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| | T HE EVENING WORLD, BATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4a, 19126. 4 | Bowmasion Bet Point, Saye Berlin. BERLIN (vie Bayville), Nov. 11— forces yesterday tried in “fia ve Treen nw tree Fecapturo the position stormed by *te the day previously at Skrobowa, 4 Baranovichi. All the attacks by down under heavy losses, says ™ German official statement. * German and Austro-Hungarian * on the northeast front the statement adds, made successful advances. entrenched Roumanian lines taken at the point of the bayo- te the weet of the Predeal-Sinaya ‘The statement says: “Front of vainly tried, positions ni Their at! heavy losees. pe the Narayuvka (eoutheast Sf 4 ) German penetrat main position ncethweet . -Krasnolesie and the « repulsed enn violent counter- iran "Archduke Charles Fran- advance by German riflemen Kpee metres in the Carpathians, erie ie siety Russians as prise 'y Russians as pris- the captured and de- Position. b the Roumanian front.—Attacks ? German and Austro-Hungarian several entrenched Heumens ‘were taken at the point of bayonet and 160 men were made “Along the pass roads further Nybe (here were only minor which we aoearea duri Eome postions in’ the helghte and 200 prisoners.” Berlin Claims Victories in Series of Air Battles in the ; West. 4 i BERLIN, via Sayville, Nov. 11.—Re- from the western front printed Berlin newspapers to-day tell of a battle aeroplane which was Gown by the Germans during ‘e fighting. The super-air was one of seventeen brought ‘ It was provided with two } Waree machine guns, and had for three passengers. It was undamaged. Following is the ‘e@icial statement on the air fighting “On the night of Nov. 9-10 hostile dropped bombs without suc- on Ostend and Zeebrugge (Bel- @ium). One British machine was forced down and captured and the ot eadl @ British officer, was mado “ Pont the morning of Nov, 10 « Ger- battle plane attacked two British between Nieuport and Dun- It shot ene one and forced other to retreat “In the forenoon Russe of our battle “ae met a superior British aerial @qtadron off Ostend and attacked it immediately, The enemy was forced to withdraw, Our machines returned ‘te their base, haying suffered ‘na! s." -@ificant dumage: PARIS, Nov. 11.—Concerning the “air battles in the West, the following »eMocial report was given out to-day: “Yesterday three German machines ‘were brought down by our pilots in ‘the region of the Somme. Two of were brought down by Lieut ynemer. This brings up to twenty- one the number of machines destroyed Thus far by this lieutenant. “ “Two other German machines, at- dy our aircraft, went crash- Ang to the ground, the first in Cham- aepagne, and the second in Lorraine, ‘where it fell in flames, Thursday our hombing squad rons dropped 2,205 kilograms of ex- ves on enemy railway stations, uacs and assembling places on the Bomme front. One of our ma @hines dropped six bombs on the rail gray station at Ofenburg, which was “@amaged veriously,” * MOFIA, Nov, 11-—"There ts no @hange of importance tn Dobrudja,” says an official statement from the ‘War Office to-day. “Near the Cerna- yoda bridge our artillery compelled epemy unite which had pushed for- to the left (west) bank of th to retire toward Dunareay lack Bea calin prevailed. the Danube there was artil- ire in many sectors. Near Glueg- ‘Hungarian monitors cap- oumanian barges laden ‘ sare trey ‘ Saused “several, sxpte | DOUBLE Sees Ses S aeaien uma were repulsed !On Same Evidence Another TAnes Taken at Baye- zr KISSES REFLECTED “| ONGOBLET COST Japanese eidier Glasses Saw Things Though His Back Was Turned. DIVORCE SUIT. Wife Wins Freedom From Wealthy Husband. ‘The vision of a woman Kissing and hugging her soul mate revealed to|A John Chin An, Japaneso butler, on the highly polished sides of wine goblets, won a victory to-day for George Saxton Barber, rich woollen merchant and nephew of the late Mrs. William McKinley, in one of the most hotly contested divorce ac- tions r tried before a Supreme Court referee. The butler’s efforts not only de- feated Mrs. Bernice Barber's efforts to obtain alimony but were responsi- ble for the divorce granted to Lilliaa =| Kaight Geissenhaimer from Charles B. Geissenhaimer, rich film man and wnieon of former Congressman Jacob Geissenhainer of New Joracy, Mrs. Barber first brought suit against Barber; then he counter sued. Mra. Geissenhainer promptly sued her husband for a divorce based on the Barber charges, which named Geissenhainer a9 corespondent. The Barber suits are still to be tried, The incidents which the Ortental butler described took place in Mrs. Barber's apartment at No. 4 West Fifty-ninth Street, after Mra, Barber had taken sudden leave of her sum- mer home at Succasunna, N. J. Under the name of Charlie Gordun, Chin An testified, Gelasenhainer called at the apartment and remained there for days at a time. “Often Charlie—that was the name she gave him—" the butler sald, “and Mrs, Barber would have cocktails served in the bedroom and frequently they drank wine. “There was one occasion when Mrs. Barber and Charlie remained at home until late in the afternoon, sitting most of the time in the living room It happened that I was polishing wine sees in the dining room with my back turned to the living room. But on the goblets, as I polished them, | could see her kissing and hugein, Charlie, and he was doing the same.” A hallboy testified that Barber called one day while “Gordon” was upstairs in Mrs. Barber's apart- ment. When advised of her hus- band's presence Mrs, Barber, the hall- boy declared, ordered him to hold Barber downstairs until she could rid the apartment of Gordon, Another employee of the house at Mrs. Bar- ber’s urgent request smuggled “Gor- don" into an unoccupied room, and there he remained in hiding all night Ge HARVARD-PRINCETON BATTLED ON EVEN TERMS IN FIRST HALF LE SR Shee oat mares rr oe WIFE ALIMONY Polishing miss took 2 yards, and on th ba gga into vie G stopped a cen. |Into ry Sing a decision. ball on her own 18-yard Herween “punted to fumbled, but recovered in midfield. forward pass failed and then Het Nase Rave to Princeton’ Eaay fumbled the ball ana i Mne, |ptrtek the ground and bounced over He reached for it and etl and, just as the Harvard end ‘as about to fall on it, Moone shot Now between The wind had died out and neither side had any ‘his head, through and snatched there wa: Driggs it up. @ punting duel Herween, advanta; After several started meg exchanges Har smashing into failed. and made first down. Casey tried again and wa with no gain. Murray's forward pi ‘was broken up by Thomas. Herw punted to necessary ten yards, Thomas pushed down. Driggs punted to Harvard's 35-yard line where Murray fumbled the ball and the ever present Gennert fell on it. Thomas bucked straight through the Harvard line for seven yards. He 4 the Harvard went thirteen and tos tacklers aside like a snow plough go. Ing Into a drift. After another plung time was called. Princeton had the ball on Harvard's 24-yard line. ‘The score and period, © to 0, SECOND PERIOD. The Princeton rooter section rang cheerfully and the play went on. Princeton lost fitt yardy on a penalty, and tried a forward pass. Tho ball fell out far beyond the Tiger legged runner who was going io meet ft. Again the team lined up and Moore failed to get through. The ball was on Harvard's 35-yard line, there was @ moment's delay and Funk came running out to take Wil- son's place. ik to the b0-yard line and m his try from placement. The ball barely cleared the Harvard line and Casey snapped it up and ran back twenty-five yards to the 40-yard line before he was brought down, Eddy tackled him. Murray got four yards and Hor- ween pushed for five more. On a fake pass Casey wriggied through for two yards. Next time he started Casey broke through a big hole in the line at right wing and got away clean, Three Tigers dived at him and missed him, Then when he was almost clear Eddy caught him and pulled him down, Now Casey and Horween were sent plunging into the ‘Tiger line time and time again, Every time they made their gain until Mur- ray made a lateral pass to Casey, who fumbled the ball. DRIGGS BREAKS UP HARVARD'S FORWARD PASS. Princeton's ball on her own 25-yard line, Driggs went around Harvard's right end for nearly ten yards, Eddy pushed through for the down, Prince- ton lost five yards on off-side play and on a fake kick Moore plunged through and took six yards back. Thero was a moment of tense sus- pense as the teams lined up and the Princeton signals were repeated over and over. Finally Driggs kicked to Casey, who was quickly tackled by Hogg on Harvard's 20-yard line. Hor- ween punted right back to Eddy, who started to run but was tackled sv fiercely that the ball flew out of bis arms. Harvard recovered it forty yards from Princeton's goal. Tatcher made # forward pass which was broken up by Driggs, Harvard tried a drop kick from the 45-yard Mine but the ball went low and missed the goal entirely, On a fake lick Driggs shot through Harvard's right wing for seventeen yards and might have got a touchdown had not an- other Princeton player fallen tn front of him. Driggs stumbled on the pros- trate Tiger and fell forward and be- fore he could get up Casey was on top of him. On another fake kick Princeton lost ten yards, Driggs tried to get it back Driggs who A 15-yard yard Princeton's Herween ploughed through for five yards and after one more attempt Herween shot for.five yards For the second time within a minute the noted Casey was thrown for a loss by McGraw. thrown Princeton's 26-yard line. don a fake kick Driggs circled rvard's right and for ‘nearly tho over the remaining few inches for the y | SOCIETY WOMEN BEGIN ext pl Harts picked Thomas up and threw him back bodily, Agatn Thomas was to Harvard's cen-| FOR BIG BENEFIT DANCE The decision was 80 close that the linesmen could hardly make Harvard had the ball by a few ree and Harvard took the EARLY TO MAKE PLANS it & MRS WPMAMILTON: es Women prominent In society are taking time by the forelock in pre- Daring for a benefit dance to be held Colony Club on Tuesday, Jan. 9, the proceeds to go to the Now York City Visiting Committee. The hostess will be Mrs. William Pierson Hamilton, and the patronesses will Dodge, Mrs. Carl A. de Gersdorff, Mrs, William at tl be Mrs. Cleveland H. a PLURALITY vs. 403,312 The total vote cast for Wilson and Hughes was 16,724,114, divided ASSERTS ROFRANO IS CONDEMNED BY HIS OWN WITNESSES | iiss: gama 408,813 Four States show that President Wilson received a smaller vote than he receiv.d four years ago The two most striking compari- sons aro in Nebraska, William J. Bryan's home State, and Virginia, the President's birthplace. Some of the chief switches were: GAINS FOR WILSON. California . Wilson's plurality. Testimony for Defense Proves Contention of State, Says Prosecutor. Declaring that the defendant has been condemned by his own witnesses Assistant District Attorney Brothers contintied his summing up to-day be- fore Supreme Court Justice Weeks in the trial of Michael A. Rofrano, for+ mer Deputy Street Cleaning Commis- sioner charged with instigating the murder of Michael Galmart, a political rival, March 8, 1918 For four hours yesterday the As- sistant District Attorney denounced the defendant and the defense he had offered. Mr. Brothers pointing dra- Matically at Rofrano, declared that he was a “shrewd, calculating villian too cowardly to fight his own bat- tlen”. Several times Rofrano, with eyes | glaring half rose from his seat, lthough to pounce upon the prose- cutor, “The people of this county, Brothers started off to-day, vdaciat the conviction of this defendant. See to it, every honest man of you, that you do your duty. Rofrano is more guilty in the eyes of honest men than the actual slayer.” Mr. Brothers told the jury that good | character was not a defense for a criminal act. Defending the witnesses the prosecution had produced, ‘Mr. Brothers sald that even though thay | Progressives, were creatures of the gutter o¢ be-) ono Socialist. leved they told the truth, |'"Atae shanioe: (ind! tie tulad wtbermens Pennsylvania .... Utah . LOSSES FOR WILSON. Kentucky .. Nebraska South Dakota . Virgin = DEMOCRATS HAVE 216 SURE CONGRESS SEATS; HOLD CONTROL BY 1 (Continued from First Page.) one Independent and K. Draper, Mrs. 1, Henry Harrimas gerated the Prosecutor : Mrs. Lewis Iselin, Mrs hy Grant oe was responsible for the defen- Vote for the President may reach 288 Farge, Mrs. Thomas William La/@nt’s plight. Montimagno, spurred still remains, There Is not any ap- Monte, Mra. William D. Morgan, Mrs. | Willlam Church Osborn, Mrs. Fred- | John T. Pratt, Mrs, Samuel Riker, Mra. William J. Schuy- Mrs. F. Louts Slade, Mrs.. Wil- lard D. Straight and Mre, Charles | erick Pratt, Mrs, Schieffelin, Miss ler, Loutsa Lewis Tiffany. __ ‘COP’ INTERRUPTED ROBBERY men wie did his bidding." Policeman Gardner of the Traffic! Squad, called by @ passerby, Franklin and Greenwich street ast evening and arrested @ man calling 0. 66 Ho-| over Stephen} R ht watchman of No, 4 West ird Street, Redmond said the prisoner and an other | ma knocked to. seize, his pay-envelope when inter rupted by the raignod tonday before Magistrate Brou; Krone was identified as Thomas Crochan, one month out of Sing Sing. — Ohio Mine Workers Ask In: High Cost of Livin; ran to n had him down, | robbed him of §% and were struggling Hiceman. When are ry on on by Kotrano’s talk that he would protect him through his friends in power, cominitted the murder at the | behest of the defendant, he said, Mr, Brothers recalled the fact that Rofrano had taken the witness stand half of Cornell when the latter on trial for participation in the parent reason for hope that the eloe- toral vote of California will be di- vided. Leaders of both sides in that State say it is solid for Wilson. At that Mr. Wilson could lose three elec. toral votes in California and still have marl murder. plenty, He spent his money, used his The President will be In New York ‘checks and influence to protect the to-morrow. He plans to attend the Assist- ant District Attorney shouted. Referring to the contention of Mar- |tin W. Littleton, Rofrano’s attorney, church here and remain until about 9 o'clock in the evening, when he will leave for Washington. | that the ararder of Galmarl was Oy LARGEST VOTE FOR EACH IN to a gamblers’ war and not to poll- Mr. Brothers declared that the RATIONS. HISTORY. The two candidates together polled a total of 16,724,114 votes, the largest total ever recorded in the country, ‘The swelling of the total by the ad- dition of the woman's vote in Illinois partially responsible for this result. President Wilson received 8,563,713 of the popular votes. Mr. Hughes got t | ant's own witnesses had to the contrary Rofrano, wife of the defend- endant’s aged mother, two sisters of Ro- Mrs. ant, and the de accompanied frano, sat in the rear of the court- - | room, 1 ive seats away from them sat Mrs, “\Gaimari, widow of the man whose murder Rofrano is accused of insti- 8,100,401. The President's plurality h| gating. ity |" Mr. Brothers finished his summing @94 majority over Mr. Hughes was up at noon, Justice Weeks began hia 403,812. charge at 115 P. M. It was expected he would give the case to the jury sometime between 4 and 5 o'clock Bedell Rnd edad The President polled 2,270,694 more votes Tuesday than he did four years COLUMBUS, ©. Nov. 11.—Onlo jago. Mr. Hughes obtained 555,933 State Mine workers through their |more votes than Mr. Taft and Col, txecutive boar, to-tay. sent rewsiu: | DYNAMITE IS STOLEN; \Maotevbe comvingtiin ioe ierescoine tions to President Wilson and Gov, nered contest that year. Willis, asking National and State in- Veutigntions of the high cost of living. The miners, Who number 60,000, de clare the high cost 1s caused by unfa! and illegal speculation in food stuf and other commodities. CLOSING QUOTATIONS, With net changes from previous cloning, Not oh ey ¥| report from George Colon, a contrac EXTRA GUARD FOR SUBWAY. Tho three electoral votes of New : |Mexico are absolutely sewed up for r} | President Wilson. With only forty- 5!Police Department Disturbed by seven sparsely settled precincts to Theft of Explosive Supposed to |Bear from he has a lead of 2,281, and 2 2 seh Jeven the Republican leaders of the Be Under Constant Watch. | state admit Mr. Hughes has slight Police Headquarters was consider-| chance of overturning it. ably disturbed to-day on receiving a a a Terror to Wild Ducks, Germany, Nov. 11,—Ornithol- jaerenie { tor, of No, 81 Eust One Hundred PA. SCHUTT A SUICIDE, SAY POLIGE, BUTS. ARREST 1S ASKED epee Death of Indicted Lawyer Is Doubted by Assistant Dis- trict Atorney. WIDOW OF SCHIEFFELIN Woman's Statements, Backing Up} Claim, Proves Satisfactory— Suicide Still a Mystery. A woman describing herself as Norma Schieffelln, widow of Sohieffelin, who committed suicide last Tuesday in the Hotel Empire, called on Coroner Healy at his request to-day, She was accom~- panied by August Dreyer, her coun- sel, The coroner told his visitora that he was distrous of obtaining Mra, Schieffelin's ald in running down a rumor, that blackmail threats drovo Schieffelin to self-destruction, Although she did not have any documentary evidence with her to prove it, Mrs, Schieffelin assured the Coroner that she had been married | to the man who killed himself about | | five years. She lived with him three | years at the Hotel Empire, she said. The day before Schieffelin ended his Ufe he seemed happy and contented, the Coroner's visitor claimed. She therefore knew no reason why he should want to die. Lawyer Dreyer told the Coroner that the Schieffelin family members helped out each other financially. Although the police declare the body of N, Henry W. Schutt, lawyer, of No, 80 Church Street, wae iden- tifled by his family and buried in the family plot, Assistant District Attor- ney Frederick J. Sullivan has caused a bench warrent to be issued for Schutt's arrest. Schutt was to have appeared in court Oct. 23 and plead to an Indict- ment charging him witn grand lar- ceny in embezzling a clients funds, when he disappeared from his home at No. 32 ado Place, Wee- hawken, J Schutt left a note telling his family : he was about to jump from a West Edgar Bchteffelin thought it best not! fp wae Anne to Jn Avent to. the to acquaint the other members of his yy... riage. ihe ha at further explained. Wich a pa Schleffelin's alleged widow refused to) WUICD A passenk say who she was before her mar- one, bag ig Mae LA wocketh oh the riage, because, she explained, she did Sip. Cards in the pocket schute Hot care to have her family figuring Later a body ide ntifled as that of in the newspapers. She added that Se hutt was recovered from the river, she dined with her late husband's | SC} Was Frolov ern oe te ear folks as recently as yesterday, The! onough said Mr. Sullivan to-day statements wore satisfactory to the) when the cane was called in General Coroner, in dead why 7" ‘the Delehanty to SCARS DUE TO “RISING” = {24,08 ea and ts tse LEAVE NO SIGN IN DUBLIN 3.0 ie ae su But Schutt is dead, He was Iden- fled,” suid Lieut. Williams at Police | There Is No Distress, but in the; Country People Are Better Off adquarters, 1 won't believe Schutt rg’ dead un- al th Than Before the Easter Rebellion. DUBLIN, : CORONER SHE IS 1 see t who | identi fied nt District repe an explain of Schutt’s attitude at rt dhe was sus- pictous his Ireland, Nov. 3 (by) Rist matl).—Tho Right Hon. Jaries Gal-| * ing when he was lagher, Lord Mayor of Dublin, in a pl als Abeta Feferc: a to the statements which * oy tind sant: ‘Ohe Ldidmt de have been made regarding supposed exceptional distress in the city due to t ) April rebellion and its suppres- sion, made the following statement: We are absolutely better off this anything and I have nothing to worry lice haven't given me “any yn that Schutt wi When [first hi jumped overboard [ susp year than last year, notwithstanding) * (Plint’ because no one could, be freshen sisti i found who had seen him do tt. ‘They the rebellion. There ts, as far as I) aiin't ask me to identify the body. I can see, no exceptional distress.) knew Schutt and would have recog- nized his body. legal proof before must furnish we surrender the There ts, on the contrary, a good de. of money coming into the city for| separation allowances for the depend- teeneiies GE ORES BATE eae ents of the men, most of them of! the working classes, who Joined the varlous traders in ce elty enable me to say that trade 1s as good If not better than it was twelve months ON FACE AND BODY ago. Moreover, employment has been added to Reda to the amount ‘nt | munition wor! jone In the city, We " have five oF six factories doing | Scratched Until Pimples Began to work, each employing from 1 to H hands. Women are vcarning “very| Burns LostMany Nights’ Sleep. d wages, and Dublin women have In Two-and-One-Half Weeks adaptable in of the temporary. rebellion was! I got up a fa _ HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT — “Pimples broke out on my face and body, my thighs being most affected. only which amounted to five or six thou- sand pounds, and the local commit- tee which had been working for the Prince of Wales’ fund in relief of war distress gave me permission to| spend from thelr resources something like two thousand pounds in addl- tion.” The pimples would be bara cay or two, er one then they wi kargl fester and were scattered allover SAYS WIFE STABBED HIM. my body. I could not stand a | the itching, and I scratched Pastor Triplett Testifies She Used until the pimples began to a Hatpin on Him, burn, I lost many nights’ TRENTON, Nov 11.—The Rey, sleep. John E. Triplett, Presbyterian minister from Woodbury, who is suing his wife, ‘L suffered about two weeks before Cuticura Soap Dorothy, for divorce, testified before | and Ointment wer Advisory Master Joline here that ommended. 1 felt instant relief as soon phe once chased him upstairs and as | used them, and I wasall healed in stabbed him with a tere alto kicked mein the right two and one half weeks, (Signed) and'f am pormanently, ‘scarred’ ho Adolph Schoen, 148 Alabama iy added. lyn, N. ¥., March 30, 1916, On ‘another occasion Mrs. Triplett mortified him when he was presented ‘3 the pastor of a Philadelphia church, declare ‘Oh, You need not mind introducing me, tant’ to meet a codfish aristocrat. fate church. people a came hero only to please my husband,” he swore she sal Sample Each Free by Mall With 32:p, Skin Book on request. Ad- dress post-card; “Cuticura, Dept. , ton.’’ Sold throughout the world. but failed. Next time Driggs punted Twenty-ifth Street, that during the ortate ave discovered that the wild to Murray, who fumbled the ball, al- niente five sticks of dynamite’ had | duck does not lke the aeroplane, ap- though !t fell fairly into his hands. been stolen from a magazine at One parently taking it for some huge bird (Continued from First Page.) Honween kicked back to Eddy, and Hundred and Fifty-fourth Street and of prey. From the North Sea coast of Letepetas aithouy 2 Coolie went ty Bi ne am. — 2 |Edgecomp Avenue, where excavation | schleawix-Holstein it {a reported that vine projectile, ja time nd 4 Ol i rORress, a! ‘al men in the press stands announced) \eld tight, On. a beautiful forward | Am =i, | oc he epee crue heye 08 | re ree ee oe SUREE OIL LA Dee two changes In the line-up, Murray | paas from Driggs to Thomas Prince- | \qcouge sfining + Bl tne bomb squad visited the scene of VOUS years. stopned a "aati Gee would start instesd of Robinson at|/on Biage the down In the middle of + Qj the robbery and started an investl- | the Far 3 South have avold~ “i rhe 0 fle! P ation, Olt of the Intervorough |ed that re " s quarterback for Harvard. Thomas} "lL imediately Driggs made another = 8) apie’ vraneit and tho surface raila (Gon offered. ie that vere frightened took Tibbott's place at left half for| forward pass to Eddy, Harvard play- 79 | way lines placed extra guards about|away by the many nes that are Princeton, This last was an un-|ers leaped up and struck the ball, but = {| thelr propert }sonstantly soHtine, SOAS tHe COnAt, fomnactas oh eabeike ‘efit bounced Into Eddy’s arms without 4 | The police say tt has not been made} mepanies chinay se the couches hope| ti icning the ground. ‘This took it % r how it waa possible to steal the | able to save Tihbott for the! gown to Harvard's %5-yard line Gl dynanite Police regulations require Yale game Horween broke up the next forward §) that magazines containing dynamite FIRST PERIOD. pass, On the 40-yard line Princeton 1 | be unde r constant guard, ° gathered for a kick from placement «| dynamite used by the six men Promptly at 2 o'clock Princeton won| It was a fake. The ball was passed 1° | indicied’ for the recent explosion in the toss and chose the west goal. forward from Eddy to Priaee ut 8 subway was obtained in, New aaa tae ‘e % the play was broken up by Coolidae. ty Th } two trains lined up Instantly and | phen Funk tried a kick, but the ball al Horween kicked off to Moore, on} fell short and went under the bar 1 Princeton's five-yard line. Moore| Horween punted out of bounds on itt dropped the ball, but snatched it up,| Princeton's 40-yard line, an | . Y ‘| Driges ran on a fake kick with no = BAIL FOR MRS BEUTINGER and by circling and working through] cain, Up to this time there was ab- bag HN iJ the rushing Harvard tacklers ran|solutely nothing to choose between 4 a buck twelve yards before he was] the two teams, ‘The whistle blew for % Rt qe ee Py Acwhad the end of tho first half, Princeton 4 {Slayer Said to Be Daughter of ha he bi 0 er y~ a re our bs ir but Princeton recovered the The first half was fought on abso- q of Rothschild, ig@s punted out to midfield. On a] iutely even The defensive 4] Peat forward pass Casey took the ball to OVK Of both tonine was go atronk® 5 Chub me oe at Pr and “Bones 4 at neither goal was in serlous da © | clair are clreulat petition tr Princeton's forty-yard line and was| jer at any time, The only possibility fd i Judge W n PL Martin in tackled by McLean. On the next play|for scoring seemed to be in a long #4, | SeRh $2 eae cabbies Cavey wan thrown for a wivenesura| try for fel goal, The Harvard's Newark, N. Jy asking bail for Mra.| amous trick plays near cae saret Claire Beutinger, ¢ tarted to go around Princeton's right|the way for scoring runs. To the ile ; . end and suddenly doubled back| spectators on the top of the grand | Crintof, on July 11 last | through a big hole in the left wing,| stand it seemed that the Teer team §|_ Mrs, Beutinger, who is in the Bs. ‘asev nearly got clear. Gonnert| wan fully as tdicky aa the Haughton yy jeex County jail awalting her second caught him and brought him down] bunch Mp] trial, ie wad stated in Newark this with a gain of only a few yards,| Harvard was kept on the waten S| afternoon, is 4 dauxhter of Judge After failing to make any impression|every moment of the time by @ suc Pat Abraiys of ent, Mngland, who) on the Tiger line Casey tried a for-|ceasion of take kicks ®| was sent to @malea, West Indies, in| ward pass, which was broken up by| intermingled with the - | % Judicial capacity, It ts also de-) Moore, and Princeton had the ball. | ‘There was no marked al olared ‘she AHeR OF LOE Devore Driggs circled round Harvard left,|tween the plunging of Driggs ana of Kent, and a cousin of but was forced out of bounds with| Horween Baron Rothsehiid only four yards gain, Driggs made a > 7 beautiful punt down to Harvard's ih BA Conthee 80-yard line and Murray fumbled the PIMLico WINNERS, to Divorce Cane. ball. Highley who, running almost on 11.—Nan Pat- under it, lunged himself forward in] FIRST RACE--Pelvidere: two-year terson, the actress, who was tried for a headlong dive and gathered ft in| olds; ven furlon; Fairy Wand. 1) the murder of Caons Young in New \ before Mu Could beoovel, Prince. | (Kev elreiait B, plase York 1} years ago, Was named to- ~ ton had the ball and began smashing| *how $2.70, first; Harvest King, 118 day Teaport in the amended straight down the fleld toward Har | Ambrose). place $11, met, $5.30," seo- divorce petition of Mrs, Viola Dilling- vard's goal. They made thetr first|gqa9, inied, Time, Vat d-4, Monomer, Rem Chartos thet. her fiusbar : Foe Hf = down In three plunges at the Ine. Arnold. NK. Beat, Hickorynuts Friend: A Dillingham. patent m an : Moore took three yards und the|iess, Ben Hamson also ran. fucturer, Wavelled with teams lined up quickly before the ball] "OND RACE—Green ring Vale Jon A #teambout from Seattle was put in play, the officials jumped four-year and up tan 1918 in and penalized Princeton 15 yards} (wo and a hodl miles Stonewood, 114 mart for holding in the line, Harvard was rgGtrmient, 17.20, place, $3.20. | Wana 4) Treo ow penalized 5 yards for offside play. And |"?! Sharpshoote Maglead — %| ANDERSON, & Princeton got a first down on Har- pi ating), place, $3.70, show, $2. ‘a sting #1 M companies of the ‘Bout « Toune Coast y Vitir, 136 {Tucke show, West. Gain 3 | Artillery arrived hero to-day to prev Fur AT xara 3: mzere HO ene plunged Third, Tine, 4-63, Bachal ralmoutn, nS Sisordere in connection with the atrike W AVE @| also ran. 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