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| | I FE EXTRA Che “ Circulation | Books Open to All.’ TG orld, “Circulation | Bonks Open to All." PRICE TWO CENTS, Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The ‘New York World). TO-MORROW'S WEATHER—Fair. Colder. WES WMP PENS IN ASG: patible. HARVARD DEFEATS YALE IN BiG GRIDIRON CONTEST a BEFORE CROWD OF 50,000 Ralph Horween, Crimson Star, Kicks Field Goal From 35-Yard Line While Casey Makes Touchdown inSecond Quarter on Forward Pass. SCORE BY PERIODS. IARVARD . LE .. 3 7 0 O10 0 0 0 S83 By William Abbott. KSpecial Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) 6OLDINRS’ FIDLD, CAMBRIDGE, Nov. 23.-—-Yale and Harvard clashed tthe gridiron here this afternoon q@ith the weather threatening rain @my minute. It was the first meeting ofthe ancient rivals since 1916 and a vast crowd of 50,000 was present for the renewal of football relations be- tween the Blue and Crimson that were interrupted years ago by war » iE This historic stadium was just one mass of humanjty. The open south end had been completely blocked in ‘with temporary wooden stands, Car- penters were driving nails into the extra stands as the early arrivals came pouring in the main entrance, A bright sun earlier in the day| finally retreated behind heavy gray clouds and a stiff eastern wind warned that rain might possibly be a deciding factor in the great football battle to say nothing about ruining} expensive feminine finery. “The Harvard squad appeared fof practice and in a twinkling the grid fren was ablaze with Crimson jer- seys. At one end Ralph Horween tried Bis ekill shooting field goals. Dif- ferent groups rehearsed forward Passes. Capt. Billy Murray, who will soon wind up bis Cambridge football career was all over the place giving instructions. Ove: in the east stands the Yale reoters began showing signs of life Their band broke out with “Whoop it up for Yale” and the Blue cohorts started shouting defiance about the gridiron at the rival sections un- mindful of the fact that Yale has not won from Harvard in this s§ adium since 1909 when Ted Coy's eleven tri- umphed 8 to 0. ‘As Harvard's warriors were still romping around, the Yale squad trotted out to a rousing reception \\ en their sections. Every member of the Ell's team was given an in- dividual cheer with a long one for De. Al. Sharpe the head coach. Meanwhile the immense stands ‘were rapidly taking on color Yale's sections were gate splashes of blu Down below the press stand there THE LINE UP. an aviator high over head performed a few sky line stunts. With both sections in an uproar Capt. Tim Callahan and Murray met in the middle of the field for the toss which Yale won. FIRST PERIOD. Horween kicked off for Harvard against a stiff wind Neville fumbled but recovered and sprinted back a few yards. Yale failed to gain on an end run and punted to Murray on Harvard's 30-yard line, Horween plunged through centre for thirty yards. ‘Then Humphrey made a beautiful kick to Yale's 30-yard line. On an attempted end run Braden fumbled and Steele recovered the pall for Harvard. With the Crimson’s stands yélling for a touchdown Hor- ween fumbled on the first play, but Steele recovered for Harvard. At this point Ralph Horween was called in for a field goal which he missed. Yale punted to Murray, who went down under five Bulldogs. Casey slid through tackle for eight yards, he lost five yards on a double pass. Then Harvard worked a spectacular forward pass that netted twenty yards. The Crimson was going in strong for the aerial game. When afother forward 8 failed Ralph Horween dropped back and kicked a pretty field goal from the line, the ball just having enough to get over the cross bar, Harvard kicked back to Kempton, | who came back 15 yards. The Crim- son stopped Braden short in a line plunge. ebb, who had substituted tor Lay, dropped the ball on the next play and Kane recovered for Harvard on Yale's 35-yard line. Three Har- vard smashes netted only four yards, the Blue line holding strong, spilled the next Harvard play and took the ball on downs. Yale quickly punted nto Harvard territory after Hor- ween iled to gain. Humphrey punted to Y ard line, Two Ya ie 8m. e checked with- ow n. Neville kicked to Harvaftd's line after Humphrey shot through rest of tackle for 4 yards. First period ended, Score, Harvard 3, Yale 0. SECOND PERIOD. Horween, who is now leading the kicking for Harvard started the seo- ond period with a punt to Yale's 40- yard line, Kempton slipped around end for 6 yards Braden dived through ntre for 2 more then Yale's bat- \tering ram shot through right tac © no mistaking the number of | fer 6 yards al iting free of the eee be 0 tals vey At 140, the /Crimson secondary defense, Braden { Harvard's admirers, 4 80 (Me | however, spoiled the advanced when ) stadium was more than half occupied. he fumbled on the next play, Clark Looking over the south end stands | recoverin It was Yale's third fum- She stone bri over the Charles | Die and each time a Crimson man was Y teigal a {On the ball, After an unsuccessful ‘River was one long span of football |frward pasa Horween — punted WW tans parac to the grounds, At} Yale's 15-yard line Braden made 1 bout this time the Cambridge band ys oe ica centre Howie punted ‘0 midfield linney replaces Steele ot on the job and the opposing sides | 19 mille mane Of the field quickly told in gongs and|" Harvard was penalized 15 yards cheers how each other would be|for holding. After Callahan stopped = ita resi hrey at the line Harvard nnihilated during the game ) at th vard om La l ip hent |Punted to Yale's 25-yard line, Braden The gridiron was in ex gained 6 yards throuch tackle. Ne- (yy shape. Its brownish-green surface | ville punted to Harvard's 35-yard “{(MB, Showed firm und Just, At gume timeline. The Blue's line hela strong and ( A orween punted raden jammed un made unsuccessful attempts! y Bivust An vahtihatcindasle ke both bib vay taronsh. the lite tor 5 yards varsity teams lined in for the game rw Woods, one of the big Harvard fo wards, was hurt but remained in the Kempton back NEW ‘YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22, “1919. 12 P Mrs. Dansey and Her Baby Boy, Whose Body Was Found in Swamp game. After an exchange of punts | Felton replaced Murray, the Crimson Captain, at quarterback. On the first play Neville made a poor punt, the ball going out of bounds on Yale's 43-yard linc ey went through tackl for 6 Then Felton worked a sensational forward pass to Casey, who dodged his way for 20 ards for a touchdown. (Horween kicked the goal, Score—Harvan, 10; Yale, 0. Harvard's pass was one of the most spectacular of tho season. Casey | slipped unnoticed through the Yale line, Felton cleverly held the ball | until he saw his recei was un- covered then he made a long pass straight down tho field, Casey jug- gled the ball several times before he finally gained a tight hold. time there Was about threo bulldogs around Casey. The Crimson star eluded each one and even passed as he dodged his way over, game, the Yale goal line. Harvard kicked bff, Both s es then resorted to kick- ing. Harvard gaining on each ex- change. At this stage both teams e kicking on thesfirst down with ball always in Yale's territory r one of Horween's kicks the seo- one period ended Score—Harvard 10, Yale 0, THIRD PERIOD, Yale kicked off to Casey, who shot | 18 yards before being downed. | Horweed quickly punted to Kempton, | who dodge d back 10 yards," Braden hit the line for 3 yards, but was stopped dead on his next attempt TWo more plunges made it first down for Yale, After two plunges netted only 20 yards Yale sprung her first forward pass, which worked for $ yards. + _ Neville d Braden kept} pounding the Crimson line until the Dall rested on Harvard's 18-yard |i and the Yale stands yelling for a touchdown. Harvard began making frequent substitutions, one of them being Ralph Horween, Neville ripped through tackle for four yards, Another line smash net- ted two more, Neville shot through! to Harvard's 8-yard line. On the! next play Braden found the Crimson { line like a st wall and failed to gain an Harvard took posses sion of ball and Humphrey} kicked ten yards from his own goal! line, It was a narrow es¢ for th Crimson team, H After an exchaange of kicks Braden ma ds through tackle and then followed the usual kicks, Kempton | caught one of Harvard's punts and raced back 22 yards, The Blue then started another drive, Braden pierce ing right tackle for 6 yards on a@ fake kick. ‘Neville failed to maka the necessary distance and Harvard took the ball on downs, Felton then punted only 15 yards, the ball going out of bounds, Kempton broke loos and gained 15 yards. After Y: gained 4 yards on two plays. Third period endc Score—Harvard, 10; Yale, 0. FOURTH PERIOD, ‘Slarting the final period, Murray, the Harvard leader, returned to the J hig ag SARIS sa By thle) egoRGE WILLIAM DANSEY relapeing Fe Kempton to who with a d and Horween centre for 8 han being hurt Harvard punted 30 yards; lost 5 yards on an end rush. forward pass wi ; st 8 yards when he tried Yale punted to H thrown for or Yale made at crowd when he right end for pass, Alrich cured five yards Braden was thrown e yard loss when he yevesision of the » 10-yard run Yale's 20-yard Casey was tackled so flercely he | tackled at this point the N.Y. U. LEADS COLUMBIA. of Columbia South Field this their anual gridiron contes e largest that has afternoon in bia’s grounds witnessed the game, The first period ended with New went over for a touchdown. RED PLOT TO SEIZE BIGU. §. TRANSPORT REVEALED BY RAID Appeal to ‘Russian Work- to Sign on Mercury Found in Grand Street. Detective Sergeant James Glegan, head of the Bomb Squad, accompa- nied by Detectives Miletich, Orlowsky and McCartney and Inspector Fran- cisco, of the Department of Justice, this afternoon raided the headquar- ters of the Communist Party of the Second Assembly District on the sec- end and third floors of No. 274 Grand Street. A large quantity of com- munist literature was confiscated, There were no arresta. When Detective Orlowsky went over some 0 fthe papers he found AGES ‘8 THOUSANDS CHEER PRINGE OF WALES OFF FOR HALIFAX Crowds Throng Water Front as Edward Waves Adieu to New Yorkers. Edward Albert, Prince of Wales, sailed out of tho Hudson River for Halifax, N. Sat 2.35 o'clock this afternoon on H. M. 8. Renown. The U. 8. 8. Delaware and a small fleet of United States destroyers escorted the British battle cruiser to Sandy Hook, where parting salutes of twenty-one guns were fired As the Renown passed down the bay thousands of farewells were 'Prince of Wales Ott For Halifax To Dagh Hunt For Slayer of Dansey Boy Leads to Prison MANIAC KILLED BILLY DANSEY, WHOSE BODY WAS FOUND IN JERSEY SWAMP BY HNTER Search for Murderer of Boy Missing for Weeks Leads to Trenton Pen- itentiary — Dogs Solve Mystery That Puzzled Police. (Special Despatch to The Evening World.) HAMMONTON, N. J., Nov. 22.—The police believe that they have in custody the maniacal murderer of little Billy Dansey, the “perfect waved ahd. shouted trem buildings child,” whose skeleton was found yesterday in the Folsom swamps, a and plerheads. There was a great | little more than a mile from his home, six weeks after his disappearance. crush of automobiles moving abreast | 74 ‘ . of the ship down Riverside Drive un. |) Heir belief, as yet, is only a suspicion, but an investigation has been @ Russian newspaper, printed in the til she passed 72d Street. The Prince, | begun which before night may shape itself into confirmation, United States, in which there w Notice asking members of the Union lof Russian Workers in the United | States and Canada to make applica- tion to the United States Transport Service at No. 54 Dey Street for em- ployment on the United States trans- port Mercury, now in Hoboken. It i believed by the dotectives that the purpose of the notice was to have the Russian radicals secure places on the Mercury and then, when the ship put to sea, to overpower the of- ficers, Included in the material confiscated was a red flag of the Soviet Govern- ment of Russia, The third floor, ac- cording to the detectives, had been fitted up for a class room and was decorated with pictures of Lenine and Trotzky MARTENS FACING DEPORTATION SOON ON NEW EVIDENCE Soviet “Envoy’s” ,Mission Purely Revolutionary, Says Deputy Attorney General. Deputy Attorney General Berger declared to-day that facts have been found warranting the deportation of L. C. A, K. Martens, self-styled Am- bassador from Soviet Russia to the United Stat&. He said this evidence would be 5 >- sented next Tuesday to the joint leg- Islative committee which is inverti- geting anarchy and other radicalism and that afterward the committee's recommendation would be sent to Washington, It is understood that the new evidence also will go to Washington. Mr. Berger said that Martens's claim to be a commercial or financial envoy from Russia had been @is- proved and that it was shown Mar- tens's main mission was that of a propagandist of radical and reyolu- (Continued on Second Page.) York University leading by a 7 to 0 score, After a series of line plunges and successful forward passes, which brought the ball to Columbia's 56-yard line, Cohen, the N, ¥, U. fullback ee ee a Waving his white cap, could be seen! beside Admiral Halsey on the bridge. | On the quarterdeck of the Renown to-day the Prince pinned on elghty- nine war veterans, American and} British, service decorations conferred by the United Kingdom. Ho also gave to Mrs, Mary Lynch of No, 47| West Post Road, White Plains, tho| Military Medal awarded to her son, Corp. H. P. Lynch of Co, B, 105th Infantry, who died of his wounds after returning from France. He had already received the United States D. 8. C. and the Croix de Guerre. Maj. Gen. George W. Goethals was the ranking officer among those who jwere decorated. Prince Kdward stood on a green carpeted dais fac- ing the honor men, who were in for- |mation under the muzzles of two kneed Highlander on either side. Major Gen. Burstall read off tho names and Capt. Claude Hamilton handed the medals to’ the Prince to \be pinned on the coats of each offi- | cer and man as he stepped forward. A number of decorations were con- ferred by the Prince in addition to j those listed in the War Department order published in The Evening World yesterday; Sir Ashley Sparks and Sir Henry Japp were made Knights of the British Empire. Major Gens. John F. Biddle and Jobn F. O’Ryan and Rear Admiral Nibiack, who have accompanied the Prince on his visit here were made Com- manders of the Victorian Order and Capt. Jack Potter and Lieut. Com- mander Legare were made members of the Victorian Order, Preceding the deCorations, the various city and State commit who have had charge of his enter- | good time he sald he had. At a few minutes before noon the Prince went ashore to review 6,000 Boy Scouts and Girl Guides, mar- shalled by Dan Beard, National Scout Commissioner, James E. West, Na- tional Scout Executive, and Col Lor. rilard Spencer, He made a brief speeoh in which he said: “Value your training as scouts and guides, for the more you value it the gre will be your own value to your country and your friends. Never hunt for yourselves, but hunt with the pack better friends you will be brother scouts and sister gu Great Britain.” More than 6,000 adult spectators heard the speech and cheered the Prince when he left for the warship in a launch BOWIE “RESULTS. FIRST RACE _—Solling for two olds; purse; $1,000; one mile.—Herd Girl, 108 (Ensor), $5.50, $3.50, $3.80, won American Boy, 111 | (Butweil), "$2.0 $2.40, second; Gain De Cause, 100 (Thur: ber), $8.20, third, Time 144 “Bright Gold, Rockaree, Pirate Moee, Oriental Fark, ©. & Grayson, also ran, Casey f your ides of |fourteen-inch guns. He was flanked | by @ sailor, a dragoon and a bare-| | Prince received the chairmen of the| tainment and thanked them for the| Put your country always first and, | above all things, be good Americans. “The better Americans you are the! The suspect is in the Trenton penitentiary under a sentence of from -; five to thirty years for attacking a seven-year-old girl of the village three | weeks ago. The matter was kept quiet for fear of arousing the neigh- | borhood, already wrought up over the disappearance of little Billy, to | violence. | my The man was arrested and tried be- hind closed doors, He pleaded guilty, was sentenced to the Trenton Penl- JENKNSINPRSON, =< St hood which had been left undicturbed by the hundreds of searchers looking for the missing boy, The skeletom was discovered by the dogs of George mie nal Eckhardt, who was hunting rabbite, {Returned to Jail at Puebla inj! was a mile from the Dansey home, 9 . _ Three 'effort tart search Connection With Alleged ppsteneaitalbtadiice! é ¢ the Folsom swamps, but for some Conspiracy. reason the search fell through, ‘The ee police theory is that the boy was mur. MEXICO CITY, Nov. 22,—Wililam| dered near his home and the body ©. Jenkins, American Consular Agent,| dragged to where it was found, was returned to jail at 6 o'clock Jast|1#8ves partly covered the body, but had anybody gone anywhere near the spot discovery would have been im. Puebla on charges of conspiracy to de- | evitable. * fraud through alleged complicity in} Detectives John Wilson and Bem- t kidnapping, according |Jamin Nusbaum, who have been working on the case, left this morn- ing for AUantic City, but will return later in the day when they may have alking with /some disclosures to make regarding fifteen Indians on his ranch Oct, 2%,|the crime. Miss Edna Dangey, | previous to his abduction, ‘These In-|felative of the murdered child, ar- rived this morning from Philadelphia, | where she is engaged as secretary to \Judge Porter of the Pennsylvania night after a proliminary hearing tn his own rece to despatches from that city. Jenkins, it was said, denied testi- mony that he was seen | dans were said to be included among | his kidnappers. The State Judge de- | clared he had no desire to molest Jen- kins but t quatioe’ dene." |Supreme Court ns but “must see justice done H | Official version of the hearing was| Mr. Dansey, the mother, who stnee oted ; ®* | ite’ Billy disappeared Oct, 8, bad he ialee to be received by the foreign | rirmty pelieved he had been kidnapped office to-morrow and was still alive and would be re {turned to her safe, broke down after her husband bad identified the cloth- WASHINGTON, > Although |! found In the woods, and is under the note sent by the American Govern- | tie care of a physician, ment to the Mexican Government| Hammonton is filled with exette- Wednesday demanding the immediate|ment over the tragic ending of the release of William O, Jenkins, American | sensational myatery, and the parents Jenkin’ | | Consular Agent at Puebla, way deliv-| have received messages offering help jered to the Mex can Foreign Ofc the! from ail parts of the State, In starte same evening the Mexico City **'ing an inquiry they hope will tas hint oeeartin Y "ties admit the lapse of time makes ‘The Mexican Government ia takin aut difficult to find a clue, pos steps to bring to juati | The hunt for the missing boy, which murde| | cithae Jico, last Frida | was advised to eign Ofhce |had been Nation-wide, ended at 3 P, |M. yesterday when George Eckhardt Hammonton stumbled across the loton while out with his dogs hunte ing rabbits, The murderer bad made no efforts at concealment. The spot gene Lack Ame shot at Mexicali, the State Depart y by the Mexican For- who ¥ —>——_ at ero! L Ra | ee Pi Ratt Fat was one of the few places in the FOU feslemAavt woods and swamps about Hammon- —_—— ton that had not been thoroughly gone over by the hundreds of poe. iy 2, 191 Hrecent weeks. View the City from thy WORLD RESTAURAN eas be tt