The evening world. Newspaper, November 11, 1922, Page 1

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ee HARVARD FAVOR To-Night’s Weather—Cloudy and warmers EDITION I} VOL. LXIII. NO. 22,203—DAILY_ Copyright (Ns "TANKER WR rx a Publishing Company, 1922. a Che York World) by Press 10 DEFEAT ' : . stantial Score ea CRIMSON ELEVEN IS PICKED 23,000 WITNESS GAME ——_—___-+. (Warvard Feels Sure of Taming Tigers and Getting Revenge for Last Year’s Defeat— Old Nassau Confident of Rolling Up Sub- PRINCETON: vard line, 188 pounds, perlods, 15 minutes each. Officials—Reteres hart, Dartmouth. By William Abbott. HARVARD STADIUM, "RIDGE, Noy. 11.—Pifty-three gand spectators crowd this historic stadium th: eheer and groin as rinceton battle. The gridiron was whol! briskly int iron was in brown ld. The grid ndition, the nd just perfect ¢ ing turf being right for speedy running The Orange and Black squad trot ted on for preliminary ctice when ‘only scattered tho $a the vast stands. The Tigers quickly sp d over the field kteking and pun numerous Digskins, with heud couch Bill Roper directing operations After a ten-minute drill the Tigers withdrew and on rushed the Crimson squad for an ear workout. The Harvard #ayers hardly started Practice when the Princeton band ap- peared and quickly marched to the @outh stands, where Princeton's root- lers were gathered in a blaze of color NO LAST-MINUTE CHANGES IN CRIMSON LINE-UP, There was no last minute changes jm the Crimson line-up, Bob Fisher and his assistants two days ago do- fled that Holder and Jenkins would iy the end positions against the Pigers and this decision removed the just doubt about the Cambridge line- ‘wp. Bill Roper is nov so positive about a team. Roy Wyngate will direct he eleven at quarte;back as Gorman's @houlder has not fully healed from he strain of the Chicago encounter. “Red” Howard may start at guard in place of Whoops" Snively, who also @till carries scars of that memorable e@truggle that the Tigers only won af- (ker a whirlwind finish. The one posi- on remaining in doubt is right end ‘where Stout may replace Ken Smith, felthough the latter is bound to get jn the game because of his drop kick- i skill, Indications point to a free-scoring ~ @ontest Many rabid Crimson sup- fporters predict the Tigers’ goal line qill be crossed three times. Prince- fon admirers are equally certain thelr hting eleven will roll up a substan- Both sides expect thts afternoon's @ame to be one of the most radical ver staged by members of the Big hree. There's no secret that Old {Nassau intends to throw passes to the Umit. Princeton revealed its power- ful aerial attack against Chicago and At is understood BI Roper hus added @ome new overhead weapons. Harvard, too, has an efficient pass- me, one of the strongest of any ne in the East. With such stars few nds were (Continued on Ninth Page.) HARVARD-PRINCETON LINE PRINCETON. HARVARD Wt Ht. Age. Player, Position. Player. Age. Ht. Wt. 187 5.10 21 Gray L.—End—R...... Holder, 6.00 185 184 6.01 21 Treat L.—Tackle—R....,Dunker. 19 6.01 187 200 6.01 23 Dickenson ......L.—Guard—R.....Grew. 5.10 210 186 5.11 22 Alford Clark. 6.00. 175 190 5.11 22 Howard -€. Hubbard. 6.02 195 198 6.00 23 Baker Eastman, 6.00 200 171 5.11 21 Smith Jenkini 5.09 168 189 6.08 20 Wingate . Quarterback.....Bueil, 5.09 155 175 5.09 20 Caldwell -L.—Haltback—L...Owen ,. 6.00 185 178 6.10 22 Crum + R.—Haltback—R...Chapin ., 5.11 189 177 6.10 21 Cleaves . .+Fullback.. Gehrke 5.10 165 Average weight of Princeton line, 185 pounds; average weight of Har. Average weight of Princeton backfield, average weight of Harvard backfield, 173 pound Time of game, 2 o'clock; Harvard Stadium, V. A. Schwartz, Brown; Field Judge, F. R. Gillinder, Pennsylvania; CAMB- thou- every inch oi afternoon ty and Harvard fought their annual football banked sith colorful humanity, a scene that ‘we only produced when teams from Yale, Marvurd and ceton play each ot! A bright su 1 down and breeze {1 rthwest — blew hall. Then they evidently went in search of a vehicle, beeause when Kaigansky recovered consciousness qand was able to wriggle out of his bonds, he was alone. He went to an exit and set up an outery, bringing Detectives Murphy and Bonnano of ea UP 171 pounds; ambridge, Ma: Time of Brown; Umpire, F. W. Murphy, Linesman, G. N. Bank. World’s Board To Reproduce Game To-Day “Fair and warmer."* That's the prediction for Weather, so football coming to City Hall Park to witness the reproduction of 'the Harvard Princeton football game at Cambridge on The Evening World’s magnetic scoreboard a sured that they can do so in comfort The board has been erected tn. the arch above the entrance to the Pulit- zer Building in the exact spot where the gnetic hoard reproduced the 8 World Series games for the benefit of tens of thousands of baseball fans. The same little metallic ball that so amply depicted the World Serie Zames will be in evidence to-day just as faithfully illustrating the Tige Crimson battle. Moving around over a miniature football fleld it will sRow every play just as it takes place at Cambridge and almost as quickly. The game starts at 2 o'clock, i WATCHMAN GAGGED AND BOUND SAVES HIS EMPLOYERS $2,000 to-day's fans who are Guard at Shoe Factory, Thrown Downstairs by Burglars, Calls Police. Max Kaigansky, night watchman at the American Shoe Company factory, No. 176 Livingston Street, Brooklyn, has his head bandaged to-day and feels sore all over after an encounter with burglars, but he had the satis- faction of saving his employers a $2,- 000 loss last night Three men set upon him at 9 o'clock, knocking him insensible. Then they him into the factory bound a ed him, and threw him down a flight of stairs, The burglars collected $2,000 worth of women’s slippers In the first floor the Butler Street station, who called a Cumberland Street Hospital ambu lance for the watchman, Then he was taken to his home, No. 195 Roeb The the shoes. —__~. thieves did not come back fo Country,"* to-day in ¢ront of No. FIVILLE DICKINSQN PRINCE TON: The Rival Leaders in To-Day’s Gridiron Classic at Cambridge Cornell Eleven Big Favorite | Over Dartmouth Team To-Day a aa Capacity Crowd Expected at] PROBABLE LINE-UP OF Big College Battle at the Polo Grounds. It isn't often during the year that the Polo Grounds harbors a capaci crowd, save o 1 league but ft is ox will be nothin standing room left when the whistle {s blown for the tmouth and Cor- nell elevens to start their fifth annua afternoon idiron st t in this con test, Grads and er from both colle are I great num bers. Moreover, the local football public is growing surprisin: fas from year to year. With all the folks who love to see a real contest of kind, together with the people realiy interested in the two college: looks as though an overflow crowd | 2 sure thing At the Cornell headquarters at the McAlpin and the Dartmouth head- quarters at the Pennsylvania those nene left This great gridiron battle will start Both col hand at 2 o'clock thelr bands on occasion 8 Will ha. to enli (Continued on Ninth Page.) —___—~»— BOY PLAYING “SOLDIER” KILLED BY AUTO OF JAMES J. HILL’S SON in Khakt Sud- Five-Yenr-014 Lad denly Runs in Front of Cav, A boy, about five years old and un identified, was killed by an automobile Street. He was one of a group play ing “'soldiers,"* Moving west on the street was the of James N. Hill, No, 181 f the late J automobile East 64th Street J. Hill, American railroad pioneer. At the wheel w t ffeur, Frank Truclove. The w urning from Mr. Hill's country place, Wheat ley Hills, Glen Head, L. I A small, khaki qd dashed Across the st nto t 1 of the automobile. ‘Truelo’ to stop h hine ' Patrolman H. Carman ordered the boy taken to Bellevue Hospita was pro. nounced dead by D! be True love was not arrest He told the i children i eleven Strand 4 games but any king tickets were told there were nthe They will make the welkin 229 East 47th TEAMS IN TO-DAY’S GAME AT POLO GROUNDS Cornell. Dartmouth, Pos. Roll d lead Un Time man—A. “W. Risley, Colgate of perlods—15_ minutes 83ROOKLYN TECH AND MANUAL MIDGETS IN SCORELESS TIE ‘The Brooklyn Tech the Manual Trainin led to a scoreless tie the Parade Gre close to ot the first period when they pre 1 to Brooklyn Tech's Ine where they were held at the whistle, nd runs by Gr the pigskin close Midgets Midgets strug ds, aul came the to the goal, midfield advanced most of the way to the 10-yard line in t final quarter, but Tech held stub- bornly at the wind up of a hard fy ht and brilliantly played game. he score by periods Brooklyn Tech Midgets Se COLUMBIA WINS CROSS COUNTRY RUN Columbia harriers won the four cor- nered Intercollegiate cross country run at Van Cortlandt Park Walter Higgins of the blue and white team crossed the finish line tn first pos ition, ‘The course measured about six and one half miles and representatives of the New York school matched strides ‘kalnst runners of Pennsylvania, Cor nell and Dartmouth The first ten men to finish wore Higgins, Columbia, first; E. O. Me Clane,~ Pennaylvania, second; Robert Moore, captain, Columbia, third; J. ( Young, Dartmouth, fourth; W. 1 varo, Darthmouth, fifth; W! Cornell, sixth; William mbla, seventh; H. V. Bonsal, ¢ eighth; E. W. Head, Pennoy ninth and J. P. Morrisson, Corne tenth, —EE Ss BOYS HIGH IN SOCCER VICTORY OVER ERSMUS Boys' High Erasmus this morning in an inte ing soccer clash at the I Ground » Brooklyn, score t Neither side was able tor the first half but in the final flay work by Sarner, bube Katz accounted for the two for Boys’ High, - <_ rue § WING ANYWHERE Mary tirely tiny Storm” Go The crow ment of hy le carver Theatre, to-morrow.—Advt -Henderson Henson: . Flynn Richards jstrom, Gobinlock Pfann and this morning at Brooklyn. Man- coring at the end ed 3-yard am also brought but in the third period the teams battled in Manual + 9000-0 Manual Training Midgets. 0 0 0 0—0 to-day when | BRONX FIREBUG agen: Second Incendiary in Three Days Sends Fam- ilies to Street. {urning From ‘Theatre, Discover the Flames. A fire set by a pyromaniac e borhood of No. 761 E the Bronx, less than a block from No. Westch Ay was built a -arly Wednesda reet building. treet in their sleeping clothes oon were joined by rom the Westches' Avenue Mrs. Herman Clausen and five-story dwelling at No, 761 atre shortly after midnight talk. They smelled smoke, street shouting “Fire! Fire Jeremiah Lenthan, a d to Fire Patrol No. 6, ssing. He ran in sf and, flames in the baby carriages. ourt yard. When Lenihan the fire Matthew Concannon of No. 80 West 105th Street, also a p who had heard Mrs, (¢ screams, sent in an alarm ause: the noise of the ne app aroused the neighborhood and e; many to seek refuge In the s arriy firemen came, The firemen and th: police were busy for quite a persuading residents of the neighbor hood it was safe to 0 back to bed. Lenihan's hands were burned, he refused medical treatment went home, Sergt. Spels and seventeen police men from the Morrisania Sta rehed the neighborhood, It ts be Wednesday started this morning 8 morning could have resulted from carelessness or accident, detective ported after an Investigation, fire Wednesday morning was clear! of Incendiary origin, it was sald. Th« fire was discovered at the Wi cheste. Avenue House by a tenant whose wife dreamed the house was ablaze ani made him get up and investigate. — ANNIE OAKLEY HURT IN ALTO SMASH. DAYTONA, Fla., Nov. 11.—Annie Onkley of Leesburg, Fla., former daring horsewoman and crackshot with Bufta Bill's Wild West Show, received serious njurles In an automobile accident yes terday when her machine overturned on Dixte Highway. FRAZIER DISCOVERS HE WAS ELECTED TO SEAT IN U, S. SENATE Phones Newspaper Office From Farm to Learn “How tle tion Turned Out." FARGO, N. D., Nov. 11 . Frazier, elected United utes Senator from North Dakota in Tuesday's election, culled uy t Fargo Courler-News last night to learn ‘thow the election turned out A winding up his car the ht before electior Frater lett for ¥ Hoople, to “put things in order for the winter." Last night, for the first tinw found time to in as tot 1, F. 'T. O'Connor, Der opponent ress OF THE ITE GVER TIG ERS TO-DAY BLAST ON TANKER -] SETS NEW BLAZE: | KILLS TWO, WRECKS HUNDREDS FLEE} $2,000,000 VESSEL Attempt BURN BABY CARRIAGES, Two Women Residents, Re- Fscape as Missiles Pass rly to-day aroused residents In the neigh- 166th Street, plosion by gas, in the der repairs a Sun Shipbuilding nue, where a fire|UNder repairs at the Sun Shipbuilding Inst a policeman's door . Two baby carrlages|two other under a wooden stairway leading from und floor were burned in the ‘The 100 or more tenants fled to the and twenty familles house and by others from the neighborhood. Mrs, (Slizabeth Schnelder, who live in the East 156th Street, returned from the the- ana y buildings. ‘The tanker Pawnee, stopped in the third floor hallway to Mrs, Schneider ran into her apart- sounded as one. ment to investigate and Mrs, Clausen went to the lower floor hall, where she found the blaze. She ran to the glass windows in the business section of the city were blown out. Chester's population streets shi whieh r fireman at- off duty, using coat as a blanket, smothered the He need them through a side door into went to extingulsn 00 ton vessel of the serby, _ FOUR-MINUTE QUAKE RAZES CHILIAN HOUSES The screams of the frightened tenants and though the blaze was out before tys here while but nd houses fell and walls were cracked So far no loss of Hte bh on” shortly lieved that the man who set the firo There 1s no possibility the fire aN aller earning of the poisoning of Sir cablegram: ADVISES SPANKING OF PARENTS AND KIDS IN PUPPY LOVE CASES ernal Indulgence at Fa Judes Baby Love Germ escapades spanked, offspring Lawrence Boys’ Court.) Passing on the of two youthful lovers, J cobs said “What these children need Is a out a Iittle of the same correc The baby love highly cases I bell ions f Circulation Books Open to All. »| ,» 1922, Pont Office, ~ Ignited by Acetylene Torch Blows Up Six Tanks. Workmen in Yard Over Heads. ER, Pa., Nov. 11.—An believed to have been caused tanker J. N. ex- Pew, killed and wrecked the vessel with a loss of nearly $500,000, Torches of rivets in used to burn off the heads le the crude oll tanks are || Fire | nue, part of the yard and struck near, was slightly damaged. explosions occurred at such that the detonations Hundreds of plate intervals mystery $100,000, of 60,000 poured into the Fire engines dashed down to rd to extinguish the flames from the gas and oil JN, Pew built In 1920 t of nearly $2,000,000. It was] r¢ most mod- | Str buildings name nearly Felt Over a Large Part of South Americn, er cwhnt TAGO, Chill, Nov, 11 (Assoet | Press).—A strong varth shock four minutes before midnight, night, and the tremors wer ne In In other party of the comntry| didn't « been reported, ntofagaasta, north of ta dal wave came] ing until Approach, ort from 40, sald th Entered as Second-Cla: New. Eleven Prisoners, two workmen, injured! Liquors, Seized in Old Black- well Residence. Astoria, of some in the from Blackwell's Island tly back of it, at No . Is the home of Deputy Police Commissioner knew nothing of the over but who iroat and his men ri they saw two both painted white. To-Morrow's Weather—Cloudy and warmer 9 NAL EDITION Witt PRICE THREE CENTS TWO DEAD, CITY IMPERILLED MOTT WIRES PARKER AT SEA: SEEKS 10 RUSH RECTOR’S MURDER 10 GRAND JURY WASTORA RAED AS BOOZE CACHE $100,000 In the shadow of the old Black- believed to have exploded gas In the] well mansion at No, 167 Fulton Ave- tanks, six of which blew up. followed Fragments of steel and debris flew over the heads of 300 workmen in an- Assistant false The mansion Is one of the finest old taking Its whom section, family was named, D\- 140 Franklin the for John A. Leach, who raid until it was The police have not yet learned .un- kind house has been occupied of late, but of lease, If any, the 4 number of men have been seen go- and out Nelghbors said they know who lived there mained in hid- big trucks which after midnight, smashing! is not the usual color of a bootlegging vot tahoe he over the] true, One had the words “Farm and fellNall over tral Chill Florist Supplies’ painted on Its side, — The other was inscribed ‘Window Commis on | Shades," wil joner Enright When cured 1 Saya Highly Infective, CHICAGO, Nov. 11 Jacobs, of the Chicago Ja way by Divislonal nat » parents, infective ve the ‘marriage’ ox y to cov I think If w 1 in sim men by surprise, no chance for a fight. the Deputy California wines, prices—at about cated to-day at No, 464 West Broad- Prohibition © warrant in tn and the four-atory building in which t in stored will be nolzed, Tho agente doclared that the wines wore made of Callfornia grapes on the ses and are camoufinged ns im. Nelther one of them showed 1 firm name or address, ‘am Horwood sent him the following| The ‘trucks drew up beside the house and men came from within to hear of your iliness. We| bearing casea of bottled goods. Goat for your speedy and complete| watehed until one truck was nearly ENRIGHT londed, then gave the signal for the — | rush. ‘The detectives caught their so that there was prisoners had been se- Commissioner Leach, (Continued on Second Page.) —- BROADWAY DRY RAID YIELDS RICH STORE Parents of young boys and «i OF CALIFORNIA WINES who partleipate in “puppy love ® , hi a biicly | Appleby to Setse Bulldinagn Which should “be publialy Held €200,000 Liquors—Awents along with thetr erring on Guard. according to Judge valued—at retail $200,000, were lo- agents under Chief John D, Apploby. Application was mado immodiately to old fashioned apanking. |crnited @tates Commissioner Hitch Furthermore, in nearly every case | | for @ earch warrant, and Yew wil And paternal indigenes: 17 ' nse mummenthal, Mahl and Sorte It wouldn't be a bad idea t man were placed on guard. As aoon nod the cache norted Ttallan Chiant! with jrned ris and official-looking labolw, In cache are harrele, 900 casen sh _Janit 2,900 hottles of the liquid r ‘a is listed as ownor of the ording to the agente, n in cuatody, He they said, the Warrant |e Inauod, SPECIAL PRIZE FOR NEXT “WHAT DID YOU SEE TO-DAY?”' WEEK DODGE TOURING CAR GIVEN AWAY FREE District, At- torney William B. Groat of Queens, with two of his office associates and half a dozen detectives, wi: at 3 o'clock this morning to would happen, An hour later the hiding group had captured eleven prisoners, solved the partitions vcreening vaults for contraband, and selzed certain liquids sald to be worth waiting what ne out of his house and Joined In the search tice to address the Jury request some other Justice to act for him. eres Urges Justice to Appoint Another to Preside Over Panel — Case May Be Heard Before Nov. 20. To Fingerprint Widow and She Will Agree, Is Report: Prosecutor’s Work Balked by Somerset Residents. (Special from a Staff Correcpondent of The Evening World.) NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Nov. 11.—Critics of Prosecutor Mott, for not smashing out indictments for the murder of the Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall and Mrs, Bleanor Reinhardt Mills, whose bodies were found juat etght weeks ago to-day, should be better Informed as .c his sitution It is this: Mr. Mott superseded Azariah Beekman, who represents the people of Somerset County—poultry and dairy and truck farmers, for the most part, who have a farmer's tra- ditional horror of running up tax bills against themselves by even the frac- tion of a cent; there people ure con- vinoed that the rector and the chotr singer crossed the boundary of Mfd- diesex County and came into Somer set for no good purpose and deserve no particular consideration from that county. Mr. Beekman sympathizes with his fellow citizens; that is why he was superseded Mr. Mott ts now acting for a com munity in which the people have al ready tried Jane Doe, John Doe and Richard Roe for the murder of the Rev. Mr, Hall and Mrs. Mills in the court of public opinion and have ac quitted them out of regard for the “unwritten law.’ They regard a for mal court trial as a rank extrava gance Enforcement of the murder laws tj the letter in this case is just about us popular in Somerset County as en forcement of the Volstead act would be In the State of New Jersey gen erally Those who have had opportunitic at first hand to observe the difflew! tles of Mr. Mott's assignment asee that he deserves sympathy rathe than criticism. Mr. Mott has sent telegrams to Nev Orleans and radiograms to Intercep the ship on which Supreme Court Jus tice Parker is tion In the West Indies, turning from a vacr Justice F her is asked to authorize another Jus Somerset Gran is asked ( in his absence; he If these requests are granted ther fe a chance that the Hall-Mills cas« may be put before Nov. 20, the first day that Jus tice Parker can possibly sit. before the Grand Ju Even here in Middlesex County there !s a reflection of public opintor in Somerset as to the uselessness of asking for punishment of the mur derers. lowing the investigation for the las olght weeks know of scores of per sons who tell pertinent circumstances to their deny having said anything of the sort or having or unofficial Those who have been fol intimates, but who stoutly Information when offtcia! Investigators approact them. Invoatigators who have thus been fotled have had the very same Peraons come to them, put them unde’ seal of a fraternal obligation to aa- creoy and tell them storios whieh have made thetr hair rine, In Newark to-day Mr. Mott, wit? Citet Investigator Mason, tm laying out the program for the final intorroga: tlon of witne the Grand Jury hearings, Heoaune of trotionsnesa and «tr used by some of have attended py ut wi Miaconcerting questions, decided wook will be the only offotal in the room when a witness te questlonod «in preparation for arm methods ° Inveatigntora who vious examinations terpolatea Wis been through next that Mr, Mott Tt wae acid by {nvestigntors today that the repert of experts whe oxain ined the olathing of the vietima of the ¢

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