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Te: ‘WEATRER—-R INAT EDITION 7) Warmer. Japanese Minist Dictator, While settlement of the Mexico-United dent Huerta in the conference. Anoiher happening that gave the Mexican ruler was about to y that he resign office was the fact report, being to confer with John L dent Wilson. It wap officially stated later, however. that the object of Moheno’s visit to the port was to meet his father, who is duc te arrive there shortly. It was added that: the Miniater intended to return to hie uties in a day or two. Despite this statement the impression prevailed that the foreign Minister was on an import- eat mission to the American Envoy. ZAPATIOTAG FIGHT TO FREE RELATIVE OF MADERO. ‘The Inst of the Maderos, relatives of the assassinated President Francisco I, Madero, left Mexico City to-day when Manuel Madero, an aged man, was sent to Vera Cruz, guarded by @ heavy mili- tary escort, to be placed in the fortrese- prison there. ‘The passengers on the train carrying Madero had @ pitched battle with rebels an hour after the train left the capital. ‘The attackers were Zapatistas and they halted the engine driver at a lonely qarve. Armed passengers and thirty eoldlers on the train returned the reb- els’ fire and they were driven off after wi short spell of sharp fighting. The Government this afternoon off- cially denied the report that Magatla: on the west coast, has fallen into the hands of the Constitutionallats. Dec. 1, it wan aald to-day, will the Huerta Government face to with another fiscal crisis, Reports from Tuxpam and Tampico to-day indloated that the situation there was unchanged. The withdrawal by the National Bank and the Bank of London and Mexico of their Tampico branches, with all funds, was construed ws that the bank officials be- the capture of Tampico by the rebeld*is imminent, if not already an accomplished fact, Reports received to-day sald (hat Tam- pico had fallen, but the Mexican people are ignorant of the rumors, as well as of the reported suicide of Gen, Bambago after the fall of Vi rigid press rship Ye maintained and the native newspapers publish no stories of that kine, WASHINGTON, Nov, (Continued on Second Page.) Speculators At It Again They are dickering in everything from football tickets to Mexican politics. But they are forever getting into ing face 29.—Although Vt It is the , erson who Invests money in safe and value-increasing real estate or in profit-yielding business enterprises who. fares by far the best in the tong run, 12,616 WORLD “REAL ESTATE” AND “BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY” ADS, WERE Rae LAST NTH 5,221 More than the Herald, A great number and variety of safe ana profitzble investments will be advertised in THE BIG SUNDAY WORLD TO-MORROW. World “Wanted” Ads. Bring Best Results on Monday) PRICE ONE CENT. HUERTA TO YIELD TO W WITHIN FORTY- | IS REPORT IN MEXICO GY). Fic reo was under way Querido Moheno, forla, because a| Coprright, 1918, by Co. (The New York Werld). ‘The Prose Publishing NEW ARMY DEFEATS NAVY ELEVEN, 22 TO 9; PRESIDENT SEES GRIDIRON BATTLE seeniice : : eo “ Circulation Books Open to All. YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 4 orld, a 77 10 PAGES ENT. INAT |. EDITION 1913. EIGHT HOURS, Charge O’Shaughnessy Confers With er, Representing Latter’s Cabinet Officer Goes Presumably toLind. MEXICO CITY, Nov. 29.—Following a long conference today | between American Charge O'Shaughnessy and the Japanese Minister to Mexico, it was persistently rumored in Government circles that 4! .. president Woodrow Wilson stepped States difficulies was due within forty-eight hours. The Japanese Minister presumably acted for Presi- strong credence to the report that yield to President Wilson's demand that while the O'Shaughnessy talk the Mexican Foreign Minister in ind, personal representative of Presi- ‘WORK NOW UNDER WAY | ON 47 MILES OF NEW RAPID TRANSIT LINES Divided Into 26 Sections, 6,650 Men Are Employed, and Cost Will Be $86,000,000. Work is now under way or about to begin on twenty-six aéctions of the new dual system of rapid vransit. The con- tracts covering the work aggregate $86,- 371,000. About 6080 men are employed. The Manhattan lines under construction jare the Lexington avenue subway and |the Seventh avenue subway, for opera- |tion by the Interborough Rapid Transit |Company; and the Broadway subway, for operation by the New York Municl- pal Railway Corporation—another name for the B. R. T. | The Bronx work includes contracts jon the Jerome avenue and Southern {Boulevard braAches of the Lexington ‘avenue subway and on the Wijte Plaine road branch of the existing subway. In Brooklyn the work includes the Fourth avenue subway and its extensions, as well as the elevated ratlroad in New Uuecht avenue. The Now York Mu- nicipal Raliway Corporation has also let contracts, with the approval of the Public Service Commission, for the re- onstruction of the Sea h Une and for the construction of the Lutheran Cemetery extension of the Broadway and Myrtle avenue elevated lines. In Queens work is under way on the three sections of the rapid transit ratl- road, which will run from the Queens- | boro Bridge to Astoria on one Ine and to Corona and Flushing on the other ‘The contract for the extension of the Steinway Tunnel for its in Queens to the Qu Plaza bas also been awarded, and work will soon begin on (ut Ine. The contracts embrace forty-seven iniles of new subways and elevated lines }in the boroughs named. Twenty-five miles are on lines to be operated by the B, K, T., and twenty-two miles on lines to be operated by the Interborough | Rapid Transit Company. of the tal value of the contracts, | $48,000,000 is for work on lines to be oper- Jated by the IR. T., and about $40,000,- | 000 on lines to be operated by the Inter- borough. Sn yek Sten Y i (Je = Awain, 1—Janes hed miLy, to-day Hation to a close mee A. Ten YRACUSE A. Ten the crews of 8 brought all» N at Tile le, Pulitzer (ocd) Buililin NOY Cy Pelepioue Her ra: ee “— ISON (WILSON ON LINER BS WATE HOSE BROE FAREWELL Throng, but Band Plays “Here Comes the Bride.” SLIPS ABOARD _ SHIP. | | | Fools Curiosity Seekers by | Joining the Crowd and Going Through Sqcond Cabin. \up a special Mag-bedecked gangplank of |the George Washington of the North |German Lloyd Ine in Hoboken to-day |to say goodby to his daughter, Mra. | Francis B. Sayre, and her husband, the |ship's band struck up “Here Comes the | Itride.” With @ broad smile on his face lthe President, escorted by four police- men from this city and his secret ser- vice staff, made his way to sulte No. Huerta’s Cabinet, left for Vera Cruz, his principal object, according toss on the promenade deck, where Mr. and Mra, Sayre had been snugly en- |sconced for half an hour, having se- cretly boarded the ship by the second cabin gangway. “Ump, ump, ta ra,” blared the band, | ‘Ump, ump, ta ra, and the great | crowd on the pler and the ship, seeing that the joke was on the musicians, who took the President for = bridal party, cheered and laughed and cheered again. The President remained with bis daughter for fifteen minutes and then returned to New York for luncheon and to get ready for the Army-Navy foot- ball game this afternoon, SECRET OF THEIR STOPPING PLACE CLOSELY GUARDED. ‘The elusive Mr. Sayre and his wife, having fooled the vigilant reportere and photographere at the Pennsylvania Station last night by remaining on the private car after the President and his party and then leaving by way of the baggage room, were able to keep their stopping place in the city secret. So no one was able to learn where they would start from this morning when they were ready to go to Hoboken to take the steamer. The reporters and photographers watched the ferryboats for automobiles and taxicabs and watched the pier trance in Hoboken, Mr, and Mra, Sayre fooled them again by boarding the rev- enue cutter Manhattan at some point on the Manhattan side and landing by a private way on the North German |Lioyd plier. Then they fell into line with a crowd of passengers going aboard by the second cabin entrance and gained thelr suite without being ob- served by any but the ship's officers, who had planned the manoeuvre in ad- vance, President Wilson, who spent the night at the home of his friend, Col, - ward M. House, No. 146 E fifth street, left there at 9 Hoboken, He rode in a itmouaine car with one secret service man. Two bicycle squad policemen stood on the footboards of the car, Another car car- rying the secret service escort followed. TAKES HIS DAUGHTER ELEANOR WITH HIM TO PIER, At the Waldorf, President Wileon picked up his daughter Dr. Cary Grayson, ’ aide, He went to Ho «{the Twenty-third street ferry, attract- ing no attention woul he reached the steamship plier, ‘There he was recognized the moment he left the car and wan greeted en- thusiastically, But !t was not until the German band on board the George Washington grested the President with strains of the Wedding March that the crowd really appreciated the whole situation, ‘The President returned to New York by the Twenty-third street ferry route, After leaving his daughter and Dr. Grayson at the Waldorf he |drove to the home of Col, House, Mr. and Mra, Sayre kept close to their quarters on the ship while the George Washington was at the pler. The sail- ing was dclayed half an hour by late | mails during the wait the bridal palr were implored to have a heart lund cone out on the deck and pose for a photograph, but Mr. Sayre, who An Byening th an Whe Skyros have the su is Muished in waite which \ sCanunued on Hecund Hage.) World snapped them as the vessel are oo ahd ve aT SS GOVERNMENT SUES THE AMERICAN CAN COMPANY ASTRUST Dissolution Action Begun Against Big Concern Charges Restraint of Trade. BALTIMORE, Nov. 2.—Sult was fied here to-day in the United States Dis- trict Court to dissolve the American Can Company, the so-called Tin Can trust, which the Department of Justice allex controls @ large percentage of buwii of the United States in tin cans, con- tainers and packages of tin. The American Sheet and Tin Plate - | agreem: 4 eroamn, | Of t Company was made a defendant be- ‘ause of an agreement it is alleged to have with the American company to nell it Un for cans at a proferential rate. In {ts complaint the Government al- jeges practices in resiraint of trade, by absorbed concerns not to re-enter the fle, contacts by consumers to buy from “the trust” exclusively and arbitrary fixing of prices, Attorney General McReynolds asked in the for @ dissolution other than on ap rata basis, by asking for a separat: into unite of different ownership to in- sure the restoration of competition. President Wheeler of the American Can Company at the New York offices of the concern to-day made the fol- lowing statement: “Thin company 1s not disturbed by the action of the Government, Neither in its origin nor In the conduct of its business has monopoly or restraint of trade been attempted. No ‘unfair com- petition’ ‘naw been resorted to. There have been no agreements or undor- standings as to prices, The company has not sougnt in any way to dominate the trade, nor has it any such share of {t (only about one-tiird) we would enable it to do mo if it wanted to. Competition 1s free and active. “The company will defend the muit vigorously and confidently, and tt te the hellef of its officers and counsel that no one sterested in the company end feel any uneaditiexs as to the outcome.” The American Can Company, known in Wall Street as a Reid-Moore concern, wae organized under’ the laws of New Jersey in 1901 as a conso.idation of se era) large factories in various parte th ry, Daniel G Held and W, Ut who are interested in sludiag the we porat el Corporation, and Mr nard of dir ‘he company w ters Reid became chairman apitalized at ow,0w, of waich t 10,000 Le OULELARGINE, east Leen Francis B. Sayre and His White House Bride On Bridge of Liner at Start of Wedding Trip The couple refused to pose for a photograph on the ship's deck, but a staff artist of The Evening moved away from her pier. braced and the Mavy lost the bail. the field, ‘ball over the goal to Ingram, who back. Mavy, 6; Army, 3. | Toward the cli sixty-five yards lequaliy divided between preferred and common stock, ‘The preferred, which te 7 per cent, cumulative, did not for sev- al years pay full dividends, but on Jan, 1 this year the company pald off % per cent. in back dividends thua @ccu- mulated, leaving about # per cent. atill to be made up, It haa @ funded debt of $14,000,000, Nearly forty factories are now owned by the company, located in the United States and Canada, with one in the Hawatian Islands, Among ita directors are E. C. Con- verse, a Director of the United States Hteel “Corporation, Frank LL. Hine, President of the First National Bank of |New York; Wiliam T. Graham, former | dent of the company, W. HL My w. Ft KOH. Ixmon, Jam McLean, ree G. MoMurty, J. W Odgen, HL. W. Phelps and Ray Skofleld and J. uM, Chicagy. of » Rudolph The Amert Moore and F Van Company was re [states Stee Jide pa Cee Fazema for pimpioe ran of advesiuwd tases ‘Rh bbbtebbieebite-bisebiteblsebitebbisbeet-biebiebbee eet Features of the Game at a Glance Im the first period, with the bell om their five-yard line, the Army A couple of minutes Inter the Middies brought the ball again toward the Soldiers’ goal, and from the 30-yard line Brown kicked goal from aking the score 3 to O in the Mavy's favor. After the Kickof the Wavy fumbled and the Army recovered the ball. ‘The Army sprung an unexpected forward pass, Benedict shooting the In the second period a wide quarterback run by Pritchard put the ball on the Mavy's S-yard line and Woodrug, , tleing the score. Wavy, 3; Army, 3. Brown scored a goal from placement from the 27-yard line. On the 30-yard line Pritchard shot s forward pase to Merilat, who received it just at the goal line and the score 9 to 6 in the Army's favo: In the third period the Mavy made ® goal from placement, Brows | making the kick from the 30-yard line. Score, Navy, 9; Army, 9. of the third period Merriliat 1 brought the ball to the Wavy’ Jouett carried the ball over for a touchdown. MoBwen kicked the goal from the touchdown, making the score 16 to ® in the Army's favor, From the 15-yard line Pritchard shot » forward pass to Merrillat, who clung to the ball for another touchdown, Soore—Army, 29; Wavy, ‘The Army failed to kick the goal. vel ARMY ELEVEN BEAT NAVY BEFORE RECORD CROWD OF 45,000 Middies ‘Scored First With Place- ment Kick in Opening Period, But Touchdown Put Army Ahead ’ in Second Period. PRESIDENT WILSON ROOTED ON BOTH SIDES OF FIELD Nations of the World Represented at Spectacular Gridiron Battle of Uncle Sam’s Boys at Polo Grounds FARST PERIOD. Army 000 O = Navy 22.....2220.3 9 SECOND PERIOD. Army .... -«--- 9 Navy THIRD PERIOD. 7 ~~ Navy FOURTH PERIOD, Army .....--200--- 6 Navy .......... FINAL SCORE. WY scccccccceccs®® NOVY cciccciscesccts O THE LINEUP. Army ... a Army. Position. Navy. Merrilat ....-------e00- Re E, ..--...---200--- Gilchrist Weyand ... a RT. G. tre .. wee Cen he mufed it, and the ball was brought Pritchard ... Jouett .... Hoge . | Benedict .. sub, Kicked @ goal from the --- Harrison *™r2zer exzD @oore, | By Robert Edgren. POLO GROUNDS, Nov. 29.—The Army created one of the big- |gest surprises of the present football season when it defeated the Navy this afternoon here before a record football crowd of 45,000, Th: | Soldiers won because of their unexpected prowess in the Western style of play which “Hurry Up” Yost taught them during'the past week or so. The Navy only showed strength in the kicking department, Brown doing ra all the good work for them, FIRST PERIOD. Captain Hoge kicked off for the Army. The Navy pushed back for one short gain through the line, then McReavy shot through a hole in the Army's right wing and tore straight down the fleld for thirty-five yards, He had almost run clear when the last Army tackler brought him down. Blodgett whipped through right tackle for ten yards, then on two aolld smashes straight Into the Army line the Navy took six yards more, The nest drive netted @ single yard and, making @ final attempt with only th yarde 0 for a touchdown, the Middies wer stopped and lost the ball. | Hoge punted off to Nicholls on the i} t over for = touchdown, making | Mobhs failed to kick the goal, jade an end run of a-yard line, whence straight down the fleld toward the Navy goal, but stuck fast on the Navy's 26-yard line. PRITCHARD 45-YARD FORWARD PASS WAS INCOMPLETE. The Army team Mined up as if to try* for a field goal, but instead Pritcharil made a long forward pasa to Merrilet, forty-five yards, The ball strugic the round over the goal line and the pass incomplete, lodgett punted to rd, who came back fifteen yards. Jouett tried to get around the Navy's Might end, but after running the width of the field was thrown out ef touch with a four-yard gain, Pritehant on a fake forward pass w thrown for an eight-yard loss, 1 punted to Har- MAIL BANDITS. GETFORTUNEIN TRA ROBERY M-yard tine, The Navy began hanvmer- i, who fumbled the ball ko gesid Seen n D, 2, ina back, until they reached the 10-/ cred It on the N fifteen-yard Ine, Escape With Pouches From yard line, They were directly in front| The Army smothered ™ firat Navy : tate? 5 oy Pea iaiect of the Army goal Again the) attack. On a fake kick Blo@gett made 1 Michigan Central Containing | Xymy une 4 refised to} daring run across the field in an ef back for «| fort to get clear, but was thrown with tho 25-yard|/no gain. Nicholls punted out to imid+ give an ined kiok fram placement on | From $30,000 to $70,000, | ine. Hrown drove the ball between] fel. Hoge got five yards through | —_——_—— the goal posts, SCORE, NAVY 3, right Another Army forward anUTiH DEND. In » Man] ARMY. 0. pass fa In a second more the Army vainen an ‘The roters’ wtacde went wiki wit) | tried #til another forward pasa, which ae a Mlohlgan { in a shrieking roar of vells that) Was incomplete. Aaa Ra pees soe tea Neaeliavkey und ‘The Army! Hoge punted and i the rush, Benes “ Wad cit ane olig: whe Was 6 Ariny fulloach, Was knocked strayed 4 ‘ © Navy's Q38-yard out cold, The rising players we nas ana ‘ ve ground the ba “ 1 ball, leaving ne hie grasp wad in an jastant| Benedict Iyhig ttat on ts tek with Che empty mall pouch wae found here seiaed by one of the Army |arms culsietched A silence fall ok |edey aver the Lake Shore station. The Army tried to beat the crowd as the atill figure in mig@e.d “pistons ee os