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Sie FS a WO. SECTIONS—SECTION ONE. EEG EDITION (i by The Prewy Publishing ew York World). oe NEW ‘YorK, SATURDAY, “NOVEMBER “19, Kntered Post 01 1921, fee, New York ne Second-Cings Matter PRICE THREE CEN TS YALE 3, HARVARD 0, IN THE SECOND PERIOD } NINE MIOURNERS KILLED ~— AS EXPRESS TRAIN CRASHES _ INTO FUNERAL PROCESSION ae Automobile Carrying 12 Per-| sons: Demolished by Chi- cago-California Flyg BODIES SCATTERED MILI One Victim Believed to B: Brother of Chicago Alderman. Nov. CHICAGO, killed at cago suburb, to-day, mobile in a funeral struck by the California Limited, on the Santa Fe. The filer ploughed through. thi large auto scattering wreckage and bits of the track for i nearly a in | ‘the auto were seriously injured. A heavy weured the track to the chauffeur. John E. Pettoske, undertaker in charge. 19.—Nine persong , 1, a Chi- when an auto- were Sum procession wag bodies down mile. Three persons snow fall and storm ob- the and four men, one woman and three boys were killed, Seven mangled identified, of the victims, all terribly have not been definitely although two of them were believed jto He Mr. and Mrs. John Zemianim, parents of two-year-old Emily Zem janim, whose funeral! was being held, Three other passe in the fu- neral car, a man, w a child, were severely injured. They were taken to a hospital, where efforts to learn from them the identity of the dead were halted because of their serious injuries. The driver of the hearse, whieh crossed the track ahead of the train, : did not discover the rest of the funeral party was missing until he reached the cemetery, a mile away ‘The train, pulled by two engines? traveled nearly a mile before it equld be brought to a stop Not even the license plate could be found in the wreckage to identify the car. The largest piece of the wrecked automobile measured no more than four feet long. ‘Tho train, which was bound for Chicago, was said to have been running at a high rate of speed, Dr. 8. S. Fuller of Riverside, who was driving along the road nearby, ussisted in removing several injured to the La Grange Hospital. The Lawndale Avenue crossing, where the mocident occurred, is part of a con- terete highway which connects Lyons and es 400 IK $H PRISONERS Ts KEN FROM ISLAND Undee Moved to Maryborough Heavy Military Eacort. CORK, Nov. 19.—The last of the in- ferned Isish Republican sympathizers were moved from Spike Island last hight. In a bunch of 400, they were taken by train, guarded by 800 troops, to Mary Borough, an vid internment : camp. One of the most insistent complaints ‘DOCTOR AND NURSE TELL TO-DAY HOW MISS RAPPE DIED Prosecution Tries to Pave Way for Conviction of Arbuckle. SAN FRANCISCO, Noy, 13.—De- tails of the death of Virginia Rappe, e| film actress, were to be told to-day on the resumption of the ‘case af Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle. Miss Grace Hafstead, surgical nurse at Wakefield Sanitarium, where Miss Rappe died, and Dr. Arthur Beardslee, house physician of the St. Francis Hotel, who attended Miss Rappe, were to lay the ground on which the prose- cution will base Its attempt to obtain the conviction of Arbuckle on charges of manslaughter. Lowell Sherman, the movie actor who avas a member of the party, also is expected to testify, The the Arbuckle hotel suite to investigate for the an accurate map of the room and the furnishings already has been blackboard fac- ing the jury box, where sij the seven jury may visit them- selves “the lay of land,” al- though drawn on the court men and five women trying the comedian. Dr. Reardslee, will testify to the condition of Miss Rappe immediately following -the party when she was carried hy Arbuckle, dressed bathrobe, pajamas and a hat, through the corridors of the hotel to a separate room which had been engaged for her. He will also give his opinion-as to whether the woman died from “external force applied by one Roscoe Arbuckle,” as the complaint charges. Miss Halstead will testify as to Miss Rappe's condition during the last two days of her fatal illness, and of seeing the autopsy performed on the body by Dr. Willlam Ophuls, who testified yesterday. A ee ST. PAUL ROBBERS GET $100,000 GEMS Enter Jewelry Store in Night and Force Manager on Arrival to Open Safe. ST. PAUL, Minn, Nov -Three robbers who entered the Gittleson Jewelry Company store some time during the night overpowered Harry Isman, manager, upon his arrival to- day, forced him to open the safe door and shut off the burglar alarm and ; the Sinn Fein officials had made of Spike Island was that it was unsanitary escaped with jewels valued at $100,- 000, according to the police. Don’t Miss Reading About— The Homely Wife and the Handsome Husband By SOPHIE First of Based on a IRENE LOEB a New Series of Articles the Real Life Experiences of Unhappy Husbands and Wives EVENING WORLD--MONDAY MAGA ZIN.E PAGE in al woman's} (Special Corr terms. such a di RAY OF SUNLIGHT CAUSES PANIC IN DARKENED MOVIE “Fire” and 100 Stampede to Street. ~ HUGHES WILL FIRMLY JAPAN IT CANNOT DEMAND MORE GREAT BATTLESHIPS TELL Mikado’s Envoys tae Fear as t Outcome of Conference—U. S. Emphatic That Main Points Must Not Be Endangered. Flaming Shaft Starts Cry of] 9rmmes-” By David Lawrence. pondent of The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, Noy. 19 (Copyright, 1921),—A climax hes come rather unexpectedly in the armament conference. vary the principles which she accepted at the outset. discussing “details,” the Japanese have brought forward a proposal to increase the size of their navy beyond the point laid down in the Hughes programme, which the Japanese “accepted in principle” last Tuesday. * The answer of the American delegation to such tactics is the outstand- ing dramatic event of the conference. Harding and the entire Cabinet the situation and was given full approval to go ahead with the plan he had in mind. It is that the American naval proposals must stand as they are with respect to battleships and battle cruisers and that only by the formula of limitation announced in the Hughes programme can competition he stopped. = The American answer is made in firm and unmistakably emphatic The United States delegation does not mean to be drawn into ussion of details as will endanger the main principles which have already been accepted by Great Britain and Japan. ——— dl {of opinion would arise and It was inevitable that a divergen effort should be strongly madé to entrenched the States reajly was behind her posals. Tie © Amcrican now has left no rocin for doubt. ¢ influen pr tial member of the Amer can group expressed tion in big battleships a thing of the past” or e go ahead with our building or He emp! d also very important point on whict s over and pe see hoy United O «ina, Japan’ has sought to Under the guise of Secretary Hughes told President ce that an o- delegation As the competi- ‘we must O° a re haps the Japanese misunderstanding 1 f the American prog! amme is based. AMERICA’S MIGHTIEST WARSHIP, | COSTING NEARLY $25,000,000, LAUNCHED FOR SCRAP HEAP ‘West Virginia Takes Water at Newport News— Is Included Under Hughes Armament Reduction. Programme. NEWPORT NEWS, Va.—Nov. 19. | West Vir- mightiest warship the scrap heap be almost inxulnerable to torpedo attack.’ No device that American genius or war experisuce has combined to produce has ben omitted from the ship's fighting equipment, The West Virginia's keel was laid tn April, 192: a year and seven montis ago. As inun measures 621 feet from stem to s ern and is $7 foet wide in beam. In addition to the eight 1€-inoh rifles she would, when&com- ‘pleted, carry a secondary battery uf fourteen o-inch rifles, four $-inch antl- eireraft guns and two 21-inch sub- merged torpedo tubes, Designs call for an electric-drive of 29,000 horsepower. furnished by oi! burners and turbine Completed, she would cost about $25, 000,000. |FIRST DIPLOMATIC GERMAN AGENT WHO ARRIVED TO-DAY 80 as to ee superdreadnought America’s weduled to grace within a few months under the re- duction programme, was success- fully launched to-day ut the plant of the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company. Miss Alice | Mann, of Bramwell, W. Va, christ- ened the ship as It glided from the ways. The West Virginia is one of the |same class and power as the Mary- land, soon to be commissioned, Some- where among Government stores are eight 16-inch rifles made especially to fit her four gun pits, She would be able when completed to steam at dlmost a y3-knot speed; she is built FIRST DIPLOMATIC AGENT OF GERMAN GOVERNMENT HERE Von Thermann Says Teutons Nould Be Pleased If U. S Soldiers Remain on Rhine. she The first accredited diplomatic rep- | resentative of the German Govern- ment ‘to come to this country since He is and his title the war, arrived here to- Edmund von Thermann, is “Counsellor-Agent to the German Embassy,” which latter will, it Is ex- | pected, he established the that been signed in near future has an répresentative created at Berlin Herr now the peace treaty and American von Thermann, who arrived on the Scandinavian-American Line | , Crimson band swung in through the east entrance The young band: | men, breaking into a Harvard “H ALDRICH KICKS FIELD GOAL FROM A DIFFICULT ANGLE AFTER RUN OF 62 YARDS Yale and Harvard Clash in Annual Contest Before '55,000—Weather More Suitable for Baseball Than Football—Field Muddy in Spots. By William Abbott. (Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) HARVARD STADIUM, CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 19.—The elevens of Yale,and Harvard clashed here this afternoon in weather more suitable for baseball. my and bright like a spring day. discarded so warm was the sun. Thick The en- many spots. Overhead conditions were t Fur overcoats and sweaters were q ickly The condition of the field was unfavorable. layers of straw failed to protect the gridiron from rézent rains, tire space between goal posts was soft and actually muddy The WITH DARTMOUTH Harvard.” A few minutes later Harvard's Raron Kato put fortir ABestiO pera th ri she suasestion| steamship Hellig Olay, said he did! x jthat Japon “needs” a 60 per cent.| ae | | |paraded around the field, Yale's . not know who the next ambassador : ’ A ray of sunlight caused a panic | navy, Haar tapers pemeerae ) stunds let loose a great cheer when “The . ’ 4 ,| He pointed to Japan's defensive : As he Harvard lund played “Boolw in “The Academy," a moving picture] HE pointed to Japan's defensive] ‘The newcomer, who was incon-| BSROR_E-VON THERMANN | students Eton Each Unives:} teeny ine buttac soalta take at No. 287 Kast ‘Houstoi ade] spicuosl é “ ei BN RAS =D Ban Lc Toa 0 theatre at No. 287 East ‘Houston nis mistake, the American delegates aplaucay arenes in tweeds and a a : <iie ab Palo’ Grounds ‘At igd| BU the Sealer Street, this afternoon. There were | point out, for the naval programme | 2° ap. in strong contrast tothe! : out to recetve a thunveous w about a hundred women and children’ proposed by Mr, Hughes was by no| German representatives of other RAIN LATE TO-DAY; Swell Attendance fiom) the, New (Hiven sections in the place and they stampeded,| means ce ned “to meet the nerds’ sears) sald that he was a.republican Five mitute hate Hurvard's eleven some of them being bruised and]of a nation, for if that were t) "Jat heart and firmly believed in they FAIR TO-MORROW, Bu Robert Boud sdnuvud | te tatnienah ROVatie SEateEe E i at were the case] ey Heart and ' yw Robert Boyd. jane using recep: scratched in the: struggle to Ket to|there would be endless debate us to] ©X8tN order of things in his coun WITH COLD WAVE} joo Grouxps, %.¥. Nov 19] U0" After a stappy drill Aldrich the stree', The firemen were called| what constituted’ the real necessities| He is thirty-seven years old,| . Ronen {and Kane met midfield for the out but there was nothing for them] of each nation, and an agreement to HAPS ca So Bide and dur-| Warm Enough, 73, but That Shoukl | ~The Meuyy Syracuse eleven and) ios wach Yale won to. do. stop the competition in building|!"* the war was a captain of cavalry, | ve Your Bert ia Dartmouth clashed here to-day in During the showing of a film called| would probably be hopeless. He war captured by the Russlans in| Drive Your Benny to the the final 1921 appearance nf hath FIRST PERIOD. “The Bait” the theatre became so/THERE WILL BE NO COMmPRO.| ‘hn? latter fart of 1914 and remained Moth Ball teams on Kast. An carly morn tlarvard kicked off to O'Hearn, who warm that Charles Goldschlang, the MISE. a prisoner “nti the end of the war, | Do net be bluffed into putting ling rain made the ficid soft and| ‘Musbled the ball on his goal ine bet R CON IONS. shiek r & | ink and eee \ manager, ordered a ventilator in the, The American programme, on the], “1 Want to pay a tribute to the! away your overcoat becauss the |slippery, hampering the playscs of [Tecevered in time and sprinted Back roof opened. When this was done it/other hand, was based upon an ef-|)™erieva Red Cross and the Y. M.) temperature at 1 o'clock to-day | both teams Aftown yards before Crockor ‘brougMs permitted a shaft of brilliant sunlight| fort to maintain the existing ratio|©* A: for WRat they did for me while} was 73 officially up in the tower A large delegation of gy ude nts {ti down On the first play Jordem to enter the darkened theatre and|of strength but simply not to add|! “&# In prison,” he suid. “They! or the Weather Bureau in White- |trom cach of the universities made | chshed through the tine for six yards strike in a patch of flaming yellow|any more ships. On that (undu-|R2¥® Me food, but mainiy, books,| jai Street It te the warment [the tris here, ewelling the attend {Aldrich made the frst down around on the screen mental the American delegation re- | 2M Tm thanklul indeed | Nov 19 on record ance te 10,000 kbt end. Then Aldrich dropped back Instantly there was acry of “IMire!"| mains adamant. There will be no| A8ked about conditions in Ger. The Weather Bueeau prognos With hick’ Burke, Dartmouth’s |@0d punted seventy-five yards clear from several ofthe children in the} concessions, no compromises, on this | th% he sald. “They are bad. but) ication is that the fray by speedy vuzht halfback out of the [Over Hurvard’s { line, After Har- audience and then the entire house| because the American delegates con. | ne bate ng classes are better off) rain about the time the foot Kar leavin) bulk of carrying | Str failed to gain in two rushes, Pitts arose and started for th front exit.| sider that Japan and. Great Britain | °” mee rest, Sixty per cent, of the) pail gamer get into the last quar- | the pall to Captain Robertson, Dart- | Made hoor punt that only went ainly out of plo ol ‘ 1 | scrambling to get out and as a ticket (Conupued’ On Boson Page, 71 Ene Bain Ch) fon ithe ‘theatre: urowie!-tht winning uguinst Mechan's pws Crimson Ine held Jordan aad seller's booth stood near the entrance, | ase aa Fee a wae the ones who) ning. Tomorrow it will be clear |up-xtaters Aldrich in three plays. Aldrich! from | did so much to wwreck Germany ; shov 9 widen the p: nd along in the afternoun a cold Culver, Syracune's great defensivea| S-yards line tried a field goal ie shoved over to widen the pith BRITISH LABOR “My country will be well pleased If waye js duc : 1 oA ; 1 1 : 1| just mm 4 the “E x. he nl of escape | ne Uaited! Mtaten wall iment : \ Jeentie and Anderson the back tetd | whic At missed the mark, the b Two men who heard the cries of fre] WARMLY INDORSES | iter, on the Rhine. Their tects Haven eatoate te ieee aaa [atte ibatrewendtnithenlinelaiatt: Me} sah the age ef ANG UBD D hee f hine clr presenc ace ia hake und | ran to Clinton and & .folk Streets und | . Ae : start af the game st rom t 1 ine Har- | jhas done much to make friendship fll it well morrow ent and , shor tf Hopped the traM@e through Hast U.S. NAVAL PLAN | ron io ie two countrica’ have a clear ire for Muntay | THE LINEUP. [Cais made) ve ane oan Houston Street und the frightened ; ; | "Herr yon Thermann said he would _ Votan oace, | Tumbled vo the next ping Ewe Kaly crowd streamed out into the roadway. | Manifesto Calls for Extension Of! gq ut once to Washington to present| Auto Banditn Mine fas Vr od to The confusion lasted for nearly holt > ; i Hire] ball but it was Brown, Harvard's s a ef Proposals to All Armament iw credentials to the State Depart- > BIS ‘ ‘ ‘ ho’ final nar hae Neen tiens oe ataaenauil xlant tackle, who finally fell om the bs rent wo ghwaymen in an uomobtile ie ieee Forms pass nee visited the substation of the’New York KE [Sigabio: After’ Shls perros eae . q, Ne Steam Corporation at the foot nat nit Harvard promptly punted to O"Hears GEN. JACQUES SAILS LONDON, Nov. 19. Great Storm Moving ward KOATLGOTIORANAN OF She tay: ot La Sy nie es | Hater PIERS EERE IA UA FOR HOME ON ZEELAND, ,,,.reuet te hy | WASHINGTON, Nov, 19 Storm manes to axed wer OP na pnilate! [before going down, ander three Crim: A manifesto issued te Y lwarningw were ordered displayed t vay At the F ft x , the Labor Party on bequlf of the Weather Bureau curly today is \ jaon te Aftey O'Hearn failed ee AEE nee tang | Britain promises support of any [to Eastport. Me. There ts a storm of ‘ b eee ahaa Ata Hatvari'alecalvitas who came to untry to attend | ‘ | marked intensity over the Great’ Laken: | Shacks nable t the * : : anche Chew. wilv car fe ie Bite fine stopped two the American Legion meting at Kan-| Steps that may be neceasary to | marked intensity, rf robbers took thein awa Mra, M Blane’ ' r| A ; : niger sas City, returned home to-day aboard| make the American proposais for Be _ a or rae thy army aptatr whe ho was convicted | lunges, Hary . pan a 9 Las es the _Zeland, mpanied by Capt.| naval armament reduction eftec- ——— 21 Below Zero tn Calgary. some time ano. we Jordan broke through lett guard tor 5 | veauaranse “fs . (checks, was ‘Held in $1,800 ball. to- . Cone Amorigan Legion in ald the tive, nd calle for the extension |(RESULT OF TO-DAY'S FOOTBALL) CALGARY, Alta. Nov. 1%—For the ty" judge ‘Talley of General Seanions | «s yards Owen, Harvard's ater GAME BETWEEN DE WITT CLIN-|nrst time this season bitter cold de- | ¢, tion wits the theft of $8,300. {rom he play, but ree a wonderful organisation, 1 hope ita! of the proposals to all forms of | connection , back, was hurt in the play, Arit will be be, perpetuated for 6 good proposals TON AND COMMERCE ON SPORT: | scended, the temperature atanding at} an army officer. She will be called to Pras Alarich of America. al armament. ING PAGE.) Hi below sero here last night. plead on Monday. sumed after @ minute delay, : Y : ry n> Ny 2 “Wea ote fy # & \ historic stadium was com- pletely filed with football humanity. HOW TEAMS LINED. UP The management announced a ~eeard fooewrten FOR FOOTBALL GAME |« crowd ATEN Whi keemed under a from the way spectators Harvard Yale) were aillgntly packed into every avall- Macomber Hulman inch, Kane Into, Hatter Crulkehete enlarged woogin wtunds In the Clark Landig| Cat end of the enclosure were one Brown Cuernsey|micat mass of cole High on the pistney nee promenade over the conerete stadium, Boel Oteren the frst of ite Kind in the United Owen Mallory | States, were thousands standing whe Coburn Aldrich| couldn't’ get much better than a. Fitts bird's eye view of the battle down om Officials R._V. Maxwell, ihe white line in the fleld Swarthmore. U: . Ocluaibien Wiad we A light beeoxe came in from’ the well, Swarthmore. Linesman—G. N,| Southwest, but (oowasn't strong Bankurt, Dartmouth, enough to bother the kickers, Both squads trotted out for an early waem-= % 1p when on'y a few thousand coters were in their eeats | The’ Yule student band marched In | und taking stations in front of the Blue sections s.neing songs, the fa- vorite selection being “Good-Night,