Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
HARVARD ELEVEN DEFEATS PRINCETON, 3 TO 0, IN PRESENCE OF CHEERING CROWD OF 35,000 WERATHER—Rain to-night and 8 rg )_PRIOE ONE ‘CENT. INA EDITION. jay) colder, = seme IPTO\N Ue NM TT Ta aN ay Copyright, 1013, by The Prese Co, (The New York World). NEW ‘YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, "1918. f VN ASTOR TO MARRY HIS CHILDHOOD Here Is Vincent girl Practically spent her life outdoors “Es ghe pretty?” was asked. wy, bane laughed. 1 | MISS HELEN D. HUNT * Mother of the Young Woman Makes Formal Announcement, but Says Date of the Wedding Has Not Been Considered. D PLAYMATE, INGTON Astor’s Description of His Fiancee She is tall and has light brown hair at tennis, golf or riding.” should say sc," he declared. Are her ideas on suffrage and that sort of thing?” Ghe has ne foolish notions and f Dinsmore Huntington, to Vincent As! had “already reached the ears of those York and Westchester, and with its who is to share the great Astor estate John Jacob Astor is answered. The forma! announcement was Issue! to-day in the usual manner, but The} Evening World obtained from Mrs. | Huntington a long distance telephonic | confirmation of the report before the engraved announcements had reached thelr destinations. “AML I care to say at this time,” Mrs, Huntington said over the phone, “ia} that we nouncing the engage: | ment to-day. No date for the wedding bas been considered.” The engagement wax also coniirmed Vincent Astor through his secretary, Tt lg understood the couple have been | Gngeged for some months, and tha the marriage wil take place in the Miss Huntington is daughter ora and Mra, Robert P. Huntington whose estate adjoin: the ter qountry home at Rhinebeck. ana Mr. Astor have been friends childhood, and often recently have been seen dining and motoring with Mrs Huntington. GRANDDAUGHTER OF WILLIAM) DINSMORE. But society has possessed dew attri fiona for this young woman, who W epeedily be in a position to assume social leadership. She ‘s the grand- daughter of the late William R. Dins- aire resident of Tux- edo, a who wi Mis Helen Gray Dinsmore, was at one tim Prominent in the sayetics of Newport and Tuxedo. Miss Huntington is twenty years old, tall, slender and atoletic. she Is of the Diond type, dlue eyed and brown haired. Miss Huntington is recognized as a pretty girl Among Js she is spoken of as a paragon of common sense without a foolish notion or a silly fad Horeeback riding ‘# her favorite diver- sion, and when not in the saddie she finds her greatest pleasure Ir, the tennis EN SEEN IN POPULAR RES: TAURANTS. Bince the tragedy of the Titanic and the death of Vincent Astor's father so- clety has been speculating as to the probably sharer of the Astor millions Busy rumor has engaged him in rapid turn to halt dozen young women prominent in the society of New York ‘and Newport, but his courtship of M Huntington has escaped the most vigi lant eyes. They have dined frequently of late at Delmonico's and the St Regis, but nothing in the manner of tington’s escort suggested the true state of affairs. Hence the announcement of gegement will come as a surpri the closest friends of the two) » shadow of doubt as tor's financial ability to make | life exceedingly comfortable for his | ride, Last November. came Into abs solute control of #5,0",000, constituting bis share of his father's esta father's estate. ees i ee ut secretions mooie op opt fads," he replied emilingly. Mrs, Robert P. Huntington of Hopeland House, Staatsburg, N. Y., to-day formally announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Helen tor. The report of the engagement in the inner circle of society in New confirmation the oft-asked question with the young son of the late Col. $125,000 SPENT ON SULZER TRIAL, AND BILLS KEEP POURING IN $75,000 ia Ex- ceeded, $50,000 to Be Asked For—Lawyers Still Unpaid. . ALBANY, Bilis for e\penses incurred at the tria! of impeachment of former Sulzer, not including insel fees, already total $0,000 more than the $75,000 originally appropriated to cover the cont of the trial, The coun- id many thousands to this Nov. Gov. sel fees will a fixure, Vouchers fed with the State show that $7000 already en expended and many unpaid rematr 8 belleved @ special till bo introduved fa the As- sembly next Weel to meet the extraor- dinary expenses, Practically all of the orlginal appro- priation has been spent for salaries of members of the court, the Board of Managers of the Assembly and em- ployees of the Impeachment Court. ‘Thus far 46,193.12 haw been paid to Sen- ators and members of the Board of Managers, and some money still 1s due t The pay of the employees was for $30,009 w One of the largest single items of expense la for the salaries and expenses of detectives. One New York agency head drew $894 for himself and em- ployees. Hig salary was $5 a day and at times he employed thirty operatives t & aday. They traveled extensively ind n in pairs, Although members of the Board of Ma # did not meet every y bee tween Aug. 20 and Oct. 10, they received $10 @ day, including Saturdays and Sun- days, throughout this time, William F, Kearney Was pald $16.26 a day as tn- tex clerk, There were twenty-eight doorkeepers, trat-arms, sergeant-atear thr janitors and three porters connected vit. the court, There are only five main entrances to the courtroom, but tae other doorkeepers were employed on the two doors leading to the gal- lerles and Various other doors in the outer halls through which It was neces- sary to pase tv reach the Impeachment Court chamber. — FOR FOOTBALL RESULTS8~AND RACING SEB PAGE 6, chief doorke stant rt GAS EXPLOSION LIKE A VOLCANO STIRS BROADWAY Manhole Sores. ¥ Hurled 60 Feet High, Walls Crushed and Hotel Guests Scared. MANY NARROW ESCAPES. Flames From Gasoline Spout Upward for Many Feet, Caus- ing Widespread Terror. New York's “volcano district” was in eruption again to-day. The district Hes between Fifty-third and Fifty-ninth streets and Sixth and Dighth avenues, and it blows up about twice a year. Accumulated gasoline in the sewers caught fire at 9.80 o'clock this morning. With a roar like the bombardment of heavy artillery some twenty-five heavy iron manhole covers went eailing frem forty-five to sixty feet into the alr. For @ minute a section of the city a third of @ mile long and two blocks wide was afflicted with @ rain of twisted iron @iske and broken glass. Windows were shattered by the hun- dreds. Electric Ught bulbs were bro- ken. Walls wore cracked. Guests in hotels leaped from their beds and ran from thelr rooms in terror. But, for @ wonder, Ro one suffered physical in- Jury. Following the explosion the sewer openings from which the manhole cov- erings had been blown spouted fire. ‘Th ir was heavy with the fumes of gasoline, An alarm was turned in, and Battalion Chief Turpenny at the head of squads of firemen went scurrying around the district looking for som thing to do, But by the time the fi men arrived the flames had subsided. CAUSE OF EXPLOSIONS THAT SHAKE THE CiTy, district affected is filled with and the salesrooms of motor car companies, Gasoline from thest Places runs into the sewers. On a wet day, when water gathers on the man- sealing thein up, the oline accumulates in A trolley car strikes a spark, the vapor ts ignited and the manholes leading from the sewers to the street openings become as the barrels of cannon. ‘That {8 what happened to-day, Tho firat explosion occurred in Broadway, between Fifty-neventh and Fifty-elghth A manhole cover went sailing ir to the height of a a! y building and a burst of fire shot almost an high, Those who have business in the district and were on the streets rushed for cover. They have been through #imilar experiences before. One manhole cover after another down Broadway from Fifty-seventh to Fitty- fourth street went soaring skyward At Fifty-fourth str branohed t the line of force eastwar and westward big trunk sewer, and man- along that thoroughfare between Sixth and Eighth avenues sailed aloft, At the same time thero were acattered explosions in Fifty-ffth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh and Fifty- eighth streets, TWISTED COVERS SHOW FORCE OF THE EXPLOSION. ‘An idea of the force of the explosions may be gathered from consideration of the fact that @ manhole cover weighs about fifty pounds, Some of tiem blown aloft in to-day’a explosion werw bent and twisted as from tie force of a heavy blow. When they landed on the street they broke into fragmen peppering the vicinity with Jagged ple. of tron weighing from two to pounds. There were narrow escapes by the score, That of Mra, Levis Brooks of the Hotel Lyndemon in West Fifty. fourth street was typical, She was crossing Fifty-fourth etreet at Broad- way when the sound of @ aeries of ox- plowions up the great thoroughfare used her to atop and look around, It so happened that she had Just stepped off @ manhole cover and was wbout two feet away from it, ‘The cover blew off and went mounting skyward right »efore her eyes, Out of the hole poured @ volume of fine and singed her eyebrows, Inyoluntarily she staggered baekward and down came the manhole cover on the spot where she had been standing, ‘A big touring car with five women as §Contiied op Becond Page.) ten we THAW ORDERED EXTRADITED, BUT HSFGHT GESON, Case Shifted to Fed to Federal Court] After New Hampshire Gov- ernor Signs Papers. HE STAYS IN CONCORD. Habeas Comes Next—Prisoner Silent —Not a Shock, Says Mother. CONCORD, N. HL, Nov. 8.—Gov, Fel- ker to-day signed the extradition pers for the return of Harry K. Thaw to New York on the request of Gov. Glynn. Thaw is charged with conspiracy in New York County. The decision, al- though a victory for William T. J rome and his assistants in their fight to return Thaw to New York, does not mean that he will go back to Mattea- wan immediately. The fugitive’s aght may last years. The case is now transferred awmomatt- cally to the Fe: courts, where a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of Thaw is pending. It has been generally expected that Gov. Felker would sign the requisition papers presented by Gov. Glynn of York. In so doing he followed the con- ventional lines and in this case shifted | ‘ $6:2-446.0806 Odd o4-@ een the whole matter automatically onto the shoulders of Judge Edgar J. Ald- rich of the United States Court for the District of New Hampshire. Neither Jerome nor Sheriff Fred C. Hornbeck of Dutchess County, deputized to receive the fugitive in event the ex- tradition was granted, was here to re- ceive the decision. It was a foregone conclusion that Thaw could not be taken back to New York on account of the writ of habeas corpus. THAW REMAINS IN CUSTODY OF FEDERAL MARSHAL. Thaw also was absent when Gov, Felker announced his decision. He will remain here in tho custody of United States Marshal Nute and Sheriff Drew pending the Federal proceedings: Thaw said that he would make no comment upon the Governor's decision and the probable future course of his cage, His mother, Mrs, Mary Copley ‘Thaw, issued a five hundred word state- ment in which she said that the Go ernor'a decision Was not a shock to her, although it was a disappointment. Thaw’s attorneys announced that they would file Immediately an amendment to thelr petition for a writ of habeas corpus, application for which was ma soon after Thaw was arrested in this State following his deportation trom Canada. ‘The original petition was bened | on the allegation that Thaw had been indicted for conspiracy by the Dutchess County Grand Jury, and it was sus pended during the Governor's decision on the matter of extradition. Because the extradition has now been granted on the strength of the New York County indictment it will be ne easary to ainend the petition accord- ingly. In granting the extradition, Gov. Fel- ker said in part: “The sovercikn State of New York, by its Governor, has demanded of the proper authority of this State the in- teratate rendition of Harry K. Thaw A proper respect for the public interest manifested therein demands that 1 should state the views which form the basis of my decision ‘By the petition of Gov, Glynn and the accompanying papers, It appears that the Grand Jury inquest of the County of New York has duly returned {nto open court an Indictment against Mr, Thaw. That ie sufficieat to war- rant the arrest, arraignment and trial of the respondent !f he inay be found (Continued on Second Page. Corpus Writ Now]: ; 3 os 4464-6095, ® 26-80-66 R OOS BRITISH CASH 'pire; Fultz (Brown), head linesman. 0 JAIL | BY ROBERT EDGREN. | _ | (Special to The Rvening World.) That Will Be Fate of Mrs. Coffin PRINCETON, Nov. 8.—Harvard beat Princeton here to-day by, | Unless She Pays Him $8,600 the small score of 3 to 0, It had been expected that Harvard would win MEET HIS DEBTS Entrusted to Her, with a very heavy score in her favor, As it turned out, tuck had as The apectucle of w mother being com-|much to do with the victory as football skill. Excepting the last mitted to Ludlow Btreet Jatl on the , . : Application of her aon will reqult trom {quarter Princetor outplayed the Harvard team steadily. Harvard's Funds to Run Government for! tne aecteion handed down in the su-| single field goal came after one of those unexpected catastrophes that jpreme Court to-day unless Mra. Cora! co often decide the outcome of foorball games, Another Month, Secured | A/Cafins Os mother, one RE H0 to Sipping in the mud, Law wan slow in ia = | aD) SSueetennt 2a) i. sarNie wetting away ® punt and Brickley broke Through Lord Cowdray, Bestury iota erated th Anpllogtion FOOTBALL SCORES. through and blocked {t. The ball ree pn ey mother be adjudged in contempt of Quarter. sonnies tar toward Princeton's goal line 5 biverlae i if wl TS natal | ANd Capt. Storer recovered ft. This MEXTCO CITY, Nov. #—Proviaionay | Court and dives Be ne aichiean ae? 0 10 O17] Kave Harvard a chance for a fivid goal, Vresident Huerta, it Was learned in) The trouble between young CoMn and|Cornell .. ,0 0 0 OO RES iay drove the ball over. authoritative clroelen here to-day, has! hia mother arose out of a verdict of} t is only fair to a owever, that scoured gufficiont British capital to| $1600 which he received as the result of | Oartnmouth lf 1¢ ie Rrickley had two chances for. fela te the Mexican Government at| injuries sustuined In the Park avenue] Pennsylvania ..-+ ° ’ during, the samo and kicked one least until the end of the present month, | tunnel disaster some years ago. He war) Brown .. .0 0 0 ie aker had two chances to The funds are att to have been ge_| OMY aixtern years old When he won thel y 50) 10 7) Gant? | She SSE Rams anda) (ry from Bihote cared through the efforts of Lord Cow. et ear aaru earn nig ed sibs Pre Tm .0 0 | Vintil the last quarter Princeton showed ray i a i ihe MW senaa, Bi nleaie Speculation In real eatate with the Navy 20 17 suotrior dine sreashing ability, but near Phe financial situadon here changed | funds of young Coffin by his mother and he end Harvard held out solidly against lightly for the better to-day, Some father reaulted in the parents becom! nl Harvard : v3 3 0 O- 3 ihe Tiger's Merce attack and reiuliated hanks are putting out oliver, unusually proxperous. The aon requested) Princeton . +60 0 0 OO) dy gaining consistently through the line Atnong the callers recetved by John] pia money from the mother when he be- lw eyan .0 0 and around the ends, 4, President Wilson's personal rep-|oame of age and the money was re-| williams . ar) MAHAN SHARED HARVARD HON- ntative in Mexico, were the Hishop | gused hin | ORS WITH BRICKLEY, of Mexivo and Gen, Fernando Gonzales, —_—__— Colga' -0 © Healdes Brickley, Mahan was (he star yne of the jest offlcers in tme Mextean | Roc .o Oo jot the Harvard team, He seemed to Army, who y retired: SEN E | 1 |have an almost uncanny ability to get Dynamite Foand on Platform, FOR MISS WILSON jou * runs, Even on the muddy fieit he The Bureau of Combustt of the Carlisle +015 12 \etarted like a race horse when the Fire Department was notified to-day Hopkins +0 0 barrier goes up. Hammond, Halll, ot the 4 7 —— Glick and H. Baker were Hrinceton's WASHINGTON, Nov. A mubscrip- taining a number of smaller tubes and ra. fg stick of dysamite on the freigne| Hon Hat for the purcnuse of a wedding) STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. |“Sudging trom the reauit of toxin Platform of the New York Central | present for Miss Jessie Wilson was oir- game, Yate will find \t extremely dim. Rallroad at Twelfth avenue and Thir- | culated among Senators to- aby by Sena-| pe Lorraine, Mavre.. +:30 4. B.| cult to score against either Princeton ty-third street, Detectives were as-| tor Martina of New "ey, It was ex- Vestris, Baxbadoos..... ++-30 & M6! or Harvard this year, . "7 to investigate. WEATHER—Rata to-night and Sunday; colder. FULLBACK BRICKLEY. betes mt i 12 Harvard’s Fullback Who Scored (TIATT) Scored First Points With Field Goal PIRATE EDO GO DES QHGH ETH EGEH EARTH FOEKE © POs OOOOeTbIOD O44 trie SON'S COMPLAINT MAY \ \ p,be vanes. Breaapty broek og Renton ___ PRIOR 2 ONE OENT. SS == TEES HELD HARVARD TO LUCKY FIELD GOAL ON SLIPPERY GRIDIRON Princeton Showing Against Strong Cambridge Team Big Surprise to 35,000 Football Enthusiasts Who Saw Fierce Battle. CRIMSON TEAM OUTPLAYED UP TO FINAL PERIOD Brickley’s Toe and Mahan’s Runs Over Muddy Field All That Saved Day for Cambridge Eleven. FIRST PERIOD. Princeton ......... 0. Harvard SECOND PERIOD. PAGES se beeeeed xe Tees reoess - 0, t i t ¢) Princeton ..........0 Harvard ........... 3 3 THIRD PERIOD. $ Princeton .. -- 0 Harvard ...........0 a FOURTH PERIOD. > Princeton ......---- 0 Harvard .... 0 : FINAL SCORE. : Princeton ........-. 0 Harvard ...........3 H _ THE LINE-UP. Princeton. Hammond . Phillips . Semmons . Harvard, Position. LE. Officials—Langford (Trinity), referee; Snow (Michigan), um- The jaterest tn the'game wee sdewn a Seat