Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
a to-night and |i¥4 EDITION. PRICE ONE CENT. “Coornane 1918, by Ce. (The New The Presse Pubitehios York World), NEW YORK, SATURDAY, "NOVEMBER ‘88, —— | YELLOW TAXIS of New Ordina te come in and to-day it gives every The Yellow Texicad Company hes Galred vacant lots and elleys in various @ections of the elty, adjoining or with- in etrilting distance of the principal Bo- tele and Geclares it will operate from them until it @nally comes to some de cision as te just what it intends doing. ‘The company ‘s using the private alley adjoining the Waldorf and to-day te Bandling the “fares” of that hotel from this stand. LAW DOES NOT APPLY TO PRi- VATE PROPERTY. ‘The erdinance dose not apply to nor povern eny vehicle hired or obtained from a livery state or garage. and whieh does not solicit patronage upon @e strests; nor to any omnibus running by authority of an ordinance, law, charter oF permit upon e fixed route @hrough the city, and it is this clause whieh the Yellow Taxicab Company is wing a8 @ weapon to fight with. It’ hag teopened }.ts it previously rented on Forty-fifth street, west of Fifth avenue, and ano! on Thirtieth street, west of Park , from which Pinces it hopes to do the work for the Hotels Gotham, Vanderbilt, St: Regis. Delmonico’s, Netherland and Savoy. It de the opinion of those who are supposed to khow “that the fellow Taxicab Company will have to and mal application for in @ very short f company reece ag “e edict just w their intentions ere when ea by an Evening World Feporter to-day. WILL NOT WAIT FOR A TRUST TAXICAB One vf the first to call * Its Kast Fifty-third ber of years ha monopoly of its at its stand Kalickerbocker HI In the future it will operate from its garage, which is « out'@a mi or a run ef six minutes from the hotel. ‘To-day an Evening World reporter | found two independent cars in front of the entrance of the hotel. y affected td the atarter, as the on was made public yesterday we called in our cabs and the independents have} taken 9 per cent. of the business fm tnis place since. “People won't wait for a taxicab un- leas th Ny have to, and this ex- plains why independents have been doing such @ business duriag the past nty-four hours.” RE ARE THE CONDITIONS NOTED LAST NIGHT, ) conditions were nt on tl last night, new cab ordinance went into eff Buorbitant cab rates seemed a tang of the past. | thirty-comt “drop” im evi- (Continued on Fifth Page.) | { i _—= Taxicab Trust Put to Rout! The Evening World has not only won its fight for reduced taxicab rates and for ‘he abolition of private hack-stand ( Bab ges granted to the taxi monopo- ies, pe ne will be printed 8,000 SEPARATE AANTRILLING ADS. IN THE BIG SUNDAY WORLD TO- MORROW, rh h it is plain it will not he necessar: eae to hire a taxi, take a car Hd yourself into the doctor's care in 5 of the position, worker, home, » neste lessons, bargain, &e, you * Write Sunday World Advertise | iT xs and. They Will Deliver What | ead Advertise at Your Door, ALL OTHERS REDUCE FARES: PRIVATE HACKSTANDS GONE Trust Extortion Comes to an End, and Arrest Awaits Every Violator nce To-Day— | Police Are on Watch. ' ‘Although all the other taxicab companies have willingly complied with decison of the Appellate Division to reduce rates and abolish private | Abokstands, the Yellow Taxicab Company ts the only one which has refused evidence of its intention of fighting. aS | the cellar step: {pugmeu for 4 ume vy the disc DErY WM HERE'S A MYSTERY WHITMAN STRIKES ANOTHER LEAD 0 UUP-STATE GRAFT _—— 3 Sends Odt Subpoenas for] Eight Contractors to Appear Before Grand Jury. M’GUIRE SPLIT FEES. Divided Bonding Business With a Nephew of Charles F, Murphy. Eight contractors on up-State road work who contributed to the Democratic campaign fund tm 1911 or 1913 were sub- poenaed to-day to appear before the Grand Jyry next Monday. Each of these men le eald to have delivered a WITH RIVAL SETS OF ROBBERS IN| Detectives requ Two Thieves; Attempting to Steal From Original Burglars. Detectives McKie and Barberi of the Fifth street station, got a tip last ght through underworld channels that about $2,000 worth of stolen hair and bristles for brushes were stored in the cellar at No. 170 East Fourth street. About five o'clock this morning the detectives went there. They found the door padlocked but heard some one .noving about in- side, They quickly unscrewed the hasp and let themselves in. They found “Joe” Snipel of No, 145 Madison street, who sald he was the night watchman and they arrested him because they also found the hair and bristles. They carefully screwed the hap back on the door and after de- positing Snipe in a cell, returned and . | Walted—hidden in a doorway across the street from the About 6 o'clock along came two young who descended the cellar | steps, je and Barberl thought théy had trapped the burgiurs but were surprised to see the newcomers begin to unscrew the hasp also, Then they ized that they had come on a second aet of bur- glare intent on robbing the originat thieves of their loot. The detectives ed until the men got inside and then rushed them. Once again the detectives screwed the hasp back to the door after which they took thelr new prisoners to the station, The men said they were Nathan Gold- man of No, 160 Washington avenue, the Bronx, and Isidor Goldstein of No, % Lewis street, Having locked them up the detectives hurried back to their hid- ing pl |FOURTH MAN USES A KEY ON THE PADLOCK. At 8 o'clock they saw a dapper youth, swinging a rain coat er his arm, come whistling down the street, descend and open the padiock with a key. inced that they had the original burg! the detectives let him get inside, and then hurried across the street and grabbed him. At the cta- dtun ne sald ne was Samuel Cohen of |No. % Henry atreet, The four were hurried to Police Head- qua to have their finger prints taken, and the Bertillon expert; @ print which exactly mate! prints of Sniple's fingers, except that the old print showed the impression of six fingers on the Jeft hand, sniple had only the usual five, but examination showed that # clever surgical operation had removed the extra finger so negt! that scarcely a scar was left. Sniple'a record showed that he had served a term ‘9 the police say, and Goldman has dono nine years in Sing Sing for burglary, Coaen Is under sus- pendei sentence for a similar offens and Geldstein is on purole from Sing Where he had been serving # fy year sentence for burglary. Meantime the police have got the woods, but they can't find the original victions, check—or more than one check—to Ev- erett P, Fowler, a Kingston lawyer, who io Pcabe cid nent for extortion, contributed te Mr. rome are of mo use to the Dir- trict-Attorney unless they testify that bcald eacveen! were bade trom threats. Boni Holl, o pero lndl of Cortland ‘aaa . Mfelong Repudican, whose gontribution to the Democratic ‘campaign fund in 1911 Caused him intenes anguish, ie the only contrector so far who has been found willing to admit that he gave up be- caui f threats made by Fowler. Mr. Whitman te looking for others. Contractors examined by Mr, Whit- man yesterday admitted that they con- tributed, but sald it was a matter of business wth them—that they were not coerced. However, out of the eight aub- Poenaed to-day the District-Attorney hopes to dig up at least one who feels as badly over helping the Democrats as did Seneca P. Hull, NAME OF MURPHY'S NEPHEW I8 BROUGHT IN. The name of Charles F. Murphy was brought into the graft inquiry yester- day for the firet time when George H. McGuire of Syracuse, who started the whole inquiry by his seal in trying to beat “Boss” Kelley®of Syracus ness, McGuire said he is in partnership with Charles F, Murphy jr, who is a nephew of the Tammany bose, Young Murphy representa in this city the same bonding company that Mc- Guire represents in Syracuse, An agrev- ment exists between them by which they divide the commissions on bonds for up-State highway and canal work and work on the New York City subway. McGulre testified yesterday that he and Murphy did about 25 per cent. of the business of the State in bonding con- tractors on public works. .| give up before me McGuire also testified that In addition to getting a commission from the Bar- ber Asphalt Company he has been col- lecting a percentage from other corpora- tions which supply material for the highways, McGuire became shy answers when Mr. Whitman had not tried to N. Carlisle, Chair man of the to make chan, highway mate Barber Asphalt Company, ‘The witness said that he “might have done #0" but did not think he had. It was thea brought out that t Standard Oil Company and the Warne: Quinlan Company sold the liquid form of asphelt and that the bulk of the rock asphalt was supplied by the Bar- ver Company. ‘MoGuire admitted he had sought to have the words “solid, natural eephait” inserted in the specifications because he got commissions, or was to get com- missions, from the Barber company. ASPHALT TRUST. McGuire was then qu to his demand on the Wa company f ampalgn contribution of $5,000 and a commission of one cent 4 Hon on all its liquid asphalt be coulu 1 to State contractors, aid you tell the wi Quinlan Company they would b; ords, ‘solid aa- be taken ont of | z- ‘tural asphelt’ w | the specitontto i don't re recall WANTED $5,000 FROM RIVAL oF| oe Circulation Books Open t to HARVARD BEATS YALE, SCORE 15 10 5; 50,000 SEE BATTLE AT CAMBRIDGE WEATHER—Unsetticd to-night and Sa FE EDITION. + All.” | 1913. |Harvard Star and Fullback of Yale Team Prominent i in Battle at Cambridge To-Day. ” SOOSE DOES saacessuceascunseeest PELOE SOHELE SETH HOSE 6 OSG | i i oom POLICE CAPTAIN'S SON HELD AS CAR ROWDY Annoyed Daughters of Lieutenant— Held Without Bail for Sen- tence Tnesday. ! James Price, twenty-one years old, son of the late Cupt. James H, Price of the Police Department, and a nephew of Capt. Samuel Price, head of the Bronx Detective Bureau, to-day w committed without bail by Magistrate Appleton, in the West Farms Court, for further examination on Tuesday on a charge of disorderly ¢ t. Charles Walsh, twenty-one, of 487 Jackson avenue, was also committed, Two young men were arrested Thura- day morning on the elevated railroad station at Tremont and Third avenues, on a oharge of attempting to flirt with the tho young daughters of Lieut. Kr- nest I. Vondlezelsky of the Hast Twen- ty-second etreet station. Hoti young men in court to-day admitted the charge, Lieut, Vondieselsky was returning home at 3 o'clock in the morning with his wife and two daughters in a Third avenue elevated train, The lieutenant and his wife sat together and the two daughters sat apart from their parents in another part of the car. The young men stood in front of the girls aud an- noyed them, aieceteateamepaaiaas 40,000 MINERS STRIKE, ‘rench Workers Deman ve Hour © France, Noy, 22.—About 40,- 00,009 coal miners in this ern France have struck work and refuse to re-enter the mines funtil thelr demand for an eight-hour jay has been granted. ‘The movement 'is spreading rapidly and other griev ances of the miners have been br ease to the front A committee of miners requested the Associati« to-day | Sect , but this request ¢ | Was refused because the proprietors as- {wert a Dill fixing an elgt-nour day for | workmen is pending before the I \ Parliament and may be voted on Therefore, the proprietors af Estas we SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDE, Goel DEOEEDODELISG ATED DEAN DEG OOEEEHTDE LED ETE TEDEDDDE PENS tach ta et Dh PALE ate Sei SD le Sach Slated >) PPE DEEE DERE NESE DELODED oo o BEE 056 2°35-96030 5 FEN SIE O35. Tm the first period Brickley, standing on Yale's 96-yard line, shot the ball over the goal posts for first score of the game. the ball striking the Crimsom goal posts. the ball and touched it behind the line be declared @ touchbact, which dosen't count; but the referee decided that it was a safety, netting Yale two Pointe and making the score stand 3 to @ in Marvard's favor. At the start of the second period Euowles of Yale kicked to Mahas, Im the second period Mahan kicked to Wilson om Yale's 40-yard line. ‘Pho clever quarterback ran the ball back to Marvard's 34-yard line, rus of twegty-cight yards, the finest of the game, Shortly afterward Guernsey dropped back to the 38-yard line and booted the ball over the cross-bar for Yale's second score, making ihe tally: Harvard, 6; Yale, 5. Thie was the way the half ended. During the firet half the heat was so intense that the players fre- quently paused for @ breathing spell. Just as the first half was about to end Guernsey dropped back at the 87-yard line and atthmpted another field goal, but the ball went just @ trifle wide. Im the third period after Marvard bad rushed the ball well into Yale's territory Brickley dropped back and made another field goal. 38 was the fours Gown, with © yard fo gain Gnd the bell cn Vaiye 96 yard line, Score, Marvard, 9; Yale, 5. One of the big features of the thira period was Brickley's run of thirty-five yards, only Quarterback Wilson being in the way of scoring s touchdown. Agein 414 Harvard rush the ball close to Yale's goal and again did Brickley drop back and score his fourth field goal. Score, Marvard, 19; Yale, 5, This was the score when period ended. About the middle of the fourth period Brickley again dropped back and kicked his @fth field goal, this time from the twenty-yard line. SOLD OUT BY LAW AFTER /FOOTBALL CROWD HELD UP ON THE NEW HAVEN NIGHT AT HORSE SHOW Pennsylvanian Entertained by Prom-| Locomotives Sent to Relieve Con- inent New Yorker, Then Loses gestion and Get Gridiron Home for Debt. Enthusiasts En Route, a} to The Frening Weld) 4) STAMFORD, Conn., Nov, 22.—Troubie Pat heraren PN RAG |tn the powerhouse of the New York, Farms,” [ y. last nlqht wore tie |New Haven and Hartford Ra, oad Gom- questa of 9 0 it New Yorker at Pahy at Coscoh, abortly after $30 this Ja dinner and the New York horse «ow | morning, detained temporarily all tratns Thin ng the rift suid all of | whic) were lu the electrified gone be- ipevpens ise te CO Dtween thi. city ond Wo lawn, Loe nw ig “4 tive Wwe & tut fro ante motives were from here to draw everyt in the eastbound trains on which were and un hundreds of footh husiasie bound for the Yale-Harvard game at © is father, B Megrann. | ty f td ihe years j | bridge, | $40.00, High living caused his financial | General Manager Bardo and other troubles allroad officials came here by special ——- train from New flaven and efforts were OTHER FOOTBALL GAMES, —[inade to get the expresies through to Tee ot oa. diy fora} Bowton, that those going ty the game pe might not be disappotnted, ‘The trouble had not been overcome at 40 4 i 6 7 j noon. — Wissen d 07° (0 “8 lror OTHER FOOTBALL GAMES AND RACING SEE PAGE 6. On etn.) 10 PAGES BLY SORE ALL POINTS FOR HARVARD Marvellous Kicker Makes Five Field Goals in Stirring Gridiron Battle Against Eli Eleven in Cam- bridge Stadium. CRIMSON TEAM OUTPLAYS THE BLUE THROUGHOUT. Guernsey's Toe and Safety All That Save New Havenites From Shut Out—50,000 See Battle. , FIRST PERIOD. Harvard ...........3 Yale. ' SECOND PERIOD. Harvard .. wane | Yale... THIRD PERIOD. ee» 6 Yale .. FOURTH PERIOD. Harvard .........-..3 Yale.. FINAL SCORE. Harvard .......-.-18 Yale...............5 THE OFFICIAL LINEUP. Position. Lett—End—Right. eft—Tackle—Right Harvard ... Harvard O'Brien Hitchcock . Gilman Yale Braus Trumbul Pennock Storer . Tight—Teekle—Leti Herdwick . Right—Rad—Latt.. Logan . Quarterback... Mahan + Latt—Halatk—Right. Bradlee -Right—Halfback—Lett. Brickley . 177 pounds; average weight average paired of Yale backfeld, 178 pounds; average weight Of Harvard eleven, 17 pounds; average weight of Yale eleven, 17 pounds, Probable substitutes for Harvard lne—R. Curtis, L. Curtis, Morgan, Mills, Underwood, Bigelow, Withington, Dana and Coolidge For Harvard backfleld—McKinlock, Freedley, Bettle and Willets. Probable substitutes for Yale Hne—Robinson, Way, Cooney, Roberts and Loughridge, For Yale backfield—Cornell, Wheeler, MacLeish, Pumpelly, Guernsey and ‘Wiser, OMclals—Referee, W. 8, Langford, Trinity Umpire, Neal Snow, Michi gan, Head Linesman, Dave Fults, Brown. ‘Time of Periods—Four, of fifteen minutes each, Time of Game—3 o'clock, at Cambridge, Mass, By Robert Edgren. (Special to The Evening World.) STADIUM, CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 22,—Harvard jusfitied the hetting odds to-day by defeating Yale with a score of 15 to 5. While Harvard showed superiority all through the game, especially in her back field, it was Brickley’s toe that did all her actual scoring. Brickley kicked five field gouls. In seven trials Guernse:; for Yale had several chances but kicked only one, Guernsey's chances, however, were not as good as Brickley's. Tie Harvard team wae able to fignt| time tn twelve vears that Harvard has \ts way down to within easy range of] won a game on her own home grounds; the Blue goal posts, Gurnsey had to} not only that, but it is the frat time mtent himself with long shots, ‘Bhe} that Harvard ever beaten Yalo single other acore for Yale was pro-| two years in succession. And just one Juced by what baseball players would| more little thing—tte dectaive defeat of all 4s a “bone,” Yale loaves Harvard the unquestioned BRICKLEY THE STAR OF THE! FOOTBALL, CHAMPION OF AMUR- ENTIRE GAME. ICA for the season of 1913, Hr ckley was the great star of th Harvard's stadium Is built with a rt Harvard ‘ean Reside Kicking flel§ | number of entrances, so that a crowd can souls he shared with Mahan the honor | come and go quickly and without con- of ‘making several long runs | fusion, Knowing this the 50,000 footbalt Wilson made the most brilliant show-| enthusiasts took their ume tn coming. ing on the Yale side, He made a num-| But at t o'clock five thousand dotted the ver of very good runs, It was Wilson | wide spreading expanse of gray concret oyed Harvatre single chance 'A column as wide as the roadway, march. to seore with a tousndo when he | {ng stioulder to shoulder and toe to heel, caught Brickley on Yale's 20-yard Mae, | was pushing steadily along from the vo!s | Fifty thousand people saw the game. | lege wide of the river, across the big, naw an emply seat in It at 2 o'clock, Every | gates, bit of standing room was taken up.| People were massing eolidly, hundreds Hoaton is in for @ great Harvard cele-|of automobiles discharging thelp humaa bration to-night, for chis ie tae Mret freight into the crowd and BEATING YALE 15 105 i The great Harvard stadium didn't have} concrete bridge, down to the entraace ” Rete wen