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Prelate of the Protestant Epis- sopal Church in Kentucky Stricken with Heart Disease While Visiting in This City. ne HE WAS A VETERAN OF THE CIVIL WAR: Rose to the Rank of Major in the Confederate Service and Studied Theology After He Laid Aside His Sword. BISHOP DUDLEY. ‘The sudden death of the Right Rev. Thomas Underwood Dudley, Episco} Bishop of Kentucky, will prove a dis- tinct blow to his many friends in this eity and the membets of his diocese in Kentucky. Called to this city by the ‘and death of his mother-in-law, Mrs, Elizabeth W. Aldrich, of No. 200 ‘Madison avenue, his own death fol- Jowed and his body will be sent back to Kentucky to-day. Bishop Dudley had been in poor health for nearly a year, but kept actively at work and appeared to feel ‘@ little better than usual when he ar- rived in this city a week ago. Aft attending the funeral of his mother-! Inw he decided to remain for the con- seoration of the Rev, David H. Greer, as Bishop Coadjutor of New York. He remained at the residence of his late mother-Mn-law, and while talking with members of the family, suddenly clutched at his breast and fell over a chair, dead, The funeral will be held in Loulaville next Wednesday, the twen- tieth anniversary of his consecration us Bishop of Kentuck). He -leaves a widow and nine children, three sons and six deughters. Four of the daughters are marrcd. Bishop Dudley was born in Richmona, Ve., in 1831, He graduated from the University of Virginia in 1858. During the civil war he Joined the Confederate Army and was assigned to the commis. sary dejurtment. He rose to the rank of major and after the close of tn» war began his studies for the Episco- pal ministry, He graquated from ‘ne Virginia Theological Seminary in 186 and wis ordained a deacon that same year. He was ordained to the pri hood in 1868 and in January, 1869, came assistant at Christ Church, Balti- more. He succeeded'to the rectorship » month later on the death of the Rey. A. Wise, jr, and remained there he ‘was’ consecrated Axsistant p of Kentucky. He became Bishop jentucky in 1k84, on’ the. fleath of t the last General Convention of the ct Bishop Dudley was chosen irman of the House of Bishops and that office at the time of his death, fe was the author of several books of Jectures and sermons and was a man of rau personality, good cheer and a pvorite with all classes, LEFT MERRY PARTY TO DRINK POISON Shields Had Invited Friends and Relatives to His Home and Laughed and Joked Through- out the Evening. Leaving a table where he had been the bright spirit of a happy little party of felends and relatives, Robert A. Shields, \Weket agent of the Fulton street, Brook- Yn, Office of the Lehigh Valley Railroad, went into the bathroom of his home, at Wo, %7 Franklin avenue shortly after nla@night to-day and drank two ounces if carbolic acid. The sound of his body falling to the floor brought a tragic timax to the festivities. Yesterday Shields invited friends Relatives to join him, wife and ear-old son in an excursion to land, to be followed by a party @ay’s holiday for the occa: Seemed in high spirits, laughing Ged and the merriness continued MI past midnight. Then, alof a sud- B, though still smiling at @ Iittle hhe ‘had just told, he left the table entered the bathroom. ent later the sound of a heavy writhing on the Door and be- je acid. He n could be simmoneds ——————— Amvitel to Kentucky. ;'4 Gov. OiNG| De. Admew'e Pills are dolignttal.” | DUNCAN YOUNG. TOMASSI PETTO. DOMENICO DIMATTO. THOMAS CALLAHAN. WILLIAM BUTLER. ALMA PADRO. EDWIN T. DUFFY. FELIPE LEMONTA. CATHERINE DRUSER. C. A. WILLIAMS. DELLA LUPPO. While District-Attorney Jerome 1s hunting mountain lons and other ant- mals in the Far West and in Mexico, criminal ‘business in this county ts clog- ging the wheels of Justice. ‘The District-Attorney has been absent from this city now nearly two wecks, and there is no telling when he will be back at his post again. Acting District-Attorney Rand said yesterday that he had not heard from Mr. Jerome in several days. Mr, Rand said he did not think that the absence of his chief had retarded the punishment of criminals or in any way had hindered the administration of criminal justice. “Mr. Jerome,” Mr. Rand said, “was a very sick'man when he left here. He had grown stale, The vim had gone out of his eyes and he needed « long rest.” Big Tombs Census, Not since the Gays of John R. Fellows have there been 80 many persons in the Tombs as there are at present awaiting trial for various offenses. The census of the Tombs to-day shows that of 345 prisoners there more than 225 are await- {ng trial in the criminal courts. Of these twenty-one are charged with homicide. Five women are in this lot. Nearly all have been in the Tombs for more than a month, and, according to those who charge of the business in Mr, Jerome's office during his ab- wence, ft 1s hard to say when they will be placed on trial. The case of Tommaso Petto, the ‘‘bar- rel murderer, 1s a typical subject for investigation of the law's delay in mur- der trials, Petto, known as the “Ox” because of his size and brutal appear- ance, was arrested last April by United States Secret Service agents, charged with killing an informer on a gang of counterfelters of which Petto was the head. Although the Secret Service a turned over to the District-Attor: office and Inspector McClusky suffictent evidence against Petto to prove premed- Station and deliberation, no attempt has been made to put him on trial, Assist- ant District-Attorney Garvin has charge of the prosecution of Petto, but he has been busy trying minor offenders, LIST OF PERSONS ACCUSED OF HOMICIDE NOW IN THE TOMBS, || THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 28, 1904. CRIMINAL GASES DELAYED NS JEROME HUNTS LIONS JOHN RYAN. BRESTON HENDERSON. EMIL TOTTERMAN. ELLEN BREMEN DONHAN, JOHN REVEL, MORRIS HEALY. MORRIS TALLOCK. MINNIE PERKINS. ALFRED CHILDS. LOUISE WAGNER. Duncan Young, a burglar, who shot and killed a citizen while pursuing his nefarious calling, 1s dean of the mur- derers’' row. He has been in the Tombs since March Inst awaiting a retrial. Green's Sinyer Untried. C. W. Williams, the negro who shot |f and killed Andrew A, Green, ‘Father of Greater New York," occupies the cell next to that of Young. Although tho evidence against Willlams has been In the District-Attorney's hands since the day of the murder, tnere has been no | attempt ‘made to bring him to trial, departure that Williams would be tried and sent to Sing Sing for execution without delay. The other murderers, apparently im- mune from immediate punishment, ac- cept their lot with indifference. Mr. Rand, when asked yesterday why Will- jams had not been placed on trial, said: “Mr. Jerome left certain instructions concerning that case, and we have not yet received the final reports of the allenists we employed tp examine Will- fams.” For the last two weeks Judge Cowing has had on the cale in his court nothing but bookm: house cases, the def on ball; while those arrested for far more serious crimes, too poor to em- ply a bondsman, have been kept in the ‘Tombs. Judge Foster has been busy since Mr. Jerome's departure trying liquor-tax and other petty offenders, Judge Newburger, in Part I, has been trying to keep down the census of the Tombs. In order to do this the Dis- trict-Attorney has recetved and ac- cepted pleas of guilty from numerous offenders who, .f placed on trial, would have been convicted of a far more se- rious grade of crime. cumulated during Mr. Jerome's the calendars of several of the courts have “broken down’ on two or three occasions during the last two weeks, BAD SETBACK FOR JEROME'S SLEUTHS Decision of the Appellate Division in the La Roche Case May Stop the Activities of the “County Detectives.” The decision of the Appellate Divis- fon, confirming the conviction of Law- rence H. St. Clair, a private detective, found guilty of Alsorderly conduct by persistently following F. A. La Roche, came as a surprise to the District-At- torney's office. St. Clair was convicted in the Court of Special Sessions two months ago and sentenced to pay a fine of $10 or serve five days in the city prison. His counsel, J. W. Osborne, immedi- ately filed notice of appeal, and notified the District-Attorney’s ofMfce that in order to test the right of a private de- tective to dog the footsteps of a man he would carry the case to the Court of Appeals if necessary. By the direction of the Justices of the Court of Special Sessions, the District- Attorney's office, in @ half-hearted way, combatted Mr, Osbor contention. So faint was their defense of the posl- tion taken by the Justices that it aroused considerable criticism, and none of the Justices expected thet the deois- fon of the Appellate Division would sus- tain the position of Bt. Clair, owing to the faint-heartedness of the District- Attorney's support. It leveloped to-day that the reason for this was that Mr. Jerome was afraid that if the Appellate Courts sustained the contention of the Special Session Justices, his own force of county detec- tives would be stopped from pursuing the same line of work, they not being authorized police oMcers under the statutes. It 1s Mr. Osborne's intention to appeal from the Appellate Division ruling to —————— We Convince Sceptics, Colds. Catarrh and Catarrhal Head- ache Relleved In 10 Minutes and Cured by Dr. Agnew’s Catarrhal Powder. Here's one of a thousand such testi- monies. Rev. A. D. Buckley, of Buffalo, says: “1 wish all-to know what a bless- ing Dr. Agnew’s Catarrhal Powder is in a case of Catarrh, I was troubled with this disease for years, but the first time 1 used this remedy it gave most delight- ful relief. 1 now regard myself entirely cured.” 40 doses ro cents, the Court of Appeals for final decision. It will be Mr. Jerome's duty to try to sustain the decision of the Appellate Division and the Justices of Brecial Sos- sions are wondering what his attitude before the Court of Appeals will be, NEW YORKER DIES IN FLORIDA, ORLANDO, Fia., Jan. 23.—C. G, Frash, of the firm of Frash & Co., New York, died Thursday of grip, aged seventy- elght. Mr, Frash was prominent tn the development of California wines, and was @ grape expert. His bod: aaa grave eave! jody was for. Kk last night. James McQuade, Broadway, New York City, Cured by Father John's Medicine. -“T feel it my duty to praise Father John’s Medicine for the good It has done me, I had been suffering with rheumatism for four years, and had ‘used every remedy that I heard of, but nothing did me any good. I got 80 I could not sleep nights from the awful pains all over me. I took Father John's Medicine and now I am well and hearty. I cheerfully recommend Father John’s Medicine to my friends, who know how I have suffered, and I hope that this testi- monial may be published, so that other sufferers may read it. (Signed) James McQuade, 1 Broadway, New York City.” Not @ patent medicine. Father John's Medicine Cured Joh: J. Doyle, of Brooklyn—He Was All Run Down, “T have taken five bottles of the Medicine and I find it has done me '@ great deal of good. I had stomach trouble and a general run-down feel- ing, and since I commenced to take Father John’s Medicine I find myself a different man, and I have recom- mended the Medicine to my friends and acquaintances, (Signed) John _ pif 684 Pacific St., Brooklyn, Not a patent medicine. THE SISTERS OF HOLY CROSS Of Nashua, N. H., recommend and indorse Father John's Medicine for colds and all throat and lung troubles. Prevents pneumonia. New Publications. READ W. W. JACOBS’ GREAT NQW SERIAL STORY ENTITLED “DIALSTONE LANE” Rexiniing in the Webruary Number of the Strand Magazine low ots Price r0 Conte, ‘Phe tntornationny News Companes New. Yorke, New Publications. No man will deny that woman's mind is more ve of the beau. ties of nature than man’s. Most women love the flowers, the woods, the trees, and every- imaginative and more ap) thing that is beautiful in mature. "A ct woman nobly _plann #3 and too often women feel th y suffer at these period: t_is the women who live in the ope: lo physical labor are little tronbled by thi Pp and ills that our delicate, house-born women suffer. At any rate, nature provides a cure for these ills of womenkind in the way of a vegetable compound, made only of roots and herbs, without the use of a particle of alcohol or any narcotic. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- scription is a womanly tonic that has sold more largely in the United States than any other compound prescribed only for the diseases of R. V. Pierce, the well-known specialist, is chief of the Invalids’ Hotel and wome: Dr. Surgic nstitute, at Buffalo, N. Y, The womanly system is a delicate machine which can only be compared to the intricate mechanism of a beautiful watch that will in good running order only with good care prope bilioget Wr Sadie This prevents the elit rom being worn out. Very many times young women get old or run down, before their time, through ignorance and the improper handling of this human mechanism. Mental depression, a confused head, backache, headache, and many symptoms of derange- ment of the womanly system can be avoided. Go to the source of the trouble and correct the irregularity. The drains on the woman. cate mechanism tem and the other symptoms disappe: can be done easily and intelligent! The correctness of this advice is amply proven by the experience of many thousands of women —a large number of whom have written of their experiences, So sure of it is the World's Dis- pay Medical Association, the proprietors of ir. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, that they offer $500 reward for women who cannot be cured of Leucorrhea, Female Weakness, Prola Falling of the Womb. All they ask is and reasonable trial of their means of cure, Their financiet reaper aid Arepeit te 2 every newspaper publisher and druggist in the fegl ‘This wonderful renaeay there- fore stands absolutely alone as the only one possessed of such remarkable curative proper- kers in publishing bove made in the edicine which has United States. ties as would warrant its such a marvelous offer utmost good fe It stood the test of a third of a century, and num- bers its cures by the thousands, It is a per- fectly safe tonic in any condition of the system, being entirely vegetable. One great secret of youth and beauty for the young woman or the mother is the an ae well- derstanding of her womanly system being. woman, young or old, should Pe herself and her oars re Pate way to arrive at this know! to , such for instance, as * eons Common Sense Medical Adviser,” by R. ierce, M. D., which cam be procured by a good doctor book, sending 21 cents in one-cent stamps for bound volume, or 31 copy, addressing Dr. New Publications. New Publication Anthony Hope aA wrote “The Prisoner of Zenda": and other things, but_— His Best Story is in the FEBRUARY Number of the Metropolitan Magazine R. H. RUSSELL, Publisher, New York A 35-cent Magazine for-15 cents Out To-day { PURCHASE WHAT YOU REQUIRE THROUGH SUNDAY WORLD WANTS. ] No arcade can we find to buy. We've asked for one from door to door, But turned discouraged from each store."’ Now smiles succeed each anXlous frown— ‘Thoy published just one littie AD, Next day twelve fine arcades they had, Flowers in the Old Garden. WOMAN'S RESPONSE TO NATURE. ‘o warn, to comfort and command.” Nature never intended that women should suf- fer from physical disabilities at certain peri imps for cloth-bound erce, Buffalo, N.Y. But though we've searched both low and high, At last they strayed to World-Want Town. How to Avoid Running Into Debt. dering domestic tragedies. Debt is a mortgage on your income aiid peace of mind and buying on the INSTALMENT FLAN is the WORST and MOST ACUTE jorm oy DEBT. What is the name of the GREAT CARE that preys by night and by day on the brains: of its vic- DEBT!!! Debt multiplies worry. Break the chains af Debt by; opening a Deposit Account at Macy’s. | Jy you leave your money on deposit here, it draws inter- est every day and every hour. And every three,months the interest is compounded, so that you get interest on interest. In this way your money 1s truly working for you, every hun- dred dollars giving you four new dotars each year, plus the tims? Itis DEBT! DEBT}!! interest on those four dollars themselves, of your balance. You can put as much or as (ttle money as yort-choose' You can draw it out when you choose—all of tt, or part of it, at a moment's note. We, do no banking business, there is no temptation ito dr tn our Deposit Department. checks indiscriminately. Here you have command of all of the markets: of-the, world. Here your money works and brings in a return-while waiting to be spent. Children’s accounts will grow here automatically. Housewives’,accounts can be deposited here, and the’ cheaper buying will insure each month something left over, which can stay and draw interest, Start an account in Macy’s Deposit Department at once. Let your money ai to work for have worked for your EY. | prway at Oth Ave, sith to oth St. DEBT—The Wortd-Burden. DEBT—The Greatest Evil. DEBT is the special distinction of humanity—foranimals do not contract Delst—but it is also a special tormeré to mankind —tuining individuals—creating catastrophies- and engen- Macy’s is a cash store, and all buying is fox-cash. We buy our goods for cash at the lowest pirice. We sell them to you for cash at the lowesti price. There are no bad debts in the store, for there are N¢ aebts. You ao nor have to pay sor those who do MOT pay. That is the difference between Macy’s and the credit system. But if you set your money to work in our Deposit Department, you have all the convenience of shopping on a credit basis. Your purchases are charged up against’ you, and at the end of each month an account jrendered: OU,:as yous R. A. Macy & Co., fice eens GLAS centre of men’s fine in this country. shoes If value than any other $3. ‘There is a great difference jolesale and retail pay only one profit on shoes made in my factory and sold EVERY SHOES TO DRESS HIS FEET PROPERLY ON ALL prepa luced anyw! could show difference between thea made in my fact one es VAY, $3.50 shoes cost more to make, w’ shape, fit better, wear longer, and are o! soe onl tbe a you stores in the cities, The result better shoes for pele Yan ae etalied coewiere. came eate By ows peeret rocess of tanning the bottom soles produces more flexibl '-wearing leather than any other SHOULD HAVE THREE PAIRS OF OCCASIONS, \ tannage. Boe pee “a ya th a Write for = Shoo Mail Order ‘L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass, 15 DOUCLAS STORES IN GREATER NEW YORK: 433 Broadway, cor. Howard. | 345 Hiphth Avenue, ‘ 755 Broadway, cor. 8th St. cor. 36th St, 520 W: lis Avenue (Bronx), BROOKLYN, : 708-710 Broadway. ] th Street. 260 West 125th Street. 2209 tid Kee cor, 120th, 5 .Ve., COr, 56 Sixth Avenu 1367 Broadway,cor.GatesAV 421 eon St. or. PR ‘earl,