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| ~ Seo rasta Were dtscharged-thts-morning-+ ACID THE END OF © “‘Just Swat RLS DREAM WEDDED BLISS Bridgeport Girl in Despair Drinks Half.a Bottle ) of Carbolic. LEFr HOME TQ MARRY: Since She Tmed It Trying to Be Man Too Poor, He Says, S$ She Seeks Death While 1: » He Stands By. . ‘A well-dressed young man, white as @ sheet, ran into the Herbert street police station, Willlamsburg, to-day and Panted out to Desk Lieutenant Snow that « girl had tried to kill herself with poison around the, corner at No. 67 Meeker avenue. ; ‘ @now-hurried to the Meeker, avenue | address, picking up on the way Dr. Bouck, who lives in the neighborhood. In @ furnished room they found « very pretty eighteen-year-old girl writhing in agony on the floor. Her Ups and Mouth were seared with carbolic acid. By prompt work the physician got her ut of danger, When the prin of the burns had been somewhat soothed the would-be suicide ‘Was able to tell a pathetic story. She anid she was Nollle Gedes, elghtéon Years old, and that until three weeks @go she had lived with her mother at | No. 7 Lee avenue, Bridgeport, Conn 'Wh In the spring she met Willlam Mascott ‘: & decorator, twenty-throe Years old, 4nd the couple became engaged. About tho Arst of July she said Mascott in- @uced her to elope with him, saying {0 do for months, and pesters me-to they would be marted in New York |j.. , nd jopendl isin bontvencon set Coney , thin’ élse he can do for me. Island and other seaside resorts around | “He's been {n the house all day till New York. | Just a minute before you came, when he Too Poor to Wed. But when they got here Mascott de- eared he did not have enough money te support a wife, and begged her to walt until he could Ket a Kood position Ghe rented a room in the Meeker ave- nue house, while he secured lodgings in Ainslie street, a few blocks away. Althougn thelr relations were perfectly proper, Miss Gedes sald she dured not Teturn to Bridgeport unmarried, and she even feared to let hee mother know her whereabouts for fear her unhappy secret and her good name would be- come material for gossip In the town Where ste had been reared, MARGARET RONG, [asked permission to walk down to the cotner for a breath of fresh alr and I} didn't have the heart to refuse Alm. | For ‘I will say this, that up till Satur-| day night he never gaye me any Cause | for complaint, He's a frail little man, but he's never Jala a day sick on my| hands since I married him just twenty-| two years ago. “He never fell off the water wagon before, neither. He turns over every penny he makes tu me and we have | nine children, I can't for the life of me ‘pee why he wanted to get drunk last Saturday night” | to Masscbtt, who. wecined cortented to | Mrs. Wilkinson Explains Her Method waste his. hay" in: {dle piannings swith-| “qvel1,- would you mind telling Just ouy really making an effort to secure how you treated kim, Mra, Wilki:non, t, ahe determined to kill her- OBne apent auioost the Inet money | seid I, ‘ao that other downtrodden sbe nad for # vial of acid. members of your sex may know just Mite unto {0 take her: torowe or | ow to go about tT" De parka for’ the ahe left him! ‘Oh, aure,* sald Mrs, Wikinson. tanding in the hall and golnx into a! «any woman's a fool that will take a x Sand hee ee EeMts | beating from a drunken man, I wouldn't ng pain of the Sery atu and do It, and nelther'd any of them have to, ed in to find her apparently dying. | \¢ they'd only do as I aid. en he ren to the police station for "You see, he come home at 7 o'clock frat, and pretty well loaded, too, I 5 {dq word to him at all, think- il peak never on wtory avioonecticre ayerachal ener in’ Ta give him a chance to go to bed gnse rab herannd wired tele t/ quiet Ike and not wantin’ to start “| ave: no tL. Was looked uo on a technical che aeott rew-on-sccount of the asighbon. | YASTANGY, He declined to give the ad-| ‘But did he go to the bed? Not him dress of the house in Afnslie. str mpage he boarded sor to Th hia Poca ‘came home till 11 o'clock, and him fuller | address in Waterbury Conk: waren a tick. Behe girl was refined and intelligent, | gitnous! somewhat — unsophisticated. er words, I just hauled off and give him ‘& Jab tn the side, He fell over on a chair, and then I landed on him agala with @ good swat on the jaw, That just) |Woubled him up in « heap, and then SENTENCE, FILES APPEAL. I dragxed “htm outeide-and called Relatives of Prisoner Expected ree Phat -Verdict-Would Be __ |" *1ana would you believe It, he walked | i Against Him. away as nice as you please with th o.cicet, waving his hang to: me and KARISRUHE, July 23—The excite-| saying, ‘Good-by, Sis’ ment over the Hau case fs. subsiding. “Oh, that's the only way to do it, and ‘The rioting ‘of last night ended when | yeu must do it the very fret time, too, Te crowd had been driven from the|‘There’a no use in excusing a man just vieinty of the Court-House to because it's the first fime he's ever more remote streets, Those person: Pbeen drunk. He'll only go and get drunk who Were taken Into custody during the} mratn -on-you.—You'va_got_to“give—‘om MAU, UNDER DEATH | of their trioks from the very atart, and the only! way te do it {s to knock ‘em ground a bit, + Florence Taking /Early Lessons, “Florence didn't like tc-sse me hit her daddy, Did you! honey?” interpo- lated-Mrs. Wilkinson! to. tiny’ two-year- old Florence, who jras airily. attired, tfady.thr the weekfy,bath. "It was «| heap steht better thdugh than \seeing daddy hit: your methir, wasn't 1, pet? Ami when Florencs |'grows up she'll know how to make! her man behave, like mother. Won't she now? Yea.” continued this east side Venus Victrix, “I've got five girls and four } boys, and I mean that every one of my | cirls will know how to treat a drunken husband as good an I do," and Mrs Wilkinson, who Is a broad lady; weigh- Ink’ about twa hundred pounds on the hoof, awelled up her ample boaom with tho pardonable pride of a conqueror, “But all women aren't your size, and neither are all husbands frafl of bulld like yoor's. Perhaps if they tried your fine line of treatment they would get the worst of it." “Mhybe they cotildn't land as pretty The women of the Molitor family, feering violence at the hands of ths street rabble, remained in one of the Fooms of the court-house unti! 12% efolock this afternoon, walling « favorable opportunity to drive to the railroad Fourteen policemen} fn carriages finally came to the resoue and_accompanied them to Ettlingen, the first station #oUth or Kartrune, ‘where they took & train for Baden- Baden, During the Glsorders a crowd demol- ished the windows in the rooms oo- eupled by the Molitor women at one of the hotels Helatives and friends of Karl Hau, who attended the trial in large num: bers, have recelved the verdict of the with resignation. — It not A surprise to them; In. fac the rwhelming olrcunitantial dence had led them to expect it. ‘AN appeal against sentonce ef je Sup! Wan fled This Court can only decide’ tech- nical questions uffecting the procedure of the present. trial. If the decision in adverse the casé. will be went back to Karlaruhe for retrial (SE NEE CUBAN BISHOP HERE. ~ Bishop Gulseppe Aversa, tho Papal{a blow with a fist 1 can, if I do eet ee are ee teem | nay Mt as shouldn't. I didn't need to Batae, toraay on Poard the steamer) yay, ‘no police interference, 1 could have knocked him out for good with onw blow. If I'd been a mind to, but | there's always something handy around | the house to ‘hit him with. If the roll- Ing-pin jen't there, or the btoom handle, jlet "em try the lamp. Anything will do \the work all right.” So there you are for @ gure cure. T next Ume your husband falls off the wagon Juat treat him accordink to Mra, Willingon's infallible prescription. If the frat dowe falls, don't be afrald to double It. 7 And if you’ have any doubts at all about the eMfcacy of-the treatment, just eo out, and haye look docile M Wiinsons Hey little monial, Is Poor John. —_—_e___ SHOT HIS’ SISTER-IN-LAW, PROVIDENCE, R. 1, July 23.—-wiil- jam. Skeington, a bartender employed in the saloon of his brother, John Skef- Charge: of selling Mis siatseclaciaee Mee ey T-la-law, Mngton, at her hi LAST WEEK.. ! The World printed 25,218 sep- arate advertisements, ‘The Herald printed but 16,521 ads, d The World's lead over the Herald was 8,697 ads.—a ratio Or 3-2. : xre ter = Telling How | Been Festering Her to Death, She Says, [HER ADVICE iS “DON’T WAIT” Applied Very First Time the Good Man Goes Wrong, By Margare since I landed pn my John Saturday night and had him arrested, he's as mild as milk to-day and butter wouldn’t melt in his mouth, He's finished up all the little odd jobs around the house that I’ve been at him /an" in Manhattan, according to a con- To thin't —waste-ne—time—at.all\ on ifenney worked for Foley Brothers, to—understand —you—won't.haye nono | followed Jumelied thé escaping gas, and Polloe- THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY. JULY 23, 1907. on Poor John He's Nice to Her. t Rohe, ; OES your husband fall off the water wagon? ' Does ‘he come home late at night’ with a jag and smash the furniture? Does he-try. to smash you, too?! Then try one dose of Mrs. Wilkin- son's Sure Cure for Drunken Hus- bands and get instant relief. “Sure, just swat 'em,” said Mrs. John Wilkinson, as | timidly asked for her receipt on the hand.ag of the erring spouse. “Just hand ’em a few good and hard and you'll! find that it works like a charm.) death-askin'-me if there ain't-some- ‘Em Hara,”’ Says Mrs. John Wilkinson, — FRIENDS ff to Cure Husbands of Drunkenness HS. VAN LT Se =—=HADACODENT | | Mother, Is Not Alarmed, However. KNOWS -WHER Trivia, for Jamestown : Exposition. | | jLeft July: 10 on His Yacht | NEWPORT, July S—In“eplte of the + |'atatement xiven out here tontay by. the soctetary of Mrs. 0. 1. P. Belmont that \ahe knows the whereabouts of her aon, Harold 8, Vanderbilt, who lett New Landon on July 10 on his sloop yacht | Trivia, bound for the Jamestown Ex- | position. the fact romatns that the af- | forts of othera to eet Into communica- tion with him have been unavailing, and | there ‘a much uneasincas among the | friends ofthe young man “Capt. Croviey, of the Trivia, wan {Il when Vanderblit, accompanied by thre soune—men, marted on his cruise and Jater went to Jliampton Roads by atenmer, expecting to Join the yacht there. Crowley got to Hampton Roads | en Saturday, but there was no sign of | the Trivia. He then began to make In- jculrtes, but nothing of the. Trivia could be learned, Muperintendent of the Raritan {Canal at Trenton has no recom of the | sloop. having passed there, The Mari- | without intormacion of the movements of the y in the Delaware River or bay. From Baltimore, however, comen the news that the Trivia was there last O/ CLERK HELD FORS/,000 THe BLAMES WOMAN Fascinated with New York High’ Rolling; 1s Youth’s Account. Thomas Kenney, twenty years old, a $7-a-week bookkeeper, was a prisoner in Newark, N. J., Polloe Court to-day, charged with stealing from his em- ployers by clever achemes suma ayer- @ging about $0 a week. His total thefts may reach $7,000. And “a wom- feasicn he is sald to have made, was the cause of it all. The young man had ‘ist Bought a t{ He went out again instead and never | horse and carriage for $35) when he was | check, about the size of the holes In arrested last evening. He had 912 in his pockets, old bottle dealers, at No. 3 Central! avenue, Newark, -and-lres- at No. 138; Hudson street. that city. He was looked upon as @ model youth, and well worth the seven cartwheels he drew_as-anaccountant. He was qulet. and even bashful among the fair sex over in Newark, but he didn't stay there all the tims. He came to New York often. _ Here he met @ woman whose name he says he will protect unto death. No third degree of the police will pump it out of him, he declares, it is suid. His salary suddenly shriveled up till it was | uscleas, rd from the bank where they did business that something wes wrong, but they had oonfidence without end, apparently, in’ Thomas, Ativend did come, howaver, when they Ngured up that they were short about for Inst week alone. Kenney had been with them three years, but they de-| cided at last to take action. His arrest The ‘specific complaint alleges that! Kenney raised checks of $100 and 3150 to $200 and $360, respectively, and got| them cashed, keeping the amount of| the raise for himself, Having authority his employers’ firm name, sald to haye had easy salling for time. | He did not seem to mind his arrest or! arraignment, but waa,somewhiat pleased | when the nigh ited od finteh’ came. caused my| troubles,” { An effort Is being made to-day to find| the woman. — GAS KILLS ONE, OVERCOMES TWO. | ry | Mechanic, Too Old to Get a Job,! _-Ends Life—Mother and Son Ac- cidentally Asphyxiated. Despondent because, as an oldtime meohanic, he could not hold a job In competition with younger men, August Prattrath, Mftf-nine Years old, killed himself owfth gas in his room, at No, 167 Wast Fourth atreet, to-day. _He came in late and went to bed, but wot ‘up before daylight and attached a hose to the gas fet, With the other end In his mouth, he lay down on the bed and was soon dead, though he rolled off on the floor and the hone was jerked out of his’ mouth,’ A chambermald man Salvey broke the door, A Bellevue ambulance was summoned, H arion NeGuire, of No. 282 East Thirty. rt, Yetta “Blaxks, thirty-nine years wade him wince. asa brute of id, and her/won Samuel, aged ten, hi re |Z, C. Petter, or that richest cbloom in he ‘@ long & | man in the blue suit who was seen Intor MIAN IN BLUE WEPT.|BINGHAMT’S PLAN QVERA SEA OF GRAY’ 70 PUT END TO Had Blown Himself to a New Suit and Found. Color Not Up to Date. The young man who had just invested &@ mood part of wnat came In the yel low envelope on Saturday in what th nd sald wa “a nobby, never-fade blu summer serge, as worn by our best Gressors," stole a little of the boss's) Ume to-day and peoked In at the Stock Exchange to soe how the best dressers, who. he understood, congregated there, did tt. Hale an hour Jater he was found by @ friendly cop weeping on the alde- malik in front of the Wall street en- trance of the Exchang, und telling “Tim" Walsh, an aged resident of the financial district, that he had been xrossly imposed upon and that a blue eutt- was not at-all-the thing—e gray Hackensack mosquito-netting, being the jast_ory with’ such folk as Phil" Staats, Hugh Murray, Ferd De Vau,| Jack -Ketty, THoy Swan, vite ~tatmbeer,y fashion'a garden, Ted MoVickar. Ax the young man in the blue sult told his troubles later, it appeared that he found from his elevated station tn te Rallery thatthe Noor-or the-Ex: change was what the ship news man jwould call a sullen nen of gray, Nary a blue sult marred its stony colored surface, but gray stripes, gray checks, Krav woolly, gray smooth and gray wrigely sults ware alone to be seen. With the gray sults according to the tastes of the best, dressers, most any old Kind of a shirt went, but lavenders were strong, with a leaning in favor of the ioveltest-shade-of violet. —Ttes-of-the same —hus—went—with—these,—exc the caso of the color blind, who an- noyed thelr neighbors with red and green ties as harmonious ae a bed of geraniuma backing up against « stack of purple hyacinths, Hugh Murray, prince of Wall street dressers, wore ‘a gray check. (it waa| foreign blech fn't a feoble haitNeleon left in hia/ pat {0 have deon made by Davios of hip mmong Uwe. fo sanrerining eae, | system.” zondeny of she fame texture as the] ties and work r way into the con ‘The Kissing Bug considers that porse- ISRTY “BOC OT OF Tar etree eit | fidenses of the Srganized bance af Ori | oution on the part of the police ka un- Herna reponing on a purple alt [Amine Gee, constantly | constitutionally cruel. He tex -fount-« Low cut russel ‘shoeg and’ viole dor mich & syetem of okitize Ui: | soft refuge in the Hell Gate tunnel Hane f. Murray's +4] formation T helleve we will bo able to| There in the tenebrous shade he can Ted MoVickar’s rubicund and rotund face likewise peered over underworks of ray, bul young ; 16 nobleat thing in green atri through his outer wear, snakes in sagebrush’ Vickar, who has recently Nevad Salling Baruch, who fa not connected swith @ny steamship company, followed | the stout line, and arrayed his} slender form. in a atone colored creation | that was dotted with scarlet specks In! A manner too cut for anytime Baruch elected to sport the violet of his confreres, but backed It up with| & spring ong effect In greon shirts, | Mr.[ Jack Kelly's famour sur: med! white shirt’ was set off yellow | cravat which lay on his granite-hupd sult like an orange in the grizzled wake | of a tramp frulter, Charile Ocirichs | and Goadby Loew all played the gray, and the men who affected the light alik| coats, of the summer broker at, work, | every one showed Klimpsen of srdy, un! erstandingly to All In the picture, | this was gleaned from the young casting @ bundle from an boat. rle ferry- Retro everett BEAT WHITE-HAIRED MOTHER Magistrate Regrets Inability Give Youth Severe Sentence, When Philip McGuire, a husky youth of twenty-two, was arraigned before Magintrate House in the Yorkville Court to-day charged with persistent drunkenness and with constantly beat- in his white-haired old mother, Mra.? Be pole yared, hia as, 8 hat i typ 1 eo! w “were framed altomether too Meg as ‘of their nationality with crimes against to. ~ 4p nent fromthe Civil Service Mats that. ing and sailing #ome hours later. The next report of the vessel was that she was at Solomon's Island, but this, upon, inveatixatlun, proved to be untrue, and ho vessel has reported seeing the yaoht since she sailed from Baltimore, This, however, fy not taken as sur- prising, as she would not Ikely attract attention unless in distress, Except for a flerce storm which vi ited Baltimore and vicinity last Thu Gay evening, but which was not felt {o any extent on Chesapeake Bay, the ‘weather on the bay since Thuraday has been falr, Vanderbilt, 1f he made straight for Jamestown after leaving Id have been there long before thin he ted up somewhere, Many small pinces along the bay have no tele xtaphic or telephenic ‘communication With the outside world, and It fa prob- able that the Trivia is anchored at some secluded spot. How Mrs. Belmont learned where her von Was, unless she Js counting on the 3 report she had from him jn Baltimore, {a not known. KISSING BUG IN HGnT FOR LIE Combines with Hug Bee to Make-Stand Against-Police at Dreamland. EOF CRIME ants Foreign Born Sleuths to Get Information from the Inside. Commissioner Bingham told to-day for the first time the purpose ta which he expects, to put the $5.00 of ad- ditlonal appropriation, which he tacked ea as a kind of eleventh hour amend- ment to he polics budget. that went) Intely to the Board of Estimate and | Apportionment, He hopes to use {t for secret service work outside the depart- ment in fracing crimes among the foreian residents of Greater New-York. A deputation of Italtans had called upon him to protest against the fre- quent—coupling of the names of men girls and children on Mimsy—and~tn-}- wuifictent evidence or-on-mere assump- on and to ask that more Italtans be put on the police force in order that they might Intelgently cope with of- fenéera sneaking their own language, That Woulkl Sew" Food taea-tt- were} able to pat It Into effoot, Gen, Bingjam—toMt bis callers ‘but fortunately 1 am not, I realize that di eredit ia brought upon (he mass of our respectable and industrious Italian cit!- zens by Uhe actions of a vicious minority of thelr countrymen, I be- Hove 4 I had more drigtit, ambitious ‘The Goney Yeiand Kisving Bug that Police Captain.}angan has been upper- balmy days past is going to court to wet an Injunction, It seems that said Bug has been driven off the beaghes and has been able to find no other refuge in Dreamland, And now Capt. Langan Yovae Italian policemen me could get! proposes to drive him out of there with PSiee reeulte, pertiage, but 1 am com-| 2” searchlight hake additions to the - “ “Put IROOM The dark tunnel -at-Hol are. handed tc me, and unless the Aeuanal jguatitys there I cannot put| "IT want lights so that I oan find that “However, this ta Bug and beat him to-death. He is PT have naked eee tty | panned from Coney‘s oceaa, The }i to expkiin why I have asked for a ape- cial appropriation of 85,00) for detective Durposes. If I wet tt I am going to Spend St in hiring a stam of men of Bee {a also banned, and wherever I not only nip many orfmos in the bud bat to securo nm larger percentage of convictions in cases where crimes have mn committed. ——————___ NO BAIL FOR PHYSICIAN, Dr. Harry Greenatein Held for Ao- tion of Coroner, Mra. Anna Katraua, yearn old, ‘of No. 350 East atreet, died at Flower Hospital this morning from the effects of drugs which, she alleged, were prescribed by Dr, Harry Greenatoin: thirty 8 of age, of No, 341 East Fifty-secord street, and he was arrested on her complaint and admitted to ball by Magistrate Dros exe. This morning, after the woman death, Detectives Tobin and Cummings re-arrested Dr, Greenstein and placed against him a charge of homichie ie being reaponatble Tor the woman's death, sting gleefully and then hover around to hear the! soft music of smacks and “Oh Charlie, you muan't" and “Oh, Harry, you bold thing! The naked lttle cher- ud with his“bow and quiver has also and will Join tande with the kissing bug to fotter the ruthless fet and relentless club of Capt, Langan, William A. Ellis, the showman, will champion the Kissing Bug tn his logul ef- | tort to enjoin the police, Mr. Ellis ap- pointed the cozy corner in the Hell Gato tunnel #0 that the Kis#ing Bug and the Hug Bee might frolic to thelr hearta! she sheltering nimbus,, He twenty-seven Fitty-fourth content In 4 ota engaged a squadron o: heey uigmatter into the highest courts if necessar: rato It ina long dark tunnel, thin Hell Gate labyrinth, but In order that the Bug and will make It longer, nor will Mr, Ell He was arraigned tn Yorkvil) 1 much as one tallow dip In it Mer ncure | Re RUL te ana worry. the .evee- pti the and remanded to the Coroner with ball, eet FIRE IN BROADWAY STORE. Morning Blase Creates World of Excitement but Doe Little rma that tickle the hearts of loy- ittle Ever Notice? Brainy People Grapc-Nuts FOOD. Damage. Smoke wan acen Issuing from the basement of No. 1260 Broadway, owned fang occupied by Rogers, P early/to-day, When the firemen camo they found a small Dlazo In.a basement rubbish plle. -It- was ‘quickly extin, wulsbed. ‘The stock was not Injured. The fire provided lots. of veutertain- ment for the work-bound throng, and a crowd of shopgiris watched the engines JSRUSDSTa SSID OF tne Abpersie |aISSING BOY iMrs. O, H. P. Belmont, His! { | i | | Ume Exchange in Philadelphia is aleo! Thureday evening, arriving In the morn-, Baltimore, | “Lentting——ind—-oross-countering these | une I than In the dark tunnel of Hell Gate) Gate,” We tie mandate-ot-Capt- Langan: t- nee him he will be swatted until there; been hounded Into the Hell Gate tunnel} wy ’ | € a \ 3 the Bee nay have even freer pasture | e e e A great many blood medicines ‘contain WHOSE FRIENDS ARE UNEASY. eT Warold .§.Venderbitl. GIRL IS SHOT WHILE AT WORK IN A HOSPITAL: | Pretty Rose Miller Strangely; Wounded in Staten Isl- and Infirmary. H Rose Muller, an exceptionally pretty | Dionde of eighteen, at work at the S, R: | Smith Infirmary, New Brighton, 8. 1., waa mysteriously shot in the right arm vwhile- at +ork In the chelf surgeon's room to-day. She was employed as a maid, preparatory to belng admitted to ‘the nchool of nurs Capt, Hayes, of the New Brighton olice station, was notified, and got vusy at once with two dotect! | A-search failed to locate the revolver | from which the fired. Miss pla on the operating rays were used to find the | “Her parents live on Jersey street, New Brighton, and they were notified of the | account for the affair en questioned by the police, The hompital authorities threw no light on the mystory, Dr. ‘Townsend, ahot by John Boll, now | awaiting the electric chair in the death [Rouse at Sing Sing Prison, was former- ily chief surgeon at the Smith Infirmary. Ho was shot dead in bed by Bell, whose | wife died after being operated on by Dr. Townsend, The police belleve the shooting was done by a former horpital employee, who may have had a grudge against | Miss Moher, Dr. Willam Smith says he wan altting in the room ten minutes before the girl wax shot, and had he Jbeen there when the bullet wan fired It would have struck him Jn the head. — GUATEMALAN REBELS, GET PRISON PARDONS. heat GUATEMALA CITY, Guatemala, July 2.—Of the ‘minor political offenders re- cently sentenced by the courts of Guatemala, many have been pardoned vend liberated. during the past ten days and It fs believed that those under sentence of death also’ will par- doned. “Conditions in the RepubMc are quiet. I tial serts, the ices, dessert confecti some other strong mineral, These in, jing and tisques of the body. Leonard was incident by the hospital authorities, , Sie sald that no one had cause to ahoot | developing rabies. ther that she wae aware, and could not and the boy Was taken to ¢ of Abraham In ten cent tins, aleo in tweaty-Gve cent tins, NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY boy TEN BY STRMGE CUR NG OF BABES in_ Terrible Convul- sions at Hospital—Hopeless, Say Doctors. ATTACK AT MIDNIGHT, Came Stiddenly When Wound Had Been Entirely ~ Forgotten. Gilbert Leonard, fifteen years ol, of No. 2 Manhattan street, ta raving {it convulsions, strapped to «bed in J Hood Wright Hospital to-day, having developed rabies.in an acute fornt early this morning. “ Buch, fa the bey's raving and such strength has he developed that four men are required to control him. 4 The boy was bitten by am dox:tagt Arril. Tho rabies attacked him early. thin morning very suddenly. After he mot to the hospital, with great aimculty, Dra, Wheeler and Williams. of the Pastour Institute, were called, They went to tho, horpital in a fast jfutomobdlle, taking anti-tozin with them, They are specialists in the treatment of rabies, but one glance at the trugeling boy told them the case wag hopeless. They said they would gladly aive thelr nervices, but that Leonard was past human ald. He would die be- fore the day wi out. Leonard and a number of other boys Went to a pond at Two Hundred and Twenty-third street and Broadway on April 1 They were playing about the woods, when a Iittle black dog trotted up. Leonard began patting the an mal, when it suddenly turned and bu Jed Its teeth in his forearm. The arm was badly torn, and Leonard went to the Washington Heights Hospital for treatment. Ho felt no {11 effects from the bite unt til Sunday night, when he became !1i and asked for water. The water wag siven him and he was thrown into con- vulsions, He recovered and ‘t was thought he had probably been a victim of the heat. No one suspected he waa In fact, the bite of the dog had almost been ‘forgotten by tho boy and his family, Leonard's second attack came on after midnight this morning. He firet. ate tempted to throw himasalf out of: the window. His mother prevented ‘thie with dMfcuity, ‘Then assistance onme hospital. ——_— BOY HKiGHWAYMAN GETS 1 CENT FROM BOY VICTIM, Arrested for Robbery, Young Des perado Admits Committing a Crime. f Martin Klein, fifteen years old, of Ne 1% Goerck strect, was arraigned in the Calldren’s Court, to-day on a change robbery. ‘The complainant «was Konigstein, fourteen years boy, af No, 21 Second old, a school street, who sald that yesterday he was held op: tr by the-other boy and of a Wyatt remanded the prisoner for ¢6ne tence, guilty, Wittett-street cent. Justice folowing a plea of When the guests can eat no more of things substan- ial; when the frozen-des-—— creams, and_ fruits are served; then is the time for those exquisite ons PURELY > VEGETABLE Mercury, Potash, Arsenic or jents act unpleasantly and often dangerously on the system by. affecting the stomach and upsetting the digestion, and sometimes do great damage b: paid t Nod such results ever come from the use of -§. 8.9. This great medicine enjoys the distinction of being the only | guaranteed purely vegetable blood remedy on the market. eating out the delicate lin- It is made entirely from the extracts and juices of healing, cleansing roots, herbs ‘and barks of the forests and fields gal thered, under our own supervision. ‘In the treatment of Rheumatism, Catarrh, Sores and Ulcers, Scrofila, Skin Diseases, Blood Poison, and all blood diseases and disorders 8. S. 8. is 9 safe and efficient remedy. It removes from the blood all impurities, ‘humors or poisons, and safely as well as surely cures all ills and ailments |du i bl For more than forty. years 8. 8. 8. due to a bad condition of the blood. Seer her : gi has been recognized as the best Blood Pu: ‘on have books on, the different bl We | Tonite. oy ‘ kin diseases which a. nd. oil alao