The evening world. Newspaper, November 27, 1903, Page 3

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_ Crying “They Are All Dead!” Jo- WS, COELET TO BOW AT COURT Mother of the Duchess of Rox- burghe, Society Hears, Has Planned an Extensive Social Campaign in England. MAY DECIDE TO LIVE h THERE PERMANENTLY. Is. Thoroughly Disgusted with the Exhibition Made by Wom- en.at the Recent Wedding of Her Daughter. Is Mrs. Ogden Goelet to abandon America as a social fleld? Has she planned an invasion of England? ore the questions her friends are asking at present because of her announced in- tention to go abroad and to be pre- sented at the Court of St. James's? Mrs. Goelet will sail on the Kron- pring Wilhelm on Tuesday next. While in England she will be for a time the guest of the Dowager Duchess of Rox- burghe and through the Dowager wili be presented at court. On the steamer Mrs. Goelet will oc- oupy the suite which was used by Prince Henry when he visited this country. Always in the finest possible condition, it 18 said the sulte on board the palatial German steamer has been done over re- cently and that Mrs. Goelet will be the frst person to occupy it since Its re- furnishing, Used at all times to travel- ling in her own yacht, the mother of the Duchess of Roxburghe has certain well defined ideas in regard to comforts @he desires at sea, and it is sald her trip on the Kronpring will be made as comfortable and as exclusive as though she were aboard her own yacht, May Reside in England, It {s not of the trip, however, that oclety is talking, but of the possibility that Mrs. Goelet may decide to make England her home. The chances are all in favor of this, for a season or so at least, decording to the gossips. It 1s Known that Mrs. Goelet has decided upon leasing one of the grandest of town houses for the London season. ‘This, with the fact that mo orders have been given for next season at New- port, is taken as strong evidence that her present plans are for social honors in England. Some persons say that Mrs. Goelet is isgusted with the show*made by the mbb of women at the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Roxburghe, and that this has something to do with her igtention! of-remafuing abroad for at least a, season. To Be Presented at Court. ‘This will not to the first time Mra, Goelet has entertained royalty, if she Gecides to enter society in London. The Goelet. yacht has been famous for its entertainments. On it ‘have dined princes by the score. King Edward, ‘when Prince of Wales, was a quest aboard the yacht. Emperor William has dined on the Ogden Goelet yacht, but Mrs, Goelet never has ‘been pre- ented gt court. This, of course, be- cause She did not care to be. It is sald her presentation will take place at the second drawing-room next season. If the London season of Mrs. Goelet fs a success, and those who know Mrs. Goelet cannot see why it should nat be one—the chance of her returning to this country for the Newbort season is considered slight. In fact, It looks as though soclety In this country may have lost a leader second only to Mrs. Astor. DEATH CARRIES OF AN ENTIRE FAMIL seph Hickey Is Found Fatally Stricken in the Streets of Williamsburg. eee red wphey're dead! All dead!” a thinly ad man muttered as he ran down Metropolitan avenue, Williamsburg, .In the chill wind of the early morning. Se canen McSorly, thinking he had a tity man to capture, pursued and stopped him. MoSorly saw at once that the man was deatlily sick, probably in fa Gelirium, and suffering with a raging fever, He gent him at once to the East- ern District Hospital, and there the man sald he was Joseph Hickey, thirty- elght years old, of No, 100 Roebling street. : Despite everything the doctors could 4o, he died within an hour of typhoid preymonta, the last of tls family of six to. of the samo Gisease in three wee! His aunt, Mrs, Mary Madden, of South Brooklyn, was first sick of typhoid’ pneu- monta fn St. Peter's Hospital, where she died. While she was sick there Hickey's father and mother and si and his uncle visited her one day, them going (o the hospital and return- ing’In an open carriage. Immediately following that .visit all of, them were taken down with the same disease and they died one after the other fn quick succession. Josep, Hickey wax the only metber <f the family, surviving a week ago. He tried to keep house alone, He was ewith- out.sufficient, food or clothes and the ex- posure laid him open to the disease whioh had carried off all of his fami How long ho had been suffering with 4 se Is not known. The doctors likely that he had been alck ||twitched continually. ‘/1 found my stomach getting so much AMERICAN SOCIAL LEADER WHO MAY DECIDE TO LIVE ABROAD. LOVE AND GLASS DROVE HIM ASAE Doctors Believe They Can Re store His Mind, but Won't Guarantee to Patch Up His Heart Affair. Frank Russo, @ young mechanic, who lives with his parents at No. 76 Third street. became suddenly insane to-day and had wrecked nearly every stick of furniture in the house before the police, who were called by the family, put him in a straightjacket and sent him to Bellevue, Unrequited love and a severe injury to this right leg, which was never prop- ‘erly, treated by ‘the .eurgeon’ who ‘at- itehided him, ate the causes absigned for ‘his unbalanced: condition, ‘The Bellevue people are of the opin- fon that they can cure the physical ‘eause of his suffering, but they will not vouch for thelr success in the af- fair of the heart. It was because of ‘his crippled condition that the young woman to whom he had been engaged | gave him the mitten, and it may be if he 1s cured’ she will smile upon him agains Russo was hurt in an explosion about| three months ago, when a quantity of glass was driven Into his leg, ‘Tho wound was not Cleaned before dressing and the flesh was sewed over the glass. Inflammation set in and Russo pe-| ‘pot; Reh SO much to: admtre aapishe iy ‘before and she told him that she wanted nothing more to do with him. That Is the story his two sisters tell. The loss of his sweetheart and the torture he underwent from the glass in his lmtb combined to affect him mentally. Surgeons were astounded when the man reached Bellevue and they had ex- amined his injured mb, They out the wound open and there was a mess of glass. They sald that the pain Russo ust have suffered was enough to have Griven any one insane without adding to st the depression that it 1s presumed foliows a jilting, | BABY COFFEE TOPRRS, Were Given Coffee at 2 Years ol Age. “My mother always gave her chil-| dren coffee to drink from the time they were old engugh to hold a cup, consequently I used it from the time I was 2 years old to my 18th year,”| says a young lady of Potomac, Ill. “Although I never suspected it, coffee was all this time undermining} my health, and. suddenly, without any warning, I was taken with ner- vous prostration. At times I could scarcely breathe and my face “I was almost helpless and my stomach was out-of order all the time. For three years 1 was treated, with only temporary relief, having to) stay in bed nearly all the time. Then Je, an old physician, came to nd as soon as he had stud- fed my case a little bit he said: “Let me get you a square meal. I think I can make better coffee than any one in this house.’ “So I waited patiently, for I did love good coffee, and I thought I had! never tasted such delicious coffee as that was, and I wondered why others could not make it just the same. So uncle told me. he would teach them just how it was made. “In this way,J.drank Postum Coffee for nearly ‘qnth before I knew it.| better and all my troubles disappear- ing, and in a few weeks I was up and around the house again and stronger and better than I had been for a long time. I am still growing stronger every day, and I am doing my best to get my friends to do away witp cnt- fee and use Postum in its. place. “Coffee almost ruined me, and I know it, and I know the only way that I got rid of it and got well was by drinking Postum in its place. I have found out that you must be careful to follow directions on the Postum package to make good Pos- tum.". Ni ven. by Postum Co,, MRS. OGDEN GOELET. tame lamey (In that condition bis flancec |, THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 27, 1903. 3 COUNTESS DS INURED GIL Springs from Her Carriage to Succor Miss Margaret Con- nolly, Who Had Been Thrown from a Broadway Car. Tho sight of a beautiful woman epring- ing ¢rom her carriage to give assist- ance to @ young woman who had been ‘thrown from a Broadway car in front of the Fifth Avenue Hotel attracted more ‘than the usual crowd, and interest was \ deepened when it was learned that the wood Samaritan was the Countess Pan- ‘aéra. Nevil. : ‘The injured girl was Miss Margaret Connolly, of Ireland, who, with her ais- ter and a Miss Thooker, is touring this country. She had slipped in stepping from the car and had struck the back of her head on the pavement. Her two companions were hysterical, fearing she had been kilied, The blood was streaming from a cut in the back of her head. Ignoring the thought that her beautiful gown would be ruined, the Countess lifted the bleeding head into her lap and when a eponge and water were ‘brought bathed ‘the wound, When the ambulance surgeon came ithe wound had been well cleansed, He wok several stitches in the wound, the girl having been carried into the Firth! Avenue Hotel. Miss Connolly, refused | to go to the hospital and the Countess; took all three to their boarding house, at No. 332 East Eighteenth street, in a | coach. OUR TIME IS N 3,500 Fall and Winter Overcoats, 5,000 Fall and Winter Suits, All new designs; up-to-date for 1903. Sale This Day and Continue Until Garment Is to sell Fall eatin Paddock, Silk Lintd, $20.00 ratin. Gents’ Furnishings, Hats and Shoes at Less than 60c, on the Dollar. OPEN SATURDAYS U ‘SELFRAISING, DELICIOUS, LIGHT, HOT CAKES, HECKER-JONES-JEWELL MILLING CO, NEW YORK. Expiration of Lease Campels Us to Sacrifice THE ENORMOUS FINE CLOTHING STOCK At Unheard-of Prices: Men’s Winter Suits, Men's Winter Suite, mixtures and black Thibet, made 7 5) Mon's Winter, Suite. ey are masters of their craft. Their entire time and cleverness are spent gray Bnglish. Clay, satin in the fashioning of this class of apparel. They know how to infuse and $25. Men's Winter Sul ported French and English fabrios, hist: something which makes a man conscious that his garments define his shall aoe satin, Back, 12,50 ideas relative to form and fabric. Secure in the knowledge that our _fanee sale and won, in00 coats are about as good as human effort can make them, we have the. and $40.00 Ns 5 courage to maintain a variety of these garments, which includes: fall and Winter Overcoats. Twenty-eight styles of Surtout, Paddock and Paletot Coats at $28.00 to $45.00. Men's all-wool Frieze and Melton Over- coats in black and Oxford, Fe08 7.50] Unings, made to sell for $15.00.. 4° | Men's Winter Overcoats in black, gray and Oxford, beaver, ailk ned, made to | vell_ for $16.00 $29.00; th! Frince Albert Tiefrarnisgfiort 235 BROADWAY, Opposite Post-Office, Just Mix with Milk or Water- THEN BAKE. ANY CHILD CAN DO IT. ee ee Broadway, 33d to 34th Street, Broadway, 33d to 34th Street. | EARLY UP. Saks & Company Impressive Winter Overcoats for Men. Ready-for-Service. The success of a business does not depend alone upon:a man’s knowl- edge of that to which it is dedicated. He must select the right men to do |} the work, and then train them to do it as he would have it done. On that basis our tailoring shop has been organized. ach specific garment is entrusted to a craftsman who has a marked talent for that manner of work. The tailors who fashion our Surtout, Paddock and Tourist Coats — Every Sold. all-wool taney for $15.00 and $18.00...... ‘ do to sell for $20.0 40 O00 Rettrapascresotateradenss dignity and grace into a garment—to lend it a specific yet indefinable 11 made from im- tyles of 52 and 54 in. English Great Coats at $15.00 to $40.00, ty-gight styles of 52 and 54 in. Tourist Coats at $15.00 to $45.00, As well as y, styles of 42 in. Box Coats in conservative and extreme models at $12.50 to $40.00. dt ur styles of 46in. Box Coats in conservative and extreme models at $15.00 to $50.00. Fur Lined Overcoats.—Instead of contenting ourselves with one or two of each grade, as is the custom, we have a most thorough variety of coats of various furs, which cost from sixty-eight to seven hundred and fifty dollars. Business S beaver, melton and vicuna, 1) ull satin lined, | srsowand geo) 10.00 all made Overcoats, black and tan, some nd 7,50 & 10.00]| Coat and Vest. full Cr) this sal: lined, for ... ; from twelve-fifty to thirty-eight dollars. Dress Suits from thirty-three to fifty dollars. Tuxeds Suits from twenty-five to fifty dollars. All of which are tailored to the Saks standard. Per- haps you can appreciate how much that means to the man who is to wear the garment. NTIL 10 P.M. | | For Saturday ; 28th, We Announce An Important Sale of High Grade Shirts for Men. Value $1.50 to $3.00. Special at $1.10 Theyaresbirts of true proportions, fashionedto insure absolute comfort by work- their entire efforts upon garments of the very highest grade, H le Shirts of imported Madras, French Percale,\ Value or Jacquarded and Figured Madras in a most exhaustive $1.50 tot eet: variety of new and desirable patterns, stiff or plaited $3.00 bosoms, attached or detached cuffs, el High Grade Dress Shirts of fine long cloth, bosoms of the( Special finest linen, open back and front or coat effect, with- at out cuffs or with cuffs attached. ‘$5.40 | Suits and Coats for Boys | Youths’ Shits aé*Cbats. At Special Prices for Saturday. Sp : 3 2pescial for A. Russian Blouse’ Suits , : Of Navy Blue, Royal Red or Brown Youths Long Trouser Suits, Seri Biosieclicn himodelayiipatent Sn o DoubleiEreieg Models of e, colla 5 leather belt and silk scarf. Sizes 224 nilish or Scotch Tweed: Cheranay to 8 year: Monte pond fpihed pole and ae ; road shoulders, full or half peg trou- Value $5.00. Special at $3.75 sers, sizes 14 to 19 years. : ey Russian and Sailor Suits Value $8.50 to $10.50. At $6.75)". Of Tweed, Cheviot or colored Serge, panaseranh ! i Value $11.00 to $15. $9.75 i ique collar an , heavy silk scarf. Sizes 214 to 6 years, Youths’ Overcoats, Value $7.50. | at $4.90 Chesterfield Models, igs of Black or Oxford Frieze, extended Norfolk Suits ers wha spend Fine Diamond Jewelry Direct from the Factory, Ee ee ee tavianea Genuine Diamond and Rich Solid Gold Jewelry esa» ufacturer at Factory Prices. Jer. GOLD WATCH, Dt, KU 85.605 (ONDS, Real Gi 14. ROSE DIAM be color contre stone, Bolld Gold Riny No chip, Bolla 1 B DIAMOND, 364 GENUINE DIAMON QUALITY. Tovar] Holiday Prese: Importing ing to the MANUFACTURING AND REPAIRING DEPARTMENTS ON THE PREMISES, Battle Cree! ich, at, hi in Roebling street sevoral days, and taat in tl ‘de- liplum: which ‘followed ‘he. dressed shim- anf SRS as ree wens Look in each package for a copy of the famous little book, “The Road to ‘on the premises enables us Mail Orders Filled wit: ENGRAVING FREE OF CHARGE, WHILE YOU |_—— ee Wrice for Our New Illustrated Catalogue of 135 Pages, Mailed Free. 38 SOLID 1 Si 7.00 3.50 5.73 "san 4:25 3.75 hin chip Solid’ Goi Henet Tackee 12000 GEN. 11 the articles Illustrated are exact size and guaranteed as described. Each of our stores contains a complete and very la: ware ofthe mewent denjens. Our high reputation has bean sustained for the past 40 vears by the ° We manucacture ana well omy such moods ne Will give entire satisfaction, © Quality of our goode, ntire all our diamonds and manufacturing all our offer coods of first quality at purchaser, Hollday Presents from th, Accuracy and Prom: nts Selected Now Will Be Reserved’ SEAMLESS WEDDING RINGS, 3" Solid 14,18 and 22 Karat Gold, c— ~ Direct from the Manufacturer, AT FACTORY PRICES. y_ lem . no chip, Solid Goid Cigar Cutter bn chi assortment of Jewelry for over 40 years in our factory ij i Responsive to the mont conte” with embroidered emblem, gray, military or shoulder capes, sizes til Wanted. sizes 6 to 674, 14, 16 and 18 years. ‘ KeGole7-75U8Kt.10.2622K9.50f | Value $1.00. Special at 50c Value $15.00 Special at $10.75 WAIT. It Will Surely Interest You shoulders, velvet collar, sizes 15.to 19.7 .. Of Cheviot, Tweed or Cassimere, in years. plaids, stripes, gray, brown or Olive Value $11.00. Spe mixtures, bloomer or straight trousers. Sizes 8 to 15 years. , in $4.90 Suits and Coats Value $6.50. Sp » Russian Overcoats FOR GIRLS AND MISSES At Special Prices for Sa Of Navy Blue, Olive, Oxford Sr ela L bridge Frieze, double-breasted mod- Tailored Suits, copies of Imported models of Zibel- els, military buttons, arid half belt. Sizes 2/4 to 8 years. ine or Fancy Mixtures, lined with VU athe good quality satin, sizes 14, 16, 18. Value $5.00. : Overcoats, Value $22.50 Special ar $16.50 Single breasted, of light_or dark Ox- Pedestrienne Suits ford, or Navy Blue Frieze, extra length, broad shoulders. Sizes 7 of Scotch Tweeds, in gray or brown, to 16 years. long coat effect, paddock back, lined Value $6.50. Special at $5.00 with heavy satin, sizes 14, 16, 18, 6.50 . Value $22.50 2 2 Misses’ Coats. short or three-quarter length, of Chev- iot, Zibelinc, Broadcloth or Kersey, satin lined, sifes 14, 16 and 18 yearsi Value $14.50 $9.75 Girls’ Coats 1860, Hats for Boys At Special Prices for Saturday. Tam o’ Shanters of Imported Scotch Wool in plain colors, uble Case, other emhle Real Pearls, Solld i, Solid Gord old Beart Ein. two tone effects, or fancy eee ones Bolte Gol i ‘ of Navy Chinchilla, red flannel lined, ne SAID: Fauna oda Bue plaids, velvet collar, sizes 4 to 14 years. 9.50 Value 75c. to 95<. at 50c Tam o'Shanter Caps of navy blue, brown, or royal cheviot Value $12.00 Special at Misses’ Jackets of heavy Kersey, in blue, brown, red or black, or of Zibeline, in brown or ‘satisfaction, “ 6.00: "8.50; “ 12,00 “3.50; ° 4751" aso _————e Tecan ieee Free Demonstration aah tas “Saturday, 2.30 P. M. VINCENT says | ANT it ld MOFPOW a CHRISTMAS is Coming—| So is Snow- So are the RAINS ana! | chill, sleety January days. | | Belted Tourists (that look \the part, too), $18 upward. | wkd" (ging, tf ste frees Al Wel j Sheffield Institute, 39 W. 32d New York. EEE eg FINEST GOODS, LARGEST ASSORTMENT. rc LOWEST PRICES. PILE Obes. Pree rae Can dense . i 8 ee! . (Cor, lari St, Broadway—22d Street, | Sunda, World Wants Work Sixth Avenue—12th Street, a Masaina Vi sik ROCHESTER LAMP (CO, rtane tr inne out. Td Park

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