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PRECAUTIONS OF BUFFAL O POLICE. Czolgosz Guarded with Extra Care—How 13 and Friday Figure in the Case. (Bpectal to The Brening World.) BUFFALA, Sept. 18.—Tae unfavorable mews from the President's bedside had the effect this forenoon of causing the Police to redouble the care which they trave taken from the beginning to guard ths prisoner from harm and to suppress any incipient riots which may take place. This morning the reserve force at No, 1 station wus increneed to twenty men. They can be called on for service at an instant’s notice. In addition there: are fully 160 men on duty, who could be assembled at any potnt in the down- town section within ten minutes. Attention has been called to the fact that the President was shot on Friday in the Thirteenth Pre- ecinct and that the grave change in his condition teek piace on Friday, Sept. 18. ‘The critical condition of the President awakened renewed Interest in Czolgosz. Hundreds of people Mocked to Police Headquarters this. morning. Most of them were G. A. R. men, on their way home from the Cleveland encampment or here for Grand Army Day at the Exposition. prisoner. As a rule, the veterans who called were from Ohlo, They were bitter In their denunciation of the President's assassin. Czolgosz is more stubborn than ever now. His appetite has re- turned completely, and he eats more ravenously than before. Ho siept ten hours last night. His guards stated that he never moved once during the night. The police have shut off on his supply of tobacco. He gets nothing now but water and the samo food given to all prisoners. CZOLGOSZ’S INSANITY. His Felgning Probed by Or. Fowler and He Resumes Eatin: BUFFALA, 8ept. 18.—Dr. Fowler, ant expert on insanity, has made a second examination of Czolgoss. He was ac- companied to the Anarchist's cell by Onler of Police Bull, The guards were withdrawn and for three-quarters of an hour Dr. Fowler was alone with the assassin. Dr. Fow- ler declines to give the result of his examination. Czolgoas has recovered his appetite! and he now cats like a glutton. He h apparently concluded that fatlure to wat wi'l not ald his scheme of felgning in- sanity. ‘They wanted to see the CONDITION VERY GRAVE, SAY LOCAL PHYSICIANS, Dr. Cyrus Edson Says Sure to Follow L Peritonitis Is Almost atest Symptoms. Dr. Alber} T. Weston, Coroner’s ph: Wan, who has performed autopsies in ive or six hundred cases where death ‘esulted from gunshot wounds and 1s) an expert in the treatment of injuries of that charact f@ to an Evening World reporter to-day, after he had; been shown the early bulletins from Buffalo regarding the President's con- dition: “Toxemia is @ term used to cover a wide range of complications. If it means septic Infection or blood pvison- ing, that Is the end. If tt ts due mere- ly to the Inability to digest solid food, it Is only temporary and in all proba- bility -the President will rally. “Ordinarily a gunshot wound Uke that received by the President would be fatal In ninety-nine cases out of a hurdred. The extraordnary conditions under which he was shot were favor- able to him. I mean, he was shot practically at the door of a hospital, and the best of surgeons were at work on him within a short time. “At the end of six days the wound itself ought to be thoroughly healed. There ‘s no evidence in the bulletins of secondary hemorrhage, or acute pert- tonitis. Bulletins from a sick room. how- ever, rarely desoribe all the conditions surrounding a patient. “Talk.ng with Drs. O'Hanion and Willams yesterday, we all agreed that the Prosident’s condition was most fa- ‘vorable, so far as the wound was con- cerned. If President McKinley is dying row {t !s from secondary complica- tions.” Edson Fears the Worst. “It is safe to say that the bullet re- maining in the President's body han, decn disposed of. The present trouble 1s possibly duc to an escape of food {nto the abdominal cavity from the wounds in the stomach, which were no; fastened firmly enough to withstand the muscular action of that organ. The escape of such food would immediately cause the symptoms now said to be present. “If my sarmisc correct peritonitis will certainly follow, assuming that the President recovers from the heart Puil- ure and shock, “The failure of the stomach to digest food and thus dispose ef it, which might be due to the patient's weakened condi- tion, would cause fermentation which would distend the stomach, make it press against the heart and thus cause the distressing symptome recorded in the bulletins this morning. “Yesterday I believed tho President's; chances of recovery to be 9% out of 100. ; This morning I would reverse the per- cannot belleve it is t that Mr. from liquid food. and I that the physicians would have risked adminiaterin; ering ‘solld. f90d. when so many Dredigested foods acceptable to a weak ened someah can be had. . Tattle Has Hope. rot cts G, Tuttle, of No, ¢1 Weat do ‘wot belleve authority on 1d to-day: “The ci 9 frresident this hoped, but from the information t have obtained tT do not think there is any immediate dang “The ‘administration of solid food to GAGE PREPARES FOR THE WORST. WASHINGTON, Sept. 13.—Secretary Gage Issued another bond ca!l this morning. He will buy all Government twos offered, except ene new twos, at a fixed price. ‘This indicates thet the Sectetary con- siders the news from Buffalo of the most grave and serous character, Hel 1a taking this early step to forestall ine contingency of the President's death and the consequent money panic that would follow. ‘The Treasury Department will dls- Durse $9,000,000 to-day on account of week’: er i. Siac ecb en de ae ee it Wy Wate Siverye fess in Was ing of the President !@ the cause for this, but the fact that his temperature has not gone up gives reason for hope that 1a the course of twenty-four hours, If 0 reat rise In temperature comes, his condition ‘will be most encouraging.” ‘The doctor wan asked If e more danger of peritonitis, any ala: “The chances of peritonitis are almost entirely absent. In concluding the doctor raid that in! his opinion there was no occasion for any serious alarm. He sald the Presi- Gent's low temperature wus a most en- couraging sign. Will Not Live Twenty-four Hours. Dr, Wilfred G. Fralick, of No. 7 Madison avenue, who is one of threo patient's Onin inteatloal troubles ccording to the latest reports the President will not surviv twenty-four hours unless a decided « .nge for the better occu: “I have hi rom the first. His pulse ‘since the ope Tost sserious and unfavorable in fntestinal and stomach was = brominent | ‘ays a symptom wounds, “In regard to the reports that the President was given solid food, the probabilities are that he has received no solids. If ibe, did {t was not the cor- rect thing to do, “I deemed the case serious from the first, because the pulse has never gone below 12). There must have been blood polsoning from the start, and the physi- chins were evidently unable to prevent the infection, which has continued ever since. It became « systemic and local affection which could not be entirely eliminated by any antiseptic treat- ment, “Tt aie now a tureiy result, “The danger of an imbedded bullet exposes the wound to infection and abscess In any course of ite track: Tae bullet in its course beyond the ome which could not be followed. caused an infection which Spread to othe abdominal cavity.” Slight Chance of Recovery. Dr. Carlos MacDonald, who was born in the same town President McKinley and is two yeare younger, id to an Evening World reporter to-day that, basing his judgment on the published in- formation, he regarded the President's chance of fecovery very sll MacDonald, who Is one of t famous physicians In New York, satd: “I have eald all along that the Presl- dent's chances of recovery were very small, because his temperature hi mained continuously above 120 and his respiration above noripal. “It Is diMcult to belleve that a pa- ent suffering from surgical fever, and with two bullet holes in his stomach, would be permitted to digest solld food within a week of the receipt of the 1 jury. The process of stomach naturally gives rise to the generation f gases which would tend to distend the stomach and put the tissues on the stretch, thereby endangering the open- the scarcely healed wounds. Should this occur there would be an es- cape of some portion of the contents of the stomach Into the 1 cavity, which in my opinion would uMicient to account for the symptoms described in, the bulletins, “Whi'e ther tera porete ey. fad Ato ery, the chance: Au one ont Dr. Charles Ogilvy renee “Everything now depet on the heart, which is taxed fo "ine tmoat. It looks as if the stomach i Ove taxed, and anything whitch would ov tax any organ would reach the hei The President has‘been in a Sind orite {cal condition from the start. CZOLGOSZ AMONG THE COAL MINERS. WILKESBARRE, Pa., S¢ot. 13.—It was learned here to-day that Leon Czol- Gosz made a tour of the anthracite coal regions about six years ago. He was employed for awhile by the Lackawanna Coal Company at Duryea, this county, and walle there is sald to have organ- ized a lodge of Anarchists. He could speak several languages and soon became popular with the foreign lement. He was known then Fred Neiman, People who came in contact with Czolgoss then say he was after notoriety all the time, ane whenever the Anarch- acer mets ue insisted on doing all the His theory was ¢ the working peop! tin ie cou oF would never be improve doc- av @e were THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 13, 1901. ANARCHISTS FEAR VENGEANCE RABID HERR MOST, IN COURT, Saturs Heeht Bros. 2 Between 16th and 17th Sts, ay 59-261 Gth Ave _ WHINES LIKE A YELLOW CUR. Cletiing Specials ¢ vr i ME!” Herr Johann Most, the Anarchist, ma | Whining like a yellow cur, was led by fae two big policemen before Magistrate Olmated, d-ay. His fat, greasy face was streaked with tears. He was disheveled, un- kempt, Cirty—a cringing object as he cowered before the Magistrate's bench. Bome one whispe-ed in his car that President McKinley was dying. “They'll hang me, if he dtes,"" whined the Anarchist. Then he begged the po- Hcemen, whom he hae so often reviled in his speecRes, to protect him from | harm. Most was arrested last night in a in Centre Street Court, to- ¢| Darroom by order of Chief of Detectives Titus, for printing an Incendiary edi- torial in his paper, Die Fretheit, on the day President McKinley yas shot. His plain, decent-looking little wite was in the court-room when he shuffled to the bar. She whimpered as she saw the manacles on his wrists. Only a few anarchistic sympathizers | arch: im? Most of them were too thoroughly frightened by the vigorous) were present. action of the police authorities to ven- ture out and court arrest. Arew Anarchists of lesser !mportanz> waited in the corridora of the bullding until court was opened, and then they took seats well in the rear. O14 Articte, Says Wife. Before Court opened Mrs. Most an- nounced to her friends that Die Freihelt would be published this afternoon. She sald the article which gave offense was published fifty years ago by Karl Hen- zen, editor of the Pioneer, in Cam- bridge, Mase. He was jerman revolutionist. The original article, she eald, had nothing to do with American affairs. The article on-which the complaint against Most was based by Assistant District-Attorney’s Byrne and Hermann was published on Bept. 7. Most wanted to make a statement to the Court, but Magistrate Olmsted shut him up and held him in bonds of $1,000 for examination next Monday. Police Commisisoner Murphy sali this afternoon he did not belleve Most could wet ball, as no one seemed willing to come forward and espouse his cause, When the Commissioner was asked if he would order Capt. Titus to suppress Die Fretheit if an incendiary edition were issued this afternoon, he replied that he did not care to aay in advance what he would Go. He sald, however: “Yeu cam Uspend on tt that the Police “THE PRESIDENT IS DYING? THEY’LL AANG WHINES MOS1. iin als paper, Johann Most changes from Department will do all that ts possible to suppress anarchy In New York." MOST FUMES IN HIS DEFENSE. Woman Reporter of The Even- ing World Has a Stormy In- terview with Anarchist. BY ZONA GALE. Ho ts not a beautiful Anarchtst—this | Johann Most, His Infrequent white, and his spikes beant ts wh too, and In Its midst the uncertain are line of a very highly colored face dims away til! you can only fix your atten: | ton on his misshazen nose and ewolten | left cheek. 1¢ has roving eyes which he heene'| on the floor while he talks. His big | horn glasses aré the most noticeable part of his face. “How ts McKinley? If McKinley dtes I shall be’——he was beginning again, and I asked him: i “Mf {t weren't for being hanged, wouldn't you want him to die?” “What good would his dying do An- Not" he sald. “What good does Anarchism do any- body?" [ asked him, “And you know you sald tn your paper"— But when you mention what he sald red to purple and talks in his beard) at 2 furlous rate. “In my paper," he poured forth, “It! 5, sald, ‘Death to tyrants! Death to des- pots! Death to the people who take all and don’t allow us aven to steer! 1 kept up with the commingled meta- phor breathlessly, because it looked as ff Thad a real burning Anarchist sentl- ment fresh from the press, so to speak. ‘Then Johann Most added: “McKinley Was No Deapot.!! “But McKinley was no despot and no tyrant. The President of a Republic couldn't be a despot If he wanted to be! “I never said he was. he should have been killed! do any good to ar ruler and put up rome other four-year man, “That's not Anarchlam, Ah, these peaple—they are pigs! They prefer aot] to understand. They hustle your opin- fons out of your mouth and throw mud at them, and when the opinions are all mud they ‘throw them to you for yours! It ts infamous! It ts" “But you, in your paper,” I sald monotonoualy, hat despots should be killed and had been killed for years, and would always pe killed. And you gald it Just after McKinley had been shot, Now, It looka'’—~ “It looks! Xt lockal’* he stormed, I never sald] febisinieieieie, lelelsicieieiet + SRE EERE: aire x Oy * HERR MOST'S TWO SONS. eRe RRR Rie Reich ike icitieticticitis er einer biicvieiciieih ricieieieieeieielebeieicicieinieiei-nicieieeeinivle ieee biciniel-i-t “Doesn't everybody know a paper Ike mine goes to pera three weeks before {t appears? I put that in my paper be- fore McKinley ever went to Buffaio, “I put ft in three weeks ago, and I can prove that it was all set up before he ever left Washington. I can prove that." “Don't though,” will look na if ay they think, 1 sald, “because that all were really a plot. and that you were in the | plot.” Unable to Speak. Johann Most mopped his brow and Yawping Anarchist hibitionof Cowardice When Arraigned — Tries to Makea State- ment to Magistrate, but Is Silenced and Held in $1,000. trie dto speak. He tried a good many timen before he could. Living up to An- archist principles ts wo se than being a tunnel man, I should think. “Here ts the point," sald Herr Most, this fs my very good defense: at I said in my paper I did not say n't print An- 8 he doesn't believe, though,” t it was an academical article— an ucademical article,” he repeated, as If he were getting behind the phrase. “The sentiment was one expressed by y years ago in the Ploneer. “It was sald fifty times by him in hia books. [ mer@y quoted it, and now they howl ‘plot’ at me. It was an aca- demical*— “You belteved It? I aatd, Yen, Retteved tt. “1 delleved gp but I merely quoted tt I did not say tt. And I quoted it be- fore McKinley went to Buffalo,” he re- peated, doggedly. Then they brought him the pall of meleletielelebiieleintelelnteteteintetalateief 20m tera deiebteie io milk for which he had been begging, and somebody told him hie wife was Upstairs. Instantly his face was scar- let, and his eyes blazed up at the man who brought the milk “Have the police been worrying her?” he asked. “In sh 1 walted wh antl ash mone thing more ¢ foot of the stairs. had LONDON SHOWS SOLICITUDE. LORD MAYOR ASKED FOR CON- FIRMATION OF BULLETINS. Rothachilds Thought Ci Not Affect Stuck Market— Universal Sorrow. LON of the Pre Just getting cir 13, 10.45 A. M..—News 3 ¢erlous condition ts lated in London. It ed with much ineredue bulletins from Buffalo Lord Mayor called up the Asso- elated Press to inquire if the alarming | rumors were true, Upon bein that they were, he expressed sor- row, All day long anxious Americans, tn- the cluding Osborne BL h A prominent Englisamen alled, the form Me Donne! pathy, Disma: pervaded all patton Ambas savor Chi ty Ie expected to_arrive in Lone Tay: The message from King Edward, dated from Copenh. Mr, Choate, react a grieved to learn that a> of health has caine sincercly bepe that bis pared.” Tan deep! Pri wta' fis 5 Would |r CABINET CALE TO WHITE HOUSE OFFICIAL NOTICE OF PRESI- DENT’S CRITICAL ILLNESS. Heads of the Government Now in Washington Assembled on Sec- retary Cortelyou's Notification, WASHINGTON, Sept. 13—Secretary Cortelyou has sent the following tele- | ram to Col, Montgomery, in charge of the telegraph office at the White Houne: “The President (4 critically Ii. Notity {the Cabinet, The President's condition thas grown worse during the night and he Is extremely Secretaries Hay and Gage were imme- diately communicated with, Mr. Gage is expected momentarily at the White House, while word ts awalted from Mr, Hay, Comptroller of the Currency wos hastily summoned and is now at the White House walting for news from Buffalo, Several other personul friends have been notified DR. STORER FEARS FOR THE WORST. Dawes CHICAGO, Se Dr. W. D. Storer. yf thia city, eho wae nt ut the time the operation was ormed at aald today; eo malnta the time that the pulse wag alts it was out of pr ture—and I feared that something would go wrong with the heart. “That was a symptom I Ud not jtke and:Z am afrald it will carry him off." | $14.50,—Our $16.50 suits are tailored in \Zold on Partial Payments | | We want it distinctly understood that while our Gives a Pitiable Ex-' prices are absolutely and always as low every day iz the week, and every hour in the day, as any of the other stores—and our Saturday Special Prices many, degrees lower still—that we cheerfully accept payment in small amounts for our most tempting bargains. ism; ment and One Price. Men's Clothing. Buy ngin the immense quan- tities necessary to supply our Seven Stores, we naturally have, a larger variety of sizes than is ordinar- ily curried, and have no ditf- culty in perfect ly fitting stout, sim and extra sized men. We buy nothing but tested goods— nothing but whatiscarefully ta lored— noth- ing but what is in the best style. comprising | wide wales, | also fancy cheviols and c ssimeres; single or double !reasted Sack Suits in longs, | stouts or regul r siz made with new firm | tion's, with wool serge lining, tailored in finest | manner; value $15; your choice to-morrow $12.50 ‘the finest’ maoner; in black or blue rough chevio; single or double breasted; in s'oits, slims and exza sizes. Also a full Ine of foncy cheviots and cassimeres at $15, so.d | els whete for $29. $20.—Our $29 suits are a Ber quality of go's and timmin.s; single or dou le| br ased, with hair cloth fonts, which make: | | it impossible for a coat to los: its share: in thihets, cheviots, cassimeres, unfinished in the ltest patterns; hind-made collars and buttonholes; sold elsewhere for 4 | A full line of topcoxts, about which we [shall siy moze later on, at $10, $15, $2)| jand $25. 30° pairs Men's Trousers, all wool, cassi« | merrs, cheviots snd mixed worsteds, worth $3.50—for to-morrow, $7.50, HATS—A ‘etter $2 hat than the other | | with taffeta sill There are no exceptions in this Store—no favorit- — for every Customer, Cash or Credit—One Treat- Ladies’ Suits, Ete. DIES' TAILe: ORED SUITS all woo! Basket Cloth (the made of new material), cost tight fitting the new effect ; with the ed suit fine quality ip cam pacer floun:e; jacket and skirt trimmed with self color velvet; @ s‘rictly man-tallore black, tee toate Price for Saturday LADIES? BLOUSE SUIT, of broad:loth, jacket throughout, ined skirt naa the new flounces |both jacket and skirt trimmed with’ velvetg, i black and ea sizes 32 to 40, fF Saterda idea, Skirts made of fine quali‘ with the new flounce, trimmed folds, best grade of percaline lining; row, $20. Men's Furnishings SHIRTS—Men's fancy laundered pero cale, with detached cuffs; value 69c. Seas day's price 45c. NECKWEAR—Men’s Imperial sats a silks, | made from ii latest Ai | novelties, made to sell at 50c., ton | price, 15c. for kecieas poe Price! for Vever SKIRTS—The season's latest self and tlack stitched; for tormorow calf | 79. pais. cores sell for $3. Children’s Clothing. Hecht Bros." special child's double. | breasted suit, ges 7 to 17, made of Sco'ch cheviot, neat pitterns, dow le seit ni kne=; | flat tops on sid: and back seams, and riveted | buttons, value $7.50; to-morrow $4.93, The Norfolk suit, in iw or three piec-s, voke and broad plaits fron: and castimeres, ch-viots, in blue, black and , ‘ages 3 to 17; worth $5; to-morrow, Sail'r Blouse Suit, metium weight, all pur: worsted, blue serge price, $1.98. * COFFE a cont PINBA tora A Jelly mae of sale SATURDAY only. FRIDAY AN D SATURDAY. RUTTER ul NUT BRI a a ike urn 4 ur Sit sCADE awe my “High Grade,” tra would rightly ask 49 t 60 cents per pound fame "pineesetes ‘and pare shredded Ceziva cocoaauts, YED * CugcoLaTios AND NONDONS OR ALL CHOCOLATES, we do 40 without fear of contradiction NECKWEAR—Satin wits It buckles or tation Rite toma! 'e ties, effects; all colors; worth 39c.—; hemstitched and ‘corded: 3c. VEILING —18-inch fancy rhesh and! | dotted Turedo veilings, black, white and black on white; all the newest effects; worth ” 39c, and SCe. yd.—special 25¢. « WRAPPERS —Cotton Out Corsetine Wrappers, in Sued ant seipehs stiped, \ at 98c. to $1.93, Ladies’ Cashmere Wrappers, tucked shoulder ru‘fied, elaborately trimmed, sain ribbcm in contrasting colors, $4.75. CHILDREN'S COATS—A to $25. Our Enormou: S»les Enab'e Us to Make a Hat of Suck Quality and Style at a Moderate Price That It Is The Popular Hat This Fall. “Derbys $3.00 3 $4.00 Alpines $3.00 04 $3.50 Silk Hats $5.00 and $6.00 CAN DY THE MOST OF THE BEST FOR THE LEAST MONEY. nd Freach { nt cream, Can you picture: PRIDAY oniy olde, lar crea ‘0a of oar most nd made ay it should be. “Extra Our weeely @ confection= Dura are, 54 BARCLAY ST ‘Men's Shoes Only: Stores "29 CORTLANDT ST Men's & Women's Shoes: { NS4yi : 30 West 123th Stag Ro aN ES COR wesr Bway. COR CHUACH (835 roadway ¢ $823 West rah 4G Fulton Streetscwes Nassatt, cor, Fulton Stes {: large assort> , silk embrodered on ment of children's black satin and) velvet. sheld; excellent $3.00 value; to-motrow's coats, handsomely trimmed with lace, gu 100 3 rd