FO'STi 1 For North Caro lina: Showers. Temperature -for taapasc 24 hours: Max. 82; Min. 62. ID VoL XII EAXEIG-H. jET. C. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1903 No. 129 r time ofJL Dsmocrats Expect to Carry Maryland and Rhode Is . land-Signs in the Air In- j : dicate the Success of Tammany in N. Y. "HI THOnAS J. PBSfB "Washington, Oct. 31. Special TTash- ingtoh, always the center of political interest, is patching eagerly the result of Tuesday's elections. National "nter e?t aiT-1 national significance as. weii at taches to the result in several of the state?. Especially is this true in New York and Maryland, where the contests have been fiercely waged. There j is some little interest in the issue' in Mas parhusetts, which is due largely to the uneasiness of Republicans ovor the fate of Governor Bates Democrats have a very small chance there, and that is all. In Rhode Island, the Democracy Is fighting to retain its hold upon tine state. They are working hard also to make gains in the legislature so as to encompass next year the defeat of Sen ator Aldrich for re-election if possible. There is practically no interest in the Ohio contest, for the Republicans are conceded everything. In MarylaVid the Democrat are counting on a lo.OCO ma jority. Senator Gorman is reported to 'lave said yesterday that the majority .tyould "6e in the neighborhood of 10,000. The legislature is conceded to the Dem crats, and the fight is over the gov-'tr-n-orship. , A number f "Washington correspond ents have been in New York the past sveek, and nearly all report that the tide is with Tammany. The campaign In the metropolis : has been the most spectacular anywhere in the nation. With a practically united press array td against the organization, the Indi ra tions point to its success. N. O. Mes senger, the well known political writer for the Star, who has been :in New York several days sizing up the situa tion, wired his paper today: "Prior to an election there is often obsei-ved an Intangible drift of surface sentiment one way or the other. Peo ple say 'it is -the air,' without being ible to expressly define It. Well, It jeems to be 'In the air, that Tammany Abuhcto We Should President Appoints Thanks giving Day and Exhorts J the People to Rest j From Labsr and 4 Join in Devout Observance k Washington, Oct. 31. The annual thanksgiving proclamation of the pres ident was made public today as fol lows: "By the president of the United States of America A proclamation. ' The season is at band when, accord ing to the custom of our people, it falls upon the president to appoint a day of praise and thanksgiving to God. "During the last yea-the Lord has dealt bountifully with us, giving us peace at home and abroad and the chance for our citizens to work for their welfare unhindered by war, fam ine or plague. It behooves us not only to rejoice greatly because of what has been given us, but to accept it with a solemn sense of responsibility, reali zing that under heaven it rests with ourselves to show that we are worthy to use aright what has been entrusted to our care. In no other place and at no other time has the experiment ot government of the people, by the peo ple, for the people, been tried on so vast a scale as here 4n our own coun try in the; opening years of the twen tieth century. Failure would not only be a dreadful thing for us, but a dread ful thing for all mankind, because it wouid mean loss of hope for all who believe in the power and the righteous ness of liberty. Therefore, in thank ing God for the mercies extended to us In the past, we beseech him that he may not withhold them In the future, and that our hearts' may "be roused to war steadfastly for good and against all the forces of evil, public and pri vate. We pray for strength and light, 10 that In the coming years we may, ith cleanliness, fearlessness and wis lom, do our allotted wTork on the earth such maner as to show that we are aot altogether unworthy of the bless 'ngs we have received. "Now, therefore, I, Theodore Roose velt, president of the United States, do hereby designate as a day of general thanksgiving Thursday the 26th of the coming November, an&fdo recommend that throughout the land the people cease from their wonted occupations, and in their several homes and places tf worship return thanks unto Al mighty God for his manifold mereies. -"In witness whereof, I have hereunto Jet my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. BattkJMi teen Is in the lead. One hears that in the streets, in the casual conversation, in the elevators and in. the street cars. It is especially prevalent in the cafes and hotel lobbies." l 1 "; President Roosevelt granted a par don this week, - under rather unusual circumstances. The prisoner commit ted murder more than forty years ago. He was a military prisoner and was imprisoned for life, ; but escaped and has since led a, respectable IrTe in Tennessee-has raised a family and is held in . hijjh esteem by the community wherein he resides, despite the fact that his past history' seemed to be well knowrf. The nameof the man is with held on account of his present good standing. The case- is similar to the one presented to Governor Russell at the close of his administration. The applicant, in that case is a snerlff In a western state, 'who is very anxious to return to his old home in North Caro lina, but can not do! so. - Tljere are four hundred rural free delivery, routes in North Carolina, and with those applications for additional routes ' which are- under consideration It is more than likely there will soon be 500 'routes in the state. With this additional number North Carolina will still be- behind the quota to .which, she is justly entitled. It t&kes pull, and Republican pull at that, to get rural free delivery or anything else from this administration. 1 Up to October 1st there .had been 4)99 applications .for rural routes filed from North Carolina with the department,' and 2S2 were re ported adversely. The routes are; dis tributed through the (Congressional dis tricts as follows: First 33, Second 34, Third 47. Fourth 4S, Fifth 51, Sixth 43, Seventh 26. Eighth 44, Ninth 46, Tenth 28. . ' ' An afternoon paper, discussing the inroads made by matrimony among the venerable unmarried senators, enu merates the names of those who! are still eligible to follow in- the footsteps of Senators Piatt, Stewart and Depew. The list is quite a formidable one, but the information of the paper in ques tion wrould appear to be seriously de fective if . It is as wide of the truth as the following statement, which it contains: j "Senator Overman, a .; new senator, has no Washington acquaintances who know whether he is single or married, or a widower." - ' I Give Thanks "Done at the City of Washington, this 31st day of October in the year of our Lord, 1903, and of the independence of the United , States the one hundred and twenty-eighth. "THEODORE ROOSEVELT. "By the president: "JOHN HAY, Sec. of State." THE ONLY DIFFERENCE It Was Only a Question of Which Loved the More Chicago, Oct. 31. Commander Booth Tucker of the Salvation Army, last evening, standing beside the bier of his wife at the Old Princess Rink, before what was probably the greatest throng of people that ever sat under that! roof, said: j "The only thing that my wife and I ever disagreed upon was which loved the other most. Our life was a. per petual courtship. A man in an audi ence once asked me if . I wou.d love God if my wife should be killed in a railway wreck, as, his had been. If that man were here I would say to him, -Though. he slay me yet will I trust him.' " ! SLEEPING SIGKNESS Congo Negroes Furnish Ma terial for Experiments by Doctors Paris, Oct. 31. Three Congo negroes who were brought to Paris are under going treatment for the mysterious sleeping sickness. One, who is in the first stage, does not present any symp toms. He eats well and does not suf fer. If anything- he sleeps too well. The second, who is in an advanced stage, is wide awake at one moment and then in a f3W minutes Telapsed in to a stupor from; which he can not be awakened. He dees nothing but eat and sleep. The third, a-boy of 13 or 14, of a cannibal tribe, has shown the pe culiar result that the disease neu tralizes the effects of cocaine.! The boy had a tumor on the back of his neck. After an injection of more than twice the orcinary amount, of cocaine necessary for a patient, the flesh was stiH so sensitive that three assistants were required to hold him w-hile the tumor was. being -removed. Dr. Wurtz, wh 4 superintended the experiments with carbolic acid and ar senic, hopes later on to obtain a spe cial serumHe does not think, that the sleeping sickness! is caused" by a mi crobe but . by a tripanasome belonging onsext luesaayi It so happens that Mrs. Overman has spent much time here and a great many of her admirers and friends have had a' laugh over the incident.. "j General Manager ; Ackert of the Southern Railway has announced the following promotions on that system!: O. D. Killebrew,., to . be assistant su perlntendent, with office at Columbia, S. C; W. A. Fort, to be resident enf gineer, succeeding Mr. Killebrew; CL P King, to be trainmaster, Charlotte to Jacksonville, Including Columbia temil nals, vice W. L. Williamson, promoted. W. M. F. Carter of North Carolina has been promoted from a $1,400 to a 1,600 position In the office of the au tator of the treasury. State Chairman Rollins has recom- i mended . for appointment as pastmas- ter at Seaboard, N. C, Mrs. Mary Gajf. The former postmaster .was a lady. She recently married, and this neces sitated a re-appointment. While ihe failed of this she has not given up, find now charges that her probable sucessor is of Democratic proclivities. i Police Sergeant' Clements.fwho came here from Madison county, - is under charges preferred by Senator Mc Comas' private" secretary. Officer Cle ments arrested the young man fxr speeding in an automobile and ' using profanity. Clements will have a hear ing before a special board in a few days. Col. Paul B. Means, who has been here this week, remarked that North Carolina 'Democrats are entirely well of the slxteen-to-one fever. Many in side the party, he stated, haye come around to look upon Grover Cleveland as about the strongest man the Demo crats could nominate for the presi dency. "I am one of these," Col. Means observed, "but I don't believe he will accept the nomiantion." William Boyd of North Carolina has been elected president of the first year medical class at Columbian Univer sity. ' Miss Willi Emily Ray, daughter of General James M. '. Ray of Asheville, Is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Tomlinson here. j Marshall Mott, Jr., has applied for a position as page in the senate. He has the endorsement of several sena tors. . ; '' to the same group of parasites which attack cattle. Dr. Brampt, who brought thenegroes to Paris, says he has inoculafed a monkey which, after exhibiting all , the symptoms observed in the human being, died. A quantity of parasites were discovered in the blood with which he is experimenting on dogs and other animate with a view of obtaining a serUm. Killed in a Mine Farmington, 111., Oct. 31. Three men were killed and four injured, one of them severely in an accident today in the New Sam coal mine. The men had been lowered in the cage to the bottom of the shaft, and entering j a mule car, started to ride to their work. In making a turn near a switch the car jumped the track, ran into the side of the entry, knocking down the prop. This loosened a mass of siate which dropped on the men. " " I FARMS FOR GERMANS Migration to Be Started From ; Michigan to Louisiana New Orleans, Oct. 31. The Southern Pacific railway has purchased the Jus tine & : Kramer sugar plantations, in St. Mary's parish, the sugar bowl of Louisiana, and wil cut it up into fifty and one hundred acre farms for a col ony of Germans who will move from Michigan to Louisiana this winter. The first colony will consist of one thou sand Germans. Most of them have been settled in this country several years and they believe they can j do better In the south than in the north. They will displace two hundred ine groes. The land agent of the Southern Pacific is also in negotiation and will probably make other purchases and trfey will be divided up into small farms for white settlers. WANTED TOO MUCH Robber Who Wanted More Gpt More Than He Bar gained For. Mount Airy, -N.j C, Oct. 31. Spe cial. News has just reached here of an attempted double robbery in the western part of this countv. Mr. T. Snow, a farmer and merchant and also postmaster at Zephyr, wls in his store day before yesterday inj the "broad open day time," when a stran-. ger drove up in a buggy with a double barrel shotgun. He went in the store, drew the gun on Mr. Snow and j de manded his money. At first Mr. Snow refused. Seeing that words did j not avail the stranger fired on Mr. Snow, but was at so close range' that j the charge only, burned Mr. now's hair on the back of his head. Not caring fo risk another shot, Mr. Snow proceeded to shell out the cash drawer belonging to the store, which ; fortunately was small. " Not finding -this amount suffi cient to meet his demands, the stran ger ordered Snow to bring out the post office cash, which was kept In the same building. Still not satisfied he force 1 Snow, at the muzzle of the' gun, to get in the buggy with him and go to a neighbor's to . borrow a sufficient amount to satisfy his , demands. To this Snow quietly agreed, until' reach ing the neighbor's the neighbor re fused to grant the loan, whereupon the 'stranger again brought the gun into play. This time it was drawn' on the neighbor instead of Snow. This gave Snow his first opportunity. He sprang on the robber, and with the assistance of the neighbor they overpowered him. disarmed and roxed him in his own buggy, brought hina to Dobson. the county seat, and ; landed him j in jail to await the criminal court nftxt month. I i v ':' . Graft Ridden Town Minneapolis, Oct. 31. The Hennepin county grand jury has presented its re port to the district court, and accord ing, to its; report, graft permeates the city council. The report declares that there are aldermen who block legisla tion until they are paid their price. The grand jury report lis the most scathing arraignment of Trrjunicipal government ever drafted in .Minneapolis. PAINT IN THE WATER One Child Dead and Another Cannot Recover; A ; Wilmington, N. ! C, Oct. 31. Special. As a result of dringing Water which was . poisoned by paint, the four year old daughter of Mr. Charles McMillan, an architect . of this city, died this morning, and an infant son lies at the point of death. Rain water runnier off a freshly painted roof and emptying into a cistern which furnished the sup ply of drinking water for the family, was. the cause of the trouble. The children drank the water and it caused inflammation of the stomach. Medical skill was j powerless to relieve the in tense suffering of the children. The boy can not recover.: ... PRESENTMil?MADE Indictment of- Blltmdre Offi cials Expected at Next j Court Asheville, N. C, Oct. 31. Special. It was ascertained today that the grand jury, which .this week 'investigated -ru- fmors of irregularities try former em ployes of 'Blltmore , estate; did make presentments before it was discharged yesterday and "that it is morally cer tain that bills of indictment against Geo. Tennent and D. C. Champlain, charging them with misappropriation of funds, ! wifl be ; presented by the so licitor to the next grand jury, together with the testimony given by E. J. Har din and F. A. Hull when summoned be fore the grand jury Thursday. It was rumored ; today that Champlain had left the state. A gentleman here from Black Mountain this morning, when asked concerning this rumor, Ksaid that j Champlain left there on the early mor jning train about two weeks ago, os tensibly for New York; and that so far as he knew had not returned. DURHAM LINING UP FOR THE ELECTION - The General Impression Is That Prohibition Will Win . by a Safe Majority Durham, N. C, Oct. 31. Special. As the "local option election draws near, which will be held Tuesday, both sides are warming up in the fight and cam paign. During last night and this mor ning the ' anti-prohibition side distrib ute. large number of circulars in fa vor of the saloon, sid.e. Today there were all kinds of rumors and reports in the streets and there were frequent arguments, all showing that the cam paign is to close with more heat and interest than was expected a short while i : agot ! ' . Tomorrow afternoon the anti-saloon sid will hold a mass meeting at the Academy of Music. This meeting will be addressed by Rev. R. C. Beaman, president of the ; anti-saloon league. The meeting has been well advertised and It is" expected that there will be a jlargfr number of people in attendance. Monday night both sides will hold a rally at least that is the program at this time. The anti-saloon side will hold a rally in I the Academy and this meeting will be addressed by Mr. N. B. Broughton of Raleigh. The other jside say that they will also hold a mass meeting that will be addressed by ! well lenown business men and citi zens of the town. On the eve of lhe election it looks like the anti-saloon ticket will win1 by a good mc,'ority. The majority, how ever, will not be as large as some have been expecting.! There are pver sixteen hundred people registered, but the vote will not be heavy. Many think that 'twelve hundred votes; on the outside j' will be the number cast. If the vote In iioi over elavea ar twelve hundred then it Is estimated by many who have watched the campaign closely, that the majority for the anti-saloon ticket will be in the neighborhood' of one hundred and fifty. Still there ar many who claim that the anti-prohibition side will win when the votes are counted. Tomorrow a 'prohibition, . or temper ance, sermon will be preached from every pulpit in the city. Some of these sermons will be preached in the morn- ing and others at night. LICENSE TAX IS HELD VALID - Judge Brown Renders a De cision Against the Ar- mour Pdcking Co. Washington, nJ C, Oct. 31. Special. Judge Brown today in the superior court rendered an oDinion in the case of the state of North Carolina and New Hanover county against the Ar mour Packisjg Company. The plain tiffs brought suit to enforce payment of $500 license tax to the county and a similar amount to the state for each of the years of 1901 and 1902. The ruling was made under section 91 of the reve nue bill, the defendant being j a cor poration1 of New; Jersey, having one million dollars capital stock. j I A jury trial was waived by both sides and it was agreed for Judge Brown to find the facts, which are stated. The court holds that I the revenue act. In cluding section 9i of the laws of 1901, was enacted with! a substantial compli ance with the constitution and "is valid and in force. Plaintiffs are given $1, 000 judgment, together with the, 4costs. Hon. John D. Bellamy, counsel for the defendant, appealed to the supreme court, j Judge ' Brown's judgment, by agreement, will constitute the case on appeal.! A similar case against Swift & Company will also be determined in the same way. A 'third suit against the Standard Oil Company is continued.- i PHYSICAL LABORATORY Additional Equipment in the Facilities of the University Chapel Hill, N. C, Oct. 31. Special. Among the recent improvements j-at the University that go tar toward increas ing the facilities of the, institution Is the additional. eQUlpmeni. to the: phys ical laboratory, for which a speqial ap propriation was inade by the last gen eral Assembly, j . - : j During the summer, four ' rooms oh the basement floor of Alumni Hall were fitted up to accommodate the increase in the equipment of the physical labor atory. ; j ' j Six typical Westinghouse and Gen eral Electric direct anl alternating cur rent generators and motors are being' Installed; also a rotary converter, a high potential testing transformer, a storage battery, with the various acces sories, such as a testing set, transform ers, volt meters, ammeters, waft me ters, electro-dynamometers, a tachom eter, etc. Orders for several desirable pieces of apparatus have been 'placed, some of which are being imported. Among the latter are a telescope, a spectroscope, an earth inductor' and a tangent galvanometer. An electric fur nace room is yet to be put in order for the two, furnaces already received. A motor driven lathe and various tools and material add to the usefulness of the work shop. With its improved equipment, the department of physics is prepared to offer courses for which students have heretofore had to go to institutions in other states. ! Change of Editors Asheville, N. C, Oct. 31. Special. Howard A. Banks has. accepted the po sition of editor of the Gazette-News, the present . editor of , the paper, Mr. W. A. Hildebrand, having arratiged to remain in Washington during the ses sion of congress as representative of this paper and Of the Charlotte; Obser ver. Asheville is Mr. Banks' home, and. it seems peculiarly fitting that he should link his fortunes with an Ashe ville paper. ! The auditorium committee is raising f undsv the six thousand dollar mark having, been passed. This practically insures the erection of a new edifice. Tied Up and Robbe'd Greensboro, N. C. Oct. 31. Special. A white man. giving his name as Tur ner and his place of residence Staley, was held up by three negroes in Buch anan street, near the depot, last night and robbed of! a new overcoat and his 'purse containing $25. His screams brought a crowd to his assistance. He ; was found tied to a fence and; his .as sailants had fled. He said he had been drinking and w lanted to .go to the de named m ,the pot, offering; toj pay a negro 'Charles Simmons to show h way; that Simmons started with him, , but -turned him! over to two other ne ; groes who proceeded to do him 'up; The : police were unable to find Simmons last night or today. Russian Naval Expenditure Berlin, Oct. 3J.-A ' dispatch from St. Petersburg to the Lokal "Anzeiger says Russia has decided to assign jH,CX 0 roubles in addition to regular naval budget, for an , Increase; of the fleet and 3,000,000 roubles for the forti fications at Port Arthur. jfoott lal . Killed A Passenger Train Ratwnto Coal Cars Fourteen Stu dents Were Instantly Killed and Many More : 'Received Injuries Indianapolis, Ind. Oct. ; 3L In a head-end collision between a Big Four special bearing 954 passengers and the team from Lafayette; for the Purdue Indiana foot ball game, scheduled to take place here this afternoon, and a cut of coal cars pushed by a switch engine, near the old gravel pit oppo site the west end of Eighteenth, street, cn the Chicago dis vision tracks, four-j teen persons were killed outright and ebout twenty were seriously- JnjxiredJ Fully fifty other person received minor ) Injuries. The trains came together with a sreat crash which wrecked three of the passenger cars, in addition to the engine and tende of the special and two, or three of the. coal care. f A scene of Indescribable confusion and horror followed. The first coach on the special was reduced to kindling wood. The second coach was thrown down a fifteen-foot embankment into the gravel pit, and .the; third poach was thrown from the track to the west -side and badly wrecked, j The coal cars ploughed their way into the engine and demolished it. The coal tender was tossed to one side ) and turned over. ! The shrieks and groans of the injured were frightful. A wild effort on the part of the imprisoned passengers to escape from the wrecked car followed. The shouts and cries for help were mingled with the agonizing groans of those who could not help themselves, Immediately following yie wreck the students and others turned their atten tion to the work of rescuing the in jured, and by the time the first am- bulances arrived many of the dead and suffering young men had j been ; carried out and laid on the grass on : both sides cf the track, i The I dead ! The LuGk of a a Ve Keiituekv the Gh rhe Carolina Made a Plucky Con ; test Against' Odds and i Came out With Every- i thing Except Win- ning Side of the Score ) Greensboro, N. C, Oct. 31. Special. Carolina and Kentucky played one of the hardest' games of the season at Cone Athletic Park this afternoon be fore an audience of twelve hundred people. After fifty minutes of battling the game resulted in. a score, of six to five in Kentucky's : favor. Carolina scored in the first half in about ten minutes by continuously battering Kentucky's line. The try for goal fiuterX leavine the score five to noth ing in Carolina's favor. This ended; the scoring In the first half. Kentucky scored in the last half and kicked an easy goal. This endedfhe scoring, both sides having possession of the ball off and on during the remainder of the half. Carolina is neither ashamed of nor disheartened by the score, as it was j only' by Kentucky's luck in kicking ; goal that turned a virtual victory Into j defeat. Kentucky came with the rep utation of being professionals in every sense of the word and certainly sus tained it well. Kentucky's play dur ing the entire game was characterized hy slugging, kicking and. wrangling j at every point. The line up of the two teams is as follows: ! Carolina Stewart, C; Perry, L. G.; Albright, R. G.; Jones- (Capt.), R. T.; Donnelly, L. T.; Cox, R. E.; Foust,LJ E.; Berkeley and Mann, L. H. B.; Rob eson, R. H.; Hester, F. B.; Engle, Q. B. Kentucky Miller, C; Kelly, L. G.; Nikcl, R. G.; Wallace, R. T.; Wood with (Capt.), Lv-T.: Thompson, R. E.; Simpson, L. E.; Cantrell, R. IL B.; H. Yancy, L. H. B.; Weir, F. B.; jW. Yancy, Q. B. u Officials MacRae, umpire; Joel Whitaker,' . referee; Johnson, time keeper. Carolina's stars were Foust, Berkley, Robeson, Ijonnelly and - Jones. " The Yancy brothers and Thompson played brilliant ball for Kentucky. Coach ; Ol cott expressed himself as being well satisfied with Carolina's playing, not withstanding the fact that the game wentto Kentucky. j VirrinJa. Outplay fvldsB ! 1 Charlotte, N. C, Oct. 31. Special Today's game between Davidson and Virginia resulted in a score of 22 to 0 in Virsrinia's favor. I The features of the .game were! the playing of McCoy, Vadue and Gipon for Davidson and Counsell for ylr fjinia, The Virginia, team outweighed iE Co were removed last. Several spring wagons belonging to teamsters 11 vine in the neighborhood were pressed Into service and the r dead were , carried away as fast as they could b taken from the wreck. The following Trer taken from the debris dead: W. II. G rube.! substitute player, But ler, Ind. !;!' ! v. ." ..- : Walter Furr, member ot the team Texas. E. C. Robertson, assistant . coach. . Walter Roush,t Pittsburg, aubstitute R. J. Powell, Corpus Christ!. Tex. W. ! D. Hamilton, center , rush. La fayette. ' ' v.vi Walter Robertson. ' j Gabriel S. Drollinger (beheaded). "- Sam Squibb, Lafayette. Jay Hamilton, substitute player Huntington, Ind. N. R. Howard, Lafayette Patrick McClair, Chicago, asslatanl coach. - 1 Samuel Trultt, Noblesyille player. . O. L. Shaw, Lafayette. Many of the bodleswere so mangled that they could be Indentlfled only by; letters and other papers on their per sons.) . 1 , t ; The cause ofthe accident has. not been explained.: The engineers of bothy trains say they had the right of way, and were proceeding without knowl edge that another train was on th track. There is a sharp curve wher the wreck occurred, and many freight cars were standing on tho side tracks, this further obscuring tha view. Down town three miles; away 1,209 cheering students had arrived on special train from Bloomlngton, Ind.p with the sturdy boys of the Indiana University eleven eager for the contest on the gridiron. They poured out of the train with bands playing and color flying, to be met with the news of tha ' tragedy of their rivals from , Purdue. Instantly bands ceased, colors were . lowered and hidden beneath coatsw Tears followed, laughter, and college yells'j faded into mournful expressions of sincere and heartfelt sympathy. The incoming Bloomlngton crowd broke into sad and silent groups jand gather- ed at street corners. The proposed, game; has been indefinitely postponed. i Davidson by many pounds. Counsel! was by far the star of the game, as he did all the playing for Virginia. Dav idson! made gains repeatedly but could not! reach the goal. ' , Charlotte, N. C, Oct.! 31. Special. The shaggy haired Presbyterians frofm Davidson proved themselves no match today for the heavy pig skin chasers of the University of Virginia, When" the! dust cleared away It disclosed this tale :j Virginia 22. Davidson 0. A great crowd witnessed the game i j Cantriu on ik GrUlrtn Princeton, Oct. 31.tPrInceton smoth ered Cornell today by the score of 44 to 0. It Is the most overwhelming de-" feat the OTange and black has admin istered to the,-, Ithacans since the modern game of foot ball came Into; vogue. ' Franklin Field, Pa.. Oct. 31. Penn sylyania defeated Buckner, 47 to 6, to day in a game which abounded Jn fierce line plunging by the. Quakers. ' ! New York, Oct. 31. Strewn and scattered, over the field were the Columbia foot ball players at the Polo Grounds today, at the finish, of 'their game with the Yale team, which wrecked the home team like a ram pant tornado. At the end of the first half Yale ball half the score was 0 to 0, although was playing two to one better than . Columbia, In j the secpnd the Columbia men were merely chips borne along by a darklblu flood. Yale's final score was 23, Columbia 0. Annapolis, Md., Oct. 31. Pennsyl vania State eleven won today from the navy team by the score of 17 to 0. West Point, N. Y., Oct. 31. The Uni versity, of Vermont and the cadets played burlesque" foot ball today. The final score was Army 20, Vermont 0. Providence, P.. I., Oct. ' 3L Will lama met a decided defeat at the hands vt Brown today, the latter wtnninff by, 22 to 0. . 1 nihr Pt ! Ctnti ' At Hamilton, ', N. T. Colgatd 23, Rochester 5. r At .Lancaster, Pa. Franklla andf Marshall 0. Swarthmore 17. At Carlisle Ihlgh 17, Dickinson C. At Schenectady, N. Y. Union 12, Rensselaer 11. . At Worcester, Mass. Holy Cross 20, Amherst 0. , At Hanover, N. H. Daxmouth 34, Wesleyan 6. At Minneapolis Minnesota e, Mlchl-ean6.-- ' 1 ' ' , '. I At New Brunswick, N, J. Rutgerf 28, Stevens 6. At Madison, : Wis. Wisconsin 6 LChicago It. At Champaign, III. Illinois 11. Nor tft western 12. At Oberlin OberUn. 5. Case 1C. - ' At Iowa City Iowa 6, Nebraska 17. At Syracuse, N. Y. Syracuse 47, Niagara 0. ' , : ' j At Cincinnati University of Circiri cati Q,Kmea II. E1ick "1 t -