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WENT TO BED UNDER PIANO F STRANGER ‘Hauled Out by Policeman and Accused of Being a Burglar, Frank Maley Insists that He , Did It All While Walking in His } Sleep. ANCE TOOK A STROLL IN | HIS NIGHTSHIRT, HE SAYS. iThe Magistrate Has His Doubts, \ but Adjourns the Examina- tion to Enable the Accused to Bring Witnesses to Prove + Him a Somnambulist. Buddenly pulled from under an old- tfashioned square plano in the parlor of @ strange flat, Frdnk Maley, eighteen years old, rubbed his eyes early to-day and asked in a bewildered tone: “Where in thunder am I?” “Don't you try that,"” admonished Po- Uceman McGuire, of the East Sixty- POISON FOUND BODY, WARRANT FOR WOODS Authorities Seek the Doctor and His Wife, at Whose Home in California the Once Wealthy Railroad Builder, o Organs: Died — Sawdust IN GtoT Ti but Found in the Corpse. Col. William Best, formerly a} tenu prominent Wall street operator, who | died April 4 last in San Rafael, Cal., was _ soneil. John Donald Woods and his wom- compenion, in whose house Col. Best died, have disappeared. A warrant w.s issued to-day for them on a charge of grand laceny. It apprehended a charge of murder will be made. Woods signed a certificate as @ ¢ -tor that Col. Best’s death was due to apoplexy. The autopsy, held in Caldwell, showed that most of the internal or- gans had been removed. Enough re- meventh street station, shaking the; mained to show the presence of a young man, “What gre you giving me?” The flat was that of Frank Bartha, on the first floor of No. 403 Hast Seventy- second street. Bartha was awakened early this morning by a nolse in the par- powerful irritant poison. Son’s Suspicions Aroused. The suspicions of Best’s sons were @roused and the body, which bad been buried at Caldwell, N. J., was disin- lor, and supposed it was his brother] terred, when an amazing state of af- coming home. The sounds ceased, how- ever, and as his brother usually says good night Bartha left his bed to Inves- tigate. As he entered the parlor he enw @ man crawling under the square piano. Bartha ran to the front door and call- ed for Pollceman McGuire. Together they entered the parlor, The form under the piano ‘had not moved and the po- Meceman hauled Maley from his retreat. Maley was in his shirt sleeves and stocking feet. He was so surprised ‘when he was shaken to his senses that fhe had to be told several times where he was. “I've been walking in my sleep again!” he exclalmed, “I live at No, 1351 First avenue, but to-night I was sleeping with friend, Fred Maxiner, at No. 401 East Geventy-second street. He has a fur- ;Bished room on the first floor. I thought (Twas in bed there. We were out to- gether last night. and I drank one milk (Punch before golng to bed. I only toole off my coat and shoes. I don't remem- ber a thing of how I got Into this flat." A coping extends from the windows of Maxiner's room to those in Bartha’s flat, wand it Js possible that Maley crept along ttihis. But the policeman was not much Impressed with the story of somnambu- lism and arraigned Maley before Magis- trate Pool In Yorkville Court to-day on @ charge of burglary, “I am a somnambulist,” the prisoner told the Court. “I have been troubled With sleep walking for two years, Once 1 walked two blocks in my night shirt, and woke up when I stubbed my toe on a paving block. I often walk around tre house, I have » brother twelve years old who fs afflicted in the same way. This effair last night was a caso of sleep walking. I don't remember a ‘thing from the time I went to bed until athe policemen pulled me from under that plano.” Magistrate Has Doubts, “Thut story sounds incredible,” said Magistrate Pool, “I always understood sleep walkers walked in a bee line. How could you have crawled along this cop- tng and opened the window of this man's flat In your sleep without b awakened?” ne “As I told you. Judge, I don't remem- ber," said Maley. The young mon sald that he was a moulder and worked in Fulton's foun- dry, at No. 3 Furman street, Brookiyn, He Avclared that he could prove by his relatives that he is a sleep-walker, aid by Maxiner, who Is a sign-painter,’ that he Was spending the night with him. Magistrate Pool told Maley he would give him every opportunity to estadlis! uch a defense and adjourned the ex- mination until to-morrow, in the mean time holding Maley in $1,00 bail for exaiinatio: POLICE STILL WORK AS CAB COLLECTOR‘ ‘Two Young Men Arrested for Refus- Ing. to Pay Overcharge Promptly Discharged by Magistrate. ‘Tn young me, wno are sald by tha police and a chauffeur of the New York Transportation Company to be Philip and Joshua Sands, brothers, members of the St. Nicholas and Yale Clubs, aad well known in New York society, were arraigned in the Yorkville Court to-day, charged with having refused to pay $4.60 for the hire of an automobile last night. The young men gave the names of Charles Smith aad James Johnson when arrested and their address as No, 7 West Worty-fourth street, which ts the St, Nicholas Club, In court they protested they nad been overcharged and Magis- trate Pool agreed with them, “The police had no right to make an arrest In this case,” he sald. “They are not supposed to be debt collectors, The only recourse the automobile com- pany has in the case Js to sue through @ civil action.” The Magistrate then discharged the younz men. According to the chauffeur, Millard ©. Perkins, of No. 339 West Nineteenth street, he was hired by the brothe outside of Sherry’s cafe at 1125 last night. After driving them to various places he asked for $4.50 cab hire, but this was refused. The chauffeur called Patrolman Stark, of the Kast Fifty. fifst street station, who arrested a young mei A revresentatlve of the New York Gourt, asked that the cage Be postponed ford. weok, saying thae It might. be wise ape tay " ‘0 grant Ry rate request, fairs was disclosed. It was found that the aged financler's body lad already been opened and the organs removed. This led to the suspicion that Best had been polsoned and that the organs which would show signs of the drug were removed by those interested. The body had been stuffed with saw- dust, Traces of Poison Found. But the skull was untouched and the autopsy reveals that there was no hem- orrhage of the brain, as there would have been In apoplexy, which was as- signed by the certificate as the cause of Col Best's death, A section of the intestines which had been overlooked re- mained attached in the body, and from analysis of this H. B, Baldwin, chem- {st of the Essex County Board of Health, Newark, sald to-day that he felt warranted in saying that Col. Beat had been poisoned. Dr. Jones, the California physician who treated the Colonel a few days be- fore his death, but was not with him when he died, hag sald that the pupils of the Colonel's eyes were dilated, which 1s one of the effects of aconite, and a bottle which had contained aconite wag found in the house of Dr. Woods after he and his female companion left San Rafael. ‘These things and a despatch from Prosecutor Thomas P. Boyd, of Marion County, Cal. to Charles Summer Best, to-day, saylug that warrants had been sworn out for Dr, Woods for grand 1: ceny and that murder probably would oe added as soon as the autopsy and chemi- cal analysis is completed, make it ex- tremely Important to discover the where- abouts of these people, thus described by Alfred M, Best: Description of Those Sought. Dr, John Donald Woods, about thir- ty-eight years old, 5 feet 7 or 8 inches, slight of figure; very prominent Roman nose, with a very small growth or ex- cresence like a wart on each side of tne nose at the corner of the eyes; ashen gray complexion, smooth shaven, though he formerly wore a dark brown mustache siightly streaked with gray; dark brown halr, also slightly streaked. He speaks very softly and never al- lows himself to get excited or offended. Sought in Phillipsburg, Woods and the woman who passed as his sister ip California and as bis wi when they came East have mysteriously disappeared ,from the Hotel Lawrence, Auantic Cify, and the warrants will be taken to Phillipsburg, N. J., where lt was understood trace may be found of them. ‘The evidence so far collected by the sons of the dead man, who are in the publishing business at No, #® William street, tends to show first, that Col. Best had between $0 and $800 in money and $1,000 In mining stock just before he died, and that Woods represented him to be In debt; then that on the way East the woman, Alice Cloy Woods, wrote to Col, Best’s widow saying that her brother, “Dr.” Woods, had died on the way to Chicago; then when Woods and the woman were later arrested In Atlantic Clty on a charge of stealing Col, Best's vallse anj other personal effects they admitted thelr identity, but were discharged because the crime alleged was committed in Callfornta, Apopleay Not Cause, It is also alleged that Woods signed thy death certificate, posing as a doc- or when he was not one; that some one ut open the body immediately after desth and removed the organs, then tn- Jecting embalming tuid and filing the void with sawdust to prevent the covery of the cause of death; that apoplexy was not the cause of deata, as ascribed; that Woods purchased acon- ite, a powerful poison, In San Rafael, and that Gol, Best was known to be In strong health and naver afflicted with apoplexy, When County Physician McKenzie opened the body at Caldwell yesterday he found, besides tae sawdust, that the embalming had been done after the or- gans had been removed and that it had been injected In the interior cavity and not through the skin, as is usual, An examination of the brain showed that deata was certainly not from apoplexy. Parts of the viscera wore removed and delivered to W, H. Baldwin, chemise to the Newark Uoard of =Health, for analysis. A despatch from Sun Rafael ways that Detective Depue started to- day for New Jeraéy with warrants Woods and the woman and with extras dition papers from the Governor, Pool, eS te Alice’ Gloy, Woods, widowed sister: but ‘was ‘repintetea at Auantlo City ak bia wife and was maz Hed to, him at Philipps, Noa in i wri Ist Alice Guicish, than man. 18 tW0 oF this et & or 6 inche nervana’ thin elmaat em er . pale blonde, + loud tn | gra: na tronely) brown hatr oH Once a Clergyman, with plump and is dressed inco: Investigation of Dr. Woods, conducting It, reveals that I Methodist minister down to Lyi, he was e¢: from his church Alleghan: by the Ole ence on the grol train near Tuffalo to face a crimine H to his Hock. Mann, of Buffalo. He was known then as * in an appearance Her husband, Ro’ who no 4. G. avenue, Brooklyn, & £ $2.00 him, and the Ri ppear name, and has figured In sevetal qu F. Gray Blinn, of Ni Preston, orris, from Dy. Barbier, Blinn’s attorney, and offered t fact was then dying. at Union Hill, id that an ex- performed the autop: ad evidently cut perlenced pathologist open tho body. PAIL thess things, together with the fact that the proceeds of two $50 a $300. mone: cash, with $2,500 worth of mining stocks, Which Col. Best Js known to hive taken to California with him when bh Interest Woods, as an alleged in certain mining projects, set the sons to Investi- aking off. gating his Studied for Ministry. “Dr. Woods" of George P Wend, hardworking ship car with his wife and another son at No. 3 New York avenue, Union Hill, 1. Je Sooper, his aunt, said bora Wood. He {5 Z an honest, He was a bright boy and young man and 1 can't understand his late dishon- est acts unless jt Js that that woman who is much older than he, has a ba Influence over him, “He studied for the ministry at Drow College and was pastor of that church at Port Allegheny about a year. He arried that honest, nice iri, sabe! Mann. ‘Then this woman cl and had him arrested for bi; Miss Mann got a div amy, and ce and he ran st_of his mother-in-law I bunted him up fn Chicago during the Exposition in 1593. He was then pra Using in a public hospital." County Physician Wiiiam H. McKen- we to-day sent the official report of his finding at the autopsy on the body of Col, Best to the authorities in the West and while ‘he would not give out whet was contained {n the report, he said “It Js all up to the Western people, now, and I think the first step for them to take Is to locate the under- taker who embalmed the body and sce what he has to say. The fact that there was cawdust in the body Is not strange. In many cases sawdust or cotton ts placed a body to absorb moisture. If the undertaker will come forward and say he removed the organs that will throw a different light on the subject.” —s—_ SERVANT SAYS SHE SAW WOODSGIVE BESTA DRUG SAN RAFAEL, Cal., July 9.—Minnle Meghettl, who was a servant in the Woods family for six months prior to the death of Col. Best, stated that she saw Dr. Woods give Best a hypodermic Injection of some drug. Shortly after- ward he began growing drowsy and soon became unconscious, never regain- ing his senses, This, Miss Meghetit says, was about April 2, 1903, Coroner Sawyer, !n whose eatabdilsh- ment the body of Col. Best was e: balmed, could not say if any of the ¢ gans had been removed," His deputy handled the case. The deputy when questioned on the subject sald that whoa the proper time artlved he wouid tell all he knew about the embalmins. FUGITIVE IS CAUGHT IN FAMILIAR HAUNT. Wanted in Brooklyn and Syra- cuse, Is Captured. After the Waring robbery of the home of Carl Fischer Hansen, in West Forty- seventh street, a few weeks 4 in which the thief made his e climbing a rope ove to the ro of an adjoining ho and run acryss er roofs more than half block to Sixth ayenue, the police ar- rested Harry Wocds, alits Thomas Warren, on suspicion. He was raigred in court and discharged as nothing could be proved against him, Woods evopped out of might and with good reason, for Inspector McClusky learned that he was wanted in Syra- cuse for a $15,000 burglary, and that he had Jumped $2,000 bail In Brooklyn. two weeks before the Hansen robbery, It was a certainty that he would coma back to his old haunts, and Detective him. Flay caught him fast night at Canal, street and the Bowery, He wan arraigned to-day In Centre Street Court and. held until the police shall determine whyther to prosecute him In Brooklyn congratulate IA he Pence ; ona T, WHOSE th watery blue or dress—she ware | y those 4a hen 4 Conder- rd that he had two wives, Ho was arrested as he got off a rge of lggamy brought by the wom- who is ow his ¢ ni. He hid himself at Port Alleghany am, and two me rduiced a young wite She was a Miss Isabella Rev. John Dorrity Wood." His Jersey wife put nd caused his first i 116 got a physicians’ diploma from a wild cat teal college in the West, added an "'s” to his name, and changed “Dorrity’ to “Donald for a mid FNGLAND'S RULER FOR HER HUSBAND! STANDS FOR PEACE But Leopold Leipzig, Whose} Lord Beresford Tells American! House Had Been Robbed.Was| Qbdurate, and There Was a Scene in Harlem Court. BEGGED MERCY 187 West Forty-seventh street. was arrested arged with causing the death of Mary ‘oods called on Charles Le testify that he was in Dr. Blinn’s office when the Norris girl called, and that she was then in the condition which resulted in her death, and in oe Later he turned wp at Asbury Park where he paid much attention to an old woman sick at a hotel. She died and he put in @ claim against her estate for $1,000 for medical attendance. Dr. Wools lived for a time with his mother Naval Officers that King Ed- ward with Aid of United. States Can Influence World. ‘The Newark coroner's physician who Pilgrims’ | ile & American | IPE frvston. net eine Proceedings ects, | Were disturbed der and ubout $100. in | One Hundred a nN, Vieo-Admiral Lord nessage from | Sixth street, to withdraw) the Prin) Jary against her his charge of bu t that an engage-| Holland House. from belng. pr e the American naval| sy yacant 1 Tam that 1 s been married] ent, amteers how The woman, around Lelpaig's . however, and the young American the presiled. ed Rear-Admiral Leopold Lelpzig saloon at centre avenue last nig zig charged his son a a Sle- Naval Camp to Kin his house and 4 mbassado. fi fell, the and other goods. je Hay sat at cers those who at- 1 of stuff from t! warned him to drop acquaintance of a crowd of who never work but rob the me of the young men wita whom hel gon of sford sald it was particular nad been a messen- were known {t would cause a sensation. eds of thelr ste leved the day was coming w ward would be known as he Peacemaker.” and nothing : 4 drunk with enthusiasm, 1 could do or say to my 1 toasted “Pre him to break away froin t! the He Leipzig confesse they had see the call President | to bring the having raise, Wil do his level jk h were held In $500 bail LOUBET CHEERED AS HE LEAVES ENGLAND. had on his visit to “ident Roosevelt were to come enthusiasm would oe Crowds Line Strects to Greet the Popular President LONDON, July 9.—The visit of Presi- tent Loubet to London was brought to ose tis morning, when the French Victoria sta- Chief Magistri tion for Dover, dents of his nity and cordial sine order to maintain Admiral Cott arliness of his departs the rovte ro: the rallway Harry Woods, Alias Tiiomas Warren, ident had entered the met by the King, Duke of Con- the nation's guest w Prince of Wale a crowd of mii As M. Loubet's carriage drew up h HUSBAND DEAD AT HER SIDE :N BED. |vesr."3s an President famil few minutes the King talking with much Mrs. Kaufman Awoke to Find That He Had Taken Poison During be seen in al! securlng snapshots of the strikiig Berg! Flay was assigned to look for Loubet met with a'great rec to-day on ‘his whieh had o bad made him Loubet on the ha, S48l) to Rineland. THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 9, 1903. - COL, WILLIAM BE DEATH 18S BEING INVESTIGATED. NEGRO JUDGE WAS BARRED IN HOTELS | Chief Justice Robert W. Rich- ardson, of Supreme Court of Liberia, Told Everywhore that There Were No Vacant Rooms TRIED THE HOLLAND HOUSE. Only Cabman at $2 Per Trip Sympa Roosevelt Has Cordially Invited to Visit Him. shimo, at Rishardson he Continent me = Ing at the very best ‘ousex of lente [talnment 14 unquestioned. “Ow t ® heft ontry fo tell me tha fed Leawn't en ‘ave hall their understand. Mr. Richardson is a negro noblemay Hf he wants to use his real name. H Jwas born da Africa of noble tilood, but his father was an enlighte: rent boy off to be tually he went to Liberia, where 1 came identified with polities ono of the letding citizens « in addition to a fudge, of Lis ident the Universit chief adviser of the F We to See Roosevelt. *rimarily he to attend the meeting of the at Bostoi ondarily he a conference with Preside rs relative to the a He says he the negro 1 ram from Si g nim that hi iy UUme he vist s arrival in tht to Atlantle City, ds of ols own coo} wil see May country he went where he was | direct the y. he land House New York winked tot uiy-thipd street tersy er to take him to bie er to tal ie ar cnoman [to himself tered and Wa: te urbane posed Mr nis at and “dont you ne a ed the bor: aad asked who SugKest rerohed venue, Porty-tfn nue and Thirty-thir Ma started Into marked coma Cabman “Pwo dollars, pleas “put 1 just 4 you two dollars to to th Wo mo: hardson pali from a dr and went inside. He cama ata minute. sits 9 must bi The ca! hotel. Mr, A diagram of t from the Imperia) to > Ashland House which was Che Mace tried, would look Ike a Weather map, and at every the eabman ted $3, approached sald that there ( nt rooms, vabman proposed the Mills House . but when the nature of the ae- | Commfodations turnished wax explained | Mr. Ric son wouldn't near of it |Then the who had becom | really sym ered to take th Chief Justice of the Supreme Court « Liberia up to Joe Walcott's sal, see if arrangem in some colored boar¢ Int be mad houre, Ric Welt down to called upon a Interests of man ft ad for ull River boat ‘fv ‘WOMAN STRUCK AND KILLED BY TRAIN, visitor Victim Was a Well-Known Resi | dent of Freshold, NJ THOLD, a wel was struck » to-day J, July &.—Mrs, B. B. resitent of this killed by a train Surrogate Grants Alleged Widow 0; WwW. W. Watrous Permission to Attack W!il Offered for Probate. therine Ballon Watrous, who et Walter n fre Watrous, 1 Surr of My Tatrous, The petition in fav f Mrs, Wat- intervention was submitted to th Surrogate by Law and set forth that she is his wido' a citation to 4 Utled to under ed that the is not the Watrous, r will in undue him by. his ns Harry W. Watrous, and other pers jwhose names are not mentioned. thetic to Coal Black Negro Whom! a{t> the court-yard below Hoi; Ra TM dC ih kh DOG SWVED LITTLE MASTERS LIFE Plunged Into River and Dragged | , Out Young Timothy Haydon, | Who Had Leaped In to Res- ; cue a Playmate. i ( | TRIED TO GET OTHER BOY. But it Was Too Late and the Noble! Beast Whined in Sorrow at Not Ccing Able to Reach Drowning] Lae. swim cut and by af the times His hale The could sxim o elp, thea bravely 1 to save hia ehi vngon's heat i the surface, but almost instar red again, — Hayden ate effort to reach his drowaln ymate, but the task was too great, rnd he was floundering he.plessly, hos strength nearly exhausted, when his faitheat d up behind Hay Mm and wi se} of Ws mast Half-drow 8 coat. ed by this time, the ind] jess to help himself, but th dog managed to Keep his head above rountil some men working near by came to the rescue, When dog an pulled out the lad was near for, and the dog scarcely had h enough to scramble to his dor tren, font ‘The body of the Rodinson boy was not recovered. LONG FIGHT FAILS 10 AVERT SUICIDE Roommate of Victim of Delirium Tremens Struggles Three Hours to Prevent His Ending Life. After fighting with his room-mite until he was weak and exhorsted, Jim Holmes threw himself ott of the win- to ere He sara} y | resented at the coofereace have agreed {y [fevence. In fact he is hurrying aroun@ J touts | under | Fuller agreement ts good enough fag_ is roam on the fifth floor at seventh street, When | ry gave the alarm and ranj es Was | No, 4 W Louts Scab had struck on his head and was spilt | police Seabury told of the} he had waged for three hours | ) Holmes from ending his tite. wed mi bruises and seratche. he had received in the encounter was s9 weak that he needed medical tention. Holmes was a heavy drinker and for | days had been A. 8. Terrell, 0} over ment of I West Fife enth str tremens. Several times he tahtly violent, but not bad eno ¢ removal to the ti two men were together In the m last night. Neither cou! (nd as the heat grew more op) pus, Seabu 1 kept a | dh Governors of the Employers* Raer id later this afternoon that a (Tillman and Burton to Debate the, | man and Burton are to make the round: watoh on him, It was abi k when the man began to ray um treme + leaped acro: and was mak hg straight for the open window when © was caust forth across the room the fought, Hol kill himsel sh pably due to oming weaker vars of sank to the fo; a seream of delight r his body ren window on th belo Seabury lay street to two found Dr. Meade purtyard ent downstalrs ay a policeman es's body tn th ¢ from K ed thelr b Justice Greenbaum mand Bru) abaum, In ihe Justice Gree Court, | mad a teacher 1p as loudly as) 4 | ribie ever. ex- | earlier in the summer and hotter him, ‘til properties to effect such cures as lth / juse Grape-Nuts and also Postum tm END OF STAKE IS 2a BLOCKED BY PARK Walking Delegate of the House~ smiths and Bridgemen’s Union Seems Bent on Fw longing the Building Tie-Up. HOLDS THE WHIP HAND. If His Union Holds Out the Other | Unions Can Do Very Little inthe > Building Line—Contractors May, | Yield a Little. a rk contractors expect’ to reaan steement with the unions at the. » which Is being held to-day a rooms of the Bulldng Trades \t No. 1123 Broadway, It ts exe 9 9 1 that ths majority of the repre- ')” tives of the strikers will agree to? n of acbleration proposed oy the 4 tors and that work on some of ieted buildings will be ree mort of sum) the striking unfona stes to the conference, * toh number includes ali the Important h the exception of the House ths and Er'dgemen’s Union, of whic 2 the walking delegate. take a most hopeful tuation, They expect that? sight anges will be asked and~ ire In a mood to grant them #6 as they do not materially aftast to whiph they have adhered eqg- tt To Curb the Delegates, i It is sald that all of the unlons ‘repr © ail the powers of the walling! . the thing most insisted UDOR A: y tho contracters, iit Needless to say Sam Parks ts not! mony the representatives at the come seeking to prolorg the strike.) ” Fy salt te-day that he would ordet men of the House men's Union to work on the buildings = mtrast ty Fuller & Cov A that the strike would be continued) uinst the others, es certainly am not going near the : onference,” he sald to-day TRS) m» and when the rest of them sign on te came basis our men will go back) to werk," se Fuller Agreemer* Suita, 9 It will be remembered that Puller @% Co. make no objections to the walking delegate, and, in fact, have been ably friendly to Parks, Cae While the situation will be much Im-~ ~ proved by an agreement to-day, the relief will be only temporary.” Without? — the housesmiths and bridgemen theray can be no permanent resumption work. Parks’s union is the strongest im the city. Thelr work must be done be- fore the men who are about to settle: thelr differences begin. Come work can be done on unfinished buildings, e thousands of dollars to the contractors but until the housesmiths and bi BY men get tnto Hne the strike cannot tee | sald to be acttled. PE More Unions Agree. oe a, W._K. Fertig, Secretary of the Boar@j ~ received asurances that five mores unions had signified thelr Intention, t the terms of the peace pr nd go back to work, | = ae tes of these ynions an M: sigh inne abeuay voted Rhee maiing peace with the @m overs W. end a meeting ol mplovers’ Jition this evening, © — when It Is confidently expected that the — agreement will be ratified. i jd that he was supremi peace would be effect xt twenty-four hours un on the long-deserte zs immediately. ‘ ———=__- hE Negro Question. ‘f KANSAS CITY, July 9.—Senators Tithe’ of the Chautauquas with a debate om! ~ the negro question. BABY WEATHER. 3 Little Fetlows Don't Like the Hot Days. hers should know exactly what’ food te give babies In hot weather, With the broiling hot days in July’ gust the mother of a baby fa fous for the health of her, one and is then particularly, in feeding. Milk f 1 y and other food is uncertain’ — Eyen in spite of caution sickness — sometimes creeps in and a right food !s more necessary a “Our baby boy, two years old, be- gan in Angust to have attacks of terrible stomach and bowel trouble. physician said his digestion was very bad and that if it had been weather we would surely have lost “Finally we gave baby Grape-Nuts Food, feeding It several times the first day, and the next morning he seemed al and con-| better and brighter than he had been jfor many days. There was a great vhange in the condition of his bow- is and in three days they were en- 'NO MANDAMUS FOR TEACHER, ‘ireiy normal, “He is now well and |getting very strong and fleshy, and jwe know that Grape-Nuts saved en Feral- life, for he was a very, very ill baby, Grape-Nuts food must have wonder- “We grown-ups in our family all of German, for a » y writ Of yiace of coffee, with the result that. mandamus directing the rd of Edu-| mm, We TH Maxwell, the Board of E him @ teacher of German | ublic. schools, Hrormed “three successive years of con- tintious and successful teaching, he was permanent license ‘under section 1089 of the Greater New York Charter. reenbaum holds this section lieves Dowel trouble in bablea ors Trulms giaimed that, having per- /ults is because the starch of the gr is predigested and does not °.0 bowels, mor ferment 1} Ser lentitled to bold his appointment as|pread, potatoes and other, him|teacher of German, and demanded a/starchy food. ; |we never any of us have any cof Superin-'j))5 put are well and strong.” Nan and th Board uperinten- | siyen by Postum Co,, Battle Ci tion to| Nich, The reason Grape-Nuts food resi) ers Send for particuiars extension gi Permissive and not mandatory. “gooks’ con