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FANSL “Circulation Books Open to All.’ MMs a, ONE CENT. 191i Copyright, Os. he's by New York Wor World). ‘The Preee Publishing NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, rr | WEATHER—Partly cloudy to-night and Sunday. > INA] EDITION 1915. _12 P == AGES “PRICE ONE OENT. —$$$___ GORIZIA BATTERED TO RUINS IN GREATEST BOMBARDMENT SINCE WORLD'S WAR BEGAN Vienna Admits That Many Inhabit- ants Have Been Killed and That Enormous Property Damage Was Caused by Terrific Italian Fire. VIENNA ‘(via Berlin, Amsterdam and London), Nov. 20.—Gorizia fs burning in many places to-day. The Italians have thrown 3,000 shells into the town. Many of the inhabitants have been killed. The property Gamage is enormous. The Austrians firmly hold all their original positions and are re- pulsing attack after attack. The bridgehead in particular has been under fn incessant bombardment for many days. Gums of every calibre have been directed against it. The increased intensity of the Gorizia attack has been an incident | fo a renewed Italian assault all along the Isonzo lines. Austrians are holding their lines, (Karl H, von Wiegand, staff correspondent, in a special cable despatch yesterday to The World, described the earlier part of this battle, which he calls the fourth which Italians have waged for the capture of Gorizia. (The day and night cannonade of the cencentrated Italian artillery,” he wrote, “splendidly served, surpasses anything I saw during the June and September offensives of the western front, while at Tarnow and Gorlice, where the Germans and Austrians smashed through the Russian Hines by weight of tron and started the Russian steam roller moving backward until {t disappeared in the centre of the vast Muscovite were there, now here, as having been child’s play in comparison, The Doberdo Plateau and a portion of Mont Podgora are called ‘the hell.’ They justify the name. Nothing else could give a vague idea of the fighting and the conditions under which it 4s taking place.”"] ROME (via Paris), Nov, 20.—The Halian bombardment of Austrian positions in and around Gorizia continues, according to the official state- mt. Everywhere the ELI STAR, GUERNSEY, | and longitude 6, | Sardinia impire, is declared by those who |cona, which was torpedoed recently YALE BATTERED BY HARVARD ATTACK: ITALIAN LINER CHASED BY U-BOAT: ESCAPES IN A FOG Verona, WAR SPECULATIONS “SWAMP” EX-SENATOR JAMES SMITH; ister Ship of Ancona, Sent S. O. S. Off Span- ish Coast. peed a Forced to ‘ton in Leather Con-| cern and Newspapers Over to Trust Company. {BIG SHIP WITH U-BOAT. -arger Vessel Also Took Part RESIGNS ONE OFFICE. in Effort to Overhaul } the Liner, Newark Political Leader’s As- sets Said to Be in a Tangle. MADRID, Nov. 20.—A wireless mes- sage from the Italian liner Verona late this afternoon announced that the ship had escaped under cover of @ , fom aftor having been chased by 4, lurge submarine. James Smith jr’, former United “ates Senator from New Jersey and for years one of the financial and political powers of the common- wealth, is involved to the extent of nearly In an earlier wire- less received at Soller on Majorea Ial- and jn the Mediterranean, which ts off the Spanish coast, 110 miles south of tw it Hare, if she bad announced that eet eels not ie Wan i being. clinses more, by speculative losses occasioned | TAME The telegram atated that the Verona|>Y tl war. Mr. Smith this after-| SrerTH Je, Was pursued by a large submarine| 008 tendered his resignation as — President of the Federal Trust Com- pany of Newark, which hold his not for amounts approximating $250,000, Senator Smith has placed his af-| fairs in the hands of the Fidelity| Trust Company, one of the strongest banking institutions in New Jersey, and the directors of the company busily engaged in finding how deeply he is involved, The former Senator, after appearing before the Fidei officials, admitted that he was “utter- ly swamped,” Senator Smith's activities, which | have led to his financial crash, were Republican House Leader Ci Som- in leather and hides, the market for which has been strongly affected by which was accompanied by a steamer, evidently a mother ship. The steam- er’s position was given as latitude 40 This would place her Mediterranean between the Islands and the Island of NOWILSON ORDERS ON DEFENSE FOR in the Balearic The steamship Verona of the Ital- fan Lino is a sister ship of the An- In the Mediterranean, Her New York agents, Hartfleld, Solari & Co., No, 1 State Street, have been striv- ing for twe days to get information as to her whereabouts. The Verona sailed from New York on Oct, 21 and arrived at Genoa, her| the European situation. home port, on Nov. 6 Under her| Senator Smith ald that the losses | sailing schedule she would have de-|of one of his commercial enterpri parted from Genoa on Nov, 9, calling | Jeopardized bis financial position, He ments Sharply on Request | for Conference. 5] “All along the front the artillery @—————————___. | Naples on the 10th and at Palermo| said all his creditors will be paid in| WASHINGTON, Nov, 20.—Informed uel continues,” says tho official FIVE MORE BLAZES on the 11th, At the offices of the line| full, o-day that he would be Invited by tatement. “Our guns dispersed [it was stated that had sho followed he Piety Trunt Cumyaay, wu wlitent ‘Wilkon ‘to consult bu. the Age Golimns tn the Ane this schedule she would be now in| take charge of the T. P. Howe om as Se / ey, ARNG salnmne tel 6 i . AT BETHLEHEM PLANT mid-Atlan However, since the | pany, one of the largest leather manu A mr mm entae pep) Sone and: in whe: upper (Cordes | Ancona sinking Salling schedules} facturing concerns in the country. | James Mann o} Republi ‘ole; it destroyed shelters on Mit- |have been interfered with consider-| which has been controlled by Mr.|ean lender, sald Kofel (Gail); tt bombarded bar-| Fires in Projectile Departments Dis-| ably, and it may be that she sailed al Smith and also The Evening Star] “1 am willing to consutt with the at Goriala and also swept nu- covered in Time to Prevent | week later than was expected. and the Morning Eaglo, his newspa ous enemy batteries posted on heights to the east of the city and hers hidden in orchards and gar- near the city. Finally it shelled column of troops which retreated tly into Gorizia, fF “On the Curso Plateau our infantry Penewed its attacks with success, es- dally in the Monte San Michele A mne, whero the Perugia brigade suc- @ \ded in conquering all the ground hich slopes from the third summit of the mountain to the Isongo, be- een Petsano and Boschini, Afterward, driven from that posi- fon by a vigorous counter-attack, it | W founter-attacked in its turn and re- Heavy Damage. | SOUTH BETHLEHEM, Pa,, Nov.| 20,—Five small fires have been dis- | covered within the past fow days in one of the projectile departments of the Bethlehem Steel Works, it stated to-day, ered and extinguished in time to pre- vent any material dama; was All were soon discov- A Daring Diatonue! BILL—Just wait till | get ahead in the preteen 1d. fonquered the lost trenches. Through-| world. sail fat tho night the enomy renewed fu- |PHIL—Why, haven't you got a head fous assaults, succeeding seven times pt mean that you wait till I get on f racching our lines. He was mowed | PITA fown seven times by the accurate fire @ our artillery and rifles and was iprled back in disorder with enormous es. Then, worn out but indomit- the brave fusiliers of the One lundred and Twenty-ninth Regiment, jeir feet swathed tn PHIL—You have your haven't you? feet on now, There are going to be many fine for one to get “ahead” and to * their feet” separately announced through the sandbags, ABOUT "7,500 WANT-FILLING ADVER+ © the enemy trenches in the TISEMENTS TO BE P jess, completoly dispersing the de-| HANDILY CLASSIFIED, IN nders and taking many isoners s sides abundant to head Revolt prepared reply to 1 ” A 3 nt newspaper stories that | Jess i of the wes leading @ revolt in Publicity Ringl : Prosident on preparedness, bi ‘1 The Italian liner Giuseppe Verdi,| per properties. n preparedness, but Tw on her maiden voyage, arrived here| The directors of the Federal Trust not go to the White House to be | to-day in command of Capt, Luigi|Company of Newark, of which Mr,|!"forned of the programme. whieh I Zannoni, The passengers gave high|Smith has been president since 1904,|%™ ©xPected to support, praise to the captain for his precau-| met at noon to-day to accept his resig.| _“A* 10 Most members of the Re- Hone against the sinking of the sbip/nation. It was aad that Chriatian| ™blican party, 1 fav Hf general by submarines, as the Ancona of the|Feigenspan, the brewer, would prob-| PO!” of Preparedness; but what i same line, which sailed from Messina | ably be elected his successor, ne Fy In auc hb programme would Nov, 6, the sume day tho Verdi galled ntroversy i Ling session o: from Palermo, was sur, ne session gress. It was in announcing his resigna- | "\°!) '" tion from the Presidency of the Fed-| h Capt, Zunnoni was warned from] eral Trust Company that Mr, Smith cant aul Pan aes “a oan Gibraltar that German submarines |toia of his financial difficulties, Hin |/°°" vaoaG th rile . had entered tho Mediterranean, Hel indebtedness is said to be principally | bp oda la Wovd a CAAp Acidiade tune put out and provisioned all boats im-| aug to banks in Nowark and other line pitter feeling he ‘9 Big a HG mediately, On Nov. 7 he relayed t0| piaces in New Jersey, and possibly aati Soytaeme Wtentse tae ek coast radio stations a call from the]in this city, ee beldod, Whe milibpty laden wae rence, whieh Bad been: torpedoed: || za o6 a. Gili dr wae (born in fended at a speech made by. the An hour and a half later there was @! Newark, + on June 21, 1851, He h poke ¢ “SO 8" from the Ancona, Capt Bene tbs an his business carver in dry goods, |+ epublic " nont made northwest for the coast of! |but soon engaged in the manufacture of patent and enamelled leather. His |firm, J. M, Halsey & Smith, is one of marines wer |the largest in the world, For years Mr. Smith has been at the head of the Democratic or; iza- nominuted Woodrow tongress, It 4 Mann will en he rec Spain, out of the thence regular o down to Gibraltar, sighted. se, and nie No sub- ul 8 strong Indication to-day Lnot au plan 1 in the Senate nators Preailent's d e fight for cloture 1 off, Wilson for Governor in 1910, but bit terly opposed him late Shoot They Are} Mr. Smith was an’ Alde Newark from 188% to 1887 Lad Runs Ident of that eit nrou ter ¢ en th Wat Datnaceaclelineciavalt rater ar i adi th aint one fone In 168s, 1898 an dose ANS V ny heart and then fled to a woods. Th ply interested In many enters ‘The lava is pouring dow ie the side children were playing school, prises in Hesex County, of the mountaia into the w 4 \ OWES NEARLY $2,000 000 HN, SAS MANN YOUTHS AND GIRL BRAVED PERILS OF RIVER TO ESCAPE Set Out From Randall’s Islan at Night in a Frail Boat. CAME NEAR __ SINKING, May Newman Proved Herself a Heroine When Their Dan- ger Was Greatest. ‘The fag end of @ gale was whip- ping the waves against the shore of Randall's Island last night, as four small persons clambered into a Nttie boat, and pushed off. Three of them | were boymp-one was a girl. As the boat crept slowly out |from the protection of the island, the wind and waves swept it about like a | chip. A whitecap burst upon the bow and flooded the bottom of the craft. |The boys pulled furiously a their oars, The girl set her lips with a| grim courage that fought down fear. | Back on Randall's Island the hun- | dreds of other boys tn the Children's Hospital had marched with orderly precision to thelr quarters for tho | night. No ono had noticed that there were throe less than had marched out |in the morning. | In the girls’ hall, too, no one had little Agure creep from the | mens hall and down the doserted cor- ridora until she found herself out in the night Down at the shore where |seen a Joined her, Then the four set out to brave the | perils of the wind-swept river, were Patrick Hoy, elghteen years old; May Newman, seventeen, and two boys named Durkin and Quinn, For days they had planned their escape, lod, according to Hoy, by the Quinn jand Durkin youths, sult-case In the bottom of the boat, | and aa the boys pulled on she bailed |to keep the craft from stinkin) Finally t boat grounded and ity occupants clambered out on dry land, exhausted, They were in the New Haven the boat lay she waited until the boys | ! "They | | KNOCKED OUT EARLY ¢- BLUE TEAM IS OUTCLASSED EARLY BY CRIMSON ELEVEN BEFORE CROWD OF 47,000 Cambridgeites: Made Four Touch- downs Before Game Was Half Over, While Elis Were Scoreless— Mahan a Team by Himself. HARVARD CAPTAIN ALONE ROLLED UP 15 POINTS Score by y Periods Ie, Period. 2d Period, it Period, 4th Reciod, Oo .6O _ 13°14 By ROBERT EDGREN. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 20 the Yale and Harvard undergraduates oxchanged cheers and matched their singing abilities, Yale cheered Capt. Mahan of Harvard, and the Crimson shouters immediately returned with three longs Harvards and three times three for Capt. Wilson of Yale. There was a crowd of noarly 50,000 on YALE. HARVARD.. While waiting for the teams to line up hand as the game started ® FIRST PERIOD. While Harvard's team was made up the rival Captains met and tomsed @ coin, Harvard won, and chose the HOW TEAMS STARTED. Harvard iltnan th gual, with the favoring wind. ae Yale lined up to kick off. Evidently the wind was getting down into the field, for twice the ball was blown from its pyramid. vernsey kicked off to Harvard's 20-yard tine, and Mahan punted right back without waiting to try the Yale Yale began pounding back very siowly from her 35-yard line, Fall. ing to mnake the down in three tries “MOT MRS, M’ADOO, BUT CHAUFFEUR TO BLAME” In the middle of the river thoy real- ervere '* aa _ be eee too Jized their danger fully, The full h on reak through, Guernsey force of the blow selzed their boat, |50 Wife of Treasury Secretary Has|munted to Harvard's 16-yard line 7 sb a Mahan tried to break but Tired and weary from their toll at! Not Been Called to Court, Is State- | = manne ate, the oars, the youths began to lose ¥ pe ; | ‘ i ontrol of (he tossing, plunging craft. | ment From Husband's Office. f « he x on hus Waves broke over the side, threaten- . w 4 56 WASHINGTON, Nov, 20.—Mre, rd peceearenernes L sist Ls ed ~ William G, McAdoo, wife of the S Wileon.ehot throdah @ helo enencae ae foes ane, Smee hands of |Totary of tho Troasury and daughter |#arvard's line by Black and C. Shel Li k soli Aaluak BA Onn aol of President Wilson, ts not in the|don and dashed down the fleld 22 cat he OT back, exhausted, she | #4 Kraces of the law, and will not] yards before Mahan brought dim . 3 - have to appe in court at Savage, | down pulled nh ther bi 7 is ‘cAdoo's to-di fumbled and Harvard got th i] The New York shore was drawing | ®t Mead fm uy | fu Harvard got the ba I nearer, but the water in the boat was} Her chauffeur, Edward Hayden, it] Mahan punted back sixty yards and earer, e wa 1 bo sald, is the guilty perso He | Ring? lod th af 7 gaining hoadway and at any moment | Ws sald, tx th ullty person | Rin, 1 ball. Har they might go down. The girl gave drove her car at nearly xty mil Wits clo: o him and had the ball Jap her oar. Sho toro the lid from a |# hoyr on the way from Baltimore, | befor Hien asauns 1 could ne authorities allege, und blue-jerseyed Mia, Saha was in the 0a: player within five yards of him Hart petal a alloped acr the lk Hines and down behind the “' WOMAN WITH AMERICAN oat post.” Mahan mieved the @oel PASSPORT 18 HELD UP ini i ee ttarvanws road yards at St. Ann's Avenue and reer ine se Duane One Hundred and Thirty-second | | yey Winche., Who ri Declared to| ’tek for rds and then punted Street, For a few moments t | dow y wd line. ‘The bal Jrested, Then the boys picked up tt | Bea German, Arrest took a kward b and a Har | suitcases they had taken and all be A faite yard player fell on it. Guernsey kan @ (tramp across the railroad With Maa dn! i mAAD » the Harvard line and pert LONDON, Nov urd Hodg- | wa ) without a gain, Wilson Policeman Anderson, on duty tn the /gon, an American, and Lucy Wunsehe, | took two yards and then the ball was jyardm apled four bedraggled figures yclared to be a German, both hav-| passed ba Guernsey, who was plodding along, At sight of the brasa 1, axicad’ HGRADOHal Seta Faclth Jowned ten yards in buttons they dropped thelr bags and led i Court to-day, | the rea fled, The three boys obtained a good \ ' with f HARVARD'S ATTACK SWEEPS id and were drawing near to frees, > 5 \ fa THROUGH YALE'S CENTRE, Aon, t posnes punted out to midfield But the spark of y at cent 1 nd i M 1 short pun mas 1 k Hoy tlared ats Aw wind carried the th 1 Kand saw Houde H line. Guernse girl otra foebly in i " Sit paused and t H ‘ i . at gotutng an ine fs » 1 Qu ‘ i ay way throug) cot he a heroe : * ’ Vien "Guernsey flor bia sucriitee, At the je ; rh t Wason on Harvard'a 43. tumbling pair, Dur being indorsed “mpanying hus eee eecaped, ; Kia Sule band to England,” (Continued oa Eighth Paged . ’