at 1.90, when the khaki-cloaked army band marched awiftly in at the head of a long file of graycoated cadets, the crowd arond the gridiron began to warm up. The cadets formed and marched around the field and then filed quickly Into the rooters section of the south Now, while the Army band played, | the Navy band, in blue and flaring | crimson, marched and followed by the Middies tn blue-black overcoats, Each cadet and midshipman carried a mega phone steng over his shoulder by a yellow ribbon. It was a quarter to black snow clouds began before the sharp northwest wind, patch of clear blue sky showed, The field was in fairly good condition, al- though thelr were a few muddy spots ‘There had been just enough heat in the air to thaw out the frozen crust of the early morning. Just before game time the sun came out and the wind shifting due west, blew straight down the field, BOTH TEAMS ARE NOISILY WELCOMED ON FIELD. 1.85 o'clock the Navy team came The Navy rooters atill filing into places, waved a thousand blue and | deafening | roar of weloome. Across the fleld the | big black, yeNow and grey banner of the Army fluttered in the west wind, while the Army rooters waited ig sil- overhead the} to roll back | and o At ou How the Army and Navy Teams 4,ined Up. ARMY. POSITION. NAVY. Gillespie... «++-Left End..., ++++sHamilton Devore. + Left Tackle -Brown + Left Guard., Centre. Right Guard.. -Right Tackle. . ++ Right End +-Quarterback.. . ++ +Fullback... . Left Halfback. . Right Halfback .... the Battle. 3 0 0 0 : Wakeman ence, But when the Army team dashed out on the fled the Army rooters bounced up and down and roared de- flance through thelr megaphones. The Navy yell lmaders held up a sign that read: “Siren, Whoo—00—00—rah.” Shrieked the Blue and Gold cohorte. Across the way I could see the Army rooters riso and bring up thelr mega- phon, while the yell leaders danced, but not a whisper of the Army yell could penerate the chaos of sound flung down from the North. Fluttering flags and pennants, waving ribbons and megaphones—banners that | flaunted in the air overhead, and over- whelming every sense a rhythmic cata- clyon, a roar like that of a thousand Niagaras mingled with tumult of all the boiler shops in the world, And out on the field, quietly running through for- mations, the teams awaiting the signal, Officials and captains met in midfield to spin the fateful coln. The two teams gathered in two tleht knots, counclis of war. And then—Navy won the toss and chore the west goal with the strong wind behind, FIRST QUARTER, Sibert kicked off for the Army for 25 yards. After one try at the line, Dal- ton punted fifty yards to McDonald who came back five yards before he was dwned. On a fake kick Keyes went through the line for Syards, Hyatt went through for seven more, Ke: ran around the Navy's right end, for 7 yards and McDonald was sent into the line for 1 more. Keyes made a 2) yard Punt, Dalton kicked to Browne who slipped in the mud and was quickly brought down. Dalton kicked over McDonald's head and he recovered the ball only six yards in front of the Army goal. Keyes punted out to the 40-yard lin Dal- nm went through tackle for three ds, but the Navy was penalized and hall went back to the middle of the Army's 20-yard line, the who got the ball, fleld Dalton el down to the Keyes kicked to middle of the Meld, where Cook, was thrown for a loss. Dalton punted again. Keyes kicked out to the 65-yard line, where McReavy made a running catch, but fumbled, and Littlejohn came through just in time to fall on went through twelve yards on a fake Keyes wormed the thick of the Na way through right | wing and made a clear gain of 18 yards. On the next play there was a fumble, (Continued on Second Page.) j are WEATHER —Fa PRICE ‘ONE "CENT Le de = Ny i 45,000 SEE THE IN CAMBRIDGE STADIUM. — BATTLE Howe Misses Chances for Field Goals” in First and Third Periods of Desperate Struggle. 0 0 Gpecial to The Evening world) - CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 25.—Under sunny skies and with a bit Yale Harvard ing, sharp wind very much in evider between Harvard. and Yale took place this afternoon in the presence 45,000 people. The gridiron, although hardened by the heavy frost of early morning, resolved itself again sun. The long lane that leads to the ity from early morn either on the walk or being conveyed to the ot battle. Yale, Avery pier jowe HELD AS CHILD BEATER. Mre. Evers Pat Under $1,000 Bail for Trial. ‘ Mrs. %. Virginia Evers, the wife of Frederftk W. Evers, was arraigned in Morrisanta Police Court to-day charged with assault in the third degree, the complainant being her twelve-year-old ward, Alice Randolph. Magistrate Butts held Mra, Evers in $1,000 bail for tral In Spécial Sessions, and committed the little girl to the custody of the Chil- Society. Mrs, Evers lives at No. 4 East One Hundred and Ninetieth street, Fordham, in @ mansion. Alice Randolph com- plained to playmates that Mrs, Evers was in the haolt of beating her with a riding whip, and Re Dr. Pelton, pas- tor of St, James Episcopal Church, Je- rome avenue and One Hundred and Ninetleth street, was interested in the | case, He conducted an !nvest!gation which resulted in the a’ ot Mrs. Evers last Wednesday nigh The Randolph child displayed bruises | and scars on her back and arms wh Mrs. Evers was arraigned in Morri antag Court, Thursday morning, An ad- Journment was taken until to-day, when the defendant waived examination, a TRAINS CRUSH TWO. Brakeman Hurt Conductor Kille: in Pennsylvania Yard, Dante! J. Gilfoyle, a conductor, forty- one years old. f No, &2 Grove street, Jersey City ’ front of a moving locomotive at the old terminal of the Pennsylvania Ky gad tn Jersey City to-day and was killed, Frank Stewart, a brakeman coupling care in the Gates avenue yards, was caught between cars and crushed, At the City Hospital it is thought he wili die Jersey City. w to Fix GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador, Noy. cocoa planters have petitioned the Gov- ernment to convoke Congress in extra- ordinary seasion fur thw purpose of pai ing @ bill appropriating funds for cocoa | valorisation—that (s, putting @ value on the staples provided by th ee ment with Portuguese and Brasilien planters to maintain prices, a Sa ae el pete He lives at No. 11 Barthold! street, | 0 0 nce, the thirty-second annual into mud with the appearance of the battlefield was one stream of Men prominent in every walk of tfe brushed elbows with their leas fortunate brothers and exchanged a cheery ‘of greeting, for all are common of daye—the hour which: determine the supremacy between two teams, although the prea “ itself’ be claimed i ‘Deeptte the official neups given egt - ee are rumblings that ‘ change on both teams. Q [tei Harvard's premier field is Umping painfully and Haughton will not enter him at art of the fray. Head Coach Piel of Yale ts+ still nervously scratehi head to decide whether to atart Reed or Steve Philbin's young EVERY SAT IN STAD! FILLED BEFORE GAME. Every seat within the stadium is filed and standing room {s at @ premium Everybody is wearing his or her fr vorite color and the venders are doing land-office business. At noon the Harvard team arrived from Lowell, where they stopped over night. The? went !mmediately to the locker building for a short bee 4 talk with Coach Haughton. The re army arrived shortly afterward end mide the plaudits of their went to their dressing reoms, Yale won the toss. Both stands ef jrooters warmed up by singing thelr sone jand rehearsing thelr cheers. was at quarterback for Harvard in place of Potter. Smith kicked off to Yale's %-yard tne, Spalding made twenty yeards at Hat vard's left end. Camp punted to Hag vard's #-yyard line, the ball rolling te rece ’ Harvard's \7-yard line, Avery the ball, Spakiing got two centre, On another shift he failed to gain, Camp punted to Harvard's line, Campbell running the ball Back for four yards. Felton seturhed the compliment to Camp at mid-field, Yale was penalised fifteen yards for holding. Wendell one through centre, Felton punted Philbin who fumbled but returned ball on his thirty-seven yard Hine Camp punted to Campbell on! Mal vard's fit the ball Bytn run back five yards, On a fake kick’ combination Campbell right ead for ten yards, run got Gardner « yard, Seully @away | ing him, Felton punted to Yale on her myard” rey epiaced Paul. . Geniaesil Camp's shorty x through centre, yard lne, | ing Yale “ampoel | Bomatster jute: pass on ily OWN Kicked out of bounds o se 4,

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