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Sete sot PPE URS: HB = oh" “PRAEGER oe DTH PSS Sy TEP tT RIN Ree p eee or on RORRS SP NRL RERE TE: = Oe GREENER 51 OD PAD RESER NSE | SP RRRE ERE MERE EE SSE eT PRET EN HERBERT SSPE LSI A td MEE Oe thE QT SPIT HAM FISH JR. ‘BAWLS’ SWEET Calle Assembly Speaker “Hmall Mao Elevated to Migh Place.” ALBANY, Jan. 1 ‘A small man ted to a high place.” iat is how Mamfiton Fish jr, for- mer Harvard football star and one the two Prog:-ssive members of the Aa- , described Speaker Sweet to- “tiem was the Assembiy fused to let Excise Committee year, when Sweet relegated Fish to thia unimpor- tant he protested but in nie Derth, vested Sweet to shunt Ko, some other” committes, Dut # ded the reques' at ix} Oh stands about six feet four, Swaot ‘Street, | is a little over five feet. Fish about 200 pounds; Sweet about! Unnecessary hote—Sweet di os . ; foreibiy resent Fish's characterization of World Wants Work Wonders. | him. if *165 told from NEW; in rig we 2 al om ee less of their original $5 Down cost, we offer the entire number $5 Monthly Perfect ern were used at our concerts and cannot be distinguished from NEW. With- PLAYER-PIANOS out reference to their original cost, TOMORROW ONLY Musie Rolls and Library Privilege Free TERMS TO SUIT YOUR CONVENIENCE Liberal Allowance for Pianoe Taken in Exchange NABE WAREROOMS, SthAve., at 30th , | Cafe Boulevard Company, Ine., of No. | Company transferred its business to {| Just as Rosenfeld was in the thick | blew out in the basement restaurant THE EVENING WORLD, TUEBSDA CAFE BOULEVARD, INC... |DARENTC OF NECETEN IN BANKRUPTCY COURT! Petitioning Creditors Charge Assets Have Been Assigned With Intent to Defraud Them. | A petition in involuntary bank-; | ruptey was filed to-day In the United States District Court against the [he wailed. |father gave him, (Continued from First Page.) until I have and charity 1450 Broadway. when it 9 claimed the Haeffnern It The petitioning creditors are Lorens | at the Weat One Mundredth Btree | Bergmayer, Frank Kolows and THN6 dress or of the infant said to have Morris, whose cluima aggrexate ¥17.| been born to Mra, Hneffner at the| They we the company within th® Sioane Maternity Hospital inst @ep- last aix months has assigned svt | tember, with design to defraud creditors, Coulter kept the Haeffners under The old Cafe Boulevard down 19) surveillance while he ne telegram Se Avenue, Wan one of the cee fd ‘the police of Atlantic City, where of tho eity, LH. Rosenfeld who! they formerly lived, to look up thelr bullt up the business, hankered f0F| record in that city. the crowde of the tenderloin and! ‘The Evening World reporter who moved to Forty-firnt Street @nd/naq found the Haeffners discovered later they had lived last summer at No, 68 Weat One Mundredth Street and went there to investixate. There he found not only Mra, Haakie, but Mra, J. Dodd and Mra. R. Stack who immediately identined a photograph of the Haeffner family group taken In the Children’s Society and asked where the two youngest children were, All the women insisted that when Mrs. Haetfner went to the hospital to be delivered of her fourth child last September Haeffner gave tho care of the other three, the youngest of whom was seventeen months old, to Mrs. Ida Williams, who lived in the same houne, paying her $5 a week for that nervice. Mra, Haeffner wan nine days at the hospital, they said. After her return the Haeffners moved, on Oct. 19, tak- ing their belongings in two sult caner, The repyrter jJoarned that they moved to No. 2108 Fifth Avenue. There they told Mra, McCarthy, the landlady, they had once had four children, but had buried two, From the Fifth Avenue address they moved to No, 827 Lenox Avenue, where they were iving under the name of Collins when the Evening World reporter discovered the Haeff- ners to-day, When Mra, Haskie was brought be- fore the Haeffnera and addressed them as friends both ignored her haughtily. “I do not know this woman. I have never seen her before,” Mrs. Haeffner sald. The mystery surrounding the chil- dren who were deserted in a vestibule of Gimbel’s store Saturday was cleared to-day by a reporter for The Evening World, who found the par- ents and took them to the rooms of the Children’s Society, where they identified the sturdy little boys as Broadway a couple of years ago. He took the restaurant on the rear of the ground floor and the rathakel- ‘ter im the basemont of the Conti- nental Hotel. But the crowdn didn’t flock to the new cafe. | Three months ago the real estate ‘and building were transferred from the Forty-first Street Realty Company to the Sanford Hotel Company. At jthe same time the Cafe Houlevard T can start | the Atiantio Restaurant Company. to give you f haa of business troubles, a steam pipe Ronenberg’s non was #0 badly acalded he died the next Mr, Rosenfeld said to- the At- lantio Restaurant Company will coa- tinue the business, SCHULTZ ACQUITTED IN VANDERBILT ‘WHIP’ CASE Judge Tells the Jury Verdict Is a Very Clear Miscarriage of Justice. WHITER PLAINS, N. Y., Jan. 19. Frederick Shults was acquitted this afternoon for shooting Charles H. Wilson during the Horse Show here on Bept. 17. ‘When Justice Morchauser bad fin- ished hie charge Mr, Davia objected to it ming it was unfair and ar- ume! tive. To this the Court re- plied, “Hit down, you are taki: too Many liberties for a young maa.” Juaticeo Morchauser, before dis- charging the jury, suid: “IL cannot agree with Rr verdict, but I must accept it. ‘here in but one conclusion in my mind, and that y's that this in a clear case of black- mail. The verdict indloates a miscar- of a knife. “It made “All of us $3 a week. HUSBAND them where shoppe: daily basi ig vero and public tobacco satisfaction in the year-round, minent in ind supreme liking, from. this wonderfully pure, mellow tinguished example has made it correct, amart, Your Own" upon every occasion. GENUINE Durham—none other with such a sweet, m i and can only be re- tained and enjoyed fresh-rolled cigarette. *Bull" Durham hand-made cigarettes afford enjoyment and lasting satisfaction to mote millions of men than al ater bie grade smoking tobaccos combined. F ing correct Sa sah of dameote tapers ill bot Ce ced e nilheces in United mail in United States on postal pad oe Fo wm) Bull? ae tl Dahon N.C, ‘THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY Sorel Matt entepilae bors Halt Durtnas ecco, Yen deliciously fresh, mild of unique savor they roll for themselves, to their individual ‘BULL DURHAM SMOKING TOBACCO There is no purer, milder tobacco in the world than "Bull! - This rare, balmy aroma is as delicate and elusive as it is e riage of Justice.” halt. The parents are now occupying a small furnished room in Harlem, It was after a vain search for employ- ment at his trade of house painter, which lasted for nine weeks, that Haeffner suggested to his wife that @ their children, Fred, four if years old, and James, aged n to @ department store and there leave them In the hope that a Prosperous woman would take care of them until Haeffner succeeded in finding work, When Haoftner and his wife had a glad reunion with their little waits in the rooma of the Children's Society to-day the father sturdily refused to accept $50 which bad come to the soci- ety from some anonymous giver, any- | bo: ing he did not want to take bis chil- dren back until he was on his f again and could give them @ hoi “We had enough to us two. run and get hie coat back with tears in his eyes. “They won’ : won't let me go, and so I thought 1 | | away from he j chance and I called up The Evening | | Supt. Coulter showed Hoeffner the| World. cheek for $50 which had come to him) |And asked him if he wanted to tacs! iy | ; the check and the children, Tne|1 take the wife and the children and — a |!ong hug, then put temptation behind | ™ “No, I must not take the youngate-s| strike was vot \to make @ home,” he said, ~ met @ Job first, then I will take the babies away from here.” Haeffner js thirty-three years old. Hie wife in twenty-six. married seven yearn ago. band said to-day that their presen’ otreak of hard luck in the moat severe | 4; that has hit them since the day of thetr marriage. “But I'm alw: “All 1 want ts a Job, what the work is. Home & Sons. My trade is that of a sign painter.” CHILO’S EVERY YELL LIKE THE STAB OF A KNIFE, “Didn't you know,” Haeffner was asked, “that if you had visited the tooma of the Children’s Society and explained that you were out of work and penniless your children would have been taken care of there for at least a couple of weeks, in order | yosident of the Hartford “Twice I started for the Children's Society building and each time I loat kids at home c: every yell they let out is like the stab grown fellow, wh can go out and ta! air and stick it o do that, When his stomach gets empty he lets you know, and he does it Dy yelling. Harlem—a big one—and the rent was hard luck was hitting her as strong as it was me. “She asked me where we would a that we'd SERTING “It was on Thursday morning 1 said to Jeauette that it would be best to take the kids downtown and leave re—to pin @ note to Fred asking whoever found them to take writes pretty English. She wrote just hat I a Third Avenue elevated train at O’elock in the morning. fourth Street we got out and walked over to Gimbel's store. carrying Jimmi “I felt mighty sad. Last time we wont to the shopping district, was fu because they thought store We fixed the go-cart, put Jim~- mie in it, tucked him tn a blanket and told Freddie to watch him till we Y, JANUARY 19, 1915., Freddie came! with the paper, but I was afrald. 1 |thougnt we would be arrested for what we did, Then 1 read in the ||fi Paper that we wouldn't be prosecuted, would take let me have my coat oT “All I ask is a chance to go to dull one in New | | work. fo toward the South, where there te work. This ye I used to belo A year ago I the child in his arms a because and Tt was one of © fitting home for them— | neveral who didn't want to walk ow 0 ore up my union card ant is not the way to begin | walked out of the meeting. “T must “Since then I found it hi a job, because I can’t sho union man. But I could get back into | | the union, | When Haeffner and his wite identi- j fled the ohildren young ones were asleep. They were told to return later They were The hus. in the day, and an official of the ao. olety offered Haeffner $3. He refused ie “Take something with which to buy food,” urged the oficial. He took $1. subject hopeful,” he added, 1 don't care I want a job so up the firm of Haeffner, Children’s Bociety to-da: hin wife them wore left in a crowd. The case seem: to be a most deserving one. What needed most of all is work for th husband.” —e——— | stote the Poltce Head's Auto, | Detective Sergeant A. J. Williams of | the Hartford (Conn.) Police Department called to-day on Aasiatant District A\ torney Deuel to ask his aid in finding | the automobile of Morgan B. Brainerd, ; Board, | which was stolen from the Brainerd’ garage at 2 o'clock Baturday morning. ‘The car was a 30-horsepower Pack limousine of 1910 model. The Connect cut Heense plate It bore was No. 6404, | the motor number being 13222. The body of the car wan painted blue and it | was upholatered in dark blue. The panel .B.B, ow 2" rd that,” he replied, 1 don't know whether Pp against it good had @ couple of * for food. Why, me lone my nerve, | %0re the monogram he gets hungry, breath of fresh pote he cette 14-Year-Old Moy a Sulctde, BUFFALO, N. ¥., Jan. 19.—Fashion- ing a noose from a clothes line, which | he attached to a rafter in the attic of | his home, fourteen-year-old Leon Becker this afternoon committed sul- cide by hanging. No cause for his act Is known. But a kid can't had a furnished room in Last week I paid to said @ smaller room, have to give up the MADE PLAN FOR DE- Es. there were lots of women ed to say and pinned it and we took th riday, leaving Hai boys on pty Just 40 cents, besides ay for a little room for en we got to Thirty- 1 was carry- new mode. rt and a blanket leading Freddie and The boys were “On Saturday I saw a piece in The Evening World saying the parents could get help by communicat! Annual Sale Lingerie at McCutcheon’s 5“ A fresh shipment just in from the Custom House enables us to offer this week an unusually fore assortment of moderate priced hand-embroi French Chemises at 75c, $1.00 and $1.25 also a collection of a similar range of Drawers at $1.10 and $1.25. The latter are strictly hand- made as well as hand-embroidered. These together with those quoted below are all to 10% Discount | Our assortments throughout the entire range-of both French and American Lingerie are still very complete. French Gowns—$1.50, 2.25, 3.00, 3.75, 5.00 to 200,00, French Chemises—$1.50, 1.65 to 35.00; Austrian Ea eens, sizes 36 and 38 only, $1.50, 2.00 French Drawers—$1.50, 1.85, 2.25, 2.75 to 18.50. French Corset Covers—$1.10, 1.50, 1.85, 2.75, French Skirts—$1.50, 2.00, 2.75, 3.50 and up. Domestic Gowns—$1.00, 1.50, 1.75, 3.00. Domestic Drawers—50c and 85c. Domestic Corset Covers—s0c, $1.00 and 1.10. Domestic Combinations—$1.10 and 1.50. Fifth Ave., 34th & 33d Streets PO WTENYT YIP Wer Won Ye te 0k So YY Fashionable Silhouette Is Changing But as we have sensed this change for many months now, we are quite prepared to fit women with L. R. Corsets which conform to this L. R. Corsets are made exclusively for us. corsets at their price that we know. And the more than 60 specialized models insure to every woman a corset that perfectly suits her figure. $1, upwards. JOHN WANAMAKER Broadway at Ninth, New York They are the best where hunger could not co: hroug! the door. Superintendent Ernest K. Coulter then told Haeffner a wealthy woman who lives in New Hamburg, up Hudson, was willing to take the chil- dren to her home for two months or until their father could get steady employment, Haeffner gladly ao- Quiesced to this arrangement. When Haeffner and his wife came to the Children’s Society and Fred- die, four and @ half years old, and two-year-old Jimmy were brought to the door of the room, both children ran to their parents with giad cries, Haeffner gathered the youngest into his arms, tears in his eyes, ‘You see,” he cried exultantly, “they know who their daddy and mamma are." “I want to go home; I'm lonesome here,” the oldest boy said and he slid down from his mother's knee to Men many nations life of tobacco. Their dis- » fashionable to "Roll ALL SUPERFLUOUS HAIR ellow, irresistible fra- oh fi FRE, ottet eas iar Si ir eas recta oy haces he Ne. cant supply you A. T. Stewart & Co. men in the January Shoe Sale. e and tan calfskin and are the very shoes which you would want to wear right now or in the spring. Formerly Another Wanamaker Sale! 548 Men’s Fancy Suits Reduced to $15.50. About half their original prices this season; some a little less than half, some a little more. All from the fine regular Wanamaker stocks which set their own standard. All sizes from 84 to 42, but not every size in every pattern, which is one reason for the reduction. Ready Wednesday morning—tomorrow—in the Men’s Store. Burlington Arcade floor, New Building. Overcoats Down to $11.50, $14.50 in the Lower-price Store. 1,243 Pairs Men’s Shoes at Broadway corner Eighth, They are black Low shoes at this price would make a very good investment in preparation for next season, The Men's Shoe Store is in the center of the Burlington Arcade floor, New Building. Broadway at Ninth 3.95 Taken from Our Regular Stocks of $5 and $7 Shoes Both high and low shoes in this offering for