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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 1

Publication:
The Boston Globei
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Boston, Massachusetts
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1
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the BARGAINS Thtm BARGAINS Advtrtlsed Today Be Sure to Read the BARGAINS Ads. WANTS 111 i il Be Sur9 t0 R88d 1He WANTS Want in Today's WANTS VOI LXYIII-NO 149. PRICE FIVE CENTS. BOSTON, SUNDAY MORNING-. NOVEMBER 26.

1905-SIXTY-TWO PAGES. thXKc. 6-0 REFORM PLAY ABOLISH FOOT nir une ivi Chancellor MacCracken Calls isplay by Crimson Turns Tide of Battle Against Her in Second Half. On Pres Eliot to Help. Harold P.

Moore of Union College Killed on Ohio Field. Muffed Elis Get Ball on i Punt-Then They Rally. Are Outplayed Up to This Point in Game. 1 -r- I 1 1 i KEvT YORK, Nov 25 Harold P. Jloore, right halfback of the Union college football team, dled In Fordham hospital at 6:20 today of Injuries he received in the second half of the game with the New York university eleven, on Ohio field.

University Heights, this afternoon. Chancellor MacCracken of New York university was informed of the tragedy tonight. The chancellor Immediately tent the following telegram to Prea Eliot of Harvard: "May I not request, in view of the tragedy on Ohio field today, that you will invite a meeting of university and college presidents to undertake the reform or abolition of football. (Signed) "Henry M.MacCracken." The chancellor said: "1 am Inexpressl-Et pained and shocked to hear of Mr Jfoore's death. I have within the last days said to members of the university faculty I have only waited for some of the older and larger universities to lead." to "favor either the abolition or the complete reform of football.

1 repeated this at the last meeting; of the faculty. I -have not felt It to be the duty of New York university to take the lead In this matter. We have discouraged every attempt to play football on a great scale here and have never allowed the desire to win to affect our requirement of moderation." The play that caused Moore's death was witnessed by 1600 people, but none knew that there had been a serious accident until the young football player was carried unconscious from the field. Even while he lay dying the game continued until the New Yorkers scored a victory over Rochester, 11 to 0. Young Moore was one of the most brilliant players on the visiting team.

He was 19 and came from Ogdensburg, Y. He had undertaken one' of his star plays when he met the injuries that caused his death. Union had the ball and was slowly taking it down the field to close tackle formation. Half way to the goal another player passed the ball to Moore. The other players formed a flying wedge behind him.

He was being forced through the opposing line as if shot from a catapult when he threw up his hands, dropped the ball and fell. There was a mad scramble for the Continued on tfac Twelfth Page. Watched Great Struggle is by 43,000 Enthusiasts. TODAY'S GLOBE CONTENTS, i TODAY'S GLOBE CONTENTS. BURR CATCHING THE PUNT WHICH HARVARD CLAIMED HE HEELED IN FOR A FREE KICK, BUT REFEREE McCLUNG WOULD NOT ALLOW IT AS BURR CAUGHT THE BALL QUILL CHARGED INTO HIM AND BROKE HIS NOSE.

All Agree It Was the Greatest Football Game Ever Played Weather Perfect and the Scene at Soldiers Field Was a Picture. THE SEEING JOLT FOR ELIS. ressed Crowd With Bright Page 2. Ex-Mayor Charles H. Coulter expelled by the Brockton socialist club.

Wylie C. Burns, missing Maiden broker, found in New York. George Chllds of Newport in small skiff renders assistance to crew on sinking schooner when torpedo boat has to give up task because of heavy sea. John Hammond, alleged wife murderer, said to be in the west. Page 4.

Prophet Dowie of Zlon City arrives In New York; says be was miraculously cured through prayer. Page 6. List of school board nominations, 13 different persons named; four full tickets and one candidate of independent women voters. Death of Elijah H. Goodwin of South Boston, a retired police captain.

Page 7. Congressman Gillett tells Beacon society members about recent trip to orient. Mr and Mrs James Coats of Providence, 1, made baron and baroness by King Edward. Exchange of ratifications of the Russo-Japanese treaty at Washington yesterday in diplomatic room at Wash- Page 1. Yale wins the annual football game with Harvard.

to one missplay turns the tide of battle against the Crimson; it was the greatest struggle ever witnessed on a gridiron, and was witnessed by 43,1100 enthusiasts. W. D. Sullivan's criticism of the Yale-Harvard football game. How the great crowd acted at the lontbal! game on Soldiers field.

Harold P. Moore of the Union college team Wiled In a game With New York university and Chancellor MacCracken at once calls upon Pres Eliot or Harvard to lead a movement to reform or abolish football. Pnje 2. Mrs Francis Burton Harrison killed In automobile accident on Long Island. Autopsy ordered on body of midshipman Branch, who was killed in a fist fight at Annapolis.

Dr Edmund R. P. Fourtin of Wal-tham arrested on charge of performing criminal operation. Sailors and soldiers mutiny at lire on and wound Admiral Proarevski. Young married woman of Monticello, kills physician who saved her life.

"Guilty on all counts" verdict of in cast of Senator Burton of Kansas, charged with appearing, while a senator, before department as paid attorney. Austria announces that if any power hould withdraw from Turkish demonstration she will also withdraw. Aggressiveness and Spirit of the Crimson Players Startled the Men From New Haven Misplay By One Harvard Man Did What the Yale Eleven Could Not Do. Colors Everywhere Maelstrom on the Gridiron at the Close of the Battle Yale Men Carry the Victors Off the Field. For one long half the teams had struggled without scoring.

Three times had the ball been taken from Harvard when her team seemed bound straight for the goal line. Twice, also, had Harvard thrown back the Blue to the astonishment of the thousands who wer ready for a whirlwind of offense from Yale that would rip Harvard through and through. Then came a second half into which Harvard returned with renewed strength to carry the ball from her own 25-yard line "Straight down to within 21 yards of Yale's goal line, where, with less than a yard to gain for a first down, a Harvard forward was offside and a subsequent end run failed utterly. Yale had been swept back yard by yard before the assaults of Brill and Squires, driven mainly at Yale's left wing. In desperation, the Yale coaches had sent fresh players out from tho side lines, but Harvard pressed ever onward.

She played faster and surer with each succeeding rush, apparently accumulating strength and every man helping to break down the Yale defence. Sixty yards had been covered In 15 rushes, not including the. five yards made up after an offside penalty. But (By Melville E. Webb Jr.) A muffed kick by Don Nichols on Harvard's 30-yard line, the swift seizing of the ball In the blue arms of Forbes, the Ell tackle, then just 10 swift, powerful rushes that Harvard's line could not withstand and Yale had won.

In less than five short minutes of a battle In which the Blue and Crimson met on even terms, Yale struck the blow that won for her the annual football game by a score of 6 to 0 from a Harvard eleven that held 43,000 people spellbound by Its unlooked-for strengtli against one of New Haven's mighiest teams. Yale was expected to win, and she did win. The experts may say that she had the better team. Perhaps she did, but to the crowd that at dusk filed out from the stadium in long, black lines there is the recollection of a battle which neither team could have won save for an Individual mistake such as came in yesterday's second half. Each team had played the other to a standstill, and then, out from a clear sky came the thunderbolt, the swift offensive rally by the Elis and the irresistible onward rush of the Blue that turned, and then decided, one of the greatest games of football ever played.

The Yale substitutes and coaches on the side lines were the first to hear the whistle that ended the game, and they came a-pouring, blankets streaming to the breeze. Instantly ington. I Death in Honolulu of Rev Dr Danlol Shepardson, the "wheel chair evangel- i 1st." Then the whole tremendous horseshoe of black melted and things began to happen. Yale surrounded her team and carried it off in a whirlwind of happiness. This didn't take more than a couple of hundred of the clean-daft enthusiasts.

The band was the next most prominent thing in sight, and it was begged, ordered and commanded to Continued on the Twelfth Page. the solid cheering section behind Yale's band broke up into a struggling mass of black, and with hoarse roarings of delight flowed over the edge of the stadium wall and on to the field. there was "no hope for Harvard." But the players who have been drilled this fall in the Reid school of football had sonietning to say about that themselves. There may have been mistakes made, and, of course, there were, by Harvard'. coach who came all the way from California tc try to put a winning eleven in the field for the Crimson.

But if there is one thing above all others that Bill Reid has shown in both years that he hat. coached Cambridge teams, It Is his ability to send his men into the Yale game with an aggressiveness, courage and 3pirit such as no other Harvard eleven ever had. And Har- (By W. D. Sullivan.) There have been football games and football, games, but never has there been such a football contest as Harvard and -Yale played in the stadium on Soldiers field yesterday afternoon, while 43,000 people looked down from those massive tiers of seats which surrounded the gridiron as these two oldest college rivals in America battled for supremacy.

And when it was all over, and Yale had six points and Harvard none, there were thousands and thousands who insisted as they left the scene of the most memorable football game of this and TODAY'S GLOBE CONTENTS. TODAY'S GLOBE CONTENTS Continued on the Tenth fng. Ex-Mayor Thomas J. Boynton accepts' citizens' nomination for mayor of Everett. Death of George E.

Haven at Hyde Park. Supervisor Brooks accepts superln-tendency of Cleveland schools. Asst Fire Chief Nathan L. Hussey stricken with paralysis. Page 8.

Fitzgerald talks to ward chairmen; Lomasney calls on election commissioners; McNary and he say they know nothing of independent democratic candidate; five regular candidates already. Page 9. A. F. of L.

convention reelects Pres Gompers and votes to meet next in Minneapolis. Rev Edward S. Travers of Trinity church, Boston, to be chaplain at West Point academy. Sudden death of William E. Decrow of Roxbury.

Mrs Erastus W. Boynton of Cambridge The Finest Blended Whisky Page 6 Winter hats for women Everybody's Column and requested poetry. Page 7 "Sylvia in Streamland," a short story Strange pets of Thomas Edward Eskimos and their life. Page 8 Old Wisewinkers discloses a card sharp. Page 9 Chumpley and Sister Maud at the Harvard-Yale game.

Page 10 Stories for young people. Page 11 Achievements of Jews In America, Page 12 Love story of the kaiser's next daughter-in-law Women's clubs in Fall River The Louvre palace in Paris Ian Maclaren on "Men ruled by women." Page 13 Adventures of Capt Kettle-Parisian evening gowns. Page 14 Five selected short stories. Page 15 The corncracker dance Bowser's auto ride Puzzle picture. Page 16 Exciting finish of a scrappy football game.

THE WEATHER. Heels of raze so. Dashiel, Dean, Hogan and Reid give their expert views on the Harvard-Yale game. Pncre 31. Great Increase in realty values In New York city.

Italians play games with cheese. Pages 2 and 33. Household department, talks with mothers and tried recipes. Page 31. Uncle Dudley on special occasions for Thanksgiving.

Editorial symposium on "Why should there be a revival of the Gaelic language?" Howard on the Sabbath and customs. Pages and 3G. Drama and music. Page 37. Fashions for women.

Page 33. Homes of the aspirants for mayoralty honors. George D. Chamberlain on playgrounds for children. Page 39.

Varhtlnp newc HURLEY DISAPPOINTED, Harvard Gapta'n Kept Posted on Progress of Continues to Improve, Capt Dan Hurley still continues to improve. Yesterday was naturally a day of great excitement for him, as his heart was at the stadium. He was kept informed of the progress of the game and was, of course, bitterly disappointed at the outcome, as were all his players who made such a desperate battle with Yale for the victory that finally went to the Blue. Dr Nichols late last night stated that there was nothing more to be said about Hurley's condition than he had stated Saturday morning, when he gave out a bulletin to the effect that in the last 24 hours the symptoms had improved to a marked degree. that we know of bears the label drops dead at Limerick, Me.

Two midnight fires in Chelsea. Page 11. Streets thronged with students and their friends, who celebrate Yale's football victory in a hilarious manner. Page IS. Dorchester A.

A. teams both win at basket ball; other games. Andover, Boston Rovers and Methuen WASHi.NUTON, Nov 25 Forecast win Merritnac valley association foot- ball league games; Lynn and Quincy tie. New Rubber ft is mistaken economy this wait-for leather heels to wear down "ore attaching rubber cushions. nothing is gained.

Appiied when new, an O'Sullivan neei win outwear any shoe. Waiting means so much comfort while wearing out the leather, an amount of rubber heel service "lost which the shoes are incapable consuming. Xew rubber is the only secret of bber heel economy. There is just one way to get this la8 "O'Sullivan's Heels." dealers make more money by sub-uting other kinds and you get service. O'SULLIVAN RUBBER GO, tOWEUL, MASS.

Monday: For New England: feN fEr Fair and somewhat 0 fcuME colder Sunday; Monday fair In south; snow or rain in north portions; resh west to southwest winds. "Who Was Guilty?" a new serial story, Page 40. Financial news. Page 41. Commercial news.

Hebrew social gossip. Page 42. Jonathan White, oldest lawyer in the state. Military and naval. Page 43.

News of the labor world. Mystic orders. Pnare 44. Local forecast for 3oston and vicinity: Fair Sunday, Mon-Jay unsettled, prob-seasonable temper in many other years, that Harvard's eleven was just about as good as Yale's team. It did seem so.

as those two machines battled with each other, almost to the end of the- game without a score. But now that It is all over, you will have to admit, whatever your sympathies are. that the victory went to the better football eleven. There wasn't very much difference between the two teams, and I doubt if Vale ever could have scored it that fatal muff of a punt by Harvard's halfback had not suddenly and unexpectedly thrown the Crimson eleven on the defensive and put Yale's team instantly within scoring distance, where she had not been in the whole second half of the game. Others will tell you how the game was played from beginning to end.

But a few things stood out in the afternoon's contest which marked it as a most notable- one. and has the largest sale of any brand in the New England States. atures; light southerly to westerly winds. The temperature yesterday, as Indicated at Thompson spa: 3 a 58, 6 a c8, 9 a 60, 12 61, 3 59, 6 55, 9 49, 12 mid 44; average temperature 56 1-24. Table gossip.

Page 45. Marie Jonreau on New York fashions. Golfing gossip and fixtures Art and artists. Page -lO. Mutineers on schooner Berwind to be banged.

Hen batches trout eggs. Lord Rosebery explicitly declares he will not train with Sir Henry Campbelr-Bannerman under banner of home rule. Page 18. Dartmouth beats Brown 24 to 6, winning by the clever work of the Glaze brothers; other college games. Yesterday's club whist tournaments.

Fownes wins the chief cup In the Lakewood open tournament. Not a favorite won at Benning yesterday. Page IS. Mrs Mary A. Kidder, the poet, dies In Chelsea.

Page 16. Real estate transactions. Page 23. Cable news. Water front items.

Capt John Ryder attempts suicide by jumping from a train near Bournedale. Boston school feachers not to receive full December salary on next pay day. Page 24. Stephen Salisbury's attachment for Mrs Lawton, whom he left $100,000 by will. Parasites arrive from Switzerland for use in brown-tall moth campaign.

Page 2S. Record of the vote In the Globe's scholarship contest. Page 29. Townsend on graft, banking and politics. Death of Hon D.

Frank Kimball of Automobillng news. Golden wedding of Mr and Mrs William R. Schaefer of West Roxbury. vard showed yesterday In a way that thrilled the wearers of the Crimson these same characteristics which stood out most conspicuously in the Reid eleven of four years ago. They flashed out right at the very beginning of the game.

And when Yale got the ball the first time and her machine formed for attack on the Cambridge eleven the crimson-jerseyed rush line charged into the Kll line with such fierceness that the Yale quarterback juggled the ball. It was a new sensation to Yale to be hit like that, and quarterback Jone3 straightway punted. Then Harvard put her offensive machine into operation, and first, with Brill back of the line and then with Squires leading the attack, the blue eleven was driven back, back, until the crimson had gained 37 yards. Then the Yale defence grew much stifter and Harvard had to surrender the ball. For the next 10 minutes it looked as though Yare was going to warts straight through the Harvard team, just as she had waded through the Princeton tigers.

But when the Harvard players found themselves, after a little while, back of their 20-yard line, it was suddenly discovered that the defensive weakness which had marked Capt Hurley's eleven all the fall, had disappeared, and Yale could not gain another foot. Harvard took the ball away from the Kiis on the 15-yard line. Then those tators alized that It was to be a battle to a finish. And bo it was until the very end of the game. Like Old Springfield Days.

It carried me back to the games at Springfield, when one team fought for every foot of the ground until it was slopped in rushing the ball and then punted, hen the other eleven strug- Contiiiued on the Eleventh Putfe. Thousands Of Votes Received Last Week The temperature as recorded in the following places at 8 last night: Montreal 34. Nantucket 48, New York 50, Washington 68, Atlanta 62, Savannah 62, Jacksonville 68, New Orleans 76, St Louis 84, Chicago 44. St Paul 36, Bismarck 28, Omaha 48, Denver 58. Globe forecast Fair Monday and Tuesday: slight changes in temperature; winds generally westerly.

Think of the situation! Yale came up from New Haven such a favorite that those who back their opinions with cash were willing to bet 5 to 1 that the blue would certainly win, and that meant, of course, that the crimson would be snowed under. Yale unbeaten, undaunted. and a victor over the Prince- ton tiger, was sure to overwhelm poor, i despised Harvard, who had gone to Prompt Relief. M. F.

Barrett. 54 Tyler St. MAGAZINE SECTION. Page Thanksgiving at Uncle Zeke's. Page 2 Jokes and anecdotes The scholarship coupon.

Page 3 Frank G. Carpenter on Canadians' desire for a protective tariff-Raising geese for the Boston market Curious monument in a Springfield cemetery. Page 4 The Catholic church In Japan-Agile West Springfield man of 91 years. Page 5 Monument to be erected to originator of the concord grape-Ludlow couple and their 15 children-Poem you ought to know The Sutton sisters Jtez. wonderful Boston, ADAMS, TAYLOR Distributers and Proprietors, 193-195 State Boston, Mass.

says: Father John's Medicine BU.va. tT. 1,1 mi III gave me XC IH prompt iclii anU cure for a severe cold sore caroat. It i3 guaranteed. Cut out the coupon on Page 2 of the color supplement in today's Globe and vote for your favorite pupil.

ESTABLISHED 1839. defeat by the Quakers at Pennsylvania and only had been able to play the Dartmouth men from Hanover to a tie What Reid Has Done. And so, perhaps, the public was somewhat justified in their expectation that Sar.ford's Girtcje- Always Healthful Cures eftlils, pains. Get the genuine. Look for the owL Pains in the clie.it are a sign that you nted Lung Kuro at once.

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