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| ‘ ag ‘a # HAS SENTENCE CUT FROM 30 T03DAYS Hatle,Friend of Huppuch,Con- victed of Insulting Women, , Set at Liberty. WHERE IS HIS “PULL?” ~ Found Guilty by Magistrate, ‘Sentenced to 2 Month, Swann . a Lets Him Loose. ? ‘What political influence directed the Hatle case into the Court of General G@easions before Judge Swann yeaterday. alle was convicted on Oct. 27 of - on the public street, two re- @pectadle women. / His offense was eo Gasing that a man who witnessed it went out of his way to act as a volun eer witness against him. The defense é UL POLITICIANS. Bt. was reported at the time that the | i ii re i i f g oe its att ! | t | i : ', F Hi i i Hi i is 5 | F E H | & = E i i ! i i : ! Hy i | REDUCES THE GENTENCE THREE DAYS SERVED. with the records of him, affirmed the sen- tence of thirty days imposed by Magis- trate House. Then Judge @wann pended sentence on Haile. ‘The facts in the case were fully set forth in The Evening World of Oct. & 3 Teagon it is the policy of The Evening ‘World to give full publicity to all cases of mashers caught at their des} Martin and er daughter were yom their way to their hotel when the ‘man giving the name of Haile stopped them and addressed the young woman. indignantly protested Longacre and ‘th a2 @ witness, Mrs, Martin ughter summoned « police ked him to arrest Halle, i hanging around with the it of forcing himself upon l ue iit tense waa the defense of all it bee E Be Ee i F John P. Schuchman, “Mr. Le’ pearde as Haile’s counsel and insteted wrote me the following letter, Oot, Lilies and Roses Tossed Aside for the Oriental Among the Fashionable. PARTS, Oct. %—Another change in complexions 1a in order with the up-to- date Parisienne, This time it ts the Oriental. Rouge boxes have been tossed aside for the stick of yellow, which adds a Chinese finish to the smartest ladies of the fashionable class. over his absence from home, as he was about to take the train when he was ar- Tested and had been unable to leave New York following his arrest. For make of the old mother, degwed Mre. Martin the sora! Besslons "8 CAKE. “I @idn't know the man had been re- Yeased on bafl,” said Mrs, Martin, to- @ay. “I thought he was in jatil. Solely for the sake of his old mother, I, after judgment, ‘nia lesson I was the ghould be released. I also ‘what hed been told me about hie his grieving family. “Tf it de true that he has an aged mother who worried about his absence from home, I do not regret interceding for him. But if, as has been intimated, they led to me I consider that I have ‘The records of General Sessions show that Haile was released on bail on Oct. 8 by Judge Swann, siti in chambers, journed. Tho Ddond was (600 and was furnished by Georg? Gchuchman, proprietor of the long after court had ‘Hotel Van Cortland, in West Forty- ninth street, @ brother of City Judge vy aD that his client had given his right name, although the name does not appear in the Buffalo city directory or bership of the Buffalo Bar JUDGE SWANN GIVES REASON FOR HIS ACTION, Judge Swann made the following statement about the case to-day: “I decided the motion for the release of the defendant Haile solely on the merits ot the case and at the request of tho complainant, Mrs. Grace M. Mortin, | bird a 6 “Dear Sir: If you find it within your judgment to shorten ¢he sen- tence of the young man who gnve his name as Henry Haile of Buffalo, N. Y., when I had him arrested on the aight of Oot. 2 on Firty-seventh street, near Broadway, for speaking to my daughter and myself, I shall esteem it as @ favor.’ “So far as I know the man is Henry ing there, wut didn't’ give| Haile. On the records of the case and the letter from Mrs. Martin I decided to ehoften the sentence. Assistant Dis- trict Attorney Delehanty insisted that the judgement of the lower court be confirmed. I confirmed that judgment and disposed of the case according to the memorandum on the papers, which reads: “At the reqeust of the complainant i zt HOU! aT ING. it i anit Hid 31 , Woollen Trust comes out for Taft. Kdilled “by dancing, manager who insisted she should. whould it be aot about to|last word in “dry” ordinances, eco Mrs. Martin, lle and in mass meoting News Oddilies TER EBVENI “ANO* ‘THE SUN-OURWED GIRL Wit je IN FABNION AT LAST: favor, Not even the deathly white face of a few months ago is proper and. the “vampire” makeup has passed, Hundreds of shops are being opened where proper treatment of the face In term of the sentence coincide with the| time already served by the defend- a | ant.’ * MAGISTRATE HOUSE SAYS 30 DAY8 NOT TOO MUCH. Magistrate House, sitting in Essex Market Police Court sald: “The evidence in the case of the man Haile eatiafied me that he had grossly (ngulted a very respectable lady and her daughter, The thirty-day sentence and on the record the judgment is con- firmed and modified so as to make the ‘was, in my judgment, just and proper |and imposed in an honest effort to pro- tect respectable women from gross in- gults on the public etreets, Of course, Judge Swann, following the provisions] of ¢he Charter, had a right to modify the sentence s0 as to let the defendant out after serving three or four days of his time. So far as I am personally) concerned I don't think three days im- prisonment $e sufficient punishment for tho open insult tt man offered a re- spectable lady and her daughter. “After the conviction and sentence it was intimated to me that th fendant was a man of influence ana position. Whether this is so or not I cannot say, but were it so, and the information had been given me before the sentence it wouldn't have lessened hin term day. I can see no dif- ference bi mn the man of position and the corner loafer and influe: in respect of insulting respectable women on the street other than that the man of position and influence should be the more severely punished for auch an offense because he knows Hated te Rise Early, Tried Suicide. Gregor Shorferger, eighty-one years old and the didest boarder in the Odd eu tried to ‘kill himself by cutting his wriste with « rasor blade early to-day, To-day te the birthday of the q@uperintendent of the home, Gampert, and all of the old people and children were told to ‘wake at 5 this morning to etart the celebration. Mr. Shorferberger, who has asthma, was greatly disturbed by the idea of getting up so early. He wae taken ¢o Fordham Hospital. The te @light possibility of hie recovery, »! John Bull Moose {s contemplating a third ticket in the Balkan campaign. _ Aghevitle (N. C.) man dies at the age of 105, Doctors say coffee killed him. And in Pittsburgh Mrs. Gertrude Stehle, ninety-three years old, has been Musical comety actress who wouldn't wear ‘em gete a $88 verdict from If Washington were alive he probably would cross the Delaware again. | Milford, in that State, has just forbidden the sale of sweet cider, being the Jack Johnson ts “read out of his race’ by the negroes of Washington, D. C., aseombled, John Schneider blamed his suicide on “slow horess and fast women." Towa Gupreme Court decides the Modern Woodmen cannot chop down ite members’ vested rights by increasing rates. Years old, to his wife as he epled an ‘Now York, “there's something I've put reliable. taught. The eyebrows are slanted to : the astern e! \ tHe | PERSIAN AND NOT PARISIAN Eprecy 4S THE THING TNDIAN MAKE-UP WOULD BE ALLOWED fort is made to harmon! of the individual to the acter. Women with unpainted faces or with the rouge and white combination are riental char- classed as hopelessly behind and little better than milkmaids. With the Per- sian and Chinese and East Indian face eonformation comes the vogue of East- erm costumes, some of which &re @x- tremely daring. » ‘The face of lilies and roses is out of| conjunction with the yellow skin is SD FRIENDS CONTROLLED LIFE OF BALDWIN, KIN ALLEGE Fighting for Share of Cattle Man’s $100,000 Estate, They Accuse His * Doctor, Lawyer and Nurse. Proceedings are pending in the Sur- rogate’s Court to contest the will of Aaron Stockholm Baldwin, fri and Partner in the cattle busin late Senator John R. McPherson. Mr. Baldwin died last August, leaving about $100,000, He was also residuary trustee of part of Senator McPherson's estate. Ag a result of his death, Sena- tor MoPhérson’s $500,000 left to Mr. Baldwin for life, goes to Yale Univer- sity. The nephews and nieces who are con- testing the will of Mr. Baldwin set up that document is not his last will and t ment and that it was improp- erly uted. They also asvert Dr. Duncan A. Dobie, Mr. Baldwin's physt-| - cian; Reed G. Dilworth, his lawyer, and Herman Friend, a picture dealer, whose client Mr, Baldwin was, combined with Mr. Baldwin's secretary, B. B, Allen, his nurse, Charles M, Beach, and Ben- jamin A, Polhemus, practically took complete charge of Mr. Baldwin's life after the death of his wife last Febru- ery. Mrs. Alletta C. White, a niece, and Clarence C. Baldwin, a nephew, and wife each received $10,000 under the will. Of his other relatives Mr. Baldwin said in his will: “I am aware that nieces, nephews, grand-nieces and srand-nephews are Nv- ing other than those mentioned in. this will, my omission to provide for such being intentional and not due to eny inadvertance on my part." i IFYOUR CHILD NEEDS A PHYSIC. If Cross, Feverish, Tongue Coated, Give “Syrup of Figs” to Clean the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. com a sure a it one’s insides, the stomach, ‘iver ‘and gentle, thorough cleansi ¥ When your child is listless, drooping, fs. doesn't sleep soundly or eat heart- ly, or is cross, irritable, feverish, stom- ach sour, breath bad; has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, or is full of cold, gre ‘a teaspoonful of Syrup of and in a few hours all the foul, cons! waste, undigested food and,sour bile, will fratly, move on and out of its little is without nausea, griping or weak- ness, and you surely will have a well, happy and smiling child again shortly. Wits Syrup of Figs you are not drug- ging your children, being composed en- firely” of luscious figs, senna ‘and. aro- matics it cannot be harmful, besides they dearly love its delicious taste. Mothers should always keep Syrup of Figs handy. It is the oaly stomach, liver and bowel cleanser an: tor needed. A little given to-day will save # sick child to-morrow. Full directions for children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed cy ‘Ask your druggist for the full ; geen ot Fige ead lish ot Boma nA, by the California Fi This is the delicious tasting, genur| any’ elee WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 33, Yellow Chinese Faces for Women Is the Latest Thing in Complexion of the; 1912. James MeCreery & Co. ‘23rd Street 34th Street SPECIAL VALUES For Thursday, October 24th WOMEN’S DRESSES & SUITS. 1m Both stores. Unusually attractive models in a variety of new materials, Tailor-made Suits in plain and fancy models. 16.50, 23.50 and 39.50 Tailored Suits gf Plain Velveteen and Cordu- roy,—several models. 24.50, 39.50, 59.00 Afternoon Dresses of Charmeuse, effective models. 16.50, 24.50 and 37.50 Handsome collection of Theatre, Dinner and Afternoon Gowns in Brocaded Velvet, Satin, Chiffon and Cloth. 35.00, 59.50 to 145.00 Mourning Apparel. Various materials and models in Mourning Dresses. 16.50, 19.75, 23.50, 42.50 Tailored Suits suitable for mourning. wear. 35.00 and 42.50 DRESS TRIMMINGS. In Both Stores, An exceptionally choice assortment of Im- ported Novelties, also an extensive range of Trimmings at moderate prices. Crystal or Jet Bands.......75¢ to 7.50 a yd. Edgings to match..........15¢ “ 75e “ “ Rhinestone Trimming.......35¢ “ 3.50 “ “ Flower Trimmings..........48c “ 3.50 “ “ Metal Bands and Edgings....15¢ “ 5.00 “ “ Beaded Tassel Ornaments and Buckles 35c to 3.50 WOMEN’S HANDKERCHIEFS. 1 Both Stores. 1 Irish Linen,—hand-embroidered, laurel bow- knot and wreath designs. 2.65 a doz. | value 4.00 Fine, sheer French Linen Handkerchiefs. 14, ¥% and } inch hems. value 2.50, 1.50 a doz. In Both Stores, VEILS & VEILINGS. Complete stock of all the fashionable weaves and designs. Crepe Chiffon Veils in a large variety of seasonable colors. 214 yds. long. 1.50 value 2.50 WOMEN’S HOSIERY 1 Both storee. Thread Silk Stockings,—fine gauge, double tops and reinforced soles, guaranteed. Black only. value 1.75, 1.35 a pair Thread Silk Stockings with double tops. Black only. value 1.00, 85c a pair Lisle Thread Stockings,—fine gauge, double tops, reinforced soles. Black or Tan. 35c a pair ‘ value 50c WOMEN’S UNDERWEAR & BLOOMERS. In Both Stores, Medium weight, White Cotton Union Suits,— neatly trimmed. value 1.00, 75c Milanese Silk Drawers...value 3.25...2.75 Quilted Silk Vests in white or black....1.65 value 2.00 Gymnasium Bloomers for women and misses. Blue or black. value 3.25, 2.25 23rd Street 34th Street Sunday World’s Want Directory makes more “Offers of Positions” than any other two medivms in the universe. Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., 5 Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth te Tenth Strect. Thursday Wiil Bea Golden Special Day in Black Silks Black Satin Charmeuse, Crepe, Peau de Cygne; eight best silks; all double width; will be half the regular market prices, 40c to $3 yard, in- stead of 85c to $6. It is the opportunity of years. $3 yard, regularly $6—Im- ported satin feutre, 42 inches wide; one of the finest silks woven for tailored suits. $3 yard, regularly $6 —Sat- in duchesse, 52 inches wide; ane other splendid silk for tailored suits. $1.75 yard, regularly $3.50 —Satin Ritz, 44 inches wide; for tailored suits, wraps and gowns. $2 yard, regulary $4— Heavy crepe charmeuse, 42 inches wide; a beautiful fabric. $1.25 yard, regularly $2.50 Crepe charmeuse, 40 inches wide; souple and lustrous. $1 yard,regularly$2--Satin Imperial, 1 yard wide. 40c yard, regularly 85c-- Black peau de cygne, 19 inches wide; for lining. ‘ $1.50 yard, regulaily $3— Crepe de chine, 40 inches wide; for dresses. Letter orders filled until quantities are exhausted. Main floor, Old Building. Here are some new prices on 1,400 pairs women’s shocs— at $1.50 pair, 800 pairs, regu- larly $2.50 to $4, and at $2.35 pair, 600 pairs, regularly $3.50 and $4. Changes in the Store on the Subway floor, which will in- crease the comfort and facility of shopping, make necessary some contraction of the space occupied by the shoes. So we have put new prices on several groups to clear them out quickly. ‘ Also children’s $1.75 to $3 shoes are now $1.10 to $2 pair. Excellent quality shoes, with welted and stitched soles— comfortable and durable. Priced according to size Thureday, in the Subway Shoe Store, Subway floor, Old Building. Moleis a most highly favored fur this year. Very beautiful examples of this fur, in coats, muffs and neck wraps are shown in the Wanamaker Fur Salons — moleskin with its silvery beauty unadorned, or com- bined with white ermine, brown skunk, gray Russian muskrat or other furs. Muff and scarf sets of this fashionable fur begin at $65. A very distinctive set with skunk garniture is $325. Coats of moleskin are priced from $500 upwards. A num- ber of imported models are included. Fur Salons, Second floor, Old Building, Thursday will be a Woman’s Day. at the John Wanamaker Store. a * Five hundred Women’s lored Suits for $29,50, instead of $45 and $50. h The woman who wishes tich plain broadcloth, diagonal cheviot, distinguished Bedford cord—will find it in this col- lection. Whatever sort of foreign style she desires is almost sure to be included—from the very plain models that button in different ways to the smart suits with velvet collar. They are the latest models after Bernard and other Paris couturiers represented. All hand-tailored in the vital Parts. Second floor, Old Building, 7 , a We are offering a Golden Special of 40c Week - End Chocolates and Bonbons for 25¢ ‘pound. Fresh, delicious 40c goodies such as we always have ready packed for people in a hurry. Made of nuts, fresh fruits, pure sugar and chocolate. The sweetest spe- cial yet! Main Aisle and Subway fear Old Build'ug. A great outclearing of wa’) papers at half usual prices is under way on the Third Gal- lery, New Building. Wall paper that was 10c to $9 a roll is now Sc to $4.50. Room quantities in Japanese leathers, Japanese grass cloths, velvets, English, French, Ger- man and American papers, and varnished tile papers fog ,. the bathroom, All half usual prices, Third Gallery, New Building. A large purchase of Royal Wilton and Body Brussels Rugs will be offered tomor- row at an average of 40 per cent. below worth. As an example of Prices, ninety 9 x 12 ft. Wiltons, reg- ularly $40, and thirty-eight, regularly $50, are $29.50 each, They are good copies of Orientals, and artistic two- toned effects, and are all well adapted to places subject to hard wear. Fourth Gallery, New Building. Our leather furniture sale ¢ of the best leather furniture made—one look at the collec. tion will convince you. Morocco other times ¢ $43.50 to $102. * Brown Spanish leather arm chairs from $34 to $81.75, whose regular prices are $45.50 to $109. Davenports of Morocco from $73.50 up, usually $98, and of brown leather from $56.50, usually $75. Fifth Gallery, New Building, sey would be