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SHIP AFIR — E AT SEA; LINER TAKES OFF 103 Sige ene perro —~ neonate PASSENCERS YALE TIES PRINCETON IN FOOTBALL GAME ‘ ‘WRATHER—Rain i0-; ht or Sanday. INA NIGHT ‘ Circulation Books Open to All.” | __ The ey oh WH “ PRICE ONE CENT. by New ‘The Press Publishing York Werld), TIGERS FIGH T GAMELY, TIEING YALE'S SCORE AFTER ROUGH PL YING 40,000 Football Guernsey Score the Bulldog Enthusiasts See First Points for With Fine Goal From Field. "BURNING FIREMEN. |2éner | BATTLEINRUINS Dig Through Debris to Res- cue Buried Comrades. |; pee ALMOST DROWNED. |‘ Men on Streets Have to Deluge Them With Water as Heroes Work. Fanned by a« stiff wind, a fire which @hell of four shaky walls when Firemen NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, Cireulation Books Open to All,” INA NIGHT 19138. 10 PAGES PRICE ONE CENT. D854694OO8.46 15946 14 4-O5414 0066EGO5. | TRYING TOFLEE That Saved 103 From Burning Ship 7 After Wireless Call for Help in Midocean \ PODOE LD ODDHE 1.6.9. FDS HHDHSDDPHED DADE OOF4 LEOODDDODDEDDD O4:8B6HHOFGH 4 DHOHD ODS OHA. F3 + TOSAVEDTHERS |With Clothing Ablaze, They): ED PDDL-DD-1DG4-H 1 64-OGF-H F.b0O9 MEXICAN REBELS CAPTURE ° v » 3 b Perrre sreeeerererives WIRELESS CALL BRINGS RESCUE 10 103 AT SEA: FROM BURNING SHIP Pannonia of Cunard Line Reports Rescue in Midocean From Span- . ish Steamship Balmes Now on the Way to Bermuda. Eee tenet CREW OF DOOMED SHIP te aga SESS, PROTECTOR,BOY yyane7 WW WiouT partie PISHTING 70 save HER . ae tat, ren tiy,bing |Meagre Details Received of Transfer THIRD QUARTER. Yale --0 Princeta—n ........ 3 HOW THE TEAMS LINE UP. | George Foster and George Boyce of ‘Truck No. 108 dragged @ length of hose | Into the rear of the ground floor, which | wave onto Waterbury street, the block behind Maujer atreat. They had scarce- FALLS TO DEAT Hangs to Roof Ledge, Gropes Seize Principal Northern Port of En- try, and Deal Blow That May of Passengers From the Blazing Ship to Rescue Liner. * ce NOTOR. iby a th smal ser an ap Sohn rues | for Leader Pipe, Misses, Force Huerta to Yield. Meagre wireless despatches received to-lay told of the rescue st sea -LT. -R.T. RE. QB - Talbot ----- Warren “The walle gvimr. | Get cut of thera j ater.” | brother fireinen saw them buried from sight {n a heap of blazing timbers. Firemen Fran Maher and John Me Dermott jumped after them when Capt. Foley yelled RESCUERS FIGHT BOTH SMOKE! Drops Five Stories. ory Oct. 28 from tis home at No. 1% Scholes street, Brooklyn, for no greater sin than that hie pa ents were too poor to care for him properly, was Killed to- this port by Madero that just preceded the fall of Dictator Diaz. Many of 103 passengers from the burning Spanish steamship Balmes by th: LG... . Ketcham at 5 bbs us ce tne a EL PASO, Tex. Nov. 16.—With the capture of Ciudad Juares in a Cunard liner Pannonia. Though fire was still raging to-day the Balmes’: eoeee Marting | grace, out tho taitme walt cought chem | Castor Solle, a twelve-year-old boy: | remarkable night attack, the Constitutionallsts are in possession of the crew of fifty-five were presumably sticking to thelr vessel, which, con- eee Pendleton | when tney were near the sidewalk, and | St t9 the New York Catholle Protect-| most tmportant port of entry in Northern Mexico, It was the capture of voyed by the Pannonia, was making for Bermuda, which should be made persons here believe the capture of the port to-day will prove the final blow Some time Monday. : to the cause of Huerta and force him to yield to the demands of President Where, how or when fire broke out on the Balmes was not disclose: WnNeon. i H n 5 . L.H.B. “Come on. We've got to get them! day in trying to eecape. He had brood-| aheough this port the rebels will hes jin the preliminary wireless messages. She was eastward bound for Spain R.H.B. out.” [ed for a week atter he learned that] ante to obtain arms and munitions of ‘with a highly inflammable cargo of cotton and rum when the Cunarder, cee eeceecceees DUNN many of his companions were in the pro-| war, It will give them control of the’ é : Streit sao peeuMeGsvecccces ak AND WATER. |tectory because they had heen naughty, | patieoad line to Chth and probably | {bound hither from Mediterranean ports, came to her assistance. This Officials—Referee, Langford, Trinity. Umpire—Snow. Mich- | tne three men plunged into the heap Herare dasiiane this morning Jamen | onapie them to capture that elty, which ;must have been some time after 7 P. M. of Wednesday last, for at that ; of mmoking, blazing debris, while oth: he night watchman, entered | °"™ . wan. Head Linesman—Fultz, Brown. ere turned several lines of hose on th hroom on the fitth floor of the | # ROW under atege By ROBERT EDGRE. (Special to the Bvening World.) YALE FIELD, Nov. 15.—Forty thousand spectators began the the distance lay the wooded, dark ‘eo the north was Lover's Leap, the in startling detail against the sky. * Thousands were marching out afoot. {Through the press yellow trolley care and automobiles of every size, shave and color felt their way carefully Fiags were flying, blue predominatt: of course, in this Yale stronghold. fevery house along the street had it banner of blue flung from the flag- staff. The turbulent torrent of apec- tators tossed on ite surface a foam eck of pennons of blue, of orange and black, A& THE CROWD BEGAN TO POUR INTO THE GRANDSTAND. ‘The entrances to the oll gray grand~ stand began to pour solid streams of Je into the runways along the poachers Slowly the gray expanse be- gan.to change color. Blue spots ap red, touches of orange. Yale's root- filled a great section in the east nd, bright and early on the job and primed, capped and double charged with all the known brands of noise, be- nvented especially for th al Don’t Be Misled! In these days of loud talk and “you know what | mean” sort of stories; it Is well to stop, think, and get down to facts. ' Sunday World to-morrow it will + ctreulation in New Yor | greater than if published in the ; Sunday Herald, Ti | Tribune COMBINED. i It will be part and parcel of a greater number of advertisements than will be printed in any other New York Sunday newspaper. Ten't That the Circulation and the Ce ——————— If your Ad. is prirted in the Big |} ompany || watts Your Ad. Ought toBe Favored Wuh? |! grand rush into Yale's football stadium shortly after noon hour. It was an Inspiring sight, seen from the upper crest of the stadium wall, In blue hills that surroun New Haven. | Over all the scene was a dim light, for a haze lay over the low-lying sun. great brown stone cliff standing out And nearer, along every street leading Gut from New Haven. crawled long columns of spectators. oocasion, Yale's band began to play “Bright College Years.” Then went |into a medley of Yale songs, while the footers waited their time in patience. (Continued on Sixth Page.) Yale... \Princeton.. 0 0 3 Harvard... 7 10 ~ Brown....0 0 | Dartmouth. 37 - 'Carlisle....7 0 Satin eennneiieed NOT STOVER’S BODY. Views Hema Found ta River at Wilmington. | WILMINGTON, De!., Nov. 18,—Ro |hins Gilman, tiead worker of University tlement of New York, arrived here afternoon, and viewing the body of SHEET OF WATER SAVES & man found in tho Christiana River, BUILDINGS. declared that it was not that of Park | Commissioner Stover of New York, who | had been missing for some time eas k cy | STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. mes, Sun and || vreatum, mottertam, via | Za Provence, Havre. Pitsd Poon Ponta Somes Bases 8 0 — mass beneath which Fuster and Boyce vere buried. Now gasping from the poke and the next Instant choked when a stream of water struck them, the rescuers dug into the pile of ruins. With thelr bare hands they seized burn- Ing timbers and cast them aside, The soles of their shoes were smoking be- | | fore they got to the first of the trapped men, and by the time they reached them both thelr clothing was on fire, The streams from the street struck them now und then and quenched the flames, bur the instant the water was swung away so that they could breathe the fire sprang up and gripped at thelr clothes again, Foster and Boyce were senscless, al- most drowned from the water which had poured over them, a badly burned about the heads, faces and bud- Thoir rescuere were almost as badly overcome. All were helved vo the 8 of a house outside the fire zone, and there Dr. Watts of St, Cath- erine's Hospital dressed their wounds and hurried r and Boyce to that institution, ‘The others remained at the fire. The building covered half @ t:ock, running around Morgan avenue to Wa- ticbury street. Within it were stored hundreds of tons of hay and feed, The blaze fed on this stuff with @ rapidity ch frustrated all efforts of the fire- to opntrol it. Within a few min- after the flremen arrived the fire Jumped across Morgan avenue to the three-story frame “building of the | Brooklyn Union Coal Company, on the | same side of Maujer street; to two small (frame houses adjoining the hay plant at Nos, 23) and 2! Maujer street, and| | to severai {(rame tenements in Water- | bury street, The woodwork on the w:.:- | | dows of the Waterbury Cable Company, |@ three-story brick building at Water- bury street and Morgan avenue, aiso took fire. | | Chief Maher snw at once that the hay | plant was doomed and he directed the | efforts of his inen to #aving the other | building. Two engines in Morgan ave- | nue pumped water Into several lines of hoe whose nozsles were directed almost straight into the alr. Tons of H were thrown aloft to fall back almoat upon the men who mann: between the basing hay plant | coal company's building, Othe: | blankets were devised in the aa: | in Waterbury street and the cable com- ved in this way. nt sparks and biasing sto Waterbury street, | | (Continued on Secoud Page.) | #mto the hospital of the building, Unttl north wing of the Protectory building, at Walker and Untonport avenues. He found the window open. He had been in the room a few minutes before get- ting hot water for Brother Paul, in charge of the room, ao that the Three Americans were killed during the battle last night, One was Charles Sergereon, an automobile man of El Paso. He was kiiled in his car, Two other Aemrica > Identified were killed in @ raid on a Brother could suave. The window had then been shut. Farrell looked out and saw Castor climbing along the Iron gutter at the’ edge of the roof. The boy was fully dressed and moved as though he w perfectly sure of himself. Farrell knew | that if he shouted or climbed out on} the roof the boy would be frightened | and might jump. So he whistled softly, Castor turned his head and looked over shoulder, ‘S-s-s-8-8, boy!" whivpered the waich- man. “Come back here and go to bed. It| will be all right, I'll not tell the Broth- | er on you and nobody will know the aif- | ference," | Castor turned his head away without | @ word and groped under the eaves for the waete pipe, With the watchman imploring him in mur back, he worked hia way ower the edge of the roof and hung by hia hands. He reached under the gut- ter for the pipe and missed. The watch- | man saw him drop suddenly out of | aight and heard the sound of his body | striking the flagging five {stories below. Tarrell went to Brother Paul, step-| ping swiftly but lightly to avoid waking the sleeping boys. The two hurried down to the courtyard, They found Caator in a heap. ‘They thought he was dead, but could not de sure until Dr. Dolan from Fordham Hospital told them he had been instantly ‘The boy's body as brought quietly the news got around at breakfast none| of the 1,600 boys who had been Castor’s | companions knew what had happened, | Rrother Paul told Coroner Shongut, | when he arrived, that the boy must} have dressed himself in his cot under the bedclothes, because the Brother had | been awake and looking over bii charges for half an hour before the lit tle fellow climbed out of his cot near| the washroom and slipped to the wine was found in the Kill von Kull River at Mariner Harbor, 8 1. toeday by Faw gin, 4 boatman, was Identified a ski's morgue a clerk in Coroner | Willlam Jackson's office as Bridget | Price, a forme: resident of fim and who rec y lived in is helievead by the Coroner that she fel’ inte the river while intoxicated gambling house. A band of forty men, supposed to be revels, held up the gambling house. MEXICAN FEDERAL8 WIPEC OUT ON THEIR LAST STAND. It {9 reported that 150 eoldiern were killed and about 300 wounded on both sides during the night fighting. The bloodiest engagement of the whole series which preceded the final fall of Juarez into rebel hands came at § A. M,, when 86 Federal soldiers were ex- | terminated at the mace track on the outskirts of the city after half en hour's desperate fighting. Of thin wero killed and 49 wounded, man escaping unhurt. The rebele @ wounded in the same olash. js were led by Gen, “Pan- cho” Villa, who bad 3,000 men under his com! Gen. Francisco Castro, commander of the Federal garrison, t@ missing, He was not among the killed and wounded and it is believed he has escaped from the city, The ocoupation of Juares by rebels be- gan at 2.30 o'clock after the men under Villa and Herrera had reached the town in trains thought to be carrying federal soldiers to the garrison. ‘he rebels de- trained undiscovered, placed their artil- lery and soon had everything In readi- ness to fight At the firs: volley the astounded Government troops were es- @ombled and returned tho fire, engaging in a battle which lasted for two hours. U. 8 TROOPS KEEP AMERICANS FROM DANGER ZONE, Bullets toll thick fi Ei Paso and ail the residents here were awakened by the sound of heavy artillery firing. Americans were kept from the danger zone by the detachment of United States Fifteenth Cavalry on patrol duty under Major RK, E. L, Mitehte, and eo far as is known no Americans were wounded, The formal surrender of the city to the Constitutionalists was at 6 o'clock, st once bands began playing on the streets and the town rang with ‘vivas" for the conquerors. Tt wax by one of the ei the it atrate- alstory of ico that Gon. Villa with Gen, Marrara wae at Chihuahua city Thure- t duy, reported to be attacking the town, | Femadores, Jt Poderal troops wore rushed to the rel; forcement of the Chihuahua garrison, (Continued on Benond Page) who have not been} and F |time the Pannonia reported that she was 1,000 miles east of | Light, but made no mention of the Balmes. i] OF DEFYING WILSON cates He Will Not Renew | Negotiations. MEXICO CITY, Nov. 16.—Thia atate- ment was mado to-day at the Mexican| National Palace “Sm view of Venustiano Carrauze'’s | Fepndiation of any form of me lia- Hon by oF alliance with the United | States, Provisional President Muerte cam do no less than join him im his expression of patriotic eontiment and maintain unaltered Bip dignified attitude toward Wai iagtoa.” The declaration appears to cast ox-| treme doubt upon any renewal of the hegotiationa between Mexico and the United Stat rding to the view| taken by well-informed pei here, | who devlaro that tt tends to substan: | Uate the bollef that no hope is left of) an amicable adjustment, Gen. Huerta 1s wald to be yet unoon- vinced Of the advinability of resigning, | Is suggested here that Venuati- | ano Carranaa’s refusal of the propost- | tionm made to him by Willlam Hayard| Hale, persunal repronentative of Prost-| dent Wilaon, has had the effect of bois- | tering him up in his deflance At the National Palace the attitude of the United States !¥ charavt indicative of a traMcking pec to-day many Mexicans reverted (o thelr traditional declaration that any inter ference tn their affira by foretkn Gos- | would be met by the ested Iminm was frankly in evidence Amertoas rday considerable been shown, —_—_—_——- SAILING TO-DAY. + whi ptimiam unti nad ton ery Jamaion is M, Saratoge. Bmil &. @ jens, Tl * Bechambeow, Mavre, .. 7 wera! Ambrose ; First news of the disaster came through a freek wireless message picked up by the Marconi operator at Cape Race, N. F. While it pur- ported to come from the Pannonla and said that she had on board the Balmes’s passengers, the operator could not confirm the message and Statement Issued To-Day Indi-, 4S further puzzled by the fact that the Pannonia, with a comparatively feeble wireless outfit, was admittedly out of range. The weird message remained unsolved until the Cunard offices in this city received trom Lloyds agents in Bermuda a cablegram announc- ing that Capt. Capper of the Pannonia had reported by wireless the safe \rescue of the Balmes’s passengers and the fact that she was escorting the Balmes, still on fire, to the island. MESSAGE CAME FROM CAPE RACE. A message was received here to-day by the Marconi Company from its wireless operator at Cape Race, N. F. The message was as follows: ‘The Pannonla reports that she is convoying the steamer Balmes, which {s on fire, to Bermuda. Her passengers have been transferred to the Pannonta and are all eafe, “The information could not be confirmed. The message, which is regarded as o freak, as the Pannonia is out of the ordinary wireless range of the Cape Race station, gives no positions. The Balmes, whose skipper is Capt. Ruls, satled out of Galveston and New Orleans for Havana and left that port on Nov, 6 for Cadiz and Barce- Jona, She ts of 2,345 tons register. Her cargo consisted of 6,069 bales of cotton and 200 casks of rum, Her owners are Pirillos, Izquierdo & Co., of Spain. The rescue ship, Paunonia, commanded by Capt. Capper, is a sister ship of the Carpathia, which aided in the rescue of the Ttanic's survivors, Her last port of call was Almerta, Spain, from which ghe sailed on Nov. & SUFFRAGISTS “CHALK” | JORDAN BEARDS BRITONS. A NOTICE TO WILSON |"*7* se Retr Paces catverster ae. amftmations Are a Farce, Write on Flagging at White House LONDON, Nov, 6.—David Stare Jor dan, Chancellor of Leland Stanford Jr. an Invitation to University, California, during @ lee: : | ture to-day at the Birkbeck Inetiute, Meeting. | Under the auspices of the Bdueation WASHINGTON, Nov. 18—@uftragtet Committee of the Lendon County Coun- oll, compared American and Brtiteh) univereRy methods, greathy to the deti- sympathizers swooped down on historic Lafayet! Pa and the vicinity of the White House and State, War and Navy| Ment of the lacter, offte vefore daylight 40-day armed| The Britian prection of examinations’ chalk and covered | he declared @ farce becaase there was pavements with) mo relation between examiations and | higher education, The essence of echelar- ‘votes for women.’ Ono immense legend, extending over ® good portion of the flagat fm front; ship he said, was to know what te de nf the White Hout “Come! in ite | 32 Guede: mesthieesy Milholland, |“ Ohancetior Jordan denounced the sea + It war the nearest approach to mil-| Prevalent tn Burope that university oy itancy the national capital has seen in| srees could be purchased in the United the suffrage campaiga. wlates. 4