The evening world. Newspaper, November 18, 1916, Page 1

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AA &£Di TION Che ic “Circulation Books Open to All.” balls Ee — — ————— 2 PRIC E ON E B. ENT. N . Ceorriaht, 1 Uh Nee Wonk Warde —— o— 300,000 MEN OF BELGIUM TO BE TAKEN 10 GERMANY AND COMPELLED 10 WORK London Hears That All Over Seven- teen Years Will Have to Go and That 2,000 Are Daily Being Loaded on Trains. BERLIN, Nov. 18.—Joseph C. Grew, Secretary to tNe Americai , Embassy, has requested an interview with the Imperial Chancellor in response to instructions from Washington for information as to trans- HONEYMOON A RIOT BECAUSE HE BARED HIS PAST 10 BRIDE tion Inte Enemy’s Cannon,” Says Rich Lumb erman. (TELLS COURT HIS WO E. G. Phinney, Who Wedded Nurse, Declares She Poured Ice Water Down His Back. Ernest G. berman of this city and Jacksonviile, Fla,, shattered oldfashioned ideals of courtship to-day when he told Su- Phinney, wealthy lum- he i Portation of Belgian workers to Germany, T will probably be arranged for Monday rew has already interview informally discussed with the Foreign Otlice the transfer of the Belgians and fas been given a copy of the orders lly Grew as originally issued. these measures. Mr, Grew has been collecting in-@ ous sources, ‘Tho suvseet te an ex-| WILSON LEAD DROPS 858 IN CALIFORNIA is_persor following all the details of tremely delic: one diplomatically and It requires adept handling since Spain and not the United States is) entrusted formally with the protec- Disciepane tion of Belgian interests. Questions pancy affecting Poland a the German] in Los Angeles—Hughes Wins Government to + an understand- | Minnesota. ing for the Interest the American] Government is displaying in this| . 18,— question. fvans Hughes will Kain 858 The chief criticism of the German | votes {n Los Angeles County, if plan seems to be in connection with | “Seml-oMeial” results of th vunt | the apparently unsystematic manner| &!V€N out to-day are borne out by of nelecting and assembling the men| te oMctal returns, for transfer to Germany, disregard-| Ths will bring down the Wilson | ing in some Instances the question ‘ 2,342 votes. whether they already © employed Nov, 18.—-The complete | oMetal {a Dalgium or do uct belong to the| vote of Minnesota, as an- aaeeieinm ° | nounced to-day by Secretary of State LONDON, Nov. 18—The Pope is|Julus A. Schmahl, gave’ Hughes a preparing to take action toward pre-|Plurallty of 396, The vote was eyeballs srtations of Bel-| Hughes, 179,553; Wilson, 179,157 gian men and boys, according to a Reuter despatch, crediting the in- HUGHE: OF formation to vamnvometat Vavicun| AUGHES OFF TO LAKEWOOD ie ee STILL SILENT ON DEFEA 40,000 BELGIAN MEN ALREADY CARRIED AWAY TO WORK IN GERMANY Goes to Pine Forests for Inde Stay—No Congratulation From LONDON, Noy. 18,—Reports trom Him to Wilson, official circles declare that Germany| Charles E. Hughes, late Republic = Plans to deport 300,000 Belgians into} candidate for President, who declines what Cardinal Merc.er has branded}. recognize the re-election of Presi. as virtual slavery, In many citles the order bas been issued that every | male over the age of seventeen must | 0, detn Wilson, left town to-day ¢ wilent seclusion of Jersey pine at Lakewood. His stay there definite, or the forests is in- Already between 30,000 and 40,000] No word of admission of defeat was Bave been deported. They are being) uttered by Mr, Hughes before leay- taken away at the rate of 2,000 a day. |ing the Hotel Astor and no message British and Belgian officials openly eharge that the Belgian prisoners are |the President, Oftici being forced to dig trenches and work | vote In California, ¢ tp munitions factories, in direct vio- | }!can hopes appar lations of The Hague Convention, to| sume time next. Which Germany was signatory, jof congratulation was si by him to al count of the which Repub ntly still faintly completed until be time next week _> A circumstantial report from the | Calder Spent Mons district says the entire male} ArpaNy: Nov. 18eeTh Population over seventeen was OF: | rion statement of United Bty tor- ered to report to the German com: | eject Willlam A. Calder, filed witt th mander at 8 o'clock in the morning, etary of State to-day, recorded no Not expecting any unusual move ntributions of $1 they did not bid their relatives fare- hire and adver } well, oF bring food or clothing with | successful candidate for Chict daige! them. the Court of Appeals, showed no re 4 When they gathered all priests, | “clpts and no expenditures é = professors, teachers, toca! offici i » ang |Men were turned away by German bayonets, The entire Belgian population i terrorized because the people realize members of the food committ @ll physically defective were dis- missed, but, it ls added, 1,200 men, | composing 20 per cent. of tho entire | hey are entirely helpless. Crowds of eligible males, both employed and un- | hysterical women und children pathos employed, were selected and in at the railway and recruiting sta @iately put in cattle cars and started t y women at Jemappes tb on the rails to for Germany. Relatives who hurried to the sta- tiem with food and clothing for the » pre- vent the departu of 4 train and had ‘to be forcibly removed by German soldiers, in Semi-Official Count | j preme Court Justice Greenbaum that ja man who tells bis second wife all j about his first wife and reveals his [entire past is not only courting mat- rimonial disaster, but 18 foolish. Phinney is being sued for separation by Mrs, Willle Pearl Bussey Phin- ney of No, 460 Riverside Drive. | The Phinney courtship not without its romance although the | couple separated on their honeymoon. After nursing the lumberman back to health, Mrs, Phinney was married to him at the Waldorf-Astoria in | 1914. It was while convalescing that Phinney, playing the dual ot jsultor and patient, spent otherwise ious hours by telling his nurse his t life und the romance of his first a marriage, “That was one of the tunate things I ever did }telling Mrs. Phinney of n jand previous marriage,” Phinney said | on the witness stand. “No man should do it. It is ke feeding your own Jammupition into fhe ,cnemy's can- land | non role most unfor- ‘The first outbreak over reference to | the pgst occurred, Mr, Phinney sald, while newlyweds wore visiting Mr. Phinney's ninety-year-old mother “Being an aged woman, my motrer showed my wife a photograph of my first wife and myself un horseback, | without considering what effect it migh veon my w nerves,” said Phinn “Well, that incident on our honeymoon ended in a riot. My wife would neither talk to me nor eat. She said she had been insulted, and f days we saw each other b ehe did not speak “In one week after that,” the wit- Jness continued, “my wife broke seven | pairs of glasses for me, You see, I'm totally blind without glasses, and Mrs. Phinne: | ad occasions, the lum: vd, when his wife de- sired him to arise at 4.30 A, M H lidn't want to, he sald, but the pour jing of ice water down his ba by Mrs. Phinney made him miy t | pleased to gyt up. In a final attempt to patch up dif ferences, Phinney declared he sug-| gested a thirty-dey truce 1 suggested,” the witness de “that we uld 0 rooms and not 5} truce ai to vee cach | other mo. n nM 8 « j to try it f > weeks and end of that time was not @ | cess we were to separate forevel The two-weeks’ 1id not even clared, An othe ald 8 had to leave Mrs, Phinney, was hea sat witin feet of he recounted his exp: She shook her head in den of every ge her husband made RACING RESULTS ON PAGE TWO ENTRIES ON PAGE 2 ——— -ike Feeding Own Ammuni-} —_ a ata rer comet ica YORE, ‘BATA RDAY, NOVFMBER 18, 1916. CROWD CHEERS HOBEY BAKER, SOT CATER FORMER PRNCETN CAPA FRST ARMAN TO ARRIVE acral, es Ex-Gridiron Star Leads Group NOTED FOOTBALL STAR | WHO FLEW TO THE GAME | Of Airmen From Hemp- AT PRINCETON TO-DAY stead Plains : Jarl Berger He Losi Business Because Patrons Were Pro-Ally, Says OWES $20,000, ABOUT Count, Baron, Prince, Naval Ofticer and Wealthy Per- sons Named as Debtors. |EIGHT ARMY MEW FLY, Lieut. Thaw Forced to Land, [ “Cirentation Books Open to All.’’ | 10 PAGES WEATHER—Fair To-Day and To-Morrow, A EDITION | ———— PRICE ‘ONE CENT. — . §. AND THE POPE AID BELGIAN EXILES EN AEROS IN FLIGHT TO PRINCETON GAME FIELD GOAL GIVES YALE FIRST POINTS AT PRINCETON: 47,000 CHEER BOTH TEAMS Elevens Battle on Even Terms Through Scoreless Half Until Braden Boots Ball Over Goal Post From 27- Yard Line. but Summons Help by Carl Berger, the caterer and one S f Big Ge } Automobile po time manager of the Hotel Gotham cures C1) ig ames utoMoniles, who has long been noted both tn Thint Fost igat Somcial Newport and New York for the excel | vate 0 Quarter, Quarter, PRINCETON 1— of the “Petits Soupers’ and te adie Nehis HaldK who San santain. of ihe aud who has an estabiisu-| Princeton oO no . as captaln i at No, 25 West Wifty-titth second Fourth Plast Princeton football team tn 1913, came } th Quarter Quarter, Score, Street, filed @ voluntary petition in to the game tosday inane ; bankrupt, to-day Harvard. re) _ which he flew from the Hempstead In setting forth his assets, which Brown, aA oO —_ Plains aviation field on Long Island, he totale. cab Shims. | Borese late I f nd among them unpaid accounts due ; NP LNEE * Te was one of ten aviators who, Sansa AUENeRIDTabatrone Wio: AE Right alter the kick-off In the third period, Moseley of Yale recovered {In military biplanes, started from the rich as well ay prominent in the t the ball, but was thrown on the Tigers’ 20-yard line, Two vain attempts Plains tor Princeton, Eight of the! exclusive social circles of the city by Yale to advance were followed by a drop kick of Braden over the geal michines were operated by United ee en innettiod ac | ponte from Princeton's 27-yard line, 3) cou as presented by Her 4 at if States Army men and two of them ARNO) PA Pr eMeR Se torney are to be found Mrs, Charles by clvillans, Hobey Buker being onc Del Oelrichs, whose bill is stated to By Robert Edgren. of the latter, the other being Alfred Hose BAKER bo $17; Hertért Harriman rn -ALMER STADIUM, PRING cane , trea! Do $17; t Harriman : ICETON, N. J., Nov. 18.00 i. Adams, | RROTO Gy cnsenwess. ety }R. Wat jury, of the Rue and PALME } 18 Yale and The fight was led by Lieut. W. G sad lub, $85; Richard of Princeton met here to-day before a crowd of over 42,000 people, greatest "4 : ne nickerbocker Club, $14 iS t ar a e ith Kelner, Lieut- Kelner was followed | WOMAN IS PRESIDENT Hii pbed ba nash ped ‘ g27,_ Hi the history of the Yale-Princeton g Thewweather conditions were by the others ut intervals of onel LIS C i] an En lL. K. Forde, U. 8. N,, | absolutely perte he sky was pertectly clear and the air was aln h i notors Mises varm at Cambridge last week, when Princeton met Harvard. The were started at dee HKaker was the } are sprain bso y 1 nd t ith first to reach Princeton, i Mr 1 Elected To-Day—She ab un ar aus i m at from | football field was hard and dry and the turf in fine condition, : ; rethere Kapherr, tary Attache in | Some time ago he wagered that he! | 0. Dive H ° Jot tie at Wash The Line-Up. To_show that there waa: plenty, of would Ko to the game on wings and band, Who Was Presid ington, Meat War. | Xt Vowiti a Prin . {Princeton enthustasm this year, the as, several of his friends had doubty Lol Mond 18.—Mre,|saw, E Risse nn hekiaxannanttt i ting ion was the first ¢o abo: hey acke he f ‘ ‘ hee Been t 1 them with Hathuway F tton was|Hudilk de Futtlack Budapest, |! ‘int Ne “| hile the crowd was coming in to 7 th ved | Honga 15,000. Berger's jlabtlith i wt Meld wily throug! + mane But winning th 8 WAS not alll oe qirvt ‘ a Carding eee g ils © schedule ay Sa " yt jl sneak ' innit TR ico. tho surprisy Hobey gave the doubt. | a A d A pages Higa pap per (allwates, the rooters came marching 1g Jers, for no sooner did ho arrive over | itt" esented 1 shes ee ei Hmnjat the end of the Meld in a solid |the fleld than he treated the crowd | soe ae i ‘ et WS aa on ‘ saan sg Piaaiae io e 1 were led by the Pew to @ series of Aying stunts that made | vetttion for divorces the 1914 season ail . ryone gape. He swooped and} She firs: te t | f them an ” Sind sround the fleld they | Spiralled en oured and volplaned | majo 4 mn 8 ison, and 1 Hee ed : : fT ead vn ate for the cheering owd ih »! ta 4 ng ch r for Yale, 10 | ‘The greatest aerial flight ever seen | onerences of nate at her} ti When war was de he | hag anu Princeton muad in the United Sta marked the | PeanaBe: ‘ aris a le : b a, ah : | bad ut on the fleld, and wag trials for a pilot’ ¢ day of | uy, sy bs i MOF SE ORR AUSEOE ARIE. TO) I going throug little light practice, eight army of and two clvilians | ),47, ig so eantatae a - ra kee rae 38 Inu few hutes the Tigers gave who have been taking lessons tn fly- |)... : : plo sea nat r way t t sey players trem ing at the a a tiacine ony | Aaaociate . Hay Ww © teams warmed jing Hempstead avtation school. |i) rer Neue spite! ; H _ vimatora | Kicked 4 f " " ked 1 seh th pipe headed to the west, bound for Prince j His Regul ‘ding to the stadium, and land wi ’ Hauvhion Took His Regulars ton, and the Yale-Princeton ked in @ dense crowd before The ten engines of th planes J iat Praha » . Thiough every gate there th | noise was heard all Central Long f {had —— ' jumns. Onee inside the Island, W Richard ( |New Trial in Per Ca rors THE LINEUP we x entrances, the stadfvin ing took th W ap abe necti Nith Uni i : of ; elt 4 swalli | up the crowd feet before his bearings ¢ Te eRania . Mg and Dut again upon the while distance aded toward — the te Ciraered Teahiaie ; . i i wis bleacher © Was a haze all over tant skyline reversed th { " be wa I Wade! ch ing of thousands of automo. 1A Seriv t n of perjury Kidw M @ ' “ ee ? eton was He Ba x at, for Pr \ \ 1 wi hour before gain " tar, who t ! Ban 4 t ‘J "i t were out agala of being the first man ever to rp he Supr art k h als Av the ball salle a foot eld by f the ai Grout v : ‘ v sts from the Black an@ Others who started from Hemp. | Harry KB. Lewis in t ¥ Orange section came @ roaring chea® steal Plain we K. L. Taylgr July 1915, after a tria bv 5 act . a ne of Princeton's fighting sony Lieuts. J. E. M GK a n two months in w ‘ pe P in PADIUM, CAM-| Ob, Here come the Elis, We'll sive B haw, a t f Willan kloads of books and | w * portly them @ surprise noted A 1 ut 14 xhibits t t L f t ¥ Open wide both thelr eyes, Prt | Re } n tha 3 W BORN ti y He w t ul] Oh, Princeton can never fall, cam’t. > J 1 \ ; r ed this | twist the Tiger's tail. Attor i he v8 i is p-| Woe are from Old Nasmau, 4 Li , ang | Bald thor t f qe he lull before the team@ {i 1k He yolplanea | 5 A ed j | honed ay | it the officials megaphoned down sutely i w * n W ent to the stands. It ~ yuickly su ded by a H op 5 Sig i ‘ " xpected shock to the Yale vant i 1 a imps i battle | dent Syith, Yale's quarterbaoty sutomobi ping t H yin iitio rota ‘ won oxix nud the {said the officals, Would not be able and reAe or | Holland Bolssevatn of New 1 | cash pene han Aight andr h Prin Ame for in @ hovpital there suffering from |. “i'm ry the people 1 befriended i; play, having been taken sick sudy the game, Janacmig | naven't ‘stuck to Mes’ \ (Continued 4 Becond Page.) denly last night. Tip Dine Bb be, ee ee "

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