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COUNT HERE T0 FIND WOMAN Hf ~ LOVES, OF DEATH ~Czar’s. Huntmaster Seeks ~ Beautiful Girl Who Fled on Wedding Eve. SHE IS AN ACTRESS. Kazansky Says He'll Kill Him- self if Search Is Not Soon Successful. ‘Im gearch of the beautiful actress who fied from him on the eve before their wedding day, Count Leo Nicholejevit Kasansky 1s hore, the guest of an in- timate friend, who has a ne residence on the west side of town, For fifteen years Count Kazansky's agents have vainly tried to find Viera Antonovna (Czern!. "If I do not find her I will kill my- | self,’ sald Count Kazansky lust night) A high-strung man of superior mental- fly, ho spoke with perfect calm. "I find it impossible to live longer without her, I will spend my Inst kopeck to find her." In Czar’s Officlal Family. Kazansky is incognito bh the Cuare Master of Russian Majesty's 3) man of forty years, an oficial of an old family, of distinguished position of refined manners, with the best edu- eation, he speaks Ge: uently. And wi! weeks ho Constantly smoki Karansky said last “My eyes have alwa tizing or rather human beings to exercise | uhiveralty nigh as had a hypno- family “Of course, I did nut love her, but I} Bad to obey fer aw The mar- Tage was to be ¢ ted nose @hurch on f atau As we Rtood before I looked at my bride. All my abhorrence of her must have been expresse s. She} @hrieked and fell unconscious. After | four days the Princess died;!a post-mior- fem examination proyed she had eut- fered a stroke of apoplexy.” Then Met Real Love, minutes Cor Then, For Temained silent unwillingtess to 7: “I was convinced I could ney until:the night I saw the Waltz Viera | Antonovna on the In Nis I loved her. I propos sho @ 1 me My some cong father, | “The wedding to our. estates, On Ue ng was to be her hus had a tong |} talk, walkin is in the moon- ight, © she confessed to mo th ahacche! he. reve { party, and y me only when | ar, during aj that she | I promtsed to kill th hunt, or join could at when | to. begin | and the guests 1 miased her. 1 hurried to her apartinent. The ir was locked. We broke {t open. Bho was gone. Not a trace of her waa | Jett, “So mysterious was her disappoar- @nce that, following the ths of the} jroinen to whom | had been affianced, 1 fas suspected of Kh bes rare m arreat_pecretiy. | X was impriso: 2 monastery inj Siberia. No oni swhere Iwas her disapp ny family knew | a mon at abr narked in > oid me she was tn a fr would never 5 11 be happy But . ot « er post-m she and you she wrote. ———_——. arn, tL without Bay TAFT’S GLOBE GIRDLING DATES ANNOUNCED.! GBEATTLE, Wash. Sept. 9—Secretary of War Taft has announced the itiner for his trip around the world as Sept due Yoko-! . 2; due Kobe Sept, 29; due! t. 4; due Shanghal Oct. ue Hong Kong Oct. Oct M4 (via Mec arrive i days Nov atooping two S89, Steamer at Cherboire about Dec. five New York about Dec, 10. AS originally intended t is printed as a reminder of 1a bad face at all, | keeping?” THIS PICTURE latter-day romance, but as it so perfectly, depicts the enthusiastic manner in which Sunday World adver- Nsers and Sunday World readers “c%, Sellers, Landlords and Tenants, Workers any Teachers and Students, &c., yesterday's Sunday ‘ vertisements are bringing together to-tay. y Gee To lt that You Are Not a Disinterested Party. Bearded Eccentric Wears the Notortety He} Has Won with Careless Ease and Even Seems to Like It, DOESN'T BLINK IN LIME-LIGHT. | 5 Says Miss Kuttner Has Explained the Sit-' uation More Completety than He Would Ever Dare To, ‘THE EVENING. ‘WORLD. By Nixola Greeley'~Sm 1th, ef. FEINITY,” ‘said’ Ferdinand | A Pinney Earle, “is nat a bad | ward. ' The idea that there | is just one person in the world with | whom one feels entire and perfect sympathy is very beautiful, very don’t believe In it, notwithstanding all the rot about ‘affinities,’ pre- natal romances, &c.,- that has been attributed to me. — In fact, 1 think) you believe more in affinities than | I do.” 1 met Mr, Edrle by appointment in his. brother Victor's real estate | office, at No. 200 West Seventy- second street. Having previousiy written my views about his conduct | ing his young wife _to France to get a divorce that ho may wed with his twenty-two-year-old “af finity,” Julla Kuttner, and having wrung a public answer from the bearde¢ eccentric to the criticism, I felt some embarrassment at the {dea of meet- ing him. NOT DISTURBED BY NOTORIETY. But Mr. Earle,'when he came in and shook hands quite as {f we met at a| lawn party or an afternoon tea, seemed 80 much at home with the eituat{fon, wore his notoriety with such careless ease, that I settled down very com- fortably to have a chat with him, entirely regardless of having called him severgl very unpleasant names in print just the day before. This young man who shipped his wife and child to Europe the other day apparently as {f he were consigning an ordinary load of frefght has not His features are regular, his face long and of waxen pallor. His large, pale-blue eyes, smooth-parted hair and long curly brown beard give him a general resemblance to the itinerant Messtahs that spring up now and then, make a few converts and disappear. Mr. Earle {s tall and loose-jointed. His manner {s deprecating, his conversation extremely elusive. Just when you think you are pinning him down to some definite statement of what he believes in he wriggles away, “ARFINITY’ APPEALS TO HI I. “Mies Kuttner,” he sald, “bas explained the whole situation. She sald more than I would ever dare to, I did not call her my ‘affinity’ origt- nally, Wut the world {s a good one, and I belleve she fulfils {ts meaning so far as I am concerned. “I don’t believe that a man has just one affinity. There are doubtless | hundreds of women in the world who would meet his needs. One man de- mands mere beauty in his affinity, another requires simply that she be a; good housekeeper. Another admires brains !n women,” “And you?” I interrupted. “I suppose you prefer brains to good house- For {t is generally understood that Mr, Earle's newly found | affinity 1s of the nizh-browed variety. “I Uke both,” he replied. “There 1s no reazon why the same woman shouldn't have both, nor why a man shouldn't. Men should be good house- keepers, too,’ he added. “They should have some {dea about homemaking well as women." hd how may a man know Nisamintty?" 1 asked. ““What reason huve you to believe that Miss Kuttner {s uny more your permanent afMfanity than Mrs. Earle was? How do you know you may not want her to give you up a few years from now to another woman, just as Mrs. Earle gives you up to her? And why-ts-that not progressive polygamy just as I sald the other dey?" GRIEVED AT ‘PROGRESSIVE POLYGAMY,” Mr. Earle looked grieved. “Oh, no!” he protested. “I am a monogamist. But I belleve persons should know each other thoroughly before they marry. Mrs. Earle was a French woman, and of course you know that means that I never saw her alone or had any knowledge of her real thoughts and reai temperament until after we were married. . “Mrs. Earle Is a Woman of wonderful education. She has far more brains than I have. I never needed an encyclopaedia while she was in the house. but a woman has to be more than an encyclopaedia to meet my ideal, I was no more successful in meeting Mrs. Earle's ideal. 1 am pretty well informed on the matter, and I don’t think she will have any difficulty {n securing her divorce in France. Till she does I sball walt patiently and work hard at palnting. Then by the time she has obtained it my affairs will have ceased to be a nine days’ wonde- to the public, and Miss nuttner and I will ve married.” z Simple, isn't {t? EARLE-I0 DEFY ENEMIES | | eAVAIaNT WH LAW a OW IDO? Wixolg Greciay- Sm i E Although Ferdinand Pinney rle,| sald If the town authorities did not the artist who discarded his y so! give him protection from the villagers that ho might be free to wed Jullal|and farmers, that he would hire his uttner, his “soul's amMnity,"" has writ-| own protection, and that if he did this, Exekial 9. president’ of| some one would be hurt, n of M 's Kolng| Should Parle venture back to Monroe, irn to his home, he has not put! where his wife was well liked and re- 5 that spected, the ch bo hurt," anc will be Earle, are “some one qill this “eome one" Near his home ts a| bucket of tar and a rall ready for quick use. It Is belleved the people would turn out the minute-It was learn- ed Earle was there again, Miss Kuttner has left her retreat in the Orange mountains, and yesterday was in New York with Barlé, To-day, tis said she has gone to a rt where her mother {s stopping and that el expects to rtay until Earle recelyes word that his wife has cured a dive and cleared t for his marriage to his “amnity a0. way Ministers Denounce Him. wouldn't “be to quite safe for Miss nature back into Monroo time. ‘The ministers of | od Earle from the pul- lp day, Tho ministera, Hke th ee wnt! ple don't seem to have o y tner at | i | ee o illustrate a thrilling story in particle of sympathy for Earle's ‘fre dom of love” ideas, oS fag to one another," it RISHOP OF CHICHESTER DEAD, the thousands of Buyers and LONDON, Sept. %—Tho Bishop of Employers, Chichoster, the Right Rey., Brest: Rol- | and Wiitberforoe, ‘D. D., died to-day at Bembridgn, Inte of Wight. He was born in 184 nnd’ was a son of the late Right ited of Biases World Ad poetic. - But it is not scientific. 1’ mwhile in, seotber. Mica (MONDAY, A Man May Have 100 Affinities; Idea of Only One Is Scientifically Crude, Says Artist Earle, Expert, in an Intervie With Nixola Greeley-Smith EPTEMBER 9. 1902. WHALES FIGHT (NER AFFINITY" OFF FIRE ISLAND Bellowed Like Bulls Spouted Blood 50 Feet | in the Air. | and We read In the Itterary news that W,| Clark Russell. the writer of sea etor-| Jee, has taken to rhyme tn order to make his word painting more effective. But there ts still poetry in prose tn) ea happenings, even In the vicinity of | New York, as witness what the yen- ing World got from Sayville, L. 1, to-! él day, descriptive of a Mht between two! whales. Tt was off Fire Island yesterday af- ternoon, and was witnessed by numer- ous persons who were out in sailboats trolling for bluefish. Our ¢orrespon- dent says: “Dne-0WG Inige monsters: fought like ter/ of the sea. H. Rabinowitz, chief of the pneumatic | tube staff of The Evening World, pro- nounces this the finest plece of p-oso |! poetry he ever saw. The idea of cuin: paring a whale to a battle-ship appeal« to him as particularly pleasing, “Phey spouted blood tty feet in the alr.” Here the correspondent begins to go! into detall, With a master hana slaps on the next dagh of color, ‘Phe foaming waters were red."’ Get wise to the crimson foam! churn and swish and boil! the correspondent avers: “They bellowed like mad bulls, the sounds, were heard a mile away. yhen this passage Was shown to Charl Harv inene snouts at prize fight athletic He unhi most remar world has seen sinc died. But Usten fur “The scene resem’ batten" Here we have eviden aki, nucw ax wr teould possess. wiiied with an enoe to facts characteristic of the cor aoientious {t will be noti that the ad off y aay ke two Bee It Continuing, and p is not only synahronoas, | nlous, y one critictam to be ad The correspondent failed to announce whic le Bot the decision, Possibly this pa.vage expiains the over. sight: | “Tho frightened apectatora walled quickly shorewant for safely.” Tt is presumed the whiies were fig’ ing over a lady whale affinity, but correspondent forgot to montion th stR ual Bel DUCHESS OF MARLBOROUGH IS COMING TO NEW YORK, Expected Here in the Holidays and May Make Her Home in | This Country. The Duchess of Marlborough will be in New York some time In the holidays, according to Oliver H. P. Belmont, xteptather, He sald yes at el- court, Newport, that } ed her at that timb, but couli Bay pose tlvely whether or not would re- turn to England, This $n the visit society has looked for since the Duke and Duchess of Marlborough parted last year, It was predicted then that she would return to this country sooner or later and make her home here. A few weeks ago he was reported In the foreign cablea 8 eccupie! with her many charities, in which sho vies with Queen Alexan- dra, of whom sho is & great favorite, Sho will make her home in,New, York Amearicts to ibe “neat her | enidst battle-ships, each striving for the mas-|aay mor | wire, DRINK ‘Contractor . Declares He'd | Rather Die Than Face dren He Made Mother MINEOLA, L. I, Smith, a well-to-do fs wife covered consciousness fret time Killed his wife etter than anybody on he wants to dic He fs atill at the ith and and wh ne lay mere. I wan less while 1 and Jf have harm the whiske he KILLED BY LIGHTNING |_ON. WAY TO BE MARRIED. HOT SPRI on Bar ning while rh may © Wine 5 ESAS MADE HIM KILL FE HE LOVE Sees Sep’ For the strong—that they may keep their strength. For the weak—that they For the young that they may grow in strength. the most nutritious food made from wheat. Clean, crisp and fresh. MISSING GIRL MAN'S PRISONER, FNS Twelve- Year-Old Blanche Kohler Disappeared on Way to Visit Mother. ' Chil | Ss. ° rtin J. w tractor, at his he night ago, Mrs. ing held a pri was soized man who broke the . eho pur car fy ine girl lett the House on Yriday last, leaving # note to her aunt, wh thal ake was , who livers at 2 > was a ng to see Mont- HEAR KISSING BLOCK AWAY; CITY MUST STOP IT suns, -lawayr egain their strength. iscuit eda In moisture and : dust proof packages. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY T. It Including i} | O th free. Protection cover and revolving stool free. | | | | 1 | ght ria “that's myself. “this 4 have gle wins Gum fi HE Che Gum-Lax is more than a chewing gum. Simply chew it Just like other chewing gums—but, unlike them, there's some good comes from tlon; takes that dark brown taste out of your mouth; action. It will rel! st proper intestinal Chew a piece afier meals. ing and carry you through the rest of The Laxative F lo by Caswell, Massey & Com) Win te ether sen Company, J. Muha Walicr 8. Ro-key and two th ycur drugyist does not solGuM A Real Fire Sale! Cur entire new stock was recently damaged very slightly by water, Used in putting cut a fire above us. jured, but prices have tumoled.. Grand Rapids Colonial, Mahogany, Clrcassi &c.; also a large asszrtment ordinarily low figures. Lifetime Furniture Our Grand Rapids proaucts are not “built to break and sell more.” We do not sell “one season” quality. for years and always looks high class. At Absurdly Low Prices We shall dispose of the entire stock at once to make room for new gcods. Everything reduced In price. Come! Examine! Save Money! The best opportunity of the season to get good furniture at smal} MANGES BROS. __ cost. Established 136 to INDS HIMSELF, THEN ASKS TO Rosenthal Doesn’t Remember Leaving Baltimore Store and Wakes in Central Pac walked igto the “What's the matter with yout? was offictal query. dont I asked a man. Yes, wouldn'’: feel safe anywhere but in & Carry Gum-Lax with you. Chewing Gum—Cures Constipation suind other druggists in Now York City. X send us 10 cents and we will mail you a box, GUM-LAX MFG, COMPANY, 29 Broadway, New York City. ‘of BRASS BEDSTEADS at extra- 140 Wesi 23d Street LOCKED UP —___-——_— } Torenthal. of Baltimore, kapt- to Magistrate Corrigan in urt he js on his way home J, man, “Woald you jock me Up fr her" Lieut. Fanner. yau hy take cate.of this ne added, p ig a large revolver— “I'm no mixed up I don't know what I with itt? : do the answert You sees know,” was what's puzzling me. few minutes ago I suddenly came te out there. ‘What place is thist ntral Park,’ he snawered. ntral Park, where?’ I asked. ew York. he said”? n't exaotly lock you up sald the leutenant. but hold on’ said the visitor; Is the point. You see, my name ts Emil Rosenthal, and I am a liquor . 44 Pratt street, Balth The lust thing 1 remember y owm store. I don't that was at what, lim. scared, an been doing ‘ation to-night. It might happen. was turned over to two nd taken to the Night Magistrate Corrigan dis- on his promise to not kill enthal sald he would go ck to Baltimore, thal or HEALTH It's a tonic laxative. it. It relieves constipa- re- lieve that distressed feel- the day, Hogeman & Company, son, Kal.sh: Pharmacy A Furniture practleally unin- Furniture jan Walnut, Birch, Maple, | We sell the kind that lasts 1852 HE Wolfner is the best piano in WE know it, and we want YOU to know it, tone, touch, construction and finish. closest investigation by piano experts, for us, and is guaranteed. by us and the manufacturer, Cpe J (aa or 10: 200 Come In and try this piano’ yourself, -Question us about any point you wish. ¢ better for us, No Money Down- No interest—no extra charges 0! The \ Wolfner Pi The more (Btege! Cooper Stare, Fitth Floor, Center.) See our requiar advertisement on page, 5, the world sold at $250, Best in It will stand the Tt is made especially es ano i Ce ou know about it, $1 a Week Delivered f any kind.