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aise — cate see mpm tC ID AOC 5 HAE Wits OPER the ancrifice abo be his. ‘Though the surgcons hal de & younger sabsect, Mr M waa found to be Jar ton underwent the firat operation for | trnasfusion. To the dismay of the @ur- |eeons th 0 0 improve RELATIVES VAIN Family Summoned to Hospital |; and Told End Is Only Mat- |; ter of Few Hours. 1 not die, you alall not die,” his vite kept whispering to him, He brightened | « Members of his family were hurriedly | noticeably, and for a moment the doc- summoned early this morning to the bedside of Leightvourne Middleton, in Bt. Luke's Hospital, where for several days efforts have been made to fave the life of the wealthy young mining man by operations for blood transfusion. He was reported sinking rapidly @udsequently he railed a litte, He wag conscious and recognized his young bride, his father and mother, his brother Malcolm and. bie sister Elizabeth, all ef whom have tried to save him with thelr blood. He was, however, too weak to. speak, The doctors said later that though thelr path temperature was slifghtly lower the end was only a matter of hours. No further operation for trans- fusion could be of any avail, they sald. The family remained at the young man's bedside. Mise Bitsabeth Middle- tom, who left for a few moments at 7 @’olock, said all hope of saving her Brother had been abandoned and that he was slowly passing away as his mrength edived out. No fewer than six members of his including hie father and young have given of thelr blood in the Geoperate efforts to save his life It was the hope cf the doctors that the Rew and vigorous biood would destroy the germ that devitalized the young man's own blood; but since the first op- @rgtions they have feared the sacrifices Made would be in vain. YOUNG WIFE CONSTANTLY NEAR HIM. For ten days the young bride hae Paced the hospital ward pathetically re- Qeating to herself, “Leightbourne will fot die: Leightvourne shall not die!” ‘Dwice she has iain beside her husband yet her veins be joined to his in the to save bim. give bim more. You must he implored the surgeons. Bat the doctors knew by that ¢ime it fas only the sips of champagne they were giving him, and not the new biood, hich was keeping Middicton alive, = Laightbourne Middleton ts the eldest Gon of A. W. Middleton, the wealthy BGieretary-treasurer of the Bristol Con- @truction, Mining and Smelting Com- Sany of No, © Broadway. He was gamed for bis maternal grandfather, the Rev. James M. lveightbourne of the Methodist Episcopal Church ef this oy. ‘Three years ago he married Frances @ Brien of Ogdensburg, a daughter of Martin O'Brien, a lawyer well known ‘at Albany, and they made thelr home et No. % Fort Washington avenue. On their wedding trip Middleton had an at- feck of typhoid malsria, It seemed @ulckly cured, but apparently the germ fay dormant or was doing its work ‘unnoticed, P Vatil two months ago it was his bosst thet he had never known what Ml- ets was, The young man then became Guddenly and gravely ill, with aplastic gnsemia. His sturdy and vigorous body abrank eo rapidly thet in a week or @wo he was al: & skeleton and so weak he could barely walk unasninted, His uncle, Dr, Bruere of Treaton, 1M. .J., a physican of more than Btate- jait th every drop of | Nex tors began to hope. asked for @ younger subject for the tranafusion, and Gordon Middieton, a cousin, seventeen years old, underweat the operation. man's side from ‘Trenton and Bait! more, but thelr blood was not sultabie. The next to make the sacrifice was Middleton's sister Klizabeth. Pleading that she might give of her bivod too, The doctors feared to allow this because of the strain she was al- ready under from grief and nursing; the operation, nd he persisted. , duly 2, Mr. Mid On Sun je the heart act n hoped Four houre later Mr. Middleton again vd the aurgeons dared 9 take from ! murning Middleton seemed 6 ittle stronger, “Leightbourne, you will That day they Other cousina hurried to the dying All the time the young wife was but at last they consented, and the young woman gratefully prepared for It was her blood which appeared to do most good of all. Meanwhile the dying man's brother, Malcolm, mining engincor, was rac- h, @ Journey of more than . He arrived on Saturday last and as quickly as possible went to the operating table. Miss Helen Quigley pt No. 3129 Broadway, @ cousin, alno volinteered, Having epeedily recovered her strength, Mra Middleton again begged to be let make a last effort to save her husband, and yeaterday for the second time underwent the operation, as did Malcolm Middleton. The doctors told them that éf these last sacrifices failed there would be no hop SUES FOR FALSE ARREST. Charles Schalla, euperintendent of a row of apartment houses on Leggett avenue, the Bronx, has begun sult against John Levandowski, a detective on the Staten Island Rapid Transit | Rallroad, and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, who operate that road, for $6,000 damages for false ar- rest and imprisonment. On July 2 the piaintife and his wife went on an outing of the Knights and Ladies of Honor, held at Grasmere, 8. 1, They returned to St. George to take the ferry to Manhattan. After leaving the train at &t. George @challa found he had left his return tickets on a neat) ¥ in the car, Schalla reached through a window and got the tickets, He was ar- rested by the detective on the charge that he had climbed through the window, and deapite bis protests and those of his wife he waa handcuffed and taken to the pollce station at New Brighton, where he was locked up for the night. He was released by Magisteate Handy next morning. ae Clothestines Break Child's Fall. Reuter Paull, five years old, wan born to be parachute jumper. To-day he fell out of a third-story window of his ‘home at No, 24 East One Hundred and ‘Twenty-firet street, and when his fran- tle mother rushed down In the court to pick up the remains of her son she found him not even crying and with nothing more serious the matter wit? him than a few superficial scratches, A tangle of clotheslines had saved him, wide celebriterspesoMeended resort to | ae. Blood transfusion, provided a auitable Subject could be found willing to make the sacrifice Dr. Edward Lindeman, the family physician, agreed, and on July 18 Middleton was removed to St, Lake's Hospital for the operation. PATHER INSISTS ON MAKING FIRGT SACRIFICE. Beveral subjects volunteered and thelr | Blood was being tested when the father, @ man of fifty-four years, insisted that GRAND RAPIDS FURNITURE ° CREDIT TERMS: 13 Meme 150 | 175000014 99 $5 Pest 75 | *20°sr" 150 $ : A WEEK OPENS _AN ACCOUNT OPEN Saturday Evenings FisHER Bros. 1eéth St, “L” Station at corner | COLUMBUS AVE [ you Nature's The exclusive use of Saazer and low percentage of rywhere, ra favorite 195 BOY PARK “POLICE” yn and aacriticed | THE bv awn TAKE OFFICIAL BEATS Commissioner Stover Sends Out First Detail of Auxiliary Force to Help Stop Vandals. Twenty-five very proud youngsters urteen years old strutted out of = ‘oner Spover's office in the Cen- al to-day to “eo on dit the Boys’ Park Protec: Each boy wore &@ little Arsen lcemen tive League. badge and tn his pocket was a police. man's whistle, The Roy# Park Protective League, launched to-day, Is the out} erowth of an idea of Principal Francis MH. J, Paul of Public School No, 171, at Fifth avenue and One Hundred and Fourth at five n t, of which the twenty- emen" are pupils, It may city wide organization, The ver the dintrict be- | tween One Hundred and Third and ¢ Hundred and Sixth streets, Fifth ave. nue and the Conservatory; thelr dutien | are to keep an eye open for offenders against the park rules, When they soe nome ono breaking tho rules they are to warn him politely that he ts courting arrest, and if the offender is inclined to be unpleasant they can blow their whistle and summon @ regular policeman, ———n HAD WRECK VICTIM’S WATCH. Mra, Ely W! of Mamford ls Ac- here, ing World.) a (Special to Th STAMFORD, Conn, July 39—Mre. Kly Wilson of No. 02 Main atreet, forty-nine years old, was arrested to- day for the alleged theft of a gold watch which belonged to Mrs. Kdward ; | J. Kelley of No. % Trydent avenue, Winthrop, Masu., who was killed In the New Haven Railroad wreck at Stam- ford on June 12 last. Mer arrest followed a correspondence with Mr, Kelley in which she offered to have the watch returned, Mr, Kelley arranged with the police to have the woman call to-day for a reward, She was arrested In the act and the watch recovered. Mra, Kolley lost other Jew- elry and about $% in money. Mrs, Wilson, who has an excellent reputation, says she found the watch at the acene of the wreck and wrote to Mr. Kelley thinking he would pay a reward for Its retorn, A Vacation Suggestion ‘ We te remind you that vacation fment ie, INCOMPLETE | unless you have a bottle | or two of “ODOL” in your grip. Bisse she mouth mornii night “ODOL" means PRO-| t fy TECTION against un-| —_ = friendly microbes with which food particles oe ; eae and which dangerous disenses of the mouth and throat. “ODOL” will also harden the gums and keep the teeth in a healthy | There is Nothing “just as good” as “ODOL.” | ry Price 80 Conte | At all Druggists and Department Stores GEO. BORGFELDT & CO.” EW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO | Ask Barley Farm who buys the cream of their Barley crops and they will tell ser-Busch—the even ants aoe Budweiser. Noblest Beverage ~ Bowed only at the home plant in St.Louls its mildness make it the District-Attorney Whitman, it was an- nounced to-day, of the Appeliate | former City Chamberlain Charles H. | Hyde up to the Court of Appeals on the points of law Involved in the ex- culpation of Hyde from the charge of bribery. Amistant Distrlct-Attorney Taylor, in wi DI charge of the Appeals Bureau, salled for Europe on his vacation yesterday, but will return in time to prepare a brief and aubmit it to the Court of Appeals in October. Justice Goff, before whom Hyde was tried on the charge of using his official power to force J. G. Robin and the | Northern Bank to make loans to the Jarnoxie Trust Company in return éor bribe, ruled that it did not have to Proved that Hy Any favor or «raturty in return for forcing the lonn constituted a bribe, ac- cording to Ji ¢ ‘The unanim late Division this and other points of law and char- acterized some of his decisions wrth unusual critical heat. H ty rt _ Webe Half-Yearly Sale of $1.50 Qualities, $1.15 $1.65 $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $1.00 Garments, $ .75 @ WORLD, WEUWESD per eanatiian atiasiamareete Sevens anes Sar sie WHITMAN TO TAKE HYDE CASE TO HIGHEST COURT Appeal to Reverse Appellate Divi- sion’s Overturn of Conviction Will Be Made in October. toft's ruling. \ i put the decision ivision in favor of de recetved money. cision of the Appel- uled Justice Goft in Announce Their Manhattan Shirts Beginning Thursday, July 31 At the Following Reductions : 33.75 od $4 Quali $5.00 Qualiien, $6.00 7 $1.68 $7.50 $2.25 $10.00 Also the First Sale Ever Held of Manhattan Underwear Reductions: t $1.25 £1.38 $1.50 $1.00 $1.35 $1.85 $2.35 $3.00 $4.00 $5.00 $7.00 “ “ « « “ COLD SUPPERS C ere Cold Meats Tasty. ‘OUS on Sandwiches & Sardines. | jalad Dressing by adding vinegar. | i WE FURIIISH HOMES COMPLETE SEsAb ere. A7 $4998) 4 2SABtere “8 74-98 SEsRolere 47012498 t o« Heilbroner $2.65 $2.85 $3.55 $4.45 $5.45 $6.45 $2.00 Union Suits, $1.35 $2.25 $2.65 $3.55 $4.55 Manhattan Shirts are so well known to New Yorkers as to need iatle description. - Manhattan: Underwear isa worthy product’ of All fabrics wed in Manhattan Shirts are guaranteed agajnst tom bean oe there is no better grade of workmanship used in cus- at any price. Materials consist of madras, silk-and-madras mixtures, all-silks— including crepes and English twills; dimities and broches, The Eleven Weber'and Heilbroner Stores will be open at 7:30 Thursday morning Largest Distributere of Manhattan Shirts and Underwear 21 Broadway 1463 Broadwa Clothes Brewery StLouis Eleven. Stores 169 Brogd: 757 Broadw: 4 Rees ra} roadway 27 New Nassau 20 Cort! jesoau, 241 B'way, 1185 B'way, 44th an: id Broadway 42nd and Fifth Ave. ‘Mth & B' way, 420d & Sth Ave. AX, JULY 30, aa nedpayacifeaidgun eh The Low August. Price:on Furniture} Is Not Made by Taking. It Qut of the Quality 4 tinued Today & Tomorrow (Thursday are “Days of Courtesy” in the August Furniture Sale—selections |,’ may now be made from the fally assembled stocks, transactions to date as of August First. prices marked on the tag. Our regular .stocks—more than $600,000 although the originator of the August. Sulé o worth—of course, were assembled for, owr Furniture, "we reserve the right to withdraw. regular trade. They are offered now in, the it from the store calendar when we -can’ nov August Sale at the marked reductions only’ longer prepare it to the great advintage of ‘our because present conditions of the: inchistey customers. . riggs make it impossible to secure} enough furniture at..s up “Tt Surely were $20 to Ever-ready fitted Dressin, Travelers’ Folding Scarf tot colors), $2.50, were $5. Tapestry Frames, 50c, were $1.50. Sometimes but one article of each style. Main Aisle, Old Building. the winter. to 96, ey ‘ «i » , fhe Auditorium Exposition “ was described yesterday by a traveller as “the nearest thing he has seen ‘in’ this ‘country to the old world exhibits of furniture.” Is an EXTRAORDINARY Clearaway of Women’s suits, wraps and dresses have dropped to as low a price level as we can recall. Majority are at half of Tuesday’s prices. In many cases those Tuesday dresses were a quarter, a third and even a half less than the original markings earlier in the season. There has never been a time when women’s| coats of the dainty, irresiflible sort, could-be| Prices. Models that may easily be worn next had for so little—$5.25 to $12.50—were $10.75 to $25 and more. Linen, eponge and other coats start as low : as $4.75, were $9.50 and go up to $7.50--|to 850, were $15. Some fine suits of linen and eponge are now] kind to mention. . 97.50 to $48,,and these were $10.75 to $58.50|" AN are displayed in the court of the this week and more a few weeks earlier. « ~ : ‘ Fancy Imported Bags, Scarf Holders, itted Dressing and Cases Half Priced Goods are slightly worn, but the savings more than make up. White Bead $37.50. 1,000 Carpet Samples 144 Yards Long 65c a Piece Axminster, Velvets, Wilton Velvets and Wiltons. i Values 90c to $3.50 a yard. Linoleum Remnants and Short Ends Inlaid and printed. One-half and| one-third former prices. Fourth Gallery, New Building. Housewares Disposal +It Will Pay Any Woman to Visit This One Such a. woman may save $20 to $25 on a perfectly good wardrobe trunk, fitted with every appliance to make travel- ing a pleasure. ‘These trunks ‘last week were $40 and $50, now they are $20 and $25. Her husband may get. black automobile tire trunks for $2.60 ‘and $4, were $5 and $8. He can also get his choice of Wanamaker lawn mowers, 10 to 24-inch, size—samples, slight- ly shop-worn, Now $1.40 to $8, were Bathroom. fittings -- all the nice, gleaming, white and nickel thin, for t! 85c prices, 2.75 to $16." to furnish.the bathrqom 450 to $3,‘were ERE is not one piece of furniture on our floors that was made to “sell in asale.”” The special purchases for August#more than $300,000 worth—are of disc i tterns and sample pieees~ alt: of which, of course, are exact duplicates (in quality as well ds in appearance) of furniture that heretofore sold at the régutir fal prices to make an area ‘regular stocks to the Sale, as we have the Wanamaker standard of August Selef, 'e have plainly said—and we repeat—that to any of its many predecessors. An hour in the Furniture Gallerfes (Fifth, Sixth and Seventh) and-in the Auditorium with its additional ‘assémbMye of fine furniture will prove this ment to your own satisfaction.’ ” 4 ae . Bags P. Bags, $2.25, $5, $8, were $4 to $16. Bulgarian Bags, 50c, $4.50,@5, were $1 to $10. Macrame Bags, $2, were $4. Ratine Bags, $1 and $1.50, were $2 and $3. i Bags, 50c, $1.50, $2, $8 and $10, were $1 to $25. Fitted Victorias, $9.50, $10, $48.50 and $17, }, 85, 10, ee Tore tiei| Were $25 to $68.50 now $13.75 to $38.50 All sorts of baskets, from hampers to those for luncheons— all exactly half of last week's Nickel and copper tableware, tea kettles, egg boilers, sfm- ovars, curate stands, and’ all such fascinating things—mostly ‘imported. 5c to $32.75, Vollrath enamel ware — pie plates, cooking pots and 4ll sorts of things. 8c to 80c. Gas ranges, $4.50-to 832.50, }were #9 to 865. Besides any quantity of mis- \cellaneous items which ‘are also exactly half the regular prices. Subway oor, New Building. 4, Bi way and Nintl te But we also plainly say that, .ad ni ‘our 18 FOAL g. able to present an August Sale superior, we are nO eae? ow ~ Women’s Clothes Tailored suits of wool are at rock-bottom Autumn are $10.75 to $14.75, were $21.75 to 29.50 and much more. Dresses of eponge, crepe and other Summer anaterials are now $6.75 to $25, were $13.60 Scores of other odds and ends too few of a, Women's Gray Salons—Second floor, Old Building. Bulletins from the Clearaway in the Girls’ and Young Women’s Shop Were $13.50 to $20 now $5 to$10 * Young women’s linen suits. Were $25 to $40.............now $10 “Young women’s cloth suits; checks, brown, tan and Copenhagen blue and mixtures, Were $25 to $40..... + mow $10 to $15 Young women’s white serge suit. girs Young women’s short and long coats. . fiports, steamer, street and afternoon models. Were $27.50 to $200. . now $23.50 to $75 : Rous women’s imported summer frocks, -a-kind models, mostly hand-em- baoidered, white and colors, voile crepe and novelty materials. P Were $7.50 to $15....now $5 to $9.50 Young women’s wash dresses, Were $3.50 to $22.50. .now $1.75 to $10 Girls’ summer tub dresses. At 81.75 are dresses which have been $3.50, 4.75, $5, $5.50. $5 to $10 dresses include hand-made French and English frocks (sizes 4 to 1 und 4 to 14). Were $7.75 to $23.50. .now $3.75 to $10 Girls’ medium weight coats, ‘ et Young women’s sizes 14, 16, 18; girls’ sizes 6 to 14 years, Not all sizes in every style. Second floor, Old Building, | Men’s Suits, $9.50 (IN THE NEW STORE FOR MEN, BROADWAY COR.- NER EIGHTH.) * They are all regu- larly $12.50, $13.50 and $14.50 2 and 3 iece suits, ‘ancy mixtures, homespuns, . chew.,}: iots and light weight worsteds, Finish out the summer with one .of these#: $9.50 suits, 20c ‘to $15.40, were e 4c to’ 400, we