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alll I eeieneiiiemeainael BABY CAPTURED BY THREE DOCTORS AND DOZEN POLICE cunt Home of Mrs. Anderson, Who Defied Health Board, ‘Rushed’ and Infant Taken, FIGHT GOES TO COURT. | Family Physician and Two Others Declare Baby Hasn't Paralysis. Jematca |e up in arms to-day, but watts for Mre Anton Anderson of k Avenue to fire the ee! her Bineteen-montha-old son ut @f the Quensbore Hospital for Conta. gious Fr The health authe hae infantile paraly A. Bmith of Springfield, L. 1, and two other private doctora say he ts lame only a @ result of malaria Aght to met Nobert y the boy ‘The health officials placarded the house The placard was torn down Two days ago Mre. Anderson, behind barricaded doors, defied 4 physician, an orderly, a policeman and a nurne Who arrived to remove the boy, What tho firat party failed to do was curired out yesterday by twelve Policemen, a nurse, an interne, Supt. | James ©. Sharp and Dr. Simon Tan- nenbaum, Chief of the Health Centres of Queens. They dashed at the house, | pushed past Miss Ruth Johnson, Mra. Anderson's sieter, rushed upstairs and | grabbed the boy from his bed. Seeing she was defeated, Mra. Anderson helped the nurse wrap the youngster in blankets. Mrs. Anderson says Dr. Harry Schneider, a neighborhood physician, told her she would be allowed to keep the boy provided she apologized for r first defiance, She refused, she says, and the new party arrived in half an hour, Dr. Tannenbaum de- nies the oifictal existence of any eucd proposition. Mr. Anuerson is an expert gabinet- maker. He and his wife have re- tained Attorney Lawrence T. Gresser to fight for the boy's relea! “My diagnosis was that the chil showed no traces of poliomyeliti gays Dr. Smith, “and I still stick to it. Two other physicians, called for consultation, arrived at the same con | clusion independently.” Health Commissioner Emerson says the mutter has not reached him. —— BOY OF NINE DYING OF TOO MUCH WHISKEY) Williamsburg g Youngster al Quart Bottle in Street and With Chum Drank It, Little Michael Reardon, whose en- » years of life havebeen spent Fremont Street, Williams- burg, is dying in the Williamsburg Hospital from drinking too much whiskey. His companion on childish spree, Arthur Atchison, of No. 179 Norman Avenue, is held by the Chil- dren's Society as a juvenile delin- two boys found a quart of y in the street and then de- elded to appropriate « wagon belong ing to Samuel Raynor, owner of the Lincoln Dye Works, of No. 249 Huron Street, Raynor missed his wagon and reported to the police, They found the missing vehicle at Harrison Avenue and Clymer Street. Atchison was still in tt, but Reardon had failen in a stupor to the street. Policeman Cavanaugh picked up the child and sent him to the hospl- tal, where it was said he had taken so much of the liquor he would prob- ably die, Mes. Shep er-ta-Law, Dead. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Sept. 23.—Mrs Peter l. Shepard, mother of Finley Shepard, who married Helen Miller Gould, died here to-day in her eight sixth year from infirmities of age. Shepard had been a patient tn the Haven Hospital since 1907, when shi and injured her hip at her home ii fon, She was the widow of Rey, Shepard, an Eplacopal clergyman of bimton, who died three sears ago. NO HALF-HEARTED Preparedness will Co if you expect to concuar a spell of INDIGESTION DYSPEPSIA OR MALARIA BE WELL PREPARED——T HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters! BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package provesit. 25cat all druggists. . THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, American Women Politically Gagged _ ENEMY OF THIEVE And Men Far Too Cynical to Be Great, Is an English Suffragist’s Criticism Only When People Here Realize It la Better to Be! + erorronee Wise and Just Than to Be Rich Will Our Politics Be Taken Seriously, Declares Miva Bua Ward Believes in Heckling and Militancy, but the Latter By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Catt Americans realiae thot tt tab wise and} be ric hy wntel they wnderetand (hat tt ts more of an honor to ie sepant than to be a militonaive American politiog will not be taken scriowsly not offener than once in four years way.” That te a woman's candid summary of the polltl cal situation to t country, @ woman *bo bas bi 4) extraordinary opportunities for studying our pollitte and for comparing them with those of an older and yore experienced jand She is Mies Eva Ward, honor) graduate of the Univer of Cambridge and the Unt versity of London, a relative of Mre uphry Ward, the novelfet, and # leader almost equally well known and tested in Che Koalien Liberal Party and tn Eng lich Suffrage eireles, Just now, lke Miss Frances Dr, Wiillam Kelior, Dr. Katharine Bement Davis aad other prominent Suffragiots, she ts working for the Women's Committee at the Hughes headquarte impressions of American poltt compulsory division TOO LARGE AND TOO CYNICAL FOR POLITICS. “What salient difference have you noticed between our and t itical wetivt ose of England? was the ion | asked Miss Ward this country you @ rly so much in earne itical questions,” she r “Most of you do not take jously. That is partly you are so large and partly because you are 80 cynical. “In England people were turtou: excited about such a thing disestablishment of the church, You wouldn't be up about a similar question, You lack of intensity, of gripping interes in politics, Is shown in your prejudice against heckling, Now in England every public speaker expects to be heckled, He expects to be interrupt- ed with questions about the record of this man or the attitude of some- | body else on the labor question, or jwhat his candidate really thinks about Home Rule. “Therefore every political speaker in England must khow his subject. He must be able to answer objections to his candidate or to his party. And why isn't this the proper condition of affairs? Why shouldn't any man be prepared to fight, verbally at least, for the things for which he stands? Oh, I believe in heckling, And oT don't consider the nee with which an American audience receives @ po- speech to be merely a differ- | between our manners and yours. Rather it’s a sign of your fundamen. tal indiffe “ence.” “Do you find American women po- tically indifre@ent?” I asked. “On the other hand, do they yet equal Englishwomen in political | skill?” ABLE AMERICAN WOMEN PO- LITICALLY GAGGED. “Many of your women are very interested in politics just Mies Ward granted. “And me of them are sincere and conscientious worke: There are women who will make sacrifices to spend five weeks on the Hughes special, On the other hand, even in the present cam- hundreds of the ablest ally They cannot afferd to minis ly for any can- ties Ww wro! paign, American women are pol gagged. injury to American grout 1 belleve in working for & na- life, tional amendment, in order women miy be set free to enter the poll! of their city and Stat eless, 1 think that the Wos a did thing for Sut [ wouldn't a myself t I did not consider is sple ance frage. any movement helped Suffrage. “LT think “mivanes is morally tiflable: 8 well as in B jus. probab! who, in apite of her Mae cheeks her charm of manner, looks the part “Another diffe Heh and Ameri your great i In & genera » between Eng polities ts tha have we rt F “Therefore, while we have oor male and female. Think that stato of Affairs docs | barred the way to the ptree that $20,000, © n'a Committee of the Hughes Alli- with n do not go inth poli- pro. rn duced a Balfour, a Lloy 1 rerios Issued in 1882, due 19 Winston Churchill, fron payable at the Gallatin } infinitely smaller than yours ional Hank in this elty. Magistrate Al Fving discharged Farrell and Dwyer fs Inexpedient. of the Fite Hughes Alilance, And it was Avenue, that ehe told me her} since there ts still the 1 eyption, 1 juin you have more of it. ‘And | think we have @ larger independent vote, The La bor Party is always up to some thing at home. | can't under- stand why you have none, Per- haps the re : an those of England?” In ngland Mies Ward informed me, with a lift of finely pencilled brows, “a woman on a committee In suppored to do a day's work, be she a Duches or a washerwoman, — The| role of patroness is something de-| apised by sible people, Women | of all clas nd do work to- gether, At unt for some thing in Engi: . L can assure you that of a Duchess | means no more to us than the name | “CHANCE FOR ‘WHIP KELLY, rlet_ Fever Quarantine Keeps Warburg Superintendent's Fam- ily From His Bedside, Physicians attending Walter Kelly, \ famous whip and superintendent of the Woodlawn Farm estate of Felix Warburg, said to-day he had a fight- ing chance to survive the injuries re- |ceived yesterday at the Westchester | County Horse Show. is hovering between at the White Plains feand children, quas ‘ount of scarlet fever, jare unable to go to his bedside While heading for the stable after winning @ red ribbon with Woodland International in the polo class yes- jantined on terday, Kelly collided with Pollock, owned by Nathantiel C. Reynal and Jridden by Le Koo Anderson, son of H. B. And 2 New York how Roth riders were thrown, Anderson fell clear of the horses, but Kelly's mount fell on him, fracturing his | skull “MATTRESS SAVED DOZEN | WHO LEAPED FROM FIRE {Score of Other Tenants Carried Down Ladders From Roof ot Burning House, | A mattress which had been thrown |into the yard last night saved the lives of a dozen persons who jumpod | from windows of the four-story tene- ment at No, 108 Dupont Street, | Brooklyn, when fire in the basement The house was damaged to the extent of Mrs. Frances. Novak badly burned about the face and arms, was taken to Greenpoint Hospital, and Mrs, Mary Reske, also badly burned, s treated by an ambulance sur- Keon, Firemen who answered @ belated 1 found a score of the sixty-five ee | New York, embalmed and placed tn a A I et ‘ENDED SPREE BY LEAP FROM WORMSER HOME ISSHOTTODEATH; « POUGEHUNT GANG Tree eee Perey ‘ | deat ’ evedore ct Slain as We ' ented Enters Saloon in bart ye A. Da ed Willow the Cunard Lane piers, thirty thre & ye and living 418 Wee tM A ® not Heven » tre was whot t 7 . H2 the left eye and ate h Aehort . the v8 ' ly ofterlo k th " n jock lt ‘ “ med Dalton's barroom « ner ot)! ra . » Nint Aven wi ev - wir el Pow bartende we Aware . the wit Au . » have bt br 2 " : th murd ” f tw - a. “ eer who f 4 1 . Cavanaugh he : Sears and bad num ee ~____ | fer from the docks. 1 he eve that the murder was the result | BURGLARS AGAIN VISIT of his campaign against the thieves. | Pian Sa Are Violating HODGE HOUSE, GET 6E The neighborhood is the feud ground] State Law by Not Stamping NS MS. ofthe “Tanner Smith,” “Owney Mad = . Veight on Package jen and Final” gangs and the \ “ihiiees Donkera” Commissioner of Weights and Meas Gracelets of Mrs, Rose Stolen From Pee : gn ires Joseph Hart he has! House Where Woman Was My | stranger was at the bar when Cav. [ee Monee Hat big Chicago and other) teriously Robbed Before. anaugh entered, and, while eniaing af Western meat concerns are violating , é os. |Atink for him. two men with peaked]! New ¥ ste law which pr GREENWICH, Conn, BoP. 23] rane drawn over thet even came ing rites that all food packages be! Again visiting the house in whieh i amped as to weight, and that he tires years ago a Glaticad Hag Wenl ere, metialely after & shot wes ped wht, and that he y Me fired. The bartender is held as a ma. | S!!l at before Chief Magistrate] stolen from the finger of Mrs, T. M. witneed, Gatien @ fot vy NeXt week aNd ask for seve] Hodgens, burglars have robbed Mra. ‘1 sais wun i | , ¢ with violating the Sullivan pai te it phe omer age hd Andrew W. Rose of No, 22 Bast Fifty lies revetvane: Sails.) anal hax two important court d even r © m1 i o¢ and sions which back up the State law seventh Street, New York, of Wola dlackjack being found behind the] 11 is alse of the com bracelets said to be worth several) har, Dalton suid that the simalier re. | missioner t hat New York | thousand dollars, Hoth are platinum | voiver be 4 to him. purchaser what tho} set, one with a large’ diamond, the! Coyanaugh in survived by « widow | Me"! woleh Henlow _the shrink. | other with diamonds and sapphires. | and tive children sh men tal eee eee eae A reward of $600 is offered for their} jonn ¢ panel a brother of the! murdered man, Was sent to Sing Sing | r the killing of John Lindstru jh occurred in a fight at Fifteenth Street and Tenth Avenue on Oct. 21, | 1913. Barney, another brotner, who | return. The thieves, who, according to Po- lice Chief Talbot, entered through a first floor window, also took a costly green fan, Mr. Rose's revolver and $20, but missed other valuables and Been “Going It” Too Hard? Lots of folks @ large sum of money. I Secretary of the Longshoremen's| Mr. Rose, a member of the New|U said te John ow adit Club, formerly owned the 4 » murder cht Emrose. Sometimes the clared that ho we 1 who for opinion t the adh ily passes the summer at There, two years ago, Mrs, Rore's pet dog, which she valued at $6,000, died. The body was taken to Newport. INJURED AT HORSE SHOW | haeey ithout It's often the re- white casket, Then it was carried on the Emrose to Newport and buried. gang depredations on the piers. sult of our at i ee fakes ae fault MORRISON, AT 80, LANDS |HIS CHEAP TYPEWRITERS continual ‘rush of work or pleas- ure without tak- exercise or PUNCH ON ACCUSER’S JAW ing enough rest, fresh A SWINDLE, IS CHARGE cia Such an attack isn’t hard to get Chicago Millionaire Knocks Out Jesse Alexander Is Alleged to Have Hae ar ie ay body and nerves ; and help the kidne, Former Protege and Two Others Victimized Many With Inven- Donn's Kidney Pills. thousands of kidney sufferers, tion He Boomed. é Chronic kidney disease is serious, Alexander, forty-four years f No, 879 Glenmore Avenue Are Held for Perjury. CHICAGO, Sept, 23.—Edward WwW. Morrison, eighty, yesterday at close of Josse old, court landed a stiff punch on the Jaw of! Brooklyn, was arraigned before Judge John Sommers, his former protege and | Hyland in the Brooklyn County Court St., says twas the Racing fee jolt. companion, who had testified that Mor- 1 : ind a Ae | ing of the engine and taking ds thet rison spent $200,000 in three years on|(0-U8y On six Indictments charging | weakened my back. ‘The draughts and wine and women. him with grand larceny, He pleaded | exposure brought on the colds and they Morrison's attorney, James Ro Ward,| Bot guilty and was held in $15,000] settled on my kidne b an to who ts alleged to hold $2,000,000 of the | Dail. have an th small of my old man's vanished property, was held|, District, Attorney Lewls alleges | back, which was bo ne at my work, in $15,000 bond by Judge Landis for the | tht Alexander, through the medium | ‘Two boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills was enn erry charge, He of “Business Opportunity” adve Il I needed to. correct the trouble. ments which he placed in newspapers, | Since then there has been no return of nk [obtained amounts that will total § n 150 and 200 per ged that Alexander for a man who b eejoseph Burnstein, ext jun dealer, was held in’ $5,000 on a perjury charge. He had accused Morrison. of being the father of Margaret and Alice 000 from betw {x It sons, ould advertise Rurnstein, whom Morrison. adopted | 8° Rurnatein’ had sworn he. told Morrison | $1,000 te m that after get-| hat Mrs. Burnstein made a death bed with auch a person | fersion as to her daughters. parent: convince him that he was th ALMOST KILLS TWO MEN, THEN HOLDS POSSE AT BAY But Beressen Falls Asleep and Is} Captured With Shotgun Resting Across His Knees, This was denied by Morrison 50¢ at all Drug Stores Fostar- Milburn Co. Prope Buffalo. NY. an invention which would bie him to manufacture, at a cost | of cight dollars, typewriting machines that could be for fifty dollars, | a Seimei nit ANDREW J. KETTLE DEAD. Noted trtah Nation Son Killed In Sette Only a Few Days i re. DUBLIN, Sept. 23.—Andrew J. Kettl fa veteran Nationalist, died to-day, | than a week after recelving the news SKIN ERUPTIONS ‘ALWAYS CLEVELAND, ©, Sept. 2%—John|that his ut, Thomas M. Kettle Reressen, fiftye was captured in his!» or » National home at Willoughby early to-day by |! River my Sheriff Spink of Lake County and|t: Q e e d tood ” n | that depiitics after he had stood oft a|{i\' Rn ate eety ey posse all night, following his wound-| wa of the fourteen “traversers ing of two men. e b. At mous brats for conspiracy held 1 Dublin in 1880 The affair was a brawl! last night where he lived outgrowth hi of essen's Descendant of Indian Fighters Dies in te a Ae an English Suffragist, do you AROS nooks OF SHG Citaonae believe in attacking political ques f ‘ al au ready to jump, when they ar- tions with hamme Bere, Aad other mills | rived with their rescuing ladde tant weapons?” [asked s. Annie Dombrosky, who jumped | twenty feet and was severely burt, | suddenly remem| her child, two | weeks old, was on the third floor. While the’ woman sereamed hysteri- | m cally a fireman went aloft and rescued he baby | of a militant more than Mrs. Pank hurat ever did, Her work, hoy ——— : pure ine with the Constitutional So-| HELD BOND “FOR A BLUFF. clety | ph oAlll i delle consider that militant | “Rut U sont oe tithe added, | Pete Contd ¥ Where They! methods Aare expedic she ade me anier to convert men to Suf-| Get Mt—te He! Owner, ee Indirectly than by talking to| Detectives Dowling and Londrigan frame inion they seo women work-|saw Charles Farrell and George at it etl Dwyer, two men they diseribed as clently Veteran “wallet droppers,” in ac Tuyen aE at Maiden Lane and Front Street think the Wor carly to-day, Upon arresting the two Hughes Alliance the detectives found book | so wonderfully upon Darrell containing « 5 of fre getting political training, and how imitation Confederate States bank AEP EOIN Reet CAMGUEERRCE 1a licetent weveral PRU AbATAA Ot AG K, bur Primrose League and the Wom- undone gold bond issued by the en's Tdberal Association wo have) York Ohio Tron and Steel Com- trained some great stateswomen pany Of $1,000, apparently of some value ENGLISH POLITICIANS GREATER")! 0.04 pefore Magistrate Evina THAN THE AMERICAN, in the & Volt Court, Parr q| the tfor a bulff, e bond ts ucted the detectives to as value of the with a f it being returned | to digntiul owner, |seeut 4 tmasters under the new Nationa i, Ante tie ped ar Depart: ihn done” x.” Biman: Disinfect Now! k | UTICA N Wiltam hi Ww 6 march dow ie shooting Bellinger, the Utican. ki i fortier, fort nine hirty five, 1 “wn axe, “ortic s “yg PUREOV Wan AIL AES Oren CHILDRENS SKIN | Van Luben’a read is cleft with an ax ONE BOX PROVES IT 25¢ Rere stood off the posse wit a shotgun, but fell asleep in his chair early to-day 1 offic Wroke in and 5 overpowered A before he could uss D t W: it U t ] ipa ee which jhe had across his on a n I wr iret Rewards for 8 Disease rewards of $5 for regular army recruits Comes— Greensburg, qa Start with the ACME CHLORINA’ Mheraly wees aay ta 8, 90, A rep tint fea moet powerful disi fectant, deodorant, and germ destroyer. Sprinkle somo down the kitchen eink er tho ne tae? are washed. Also down Goorae | You sith rheuma’ to ty de et oir Uae commen ei taki leeh"me ao ms ee alts ~ York Health Departunent in tas ept deme ot Tntantie Paralysis, The tocacaa, Don’ sudetitutes w may be stale and worthless awe. The Only Woman Deep-Sea Diver Read Her Story of Adventure in the World Magazine To-Morrow 95.99 Per Cent. at 16 This is not a problem in mathematics; it concerns a cer- tain New York high school miss, who at the age of sixteen, was graduated with 95.99 per cent. in her studies—the highest mark of any in all New Yorks twenty-four high schools. By the “Hobo Poet” F Harry Kemp, the widely knowh literary “tramp,” was up a tree for want of something to write about-—a frank enough admission that led to a series of interviews re- freshingly unusual, because he stumbled upon them in unusual places. A Funeral Pyre for a Jersey King A Gypsy King, he was, whose tent domain lay in Jersey, and when he died recently his personal effects, valued at $2,000, were burned on a funeral pyre, in keeping with an old tribal custom. The story exudes the atmos- phere of Romany. Once Crippled; ee ° Now Diving Champion When ehe was eleven years old Josephine Bartlett was paralyzed in the left leg. Imagine the courage and per- severance that have been hers when, years later—-she has won the distinction of national woman diving champion! The Call of the Wild West Prince Paul Troubetzkoy, noted animal eculptor, has modelled a group of broncos and Indians that transplants tl West to the East—poetic proverb to the contrary notwithstanding—striking photographe of them in color. “Fresh Fish! $8,000 a Pound!” You've never heard such a cry from the fish . even though he was Old Hi Costa Living in But there are gold fish—rare Japanese specice—that bring that enormous price. There’s a page of the pre- cious things in colors. In the Editorial Section AMERICAN CHEMISTS AS WORLD BUILDERS: An Interview With Dr. L. H. BAEKELAND, of the U. S. Naval Consulting Board. ALLAN L. BENSON SOCIALIST CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT, Talks of the DEMOCRATIC AND REPUBLICAN ISSUES. In the Gravure Section Photographs of The U. S. Navy of 50 Years Ago. Pretty Women and Their Pretty Clothes, Sidelights of the Battleficid. Athletes As They Strain at the Tape. In the Metropolitan Section Doing Opera Out in a Lot With the Thermometer at 55 and a Fluky Wind Rocking the Rock of the Valkyries. NOTHING LEFT TO BE DESIRED IN THE WORLD To-Morrow (Speak to Your Newsdealer To-day.)