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f ers in Peril When Ships Collide in Lower Bay T RULES FOR NEW REN- N DRIVER MINGLED WITH POLICE To-Nlght' Weather FAIR AND COLD. To-MonW Weattier FAIR AND COLD. Passing LAWS BOMB WAGO To Be Sore of Getting The Evemiinig: World, Order in kSvamice from Your" . Newsdealer : : VOL. LXI. NO. 21,587 52,000 EXPECTED TO WATCH BULLDOG-TIGER GAME TO-DAY; TON 7 Temporary Stands Make Room for a Record-Breaking Crowd. YALE TEAM CRIPPLED. Odds of 7 p 5 Offered Orange and Black Players. on By William Abbott. PRINCETON. Nov. 1.1. Old-fashioned foolb.all wither, clear as a bell, with a tinge -of the Arctic, la jprormjwd for the YaJo-iMnclon iramo this aftcmoou in the 'Palmer Stadium. The meeting of the Tiger the Bulldog will he thr 1lrst here trince 1916, when college olevens throughout the country began a grand mass play lo the training camiw s Orange and Blnck hopes arc soar ing so high that last year's victory at New Haven will bo repeated here that odds of 7 to 5 arc cheerfully offered on Princeton. Toward game ilmo thr-sc odds may possibly shorten a little under tho weight of Yale bankroll' Fifty-two thousand will watch tho two tcamc In action, a record crowd for th!o llttlo revolutionary town. Temporary stands In tho open end of the horM.shtx studlum and provi sions for B.0O0 standees will maHo thin (treat outpo rlng'posslble. Kven with thoso extra facilities tho huge con crete stadium is inadequate, ns nearly 10,000 applications for tickets, were returned unfilled. Several days ago old-tlmh Princeton lootball heroes and. graduates began flocking buck to Nassau Hall to catch an eyeful of tho team so many confi dently believe will collar tho liulldojr. The first big influx of visitors fol lowed tho mllltmcn into town to-day. Autos with Orango and Mack pen nants und occasionally somo flying the Blue of Ml Yale honked their way UP and down past the Cajnpus. Tho main body of the invading drmy Is expected when special trains from Now York, Philadelphia and points In Jcracy start unloading thou sands of football fans. With tho historic Princeton Inn closed, the vli ling hosts will be con fronted with an acuto food prbblem. A. regiment of sandwich venders were early on the Job, however, and these (Continucd on Si cond rage.) PRINCE Probable Line-Ups To-Day of Princeton and Yale Elevens rn- roN Position, Mi. HI. 1-. l'lujtr. 102 5.0S 22 llnilv I,. Knil- 18(1 11.00 111 Hooper I.. -ri'urklr JIVS O.lll 21 l)liki-non . . . 178 5.11 22 Callulinn. . . ltIO 0.O2 20 Miir.Munroon . 20b 0.1 1 22 Ki-k. 173 5.11 21 IIJO 5.10 21 Letrnilre It. I'.nil oniric Quurtrr Murjihy 21 B.'IO 157 107 5.l 20 (illroy. . . j75 5.10 20 liiirrllj". . 175 11.03 21 SclH-irrr l;uMhak . lonlitn 22 5,11 Arnic tvi'Ulit ot I'riurrtnit line, IH7 ponnil. Atrmsrr rlclit ol rrrurclnii liu-ktlilil. Id;) pountW. .Wriuie weiflit of Ynlr bml.flyld. 172 V',- poiiuiN. Time ot gimir, 2 o'clock, at IVlraer Mudiuni, I'llnccton, -N. J, Time of leril 15 mlnutin uwli. OfrlrlalE Itefrxer, . J. Crowrll. hnarthinnrr. I'liiplre, T. J. Thorpe, Columbia, l'lclj Judu, V. A. bclu'urt, llrown. Mnramnn, Li. .N. lUnkbuii IXrimoutb. IIJo Iteroptou maj ttart aUqoartrrbarU for Yalo In plots of Murpli), while Krck ' rrlnt war thMi"lw at lurlil wttu Mmpw U briar blu ppmltc DAILY. (opjrltfht, 11)20, by The l'r Publishing Co. (The New York World). TO 5 1 INCOME TO $420,000 IN SINGLE YEAR Further Disclosures Before Graft Investigators May Send- It to a Million. Robert P. rtrlndell, head of the Uulldlng Trades Council, whose specialty appears to have been the Issuance of "strike Insurance" poli cies for whatever sums he could ex tract from his victims, added unothur J50.000 to his gleanings when ho ne gotiated with Hugh Jtoburteori, the bulldor, according to Robertson's tes timony biforo the Lockwood Com mittee yesterday. Tho demand was for $50,000, itrlndcll, so Robertson stated, wantcJ only 1.20,000 immedi ately In cash, and this Robertson paid him, adding to It later until tho amount totalled 432,000. ' Until Itobcrtson tc&tifled, Urindell's artmtics among ibullders and his promises that no strikos would be permitted to occur on JoTja whose contractors had "come across," yield ed him about ? 120,000 a year. At least that Is what testimony has ho far disclosed as having been collect ed by him or his agents. But almost every hearing of tho Lockwood Com mittee adds to thin large total and It would now seem that If the hear ings continue very long, tho Urlndell fund will mount well toward a million a yea r. Urlndell made his demands quite frankly, according to all testimony, asking "all the traffic would stand," lequlnng $2,000 here or $20,00 ther, tho amount being dependent upon the magnltudd of tho victim's contract. As Robertson's work for the Cunard Steamship Company tn" erecting a great oflice building at Bowling Green and constructing piers on tho Jersey side of the .North River involved contracts amounting to about J40.000.000, Urlndell evidently thought J50.000 not at all exorbitant as "in- (Continued on Second Pago.) YALE, riajer. Age. lit. Nt. IMIn-nrth .1.11 IT'I Walkrr lit II.IU 111(1 -n.. n. FAVORTE BRINDEL RAN . I.. (iiiarri II Culluliuii ill 5.11 210 . . . Centre- Cro ail 2IK5 .11. dunril I Aroktu 'J I II.OO 1117 .11. TiM-klr 1 MacKay 20 U.Or, 230 U Cutler l B.07 148 . I. lluiriturk lir. Krllry 21 5.0H 175 .11. llalftnii-k I t'um)hrll 25 5.11 1IIH 1IIO miuiiiIs, irruir ueUht uf nr llnr, 1 'lr.'..fn;.M T1. 4n Mint I VlllilUUUUK JUUUM VJCil l 4S4 NEW COLLIDE IN BAY San Marcos Rams Montserralt on Way to Pier With 379 Passengers. I TUGS TO THE RESCUE. Passenger Leaps to Deck of Rescue Craft When Ves sels Crash. The Sail Marcos, a Mallory Lino freight steamship, and the llontserrat l of tho Spanish Royal Mall Steamship Company, with 379 passengers on )oard, collided to-day in the. lower bay immediately afttjr leaving Quar antine for their plerp. The Montserrat was struck amld fihlps starboard by the bow of tho San Marcos and her Spanish commander, Capt. MusJcra, beached her on tho Bay Rldgo Flats, shoals off tho foot ot 09th Street, South Brooklyn. The fjan Marcos, her bow battered and flattened, proceeded to her pier, No. 37, In North Itlver. A tug which was nearby at the time, hurried to the sido of the Mont serrat and as tho smaller craft came alongblde, an excited Spanish pass enger leaped overboard from the rail of the mail linor. He landed on tho neck of tho tug. dislocating his hip. Ho was remvoed to Ihe hospital at the Immigration depot on Ills JI&nd. Tho Spanish Jlne, upon receiving news of the crash. Immediately dot-patched three tugs to tho assl-jtanco of the 'Monl.scrrat. The luge took off the passengers and landed them at Mils Idand. Although the San Marcos reached her berth at Plor 37, North River, under her own stvam, and was de clared freo from any serious injury, sho presented a battered appearance. Her W.'v wan flattened from deck to keel. Ptates were buckled and torn open, and ns she lay a' her pier, sho had a big list to starboard, presuma bly from a shifting of the cargo or coal, nvidently tho damage was con fined to tho 'San Marcos's outer shell. On board the San Marcos it was learned that as tho Mallory llnfr left Quarantine at 9.15 A. M , following close on tho Montserrat, the San Marcos, bow on, struck tho Spanlwh fitenmshlp on the starbcrd amid ships. When It wns seen that a col lision was Inevitable, the San Marcos was ordered to make all speed artcrn. hut the order wus given too late. The collision followed. As soon as the crash came, the boats of the San Marcos were made ready for tower ing. The San aMrcos backed out and her officers immediately Investigated to see If the Mallory liner wns mak ing water. "All was found unhnrmed In this respect and as tho oMntserrat did not signal for help, tho San Marcos proceeded to her pier. C'rlsclla was taken to the Holy family Hospital, but required no special treatment and was sent homo soon afterward. Neither ho nor tho surgeons could tell whether the blow he received wns dealt with a black jack or a list. The Montserrat left Ilurcelon.i, Spain, on Oct: 23. touching at Vulen iin tlw s.imo day. Mnlaga on Oct. 28 and Ciullz i" (k?t. SU. Kho wns ill i-oii .ii, hi. i c. Capt. MiiMi-ra, one of tin" uldi-Ht .u.iptalns ln thn service of th; Hpanif-h Line. She carried 87 first cabin. 111 hfcond cabin and 273 btcer nge pa; -.engcrs, the majority of them drsUiiwl for New York, although some were (or Mexico and th West In- DRIVER OF BOMB Urn rnrlnllTrn ! AM rKt utt tn nti onrur YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, i UN mir AFTER WALL Photograph Taken for Movies Sliows Him as Clock Points to 12.50. i EXPLOSION WAS AT 12.02. Federal Officials Welcome As sistance of Evening World in Solving Crime. The man who drove the wagon on which was the bomb that wrought death and destruction in Wall Street on Sept. 12 hung around the scene of 1 the explosion for nearly an hour after the blast, t This fact was brought out yester day by the publication of the picture In The Kvcnlng World showing the driver on the sidewalk bridge In front of the building ne.tt the Stock Ex change with thrco other men after the explosion. This exclusive picture wan part of a moving picture film. Further on In the film a clock face is Known Indicating thu time as 12.50 o'clock. Thlh was 18 minutes after ' the deadly explosion. ! In all that o.lap.sed time the driver was evidently mingling with tho swarms of poller and drttctives who .were on tho tccno Immediately fol lowing the blow-up. It was retailed that the excitement of the police and detectives in the hour following the xxploslon caused them to exert themselves principally in showing their authority by barring from tho wrecked area reporters twho were trying to tell the public what hud happened and exert trained Investi gating intelligence. Few if nny de- 'tectives were asking iii' stlons of eye witnesses until the day hi' r the ox plosion. In his examination in the District Attoiaey's offlco yesterday Secretary Fleshlier of the Volk Company told a very clrcumstantlnl story of the strange man on tho bridge one that Is more circumstantial than has yet been given. It was as follows:' "I was at work on our Job at No. 1 Broadway when 1 heard the explosion. J had some trouble In getting through tho crowd, but I wai at Broad and Wall within llfteen minutes. Tlw bridge over Inroad Street had a lot of people on it and a lot more were stand ing under It. Walsh, of tho Insurinrn company, who was on the Job all the time, said we had better clear the bridge so I started in to oitler the peo ple off. LET DRIVER STAY ON THE BRIDGE. "Somr , . ''-m 1 found belonged on tho Job and wnen I started In on 'he othcrr. there was one fellow that snld tho foreman had told him It was nil right for him to bo there. I let him stay and went up on tho toof of l!i shack on the bridge so I don't know when he finally did lravc. "Later on Clark told mo this fellow had Bald It was his horho that wm down thero In tho street and th.it he wanted lo seo What had hipponcd to it. Then I began trying to roenl) what I had noticed about tins tn.ui Ho was about mivllum height. & t t 6 or 8 Inchec. and' weighed irouixl 160 pounds. He was kind of flabby, you know, nut slim and not fat. II. was foreign looking, dark, and might have been a .Russian oi an Italian. His clothes were not thoso of a driver, but looked liku goad clothes that luc! WAGON NEARLY AN HOUR ST. EXPLOSION Employee of Cabinet Works Attacked as He Steps from Taxicab. The attention of Poltco Cnnimlii sloncr Knrlg'ht Is hereby Invited to. tho activities of holdup men ;.t P.20 o'clock this morning In front of the Jordan Cabinet Works, No. 129 Be gtuw Strew. Brooklyn. A taxicab drew up nt the curb. In It wuro IJdnard II, Jordan, former Internal Revenue Collector and pro prietor of the plant, and Tony Crla ella, a clerk In his employ. Crisella stepped out of tho cab with a pack age containing more than J8.000 In bills ,thc weekly pay roll. Two young men grappled with Crisella as he reached tho sidewalk. One caught him by the neck and .bent him backward. lie felt a blow on the torp of his he.id and lost con sciousness. As ho was falling Che package of tni.nny wa taken from him. Then tho two hiMxts darti'l across tho street, ran up tho front stairs of the house ut No. IM, now used as u tenement for several fam ilies, and entered. No trace of them has .been found since. -Mr. Jordan, who Is an old man, was in tho cub during the few sec onds thnt It took to accomplish the robbery.' He said ho could not give a very good description of the rob b' rs. Crisella, when ho had recov. orcd consciousness, wus equally vague "We proceeded this morning," said Mr. Jordan, "In the way we have been proceeding for years on pay days. I always go to the bank my self to draw tho payroll money, mid I always take Crisella with me. lie has been in my cmploj for l(ftecn yours. "This morning I went to the Irving National Hank nt Fulton Street und Red Hook Iano nnd met Crisella there. A tuxlcub was waiting for us at tho cm b. I drew the money anil handed It to Crisella. Then wn both K'.t Into the cab and drove to the plant. The test oi the story you know." There weie many prrsuns In the strict nhen the inller occurred, but most of them vcr- children. Classified Advertisers CLOSING TIME 5.30 P. M. SHARP SATURDAY FOR The SUNDAY WORLD'S Classified Advertisements QRANCH OFFICES CLOSE BEFORE 5 O'CLOCK Potltlvely no Claaalflcd Advtrtlit menu will be received for The Sunday World aft'.r 5.30 P. M. Adverttalng copy for The Sunday World nhoiiH hi" tn The WnrM omce ON OR BEFORE FRIDAY PRECEDING PUBLICATION BANDITS GET .0 BROOKLYN PAY ROLL KNOCK OUT CLERK "Circulation Books Open 1920. E ESTATE VALUE IS PLACED AT $40,653,753 Inheritance Tax on Sewing Ma chine Manufacturers' Hold ings Is $1,669,200. Si, 440,235 IN REALTY, Personal. Property Appraised at S4 1,192,577 Had $441, . 201 in Cash. mVRHHKAD. L. I., Nov. 3.-Tbo largest Inheritance tax over levied In Suffolk County has been filed here, on tho cstato of tho late Frederick O. jiourne, who was ror many years President of the Singer Hewing Ma chine Company. Tho tax Is 11,609 200.76. Thn grout value of the cstato was appraised at $12192,813. 59, and tho net wtale nt 0,603.7153.1 6. Bourne had a largo country estate at Oak He. Tho legal expenditures on tho ! account Inr waw l"rtirai i, estimated legal expends in the futur.i nr- 20o,000. Thi- commissions for the two executors amount to $810,138 50. The real estate wan apprutnM at ? 1. 11 0,235 DC. Tho estate at Oakdate was valued at $1,17.1,100; t he prop erty nt Glen Cove at $10,000. and the New York City rosldenco wns ap pniiseid at $1 12.335. Mi. Iiournn also owned an estate nt Dark Island, In the Thousand Islands, v.iluivl at $14, 600, Tho personal property was ap praised ot $41,132,577.66, of which $26,510,018,33 l n (docks, $13,487, 089.45 tn bonds, and $321,701.60 In bonds and mortgage, with $411,201.35 In cash. The amount of the debts, In cluding ndmlnlstrlou expenses, is $1,939,060.13. The contents of the main house at Oakdalo were worth $120,982.00, ac cording to tho appraisal. There were many bequests to charitable institu tions. Tho rem of the estate was divided among Mr. Bourne's children, aa fol lows Arthur K. Boiunc. $4,863,. 577.59; Mm. Mary B. Trusirtiurger, $1,927,313.59; Miss Marlon ifourne, $4.964,3I6.G9: Alfred G. Ilourne, $4. 982,643.17; Mrs. Florence B. Hard. $6,016,984.60; George f! Bourne, $5, 135,574.02; Miss Marjorle Bourne, $5, 075,686.60 To persons not yet determined Mr. Bourne left $5,021,975. Hums ranging from $1,000 to many thousands were left to relatives, friends and ser vants WINTER WEATHER HITS CITY HARD Mercury Falls to 25 and Weather Man Intimates Worse May Come. From a temp;rnturo of i:S degrrc at midnight the mercury In the tner mometer fell lo 25 at 6 o'clock thli morning- Four lion later It had rtjen to 32. Continued coid Is promised by the weather man, Tho mercury may fall further, but thr wind, whloh hail dropped to twenty mile it midnight, will moderate and trniper the frigid visitation to tho over do itlejj. Tho cold area extendi all along the roast ajid far Into the Interior. Thrre were plenty of pMeea colder than this section, Including RuRalo, fjliero tho mercury dropped to 19, NEW DROP IN RAW SUGAR. I)un In .1 l-'J Criilv I, on- lleeiirtl nf Vrnr. A new low re oi 1 tor the year In the raw Hugur market was registered to day when sales wero made at 5H cents ii pound--,i decline of '-4 cent, from the previous low record. The new price Is about 1-2 cent, be low the Government control price for lb Itll'lOll Ctep. BOURN to All." hntrrnl na Becond-Clam Matter 1'ovt Office, New York, N. Y. 10 JUSTICES IN U.S. COURT RULE IN FAVOR OF NEW RENT LAWS-SUIT IS DISMISSED hJS Action Was Taken by the Marcus Brown Holding Company Against , a Hold-Over Tenant in an Apart ment House and the District At torney Rests on Question of Con stitutionality. Three Judges of the Federal District Court to-day handed down a decision in reference to the Eniei ;ency Rent Laws which were passed by the t eK'islaturc at a .special session called by Gov. Smith at the instance of Tlic Evening World. It was in the case of the Marcus Brown Hold ing Company against Arnold Pollak, 4 tenant in the Apartment at No. 215 West 9lst Street, who refused t) vacate when the premises were rcntc.l to another at a higher rate. The opinions were signed by Judges Learned Hand, Julian W. Mack and Martin T. Manton in the litigation challenging the constitution alit" of the New York State Rent Housing Laws. BUILDERS NOW HINT OF OPEN SHOP FIGHT Warning Qmes With Demand of Unions for Another fit a Day Increase. The Hulldlng Trade Kinnloynrs of the city hint nt mi open shop fight unlfss; their 40,000 unionised workmen recede from their dcuihndn for a flat Increase of $1 a day, nrtordliiK to Ronald Taylor, lresldcnt oltho employers' association, In an oildreaa to the New York State Association of Architects at tho Fine Arls lluildlng. , "The employers have gene a far as Ih'y can go." ho said "Next Wednes day wo aro rolng to vote down the $1 raise. We aro facing tho proposition of whether wn shall go to the Ameri can Federation of Iyvbor nnd Insist on an honest contract which wo can rely upon or wXnlher wo shall state plainly that hereafter the building trod a em ployers of New Tork will pay thn pres ent wage soalo Irrespective of unlonliun or non-unionism, race, creed or natlon mllty." The union scjle was adjusted Jan. 1 laat at $! a day for mnrhnnlcn and $6 a day for tmlpers, bricklayers and plas- ternrs receiving a slightly higher pay. On M(iy 1 Uie men were given another $1 a day raise and now tlioy demand an additional dollar. POOR OLD KAINTUCK DINES BOURBONLESS Lots lo Fat and Good Vaudeville, but Not a Drop to Drink, Suh! Th Kentucklans. ns tlin Kentucky 4oolnt of New Tork Is officially culled, held their annual meeting, dln- nrr nnd raudoTlllo entertainment at the Hotul Astor Inst night, and not n single bottle of what helped make Ken tucky famous attended. A niembur. who an hour or ao before had two teeth!.. ' . , ....... .ulled. searched In vain for a little first aid from aomtrtly'a pocket. 'I can't even find a man who will admit he's from Ilourbon County," he complained. The 300 members of the society have arranged a banquet and d.mcu for the third Thursday In January with Irvln 3. conn ns guesi ot nonor unu princi pal sptuker. Ilrpnrl pliaii(apiil llrlns; ISiricanlnl LONDON, Nov. 13. Hebastopol Is be ing evacuated and Urltlsh authorities are requisitioning ships In Constanti nople to tuk refiiKiH-t from that cltv. says it dusputcli to the Ksnhange Tele graph Coinpuny from the Turksh capi tal, (len. Ilnron Wrangcl's situation In Northern Crimea ia said to be des-psrata. T WALL ST. TABLES . i IATEST .4 owe xwtaviwjg PRICE THREE CENTS The main decision written taw Judgo Hand and concurred In by Judgo Mack dismissed the motion for injunctions restraining Pollak as '. tri-sp.-iHHcr. and the Blfltrict Attorney from enforcing the rent housing low, Judgo .Martin T. Aranton, dlint Ing, suld that the threatened pro- Ior continuous acts which uo"ld constitute crim.es under the) (rlmlual .statutes Is HUfftclnt, In his opinion, to ask for ciiuitablc reltof If the statutes be held to bo unconsti tutional. But in viow of the author;. Itles In the Huprrmo Court, as wetf ns In this circuit, of the principles of jurisdiction Involved, ho Xelt con .tratucd to dltwnt. The Marcus Brown Holding Com pany brought tho suit In equity as a landlord against a tenant nnd Dis trict Attorney Swimn to test tho con stitutionality of the Stnto Kent Housing Law of 19C0, considered emergency legislation to remedy the rent-housing situation prevailing In this city. The defendants moved .for the) dis missal of tho action for lack of the Court's Jurisdiction because the amount In controversy does not equal $3,000 above Interests and costs. Sustaining this contention, the main decision bv Judge Learned Hand In conclusion savs: "In no aspect does it atom to ua . that the cause is within our jurisdiction, and the motion to dismiss must be granted. Aa there can be no amendment which will cure the defect, th dismissal will be without any rlnht to plead over." Tin bill of complaint alleged tttat on July 10, 1918. th plaintiffs prede cessor In title leased an apartment at No. 215 West Wth Street to the defendant Pollak for a term ending I Mnl T.n IVfl nt r, vnT.r vAntnl rt9 J'wu' "nu ,cuao oonuunea me. usual covenant to surro.nuor posses sion on Its expiration. It was further alleged that when the lease expired l'ollok. though he i had received notic before Feb. M;' 1020, refused to surrender tho apart ment, giving as un excuse the New York State emergency legislation. It was further stated that after Tollak had been served with the no tice regarding the lease tho apart ment was leased to ono Qriffen from Oct. 1, 1920, to Oct. 1, 12S, at a yearly rentul of 2,300. It was also alleged that Pollak com plained to District Attorney Bwaun 4