The evening world. Newspaper, September 13, 1912, Page 20

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Che See aiorid. ESTABLISHED BY JO! Published Dafly Except Sunday. by the P: 63 Park Row, Why Not? #% +-arse THOMAS F RYAN IS GOING To 0 AN ART GALLERY_ ° WHY Not H PULITZER. Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to York. scent, $4 Fast, Rew. Cecretary, 6 Park Row. lew York Loa! Hnelang ond th For All Count: Entered at the Post-Office Subscription Fi jo The E ‘World for the One Year One Month VOLUME 53........ Soe aecceeesseecessssceens + NO. 18,649 JUSTICE DELAYED IS JUSTICE DENIED. HE trial of Lieut. Charles Becker, charged with having insti- gated the murder of Hermen Rosenthal, who was shot July 16, nearly two months ago, was echeduled to begin yesterday. Tt did not do so, What did begin yesterday was another ecene in the old familiar spectacle of legal juggling and court jumping. ‘Through the usual series of stays, changes of venue and the like, Becker's lawyers hope to put off his trial indefinitely. Already they have secured a delay until Oct. 7, which may be shortened—or length- ened. Cynical speculations are already heard as to just how long first rate legal talent can hold off the trial while public interest and) indignation exhaust themselves, The people, mystified by the technicalities, wearily resigned to N ning in the International ni and Canada. One Year. One Month.. sees M5 + $8.80 . & MSS SSS Ss WMA WWI LE this kind of thing, take fresh news of delay without surprise or resent- | 2 Sn eae ment and “loave it to the lawyers.” After all, “it’s the same old A FAITHFUL FRIEND s story. It’s the law.” | SSS sss Not long ago the New York Board of Trade and Transportation was invited by the New York State Bar Association to give an opinion as to “the causes leading to the present feeling of discontent with our judicial system.” The Board of Trade and Transportation promptly replied that the great and glaring evil of our court system is DELAY. The law's delay, objurgated for ages, hurts the innocent, helps the criminal, harms the community and impairs con- | fidence in the courts, thereby wasting a valnable item in the assets of our community. Justice delayed is justice denied. If the man awalting trial be innocent, then The lack of despatch in trial courts and courts of later brings {t about that an inmocent man, mvicted as a criminal, is after long BEE AX XX means removes the blight or expiates the anxiety and dis- It does arouse popular sympathy. It wakens mistrust and worse toward the judicial system kept up for more satisfactory results. this, and to the public more important still, If the Rosenthal murder had been an English case, handled by English courts, Becker would at this moment be either free or under sentence. The p-ople of this city ere already accustomed to the disgraceful apectacle of a former City Chamberlain, indicted. for bribery as a public official May 1, 1911, who for sixteon months has enapped his fingers at the courts and is still untried. Is Becker to furnish another racy footnote for the doubtful chapter of judicial procedure in this State? —_—_———-+—-——_——__— A NEWLY-ABRIVED Englishman boasted the other night of the climate of Surrey, which he swore was the most beautiful in the world, Aocording to next morning’s cables a woman frose tu death there while he was talking, ——_—__—+-__—. FAAAAAALABAASAAARA ‘with the genial proprietor. would have paid to a fiy winging in as Nobody paid any more attention tejan added entr~ to the free lunch free- Covrteh Te Rew Tork Words ee rid). R. JARR paused at the portals of @us'e cafe on the corner, He ‘Was debating with himself es to what would be the most effective en- trance he could make. ‘His first thought was to “gum shoe” in—that 1s, to make his incoming quiet o| BS By Maurice Ketten ty gigs LEE YSN HisToricaL SCENE ererrrrrrererererrerr rere reer ere rere ° lly Mr. Jarr Gets a Warm Welcome in Gus’s Place on the Corner) [them with a threatening look, sided|Mr. Jarr’s dramatic entrance than they! for-al. A napping sound was heard. The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, September 13, 1912 Em. PARA PA. A FIIASKHSSSASAAAAM If any one heeded it he probably im- agined 1t was something wrong with the clook. But that :-und was Mr. Jarr’s heart breaking! He had been away from Harlem two long whole weeks and no- ody seemed to care he was back! ‘The bitter thought came to him that in this great, cold-hearted town tt was only too true that the indispensable man was not numerous, It then occurred to him that he hadn't made enough noise, perhaps. So he stepped back outside and clumped in | in with heavy strides, crying, in |simulated heartiness, “Hello, 014 sports! | Gee, I've missed you all these two long | ‘weeks I've been out of town! What! everybody have? yee pepe arbegin hye gamed gies ange Nab Seeder the cost of living. Just the same, we're not going to deposit | rene mee so that the warmth of Greeting be would receive, the acela- tions of welcome from hie old anything until we see. ice at ght of him ‘woul bell te ‘Publishing On, (the Now York Wertt. + more height by the contrasting A DEN’S PRAY! ER. modesty of his demeanor, As he paused the thump of @ hand GNews Nem—Mr. Eéwerd Bok aims to revolutionise the dress of American The most certain clgn of wisdom fs © continual apon @ table and 9 voice saying ‘Wla-| women Oy eubstivuting sane American fashions for the ¢reakish designs from cheerfulness, vinaky, I meld sixty queenst” apprised | Parts.) _ that Rafferty, the builder, and Sia- You may strip use of owr panniere—'twill cousc us Kittle grieving. Take all our frills and foidies—bdus pray give us in their stead ry 4 HAT—on honest top plece—made to At the HUMAN HBAD! to whether when one of ig : the Glce fell on the floor and turned up You make take away our pecka-doos, owr stripes and dote end plaids; YY could be Letters from the People oe eee eae Co ae ria beatae bei eee him a DE MONTAIONE moe sane, were having and y 00 may take away our hobble skirts, a0 frankly wndecetving; pinechle or Died Bept, 18, 1598, E ce not been at fault, But stop not there! Or, oh! alae! how for you've been misled, “Que knocked the dice off when he| We want a HAT, o&, Mr. Bok, to At the Human Head! pushed over your beer!" oried a voice “That'e Rangle, throwing dice with| You may take oway our scuttle hats, our derbys and our pokes, bird ont aration, and nerve @us,”| And all the whtme sartorial that make us Awman jokes; ™ Mp. dare on the nuteide, But give, oh, WILL you give us, then—when all ts done and eaid— “Tt don't count, no matter who pushes ” Binety pounds, |it off; It's a vocked dice!” Gus's votes | 4 Aat—a dona fide HAT—to fit the Humon Hoag? | With patience we can somehow clothe ourselves from oMn to toes, orwelty to animaia? If it ie not, then tas |G tha bat aud Gurned Gn cose on ihe But where, oh, where's a hat that doesn't cover up one’s nose, t a moment ago!” protested Mr, |Or ef upon the forehead like a twelve-pound feather ded? | Alas! ataoh! No hat 4s MADE to fit the Human Head! rh out Itt ah heard) wtaln't it my liver otere, 20 #00n CRaveaue from India, Dut nothing Aalf 20 queer, y dice and my floor?’ | Beatde the thing I wear the Zulu'e donnet ie a dear! At this there was such a loud clamor, I've seen some quaint “confections” twist the South Sea and the Rhine, in whioh Blavinsky and Rafferty joined pry ee ety log Aa all But oli of them were made to fit the Human Head eave mine! tively that neither -|know ft was all off with any cum shoe Ite trimmings all stuck on BEHIND, four feathers stand abreast, wit benefit the uf. entrance, te saa to him that it (God put my face IN FRONT! Alas, I thought that He knew dest.) LCE ee x mer vie Ita drim just shades my Payohe knot; my eyss must take the sun, MMe face and cry “Hollo, boys! Look 7 feet ke walking backward when I got the SWHET thing on! gle eed SarneN Wa premiete Too long we've Kved in dumd content beneath fhis load of sin— would get him a royal reception if tor TM4# Ditter Udel worn without, denying draine within, fothing but the diversion his sudden Such hats were never made to WHAR, dut merely made to SELL, entrance would cause, And, oh, I hope for mili ‘here's some espectal—pumishment Bo, with @ magnificent gesture, ne! bcs soar (Ee ih ! erushod aside the swinging screen and, Time was a head was scarcely thought essential to a women; advancing threo atrides inside, oried: But now that brains are “a-le-mode,” our Reade are almost Auman, "Tm the ry that put the ‘ache’ in| go many thinga the modern girl has studied, thought ané read “vacation|’ ere| ‘Tut the clamor wae at ite neighs,| 7MA? @# her North evtremity—behold a Human Head! Th ais, 24, |Mangtie claiming that unless his spilled Ao take away our fade and frills and all owr estra hate, parma - : Wee eens, wiieh wate itr] ee Our harem ekirte, our peck-a-booe—dut hear the Motden's Proyor! . a stand, Bome of those present sided OMF Dlcseings on the gallant enw) who'll give us in their etead GYMPATIE, | with Rangte and some, when Gus fined 4 HAT—o cane and eightly het—fo At the Humen Head! Dulling a-~well, {t was a male anyway, Who weighed at leact as much as the Dony iteelf, Me was accompanied ty child, whe from appearances weighed in the nelgmborhecd of j o ? i a Hl Hel ii t z 4 m2 | | E HH i | H i z H 1 3 5 5 2 : at) ER se Hd : i i i it : ‘ os ay i thi Ee z E 8 i 4 f 8 i - i i jee rl i i i I i it as i + wr 3k i 4 a % 4 i i 5 g~< i Perens 9 9a Tt @id not even stop the quarrel, se Mr, Jarr pushed his way im among the group at the bar, shoved the dice box aside and remarked tensely: “I asked you ell WHAT you were going to havet" ‘We're going to have @ fight, and somebody will get @ hit on the nose if You don’t stop butting tn!* sald Gua, “Bure,” sald Rangle; “what bustmess te it of yours?” “Gentlemen can settle their ewn fights ‘mitout fresh guys mizing im,” sald Bep- jer, the butcher, “Let's throw him euti* eatd Muller the grocer “Waitt cried Gus; “he owes me a Gottar-eighty. Let bim pay that before he’s chucked outt™ “I got more than thet against him, ut I don’t care,” sald Bepler. “He dkips out two weeks ago owing me @leven dollars!" “I'm a sport, too. Fl hand him « wallop, even if he owes me nine dollare ana sixty-seven cents!” cried Muller, the grocer, “Don't hit him now; veit ti he's by @ winder!” cried Mr, Slavinsky. “Gus, you don’t care; you got winder insur ance, and @ broken winder makes buel- ness for @ glasier who ts @ good ous- tomer,” “No,” cried Gus; “no violence My wife Lena upstairs has got a headache ‘Let's hear what he bas to say before we 1 U8H him out.” “AM T've got to say ts this,” said Mr, Jarr, hotly: “I read in the papers that the moving pictures are putting the saloons out of business, I'm giad to hear it. My children are tn the Nickel- ofeon up-strest now. I ehafl join them, GOOD-NIGHTI" And although they called after him that {t was all @ put-up job, out he went. — WEALTH BRINGS WORRY, “Wealth doesn’t always bring happt- ness,” remarked the youngster with the large epectactes, “Naw,” assented the other kid. “Look at me cousta yonder, He's got two cene and he can't decide between lollipops DOT TECTED AGLI THE RWONEY ev DETECTIVE WRC275"*) SHERI A Series of Articles Fxposing the Every- Deceptions of the Powers That Frey. (“Camera-Eye” Bheridan te regarded as one of the beoh detectives that ever extsted outside of fotion. The feate of memory which gave him his nickname, when he wee idl head of the Bureau of Identification Ls the New York Potice Department, are proverdial, It has deen said there te no man tn the Daltes Btetes with 20 thorough @ knowledge of criminals ond their waye ae Detective Sheridan. In this series he gives the public many valuadle pointers Calculated to save them loss by swindling.) . (Copright, 1012, be W. Antioh.) NO. 14— THE WIRE TAPPERS.” | jn Wiese - tarted ‘be on the tevel. [aE aS Tesh as na a ec Nneman and an ordinary telegraph operator could turn the trtok ito th piace in which to break in on the ntandsd top che poston a propristors. ‘Then « signal to a man tn long enough to use the information to crimp some bookmaker, An expert of the winning horse, and the bets could would give him the name pf ‘They | 2 i vw @uch oums ae was thought sate and es the long oF winner suggested. ‘This method didn’t last long. The dookmakers grew wary. after post time, no matter what length of time elapsed between the hour the race and the telegraphed announcement of the result. It hard to put the bet on @ book, and the game fell away for « Gead till ome gentus came along and organized the phony tap echeme, which has been prominent ever since. So many big money people have deen eased of their bank rolls and Go Rewepaper publicity has been given the game that you might wasn't @ grown-up person in the Jand who hadn't heard of what happened to the marks, But there’s & new crop of suckers blooming daily, and you can't pick up @ paper without finding a reference to some new boob trimmed by the wire- workera, Gome pains are necessary to work the game properly, but as the swindlers mever play for ptkers, the pains are mot besrudged. The first thing fe to gain the confidence of a rich man, or a man who has the handling of large sums of money. There are ways of finding out from Wall street connections, what men (preferatly men from out of town) have been losing heavily tn the market. A man who ts far to the bad ie the man the wire-tappers are looking for, be PS the ehort end of it, a emocth talker fs sent to the losers home town, and in- structed to make his acquaintance. The tapper shows plenty of money, poses as @ wealthy business man with a sporting inclination, and gradually gets the victim warmed up for the big suggestion. This is that a fortune is to be made in New York by being in on @ wire-tapping game, whereby the manager of one of the telegraph companies (said to be a friend of the tappers) will hold back the results of certain horee races, giving the tappers time to bet a wad on the winner. ‘ There are dozens of details going with this plan, and in many cases they’ vary. But their general purpose ‘s all the eame—to get the sucker to New York, feed him at @ swell hotel, introduce him to a man in shirt sleeves who ts en- countered in a corridor of the telegraph butlding, arrange for the betting, and finally the victim's wealth. The tappers rent @ room in a house where they will not be Meturbed, ft {t up with telegraph instruments that go no further than the floor, people it with a dozen grafters who pose as rich men or betting oom- missioners for millionaires. The tapper and hie victim are to walt tn a certain saloon for a phone message from the “telegraph manager.” The firet time (t comes, it 1s after the race, and the “manager” simply repeats mn ‘wealth. But there is nothing in ft for anybody—sot even the who makes it. for money that comes that way never does anybody any As eoon as @ casual acquaintance suggests anything about the profite in wire-tapping, call @ poloeman. The Monsoon. Indian monsoon, which, hav- , somewhat later in the northwest of Ge ing begun rather feebly in the | Punjab, where the rains begin with @ fnterior, 1s bdeing anxiousty | terrific burst which is @ far more im watehed throughout the country, should | Pressive spectacle then the eompare~ be well estabitshed by now over a ereat | Oe ee Gace sis delta A wean ee part of both eastern and western India. | ing of the rainy eeason te by pe ineane ‘The oMctal date for the opening of the always a discouraging sign, for the de- rains in Bengal te June 16, and in a | fictency fs frequently made up dy beaty normal year they begin to fall copiously | fails in August and Septemben—Weet- between the 2th and 2th. They are! minster Gazette. ona ana Qigh or Direc- toire collars @ import- ant features of the fall styles, and this blouse shows both, The aleeves are fintohed with Drettlly turned over cufte “also, and alto- anihe cet ts available tor the entire gown and for the waist tationea gue, “EE the 2 illustration {¢ of charmeuse with tine ming of velvet and chemisette of lace, the combination “is a 004 one to whichover e front use it ts put. Thi closing also import lary women like to material to auit their own tastes before cutting the waist, and this model can be used in that way as well as for the Berrectiy plain blouse. YY fash- ‘ fons are erous in their variety, and while long sleeves’ are i mush ‘worn, they are by no Means exclusive and elbow sleeves are quite correct, Again, tf the open neck Is Itked, the chemisette can be omit- ted. There are only shoulder and underarm seams and the sleeves are cut In one plece each, but with fullness at the elbows, that ren- ere then comfortable, sided For the medium tho blouse will aie 28-8 yards of matorial 27, 2° yards 36, 11-2 4 inches wide, 4 Pattern 7574—Plain Blouse, 34 to 42 Bust. 3-8 yard 21 inches ya with wide for the collar and cuffs and 3-8 yard 18 inches wide for the ohemisettc. The pattern of the blouse 7574 is cut in sizes from 34 to 4 inches bust measure Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION BUREAU, Donaid Building, 100 West Thirty-second street (oppo- te ste Gimbel Bros.), comer Sixth avenue and Thirty-senond street, Oveatn $New York, or sent by mail on receipt of ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered. Thee IMPORTANT—Write your addres plainty and always specity and fee cream,”—Loutaville Courlem Journal sive wanted. Add two cents for letter postage ff in « hurry, |

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