Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Nov. 13, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE WEATHER. ;fFP iPfePI W- Z. , .... :-,jjr p i , jpl ijjlN RMr' 1 Kl mm TivolSectidnsr, f lt VOL. LXXXVn NO. 45 WXLMDTGTON N; Cti i3 CDAY- MQBNlKQ, OVEMBEIJ 13, 1910. WHOLE NTTMBBIl 13;4 52. -4." TH NEXT SSkER. YALE TAKES GAME mm . 'A I,,. in .Standard Oil Cases 1: CVODCCC CTDItft LUIILUU UIIIIIIL i; SEEMS JT i El Bruce-Brown Takes Grand Prize Event by Narrow Margin at Savannah. FRENCHMAN GOMES II! SECOND Thrilling Day on the Course Wagner Badly Injured. 60.000 Spectators. Great Interest and Excite, ment. Savannah, Ga., Nov. 12. The New York boy who four years ago ran away from home to become a driver of racing automobiles, today saved the American drivers from obliteration at the hands of foreigners In the Grand Prize race, the blue ribbon event of automobile contests. , ' Speeding faster and farther than man ever went before in an automo bile road race this young man, David Bruce-Brown, won the grand prize by' barely more than a second at the end of 415.2 miles heart-breaking miles. He flashed across the electric timing wire 1:42 seconds ahead of-Victor He mery, the Frenchman. His time was five hours, 53 minutes and 6.77 sec onds, setting a new American road record of 70.55 miles an hour. Both he and Hemery drove Benz cars, so that the foreign machines triumphed over the American made racers. The con solation In having an . American at the wheel of the winner was Increased by the feat of "Wild Bob" Burman, driving the maddest race of his' ca reer In an American car, the Marque t-te-Buick, which finished third, getting not only third money but an addi tional thousand dollars for the first American driver ta finish in an Amer ican car. , v , ! ; - ; ., - i Before the race it" was said that the American team planned to set a pace iuithe early stages which " would burn the tires off the; big foreign machines thereby securing: an; advantage over them. Apparently the- Americans 'tried this trick and It nearly succeeded for moat of. the foreigners. ?vre. either stalled or wrecked-on the track, be fore the finish, but the foreigners were too numerous. ..'Two of their cars, the winning Bens machines, still remained on the track at the end of the race. All the other finishers were 'American cars. ; i . -... - ;- Behind Burman were the derelict cars of some of the world's most fa mous drivers, who had failed to make their speed machines last through the terrific strain of 240 laps of curving roadways. These foreigners went to defeat gamely and in some instances recklessly. 1 Wagner hn Accident. Wagner, in 'his big red Fiat, was one of the grittiest. His daring nearly costing his life and that of. his me chanician, Louis Ferro. On the back stretch, while coming down a small hill at lop speed, Wagner lost control of his car for the fraction' of a second, one of his front wheels striking a stone culvert, crushing the weel and throwing the car" on its side for a slide of 50 feet into the trees border ing the speedway. Ferro was literal ly shot in the top branches of the 20 foot willow, which caught him and broke his fall. He ran to the car beside which Wagner was, lying with machine oil poured about him from a broken tank. The great driver got up with the aid of the mechanician and walked to the .German Club nearby. Later, he was taken to a hospital, where it was reported he was not seriously hurt. Willie Haupt, one of the Benz drivers, skidded off uie road at tlie end of a long stralght-away,- side swiped a giant live oak and then side swiped a giant live oak and then Plunged with his car and mechanician into a clump oi bushes so thick and ho tall that they apparently swallow ed him. hiding his from view 'of the breathless spectators. He and H. W. reyhle, his mechanician, emerged trom the woods with" reassuring ex pedition, though somewhat bfuisted and scratched. . L i Fifteen Cars in Race, fifteen cars started the race. In side of twenty-miles me three Fiats driven by Wagner. DePalma and Naz zareo and the three Benz cars steered bx Hemery, Bruce-Brown and Haupt' . nart left the Americans well behind, fumery took the lead at about 30 "iIIpb and held it until the 140tn mile, nen a change of tires at tae pits al io wed four of the other foreign cars 'o rush past him. Meanwhile Nazzarre, holder of the worlds road record of about seventy nve miles an hour, was doing the fast .uliT1;? of the dav in anfeuort to ch Hemery. Nazzarre's best time a single lap was 13.32, which was the rate of 7fi 71 no i f oi over a hundred miles he laid out for o wnen Waner took the lead Z hi0iU I" n;il -8' Dut lost it in filling nis on and gasoline tanks at the pits. iue 2uu mile mark was well HI tne roar nr,A v. .. w Z. . u lue race more tnan dii oveV. thpso i,n, i , , " 'v uls tara were sun nS? .d...g0in.S onle of the most A Sf-ant fhro ... rnj7t.l . miuiues at times sep- onw n'lr i A tour or flve, seconds m u-m" opened their speed lev fa t ! wheels at n " 7" l 8t&y on the track at v-vuunuea on jfage Eight) I TiVJ a -m. a m ; Washington, D. C.,' Novf 12. Many newspapers opposed to Democracy are engaged in an 'effort to make it appear that the Democrats . of the next House are preparing to row over the speakership. These stories are wide of the, actual facts. There is no fight on Champ Clark for the speaker ship, and ' he will ' be elected unani mously or practically so when : the Democratic caucus assembles to name a candidate. f HIS BODY FOUND 111 A MARSH Bullet Hole Through Head and Evi : dences That' Indian Man Had Been Robbed and .KIIIed-4 Labor Lader. Warsaw, Ind., Nov. 12. With a bul let hole through the head, the body . of Ray Mason,, vieeipresident of tne National Horseshoers' Protective As- 8oclation, residing. In' Kalamazoo, Mich., was found in a marsh on the outskirta of tali city today. . ;. : The. hody .eyldentljad .been in the,, marsh for ; more ..tnan a lweeK That Mason had , been the victim of holcMip'hien ,Cnd k-e.WiMni. dragged to thei marsh : in an- effort to conceal the crime 'is the theoy pi detectives' who have been investigat ing the case. . . I Mason Vas the owner of consider able property in Itnion City, Ind., 100 miles south of Warsaw, and 'it is be lieved he was on his way from Kala mazoo to that city .when murdered. A revolver with which it is believ ed Mason was killed, was fouijd near the body. It was smeared with blood. No blood stains could be found near the body but- evidences that the man had been dragged along the ground could be discerned. 4 The purse of Mason was found in the pockets empty. ' A brother of Ma son, who arrived here today, said the labor official had considerable money in his possession when last seen. He said that there was no reason fdr sui cide and he knew of no enemies of his brother.. NATIONAL -HORSE SHOW. - .-: " : J : Disagreement In Coach RKad Race t - Events of First Day. New York, Nov.; ' 12. Disquaiinca tion of one-of the three entrants and a protest against the winner marked the coach road race of four in hands from Arrow Head Inn In the Bronx to Madison Square Garden this after noon, a contest held in 1 " connection with the opening of the ,26th National Horse iShow, ' . , Paul A. Sorg, swept in first in new record time of 26 minutes, 37 seconds, but J. H. Coutler, driving the Ayr shire Farm entry, which was second, protested that William Grant, driving tie Sirg entry, did notv handle the reins of Sorg's . team during the en tire nine miles of the trip, but alter nated with Frank E. Painter, an in vited guest. Grant and Palmer botn denied the charge, and were borne out by the" official representative . ox the National Association on the Soag coach. , Wihile -this controversy x was being waged - the association repre sentative abroad the Coulter coach reported that Morris E. Howlett, win ner of the race two years ago ha alternated with Coulter In handling the reins on the Ayrshire coach... Aa this protest-was official the entry was disqualified and Alfred" Vanderbllti who finished third, Jumped to ?cond place.- Coulter's protest against ' the winner, was referred to the secretary. for official action. 9 -. Sorg's winning team . was made up of the ' horses Queen of ; The . . Road; Tom Mountain, , Brother-; Jack, and Trip The Gutter. Vanderbilt drove Mlddletown ,; Belle, rt Roanoke. Lacy Golightly and Bertha. 5 Eachcoadn 'rarrled Beven passengers. " - "u The cup must be won twice by the same exhibitor, to become . his prope The horse show opened In Madison Square garden thisj afternoon with the With . tonight's ' session the'" show toOi:a . on its - accustomed -fair. Society blossomed forth and the' Judging be gan in earnest. 1 Even in v the early classes, the hlgbstandard of the en tries was noticeable. ' forecasting the fulfillments of 'advance claims of the most successful show ever; held her. ien : vym Keturn to Work Mbhda Pending . a Fi- nai AOjustment OTHER DRIVERS REMAIN 0 Chauffeurs, Cab and Other - Drivers , Contend .for RecognitMn of ln- P z Ion Bod Theft of Van and! ' Several Attacks. , V 1 (New YortC Nov. The strike 'of drivers and .helpers employed ,byl the transcontinental express companies, was formally declared oft this evening and it was announced at strike ' head quarters that Jthe men will return to work, on Monday, ' This will end one of the most serious labor disputes that the metropolitan district has ex perienced in years,- y- y. - The close of ie strike was brought about by the New Jersey stHbers who voted. late today to accept the terms upon' which the companies offered to take back the, men " " V r ' ' Thej agreement provides that the men shall be taken oack without dis crimination, except "fori, acts mof vio lence during the strike ' Each com-, pany win . take up with its employes the adjustment of wages and hours. Recognition of thir union, the chief If cue for which the strikers held out for several days, is not granted,-now : ever, but the open shop policy is to prevail. " v ;; "The agreement beewieen the express companies and their, employes does not effect the strikes of chauffurs, cab , drivers and drivers for depart ment stones, who at first quit work in sympathy with the , express .employes and later' presented demands in their Qwn", behalfr Secretary Forster, of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, declared, tonight that the fight of , the chauffeurs ,and cab drivers will continue iTuftll precognition. of tfX bold'.theff. ot;an.express van .Con taining merchandise worth' 150,000, and several attacks byj mobs on. drif : era , bf express and delivery wagons occurred' this afternoon giving the po lice -the hardest work . the) have, had for-'several days in connection withj the 'strike. , ; ' . Four strike breakers, were arrested, charged vith the theft of . the van which belonged to the Adams Express Company. ' - THE TELEGRAPH SNARL. ClaPperson Takes Issue With Clowry a the Policies. , (Special Star Telegram.) r . ' New -York, Nov. 12. 3eorge .Ciap perton, . vice-president of the . .Com mercial Cable Company, being asked in regard to the interview with Cdll Clowry, president of - the Western Union,- Telegraph (Company, jjeiauye to the announcement of Commercial Cable Company of reduced cable rates on plain letter messages said .Onr five-letter reduction plan is' entirely new. and entirely different from the x t . . w i t r " -'- oia pian menuonea oy v;oi. -viowry and his insinuation' as -to the Com mercial Cable Company attitude - is incorrect - The whole history of th Commercial Cable is to the contrary We .;are , theones who reduced cable rates from 50 cents' to 25 cents a word, and after two years and a half We are the ones who reduced cable ed to do the same. Colonel Clowry omitted to state that the chief object of the trip to London of Mr. HalL or the Western Union Telegraph Com pany and also vice-president of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company is not the question of rates but to ' combine all the English com panics with the Western Union in op position to the Commercial Cable Company; and might have added that Mr. Vail, , the president of the Amerr- can 'Telegraph and . Telephone torn nanr.. made a trio to. London (last Summer for the same purpose J : ,SEA'. FLIGHT GIVEN UP. McCurdy WHI Not Attempt Aero Trip From Ocean ' Liner. - .? New' .York; Nov. 12.-rJ. C. (Bua Mars' of the Curtiss staff, substituted for. J A. D. McCurdy, did not mase the : proposed 50 mile aeroplane' flight from, the deck 6f )the Hamoerg-Amet-lcan 'iner Pennsylvania today.' ;v oil can, sucked 'into the propeller, put the craft out of . commission " Just be fore ; the Pennsylvania left - her pier, but Mars Juck might' have been worse bad as It was. S, When the squalls ana black - clouds and snow flurries piay ed 1 1 tag with each other- across the lower harbor all afternoon, and ! as the sun - went down the wind rose i'J 50 miles ' an hour. : Either Mars must have Tlsked (his life , against heavy odds Or have confessed that his, task was beyond htm. V . :r ; : . v f- It was definitely announced tonight that the Hamburg-American line will not ., attempt v the - experiment again. 'Hie Winter weather is too uncertafn and by the time Summer comes again it' is probable; that the real will have been proved possible ; or impossible once for all from the decks of y war i ship. f ivl v . Jk;; ,;J UA -r- ---- '"f;" -f- - , - --A IP'- "V'jrr1- - s ' : , ' v' - r ' : - - M v . i1-1 s'.., I ''' 1 J ''- ' v O ',w 1 I ''-., i ' '" -( ,-l-r , ,f t , - p '-v- ---: V v.--. ' - t ' - c X.- . ' Judge John 'E. McCall is presiding Court at Jackson, Tinx,' which must ls reoaung on l.ws counts returneu is found guilty on all the counts it is HIGHWAYMEfl SECURE 55,000 Masked Men Held Up aymastr on WaV to Pay Off Kinv. In Massa . Cusetts Construction Camp ' .. . --Surrounded, . ; Great Barrington, Mass., Nov. 12. Three mashed .. . highwaymen farmed with rifiea; "seciirjpd 'between ;V?4,00U and 5,oeo lyJhstgJiionff otthe riost dartrihohMer uus- section Tor MnsBacnaectts. : v.v?..-, "The money comprised the 'payroll for two camps o? Italian laoorers Cm-' ployed by the Woons construction Company; on the construction of a new electric car line between- Great Barrington and EgremonL- The mon ey was "Carried , by the paymaster of the . construction company-i a ' man named v riines who rwas escorted by Deputy; Sheriff Fred Truesdell, and Carlton "Robinson, the latter a mem ber ' of - the; tcontracting i flrmv Fay master Hf nes and his . escort : were walking along the trolley line about two miles from Great Barirngton. As they ; approached a densely v wooded swamp they were confronted by three masked, men who levelled Titles . at them. v ,One 8t was fired at Hines, but it missed him. The robbers then de manded the money and it Was hand ed over 1 whereupon the rjubber dis appeared in the thicket. . ( Within half ah hour a posse of 200 armed men were on their way to the scene., .The swamp was soon sur rounded v. and tonight, the ' ' robbers were believed to be trapped: FIVE YEARS FOR BLACK. Connected at Chester, 8. C- ln Di) pensary Fraud Cases. 'Chester. S. C . Nov. 12. Fite vears hn the v penitentiary at. Columbia,! "without labor. was tne sentence passed on John Black this morning by Special Judge Ernest Moore. . The court . overruled a motion for a new trial, after hearing arguments. Notice j or an appeal to tne supreme courn 1 was, given immediately by counsel for the defendant and bail in the sum 01 110,000 was granted to Black, 'pend ing the determination of this appeal. ,The gond was arranged within, a few OUTLINES. Princeton lost her first game ot the' season yesterday to Yale,- .the score being 5 to 3. A. & M. defeated Richmond College and Carolina lost to Washington" and Lee Bruce Brown, an American, ; won the Grana Prize ' race ' at - Savannah yesterday. The race was exciting to the ' finish and was witnessed by 60,000 persons The New 'Jersey expressmen yes terday accepted the peace proposal of Mayor Gaynor and the companies and the strikers will! return to work to morrow With; a bullet, hole iiv the head, the. body of Ray Mason, theMa bor teader, was found in the outskirts of Warsaw, Indiana," yesterday Slemp, Kepnblican, carries the Ninth Virginia district' by a majority . of 231. as compared with) i.lOOTtwo yearB ago Seven persons were tilled at Kalamazoo, Michigan, last night when a train . struck a street jcajr- -New? York markets : ; Money on call; nomi nal time : loans' dull and .soft; spot cotton closed quiet,, middling uplanas 14.80, middling - gulf 15.05, flour t dull with price ; ? quotably unchanged ; wheat barely steady, No. 2 red 96 1-4 elevator and 96 fob. anoat; .corn Dereiy steady, Wo. 2, C5 5-8 elevatorr domes tic basis' to arrive ad 57 7-8 ffojb'iafloat; oats steady, standard white "38; tar pentle steady," ' ... .' at the session of the' United states decide whether tae -Standard Oil Co.,' J by the ffrand iury. it the company liable to a fins of over thirty mlliona. EIGHT ARE KILLED IH CRASH Express Train Struck Street Car In Michigan City Dozen Were I n ; jured.i-Details'of Fatal. Crash. Conductor Escaped. Kalamazoo, Mich., . ffov., -12-EIght persons, were klUed about .11 o.'clock tonight, when a fast .Michigan Central express trains runohigfi ve . honr .latfe hit a Maln Etricai.iAbout a dozen , Four bodies have' been removed from thes pilot of the engine so badly mangled that, recognition is impos sible. : 1 ' v ?' - .- . - : . Conductor -Vern JVan Horn had gone on 'the track to-flag his car ahead. Standing .near . the crossing was . a Btrlng of box cars. . Down the yards a' short distance was an engine stand ing near a water tank. Seeing no train in sight he motioned his car . ahead. He (had stepped aside to let his car pass . when' coming around the . bend at a .'terrific rate was the train. The crash came jnst as YanHorn stepped from' between tne train and his car He ascaped Injury. SCHENK WILL RECOVER. Millionaire Packer Who Was Poison ed By His Wife. ' ; Wheeling, W. Va., Nov. 12. John O. Schenk, the millionaire pork pacK er,' who. is alleged to nave been pois oned with arsenic will recover, ac cording , to his physician, Dr. P. L. Hupp tonight though his recovery will be slow- and tedious. -Mr Schenkrs condition will ; enable the ' prosecution and the attorneys for; Mrs; Schenk to agree upon a data r for .a. hearing upon charges against: the woman, who is in jail under allegations that she administered or caused to .be. admin istered in mineral water, the. arsenic or poison that caused the illness ot her husband. It is now expected that the hearing will be held " early next week and the woman wil be admitted to bail., All communication with Mrs. Schenk is forbidden and her '.attor neys tonight issued a statement de nying rumors in circulation that , ahe had made a confession of any wrong doing. Prosecuting Attorney v'J. B. Handlan, on the other hand, declares he has a strong case against the wo man and today asserted Mrs. Schenk was arrested 24 hours .earlier .than was planned because of a scene she created at the North Wheeling hos pital, last Wednesday, whehVshe In sisted on her husband being removed to their home oh - Wheeling -Island. :, 1uDsovmwom ; r - .Governor-Elect of Ohio and Possible Democratic Candidate for President. ' '.; ;i .' '11.. - , ' .... .'. 1 V Anti-American Demonstra- tion Resulted in Death and Injury Yesterday. . TOIDESERT HOMES Preparing to' Concentrate in Principal Hotels Several Hundreds of Ar- rests. Made Effort to 8top '.Trouble. ; Guadalajara, - Mexico, Nov. 12. Car los B. - Carolhers, a locally' prominent real 'estate dealer, shot and killed Joe Liza, a 14 year old Mexican boy. and wounded Prudenclo Chavez, a Gendarme, In' defending his home against a riotous attacK by Mexicans last night. ' Carolhers surrendered to the au thorities and was lodged in the" State penitentiary at midnight. ' Following a preliminary examination today he Tuesday morning. ' x . v Although- the entire police force, root and mounted, and tne tentn regi ment of cavalry were called out, riou ing which -began at 8 o'clock , In the evening was suppressed only after three ' hours of vigorous efforts and after considerable additional damage to -property had been done. iThe af fair was a continuation of the previous night's violence by students and. work men.-. V v . As on Thursday night, the mob traveled rapidly through the business' district, hurling rocks through the windows of, the American building. many of which had already been de moiisned ana naareacnea tne Amen can residence' section when they were overtaken by the soldiers and police. v Carolhers, who said at the police station that he , Is Mexican born at Saltillo, State of Coahuila, but whose Darents were Iioulslanlana, was guard ing his home in the western part of the city, the windows and doors of which had been broken in during the first night's r rioting, when the mob ' At the first alarm he took bis family he Opened ' fire with a . rifle as the crowd attempted to enter and wreck his home, t v 'The quick action, of .the police and soldiers prevented the mob from seiz Ine Carolhers and wreaking ven geance upon him. He surrendered and was taken to the penitentiary. : Caroiners is a brother ot G. C.Ja rolhers, American consular agent at -orreon, Coahuila. Ihe nroberty damage last night con Risfed nf demolished windows and store fronts, vaiuea at approximately $1,500." A number-of American families are preparing to abandon their homes in the .Buburbs and -concentrate in the principal hotels. The proprietors of the latter say they , are prepared to resist, by force of arms if necessary, anv attemnt to -enter. k The-American consulate Is guarded tonight by a- detachment of the tenth cavalrv. - The authorities insist that there will be no : recurrence of vio lence, and say that several hundred arrests have been -mace. 1 ' A StoD to Rlotlna. Mexico. City, Nov. 12. ."There will hA no further demonstrations m tnis city against the citizens of a friendly nation while I am governor. The dis turbances are over for good and all and under . no circumstances win permit a mass meeting of any nature bv the students, or any otner ooay In these -words Governor Guillermo Landa Escandon, of. the Federal dis trict, eave assurrances in an Interview tn the tvress tonight. 01 a continuance of the quiet, which has prevailed for two days following the recent disturb- i j.. tA. -i ances in iui tnj . VVH.ITE SLAVE TRAFFIC. Federal Grand Jury Returns True Bill Agaiiist Men at Charlotte. . (Special Star Telegram.) ' Ashevllle; N. C. Nov. 12. A Fede ral erand Jury here late today return ed a true bill against Joseph Napier, South Carolina; E. Charts Quaster, Baltimore, and 3harles Randolph, ail as Charles Brown, for alleged viola tions of the "White Slave Law." Na nier- was "owner of Napier's Four-in One show, "'which did business through central Carolina, and is accused of bringing girls from Baltimore to Win ston and1 elsewhere for Immoral pur- Doses, .also' conspiring to . bring ' six from Danville - to . North uaronna. There are about a.dozen counts in the bill Charging . inducing girls to leavo their homes for immoral purposes, de bauchery, prostitution, etc. (Among them being ' Maud -.. McClellan, from Baltimore,-and Marie Von Newendorf. The -indictment is the second found under the new law. The trial is set for December 5th at Greensboro. Hea-. vy penalties are ; Imposed by statute. Napier .'and Quaster are now . in Jail at Charlotte. V ; s ." - TH I RTY: FI8H ERM tti LQ8T. Fishing Fleet Caught In Severe Storm 1 '. in English Channel. Calais, France, Nov, 11. The e- Yere storm which raged In the Eng lish Channel and the Straits of Dover today,' caught unawares the Calais fishing fleet. Several of the vessels were sunk and 30 fishermen were . 5 ' ..' y 1. Ji .. " T e J IT ' V1 ' igcr w7corea upon in Aioie Game For First lime , -. .- . . This Season. III DEFEAT A. A M. Wins by Score of 50 to Or From Richmond Davidson De feats 8outh Carolina-i-Har-vard Wlns Others. Princeton, N. J., Nov. 12.--Yale 5 ; ' Princeton 3. The Princeton football eleven today, lost an opportunity of a life time, an oportunlty to go through the football ; season of 1910 without defeat and pos- sibly without being scored upon, but . they lacked aggressiveness, a.charac .teristlc sd pronounced in previous Vi gers elevens. '' ' Princeton was outplayed In every. , department oi the game with the pos-' . Bible exception; of kicking, Ballou's : high spirals carrying further than. those of Howe, the Yale crack. Prince- . ton was fortunate to score. Had it , not been for the fumbling of Daly in the first period the home eleven would i have been unable to get close enough for Pendleton to try for a goal from placement. . , , Pendleton was the disappointment pf the game. Compared with Yale's Interference, Princeton's was infan- tile. The Yale ends-broke through,, the Princeton line time and' time ' .again and threw, the fleet footed Pen dletpn. before he could get started. On ' the other hand Yale's line was her; strongest point. : ' Neither eleven showed anything out ' of the ordinary., Aside fro,m .the, for- ' ward pass there were no new football evolutions. ' Yale's best ground gain-, er was the fake-kick. . HoweA would drop back apparently; waiting" for the! ball and either Kistler pr Daly. would; take the pass and plough through thei : Princeton, tackle ; or between tackle 1' CAROUIM OOWII and," ':'nd.' "vTh'e'.'Yorwardipass 'whlcfc'' . .7tpwy::wl-H ; enabled Yale .to .turn the. tldfl ;of de . eat into a wave of victory was bean- . tifully executed.. -' Yale had ,' worked the ball well down t the .field, the ad-' Vantage being partly due to to "fumble1 when within 20 yards , of the . i'xlnce tdn goal on the extreme' east side of, the field, Howe dropped to one side and sent the ball directly Into Kllpat-. rick's hands. , All the latter had to do was to t6uch the ground, as' he was, standing on the Princeton goal line. The touchdown was made at the cor- . ner and the kick out at a bad angle . was missed. Those five points, how-, ever, were sufficient to win, and dur-' ing the remainder of the game Yale, played safe. In the last period the two teams kicked repeatedly, Prince-( ton In the hope of a Yale back fumb' ling, and Yale in an effort to keep the' dangerous Tigers from within strik-' ing distance of her goal. Three times 'Pendleton tried to boot the leather ' between the goal posts. ' It was the. last hope. The Tigers could not gain consistently aeainst the strong a ale .line and a goal from placement if sue cessful meant a score of six to five. Two of Pendleton's attempts went twide of the mark, but a third kick Struck, one of the posts and missed going over by about six inches. Princeton scored a few minutes af- ,ter play began in the opening period. Daly lumoied one 01 uauou kicks and Princeton secured the hall within ,twenty yards of the covered goal. Af ter two attempts to advance the ball on end runs, Pendleton dropped back for a try at goal from placement. He was directly in front ot the posts and' the great throng was hushed as Bal lous knelt to hold the ball. Ballou poised the spheroid and Pendleton sent it straight and true over the bar. ' The day was ideal for football. ; White, who played left end on th ,Prlnceton eleven played a- remarkable jgame. He was down. under kicks like ightnlng and his tackling was hard , ,and sure. ' ' . ' ' - ' Howe ran the Yale team perfectly. On the other hand Ballou, after he had failed to gain with , Pendleton, -reemed puzzled. . There was no varie ty, of plays and Princeton, apparently lost lfeart . .' ... ' ' Yale quite the contrary, grew faster as the game progressed,, and, being able to gain ground consistently kept the Princeton eleven on the defensive until near the . close . of .the contest, when the blue was . satisfied to play . sure. More than 30,000 persons wit nessed the game. -. A. & M. Game. .Raleigh, N. C., Nov.: 12. Under' Ideal weather "conditions. A. & M. hit )ier best -form today and ran up ,a score of 50 . to 0 . against oAicnmona College. At no . time did the Virgin ians have, a look-in, being too light for the Farmers. Richmond executed suc cessfully .two attempts - at forward passes; no attempts, were made by A. The Interference running by A. & M. was the. prettiest ever seen on the local field. . The machlnenke preci sion with which A; & M; plays were piled off has not been seen before in . Raleigh.- The showing made by the backfield . today proves that A. & 1IL ha? the fastest backfield in her histo ry, Carl and Robertson getting away, for 50 and 60-yard runs six times. ' - ' ' ' '- i if 'b A i t -!f i. '.It 1 r. 1 .r .r I- " J, H ,r I' ! . hi , ' I..- i, I ,f I r v ' f 1 I ! .1 - 'Ft V T 4 r 1 ' I- t : Vi v.. A
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 13, 1910, edition 1
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