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| | BOY STUNG 8 INSECT DIES 0 HAE DEA Young Bienz Infected With t Anthrax Through Bite it on Lip. MOTHER TO BE EVICTED Court Grants Her Three Days we in Which to Bury i Son, ' The case of William Blenz, sixteen years old, of No 46 East One Hundred and Twenty-third street, a big robust fad, who was bitten meek ago Harlem Hospital at midnight thrax {s vastly interesting to the doc tors of the institution, and an autopsy will be performed to stu lar phases of the disease that killed dim. Anthrax tsa di Wccasionall especially Russia, bh anfected, Tho theory ts that the insect that stung young Blenz hed carried the ge m some shed Yard, ‘The Harlem Hospit @ case of anthrax bet At the time the boy dled his sister, y some Insect 8 and died in the yesterday ease peculiar to sheep, ntries, sheep raising o man be! had 1 never Mary Warner, was {n another ‘ward of the hospital awaiting an opera- Gon, This morning Mrs. k Bienz, the mother of the boy ther children, went to the Municipal Court at One Hundred and Twenty: Bret street and Sylvan place, with a Wispossess notice and begged a grace wf three days to bury her boy, With a brother, Alphonso, elghteen dhe dead boy was the sole support of Rig mother, sisters and little brother. (But both lads had been out of work wome tims when William was bitten, Go far as the doctors could learn trom the boy and his kinspeaple he was Bitten while asleep, The bite was on the lower lip, and when he awoke !t| thad swollen to three times its normal | Bu Home Insect Infested. At first it was belleved that a mos- @uito had bitten the boy, a# there has} ote In that gection past few weeks, earwigs and other erawling things have multiplied pro- Aigiously, and, acco ‘‘hirteen-year-old sister of the dead boy, @ multitude of have been crawl fng about their home for weeks, When young Blenz morning after he was b! $nto his mother and exhibited his fen Ip. remedies were appli but the sw ng continued to grow and the pain of {t became intense, On Tuesday the-boy went to flem Hospital ang in the dis ceived a wash t8 use on his lip mvash did not live ever, and b deen 2 ot Harlem the ‘Water bugs and for the Har- ensary re The is s ing to Mary, the | e following day the| of an-| i} gv, how. | §P lu artist and nooga as his ewelling had involved his neck and Shoulder, The next day {t extended to| his right arm and the palm of his which began to fester, Then a nelghborhood physician was ealied in. He told Mrs, Hienz that ther son should have been treated eariler and expressed the — opinion that he was su g from blond pot soning. He treated the youngster for this, but he steadily became worse and Buffered great a Suffered Great Agony. Finally, but not until yester hysician insisted that the patien should sent he hospital, He called i an ambulance Surgeon , who summoned lem Hose took the boy , where, after an examination, tt was said he was dying of anthrax, ‘The relatives of the dying ment to the hospital sald they thought he had beon bitten by a mosquito, After a 5 at the tlent developed allt yspital rgnized s: 1 ningitis, lapsing Into a coma aix hours before he died The boy was an unusually husky youngster for hs age and had never suffered a day's sickness in his life, He was five feot nine tall and weighed 165 pounds. ee AMBASSADOR O'BRIEN TALKS inches OYSTER BAY the Treasury G Thomas J. O'l sador to Japan dant Roosevelt at Hill to- day Cortelyou driving over from his home at Halesite, near Hunt- ington, Ambassador President was presumably of affalrs in Tapan. Other guests of the Pr wero W. C. Forbes, Vic Secretary of ortelyou and riean Ambas- of Pres!- Secretary it to-day the Philippine Islands; R, R. Rogers, general counsel for the Isthmian C Commission; Rode “oll nd Mrs Hapgood and Mr. ¥ It Pays Them HI ¢ nrinted T 4,925 separate Houses, Rooms and Apariments — adver- tisements last week—1,085 more than same week las! year and 2,822 more than any other 6 New York news- papers combined. ad whol O'Brien's talk with the | overnor of | e pa-| that - | sponsible fi | |New $2 ——_______—. THE EVENING*WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUAT. dv 1908, ‘They Demonstrate that to Preach and to Practise Love Are Two En- tirely Different Propositions. GENIUS A DOMESTIC DESPOT. — BO TWIOlSON By Rose C. Tillotson. And so they were divorced and lived happy ever after. | 4 re This {s the finis written on the romance of the modern) J * novelist of note, for, Judging from the matrimontal mis- fits of literary lights, temperament rather than temper is disrupting domesticity. live up to one of his own romances. mills can grind out the desired decree. To preach and to practise | love, according to the wielders of the pen, are two very | different things, for the average author, though an ex-| pert at the art of writing Utopian tales, is unable to} Instead, he sheds | the shackles of matrimony as quickly as the divorce And why 4s {t that love and Nteratwre seem to be divorced? Genlus, so it would appear, 1s a domestic despot, with whom {ft 4s hard | y the singu- ‘to Ive, for he who worships at the @Mrine of the Muse {s usually a peevish | Fascinated with the production of a heroine, an Ideal of his own | brain, Intoxicated with the romantic scenes evolved by his perfervid pen, the weaver of whims, wars and weeps forgets that a flesh and blood heroine are {gs languishing at his own fireside, fed on a continuous diet of dull domes: ¢ the physicians |tofty, partner, Tove, which in black type he has!of thelr marriage ara looking longingly made a bu toward the happlest state in Nfe—Da- Instead of the mad emo inspe. he 0 eloquent “{ncompatability of gentus."" They Don’t Blame Genlus. to say martial mix In the public p! way blame sald thi proceedin Ds Happy Twenty came to art ha; weekly. Two children, a make her Mr, and having talked th agreeing demanded both ary children accepts het husban and Jaltar of divorce for her literary inclina- sertion, Real Cause of Trouble. tions, But R noted art tations of Henry band, Spenders” wife have a history of mpatibil- | of genius wife wrote stories — love stories tty that , the fute hookkeeper in drawing the m work York which she has supporte rivet: 8 against Til! Genius Developed. 3 ag nville y studio In which to study art, But ambitions P. Cooke, with {ni He famous. Mrs. Ce Devi Cectl-( st and novelist, frankly admits tibility herself and her author hus- fame. vorced them. Mrs. a former genius in tible mp Jack London's Case. Tt was his erotic idea that nant Jack London young Russian Je and soclal'siic Maddern Wilson virile masterfulness thing he writes. When the autho of this startling volume \ or and stud Mrs. Maddern, a husband, a ce mung ¥ and ke, the ing thing, t ross the breakfast table. for vife has just secured a divorce from the stepson of Robert Louls Stevenson, blaming her marital woes to too much mother-in-taw The feud between Mrs. Robert Lou's Stevenson and has been lone and bitter, but !t is safe eccentricity played a minor role, at least, in this Mrs. nts, her devotion to Itera work for her husband's action for dl- vorce. "My husband and I have simply grown apart, and J don’t think it would he fair to say 1 had outgrown him,” lady when asked about the erests, | general and shunting in par- to the life of the # nificent fe contented wife, Who soon erward took up the pen that was to poke ma sacrifices Rose s cold when kota, of which | of his th | with his matrimony. virlle pen, m blamed by the for the severing bonds. There 18) instance, whose {st was the central tarious veiled lady Lloyd Osbourne 8 said, of genius grinding out dally swan Cooke, whose | happiness has been ntly occupied space does not In any| Wo next? er. ) a sitp of a girl ‘Tenn., and took & soon waned when a handsome V in out-of-d her off to Chat There they lived of ® salary Jen and Catherine, Three years ago separated, after| L. T, Cooper, er over caim) Cooke's lter- presence in her work, by if and her writer calmly usation of de- herself on Mrs. her ed t two mon the Nell Wilson, the} of geniua” is re- rupted domestic Te-| teenth streat ;am among t question that wonderful medicine. ‘incom positive that Wileon’s fret! ite, 6 do etal thoughtlessly, of and and, Both Mr. but was also a failure. }.told me t stomach, and rie could be On love as de-| ood chance of rec’ Kempton-Wace longed treatment fi the domestic dif-|trovble, which failed were numb: powerful Spollers," won the hand of the pretty Crates young novelist and his bride settled in New York, he to win greater triumphs she to manage W 1 not make overcome ‘or to. “The Spoilers” Won Her, ly weltes, the fiction fa-| After an exciting courtship in which natic comes to regard the tender pa8-|the proposal read from tha strong love ston as a disorder of the mind or a|scene mere matter of imagination, and the | feminine writer, too, has often made | actress, her inconspicuous consort a victim of book, Somner, Last winter the dramatist and novel- figure in a reall life drama as pictureeque in plot as| the best products of his pen. ho made GRATEFUL TO MAN WHOSE MEDICINE WED HS LE \E. A. Castle Gives Remarkable! Account of His Recent Experience, the young Westerner ,|Who claims stomach trouble to ve the| cause of most {ll health, ls having re- |markable success In New York. Cooper 1s meeting the public and ex- plaining the nature of his preparations at the Riker Drug Store, Sixth avenue and Twenty-third street, For the past 3 he has talked with a con- stant stream of callers each day, and has succeeded in convincing many New Yorkers that his theory 1s correct and | his medicine all he claims, Among statements made recently by, ple assa some of hls converts 1s the following! orderly conduct assessall by E. A. Castle, of No. 300 West Seven-| Manhattan, who said: e who know beyond all/ Mansyer of man Cooper has a this statement} ‘ es from a deep sense) after a while this incompatibility dl-|5¢ my obligation to him. The following Sho endeavored to re-| sing told me, by an affection of the veral physicta t the trouve emanated in sald that if this help me, 1 de- e home of Jack London, {shaired altogether and thought my days“ “The the The mys- | the} author the victim of a practical Joke | or a hostile conspiracy, which ft was| beth Barn hover discovered, is also the cause, {t| murder of Osc of the tmpending differences between the talented young couple, And all the while the divorce mill ts decrees to discon- jtented literary couples whose domestic wrecked rocks of “incompatibility of genius,” on the this I stood a After pro. { stomach ¢ WOMAN FUGITI HUNTED IN BAUS SHERIFF'S ME Acquitted for Murder, Then, Arrested for Forgery, She Escapes by Ruse. BAY CITY, Mich., Aug. 4.—Mrs. Eliza- y acquitted of the | rson, a b | farmer, and rearrested on a char} caped from Sheriff yesterday the brush-co: ridges onthe shore of Sag ten miles no was hunted un by ty farmers. It ts said that a fugitive if provided Bartley the Miss with food could maintain a safe hiding s desolate region for three weeks » Barr deeds to prop belong to Pete the where found !n entered one of the swamps, bu upon a thorough searcl —__.——— WAS SHE THAW Hotel Aldine’s Telephone Girl Pleased When Manager Is Fined $5. Magistrate Kernochan dec.ded Tombs Police Court to-day that for a) hotel manager to pull a chair from un- | der a telephone «irl and ¢ her out | elry did not a nt to sim: | , but was, he thought, dis- at $5. The detenda as Albert L, Fe- “{} moyer, who since Saturday has been ‘Aldine, No. 100 the I Aj He was arrest- ect. West Eightiet am absolutely ed at the Ins: e of Miss Annie Cas- this medicine saved my) 8!d¥, nineteen, of No. 803 West One Hundred and Foristthird street, a comely young woman with russet hair, She had been employed in the hotel peer | facts, which [’am prepared to swear to| {Of more than a year under Manager Cecil O'Netl—had | at any time, will speak for themselves. charge he heard the soung lady order ray Latham, &@) phree years ago my entire nervous, ing an elavorate breakfast and request- ain way, who provedl organism broke down, caused, physl.| {NS that it be brought up to her im- mediate! Femoyer d out that if she wanted form him, It is said, with patna PC-} stomach. My right arm became para+ any breakfast she must go down rs ture Jokes In the comle paper which Mr, jlyzed and every function of my body CoM ste Wilson edited, But who can reform &| eoliapsed almost completely. My blade! y,02tG 4 (tn't & he really meant 5 { nutible? So exit ‘i s" said Miss Cassidy to Magistrate genlys who Is incompattt le Loe ‘| der and my bowels ceased to work ale) Kernochan, “so I wen n tele- one genius and enter another—more In-| most entirely and had to be constantly Phoning, He cried that he compatibility, stimulated by artificial means, Was manager of he hota and T would Sut will grow e and n ine | “After extensive treatment by physi- Nave to obey Ee it he ut while growing more and more in | cians | was advised to have an Operas Was the manager I At | eompatible themselves, dot Rose Cecil, n on my spine, This was performed that he made a jump and pulled the O'Neil and Henry I Wilson In their} at a leading hospital, but proved of ne chalr from under me. As 1 fell he writings seem to have developed s' an ' th Hasan Wipes BiG Chen. irow, ihe bility ny | “L then had another operation per- Me, out of the piace.” further their ability to direct the | rormed at anotier hospital but beig Femoyer pulled course of true love in the case of others, th chair from wo- was very, her” fe with night clerk of » girl, how- writer whose doml-) “wpwo months ago I read an article in eon Pemoyer is felt In e 1 this man Cooper said his medi. . cine would regulate the stonuch in six naeaultnbad Tracea io Weeks, and T decided to try it Against nosed a fine on advice of M forming egan iy nervous trouble for divorce. This he obta 1 in When Ic November, 1905, and two dayg later the abl author of The Call of the Wild” was) |itl again launched on a matrime a> | mit 18. reer, t his bride And st patibility s time taking Chi a young writer of the West, as another | whispered, are suffering from “incom: of genius.” Rex Beaches, who despite the romance! principal requisite for good health.” we literary couple, ‘tis! iy s out toa HL that a sound are the belief whi 1 friends T began ew nsider that | was to walk two months ago ar ad ® a Discovery disappear man I fe) e to have been little short ase Cooper said omach ny Alsorden > Kemoyer paid a YOUNG GIRL DRINKS ACID. Kighteen - Year-Old Paeing Poverty, Sarah 4 as seamstr charge, wh Seamatres) Tries Suletde. n, an eightee year-old empted spicide by of her room, No. yn, to-day oT OUT UT | Miss | graduat aristocr ton, N. lv up § 3. He man, Ww ness ¢ the das and earnestness of purpose. in tw» KAISER'S MUSTACHE CHANGE Jack LONDON, HEIRESS TO JOIN ciety, ver daug it Is said SALVATION ARMY oo Woolman Will Quit So- It Is Said, to Be Lassie an Vassar and Woolman, a rofa wealth y of Burling- Marion atic J., has renounced society to take ation Army work and marry G itt, ned a promising bus!- n Army yecome @ Salvat 4 to reports to-d ationed at Bure and won the upon learning ance, at first ob but ing that transferring hing young worker to Pater! diminshed her daughter's in tinally gave her nan and her summer at Oc e, the marriage will take = now been transferred under HALTS HIM AT COAST FORT. VIN! Willla atche sion to prevent recognizing bh upper E, Aug. 4. — of wearing his mus- fufted admis- | ast forts oMU enor atised him to be (the c here Just | eon his trip to Swe- pompanied by being ror, @ ed progress, owing to lipo! ne n he said ry You must r. Don't you know me? | or.” ‘he sentry nore closely at the © reassured Majesty's features, rms and al- lowed him peror res ported his promor GEN. ATLA, was an Hult w hu Dodso The yy mak TRY Post (tune: an) Toasties ing the s ommend ee CHAFFEE'S SON TO WED NTA, Aug, 4—The engagemer nounced to-day of Miss Ethel Adna R. Chaffee, son ( special “toasty” flavo es “The Taste Linger’? Two sizes, 0c and !5¢ Writers of Fiction Who Are Unable to Keep Their | Own Individual Romances Out of the Divorce Courts R Mac— GOWAN Cooke, pw York sales: | WhO Spoat Cans, R.H. Macy & Co.'s Attractions Are Their Low Prices, ae ) VA to 35th St B'way at 6th Ay, Our Midsummer Sale of Furniture Starts Next Monday. Avgust 10th InClearance Times Like This Prepare for Future Needs. Much of the merchandise in these midsummer clearance lines,while termed summer merchandise, you will find useful and serviceable six months from now. Yet we are sacrificing it—sending it out at the lowest prices of the season. The values, in many instances, are unprecedented. Expect to find the best plums placarded with “Not Advertised’ cards. Such cards are invariably used when quantities are not sufficient for at least a day’s selling. Store Hoursi—-8 A M. to 6 P.M. During August we close at noon Saturdays. faces Men’s $3.49 to $4.96 Low Shoes, $1.98 Mid summer clearance prizes —and enough to reward 600 men who care to save from a dollar and a half to three dollars on new and up-to-date footwear, All Low Shoes, of pat- ent — leather, black calfskin and kidskin. wy Not all sizes of every style, but, collectively, there is a full range of sizes. Additional Lines of Footwear in the Clearance at $2.97 Second Floor, These are Shoes such as we have sold from regular stocks throughout the season at 4.96 a pair. Included are Pumps, Gibsons, Georgians and Oxfords, of patent leather, tan Russia calfskin, gray and brown suede and black kidskin, For Misses and Children. Low Footwear—Gibsons, Sailor and Oxford Ties, of patent leather, black calfskin and kidskin; also some boots of white kidskin and canvas; not all sizes of every style. ——Sizes 8 to 1014, ——Sizes 8 to 2, Fifth Floor, WILL BURY O06 WREAL C0 SILVER TANNED Private Funeral for Judy, With Hearse and Flowers and Cemetery Burial. Judy, a fox terrier, ford section of Brook in Hartsdale late of the Bed- n, will be burted Cemetery, near White Plains, to-day or to-morrow, There was a private funeral on Friday at No, 820 Maroy avenue, where Judy's owner, Mrs, James Gardner Rossman, of At* lanta, Ga. 1s visiting her motter, Mrs, AR. Lane. ‘The white. silver trimmed coffin was surrounded by floral pieces in the nar- Nya ag r lor of the headed p: coffin do tin handsome house. Bare Ibearers carried the little vn the front steps and placed hite hearse, Unveatabie Exterminator TS Tue OLD i RELIABLE That Never Fails 1 $c, 25c, 75¢ Boxes at Druggtsts were up to $2.49, were up to $2.97, le $1.29, le $1.98. 5,000 Boxes of Fine Stationery “The Autocrat’—a high grade society note paper; fabric finish in white, gray and azure; regularly 24c. a box, this igen eal Ac Main Floor, Rear, ‘Time and Money Wasted Buying Cheap, Low Priced Powders, THIS POWLER WILL DO THE WORS The Powder, 15c¢ and 250 Cans Remarkably effective against Cock Roaches Dectles, Water Bugs, &c. THE LIQUID Not onty Kills the bugs, but destroys the exes and prevents thelr hatching, 4 Pint the 1 Gal 1Pint25o 6 Grocers & Furniture Boys’ Suits, 69c 1". Russian Blouse Suits—new model—made of striped ma- dras; cut full and well made; sizes for boys of 242 to 8 years. (dass M sses’ and Girls’ Apparel » ». Kimono Border Dresses, of excellent quality figured per. cales; yoke, kimono sleeves and skirt trimmed with stitched border of plain and striped percale in contrasting colors; full pleated skirt, with deep hem; 4 to 15 year sizes......... Tub Dresses, made of figured lawn, effectively trimmed with tucks and embroidery insertion, full pleated skirt; 14 and 16 year sizes—for small women and misses, $5.00 values, special $3.49 Jumper Dresses, of tine quality chambray and checked ging- ham; yoke and kimono sleeves trimmed with embroidery; pleated skirt, with deep hem; 14, 16 and 18 year sizes—for small women and misses. 4.74 66c Bamboo Tabourets, 39c Basement Tabourets, standing 18 inches high, with 14x14-inch tops, cov- ered with Japanese Matting; y desirable for porches and Girls’ Dresses, 89c % ¥. One-piece Dresses, made of dot- ted blue percale; blouses trimmed with pleats, pearl buttons and stitched straps of plain white per- cale; full pleated skirts; sizes 4 to 14 years. Cans, 81,50 6,00 Stores ROUGH ON BED Bucs Rough on Bed Bugs, TOWDER very de. cidedly effective, cieanly to use, Is best applied with-a bellows powder gun, THE LIQUID Not only kills the bugs, but destroys the eges and prevonts their hatohing. ‘44 Pint 150 1 Pint 25e G Qe. Spout Cans, D 6.00 tores 1 Gal, Cans 81.50 Loan At Deng: Rough on Fleas The Powder Kills Fleas on DOGS, CATS AND OTHER ‘ANIMALS The Iiquid may be found best for household use. 250 at Drugeists or by Mall Clearance of Children’s Summ r Coats and Hats 2d Fl. Coats, of duck, pique and linen; sizes 2, 3 and 4 years; formerly $1.98 to $4.94; now, $1.18, $1.98 and $3.79 Infants’ Bonnets, of lawn; were 99c, to $1.98; now, 49c and 99c Children’s Lingerie Hats, were 81.98 to $2.97; now, 49c, 99c and $1.49 ON HEN LICE The DUST for application to the feathers and hody of the Hen, in Cans, 156 The POWDER for plac- n the bottom of the . in Large Cans, 28, LIQUED to be diluted t applied to Heo Houses 1 pt Cans, 25c., ans $1.50, & Gal, D0. At Druggists and Country Stores E. 8. WELES, Chemist, Jersey Clty, N. Js Originator of “Rough-On” Preparations, Beware of Imilations or Substitutes. ROUGH 200, sale, i Brooms— Floor Brooms, good quality corn, quadruple stitched; 1,000 in all; 25c, grade, special .......... 196 Sale of Aluminum Housewares. Basement Wall Tents Tah a soe ek anal Supplies If such wares need anything additional to commend them to Complete, Poles and |" "” ; i any nM Fines Chines thrifty housekeepers here it is—a sp pricing. In no other store uy f at SN Whistle ¢, ‘ Te ny: AS i $4.20 can you match the values. First qualities of course—we never sell nt tender, Housewares “seconds,” Coffee Pots, $1.46, $1.66, $1.88 Tea Pots. $1.39, $1.66, $1.81, $1.98 | Child's Cup, 26c, 28¢. Cup and Saucer, 52c. ee s 8Bc, 76e, Vic, , Covered Roasting Pans, $3.47, $3.66 NS v 3 cores mevoe Reba Ser) CSE) 22°) ea Rete $214) O2ed, Salem Xv Mee $2.89, $3.43 AAS RS ST Lipped Saucepans, Ste, 62c, 696) Round Trays, $1.26, $1.39, $1.82 76c, Ile Dippers, 3c, 44c. Stew Pans, 58¢, 73¢ Rice or Milk Boiler, $1.19, $1.52, $1.81, $2.17 Griddle Cake Covers, 37c, 44, 51c. Fry Pans, 5c, 69c, 83c, 94e. Bread Pans, Sle. Muffin Pans, 46¢, 73c. F reserving Kettles, Od 1G A 1 87e $1.06 $1.23 $1.48 $1.77 Covered Jelly Moulds, $1.17 Layer Cake Pans, 4le. Bircuit Pans, Sle. Pie Plates, 2c, 26c, 28¢, 32¢, Fudding Pans, 442, 52¢, 66¢, 77e Condensed Milk Can Holders, 4le. Batting Spoons, 24e, 2/e, 3c. Measures, £8¢, 73¢, Y4e. Shaker | Plain, 41; Milk Shaker | vy ash strainer, 79¢. — (8 LT TT TIED