Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
_ EVERY ORGAN STAINED WAYS Been Determined. ae" Dad been stained a similar hue, Couldn't Diagnose Case, ¥ afternoon. + » * “and was about sixty years old. by , but weak, the pupils of th & remarkable ease and they . O'Hanion, who to-day gay ing Dever before hi woman was stained was no Retoeptiite Uilckens and wn, color thal lye the clinical pathol Man Hospital, @: ined blood under a misrosoo; te of potassium was le to the naked ¢; excessive use of such dru “I had all the orcans. remo Analyels, I > @mact cause of death. Mis Head in Chicago § q tthe man was murdered. "Of the head and his b Pe the side of the automobile, y @ card in one of the dead man's - ete Bere the words | > “Wall for Mr, Dove at the Audi- ~ sm. 7 “At the Auiiiorlum t woe satt that no Miss Ruth Hoefer, Reported Rich OF phe by the nume of Dove was tosis | ‘othing w @ farmer. Tie ma car & ditch. ei i> H % 139 Boarders Wanted, 184 Furnished Rooms, 73 Operators. 91 Business Opportunities. 85 Houseworkers, 76 Boys Wanted. 67 Agents Wanted. 55 Girls Wanted, 33 Stotes To Let. above World Want Directory, for to-morrow's Want Directory. hi 7 it Is also known as New be HOME AND + TO A SIMILAR COLOR. “Physicians in Attendance Were Fy inable to Diagnose the Case }, and the Ailment: Has Not Yet A condition of affairs in a human be- Ang, absolutely unknown to physicians ‘this city, was revealed to-day by an ‘Autopsy on the body of a woman who Gied tn the Presbytorian Hospital yes- 7 terday from_a disorder, the exact na- Ture of which has not yet been deter- Physician O'Hanion was the hospital to make the @itopsy becwuse the phystcians there ) were utterly at sea as to the woman's) aliment, He found that the blood in the © Body, insiend of being red was a dark chocolate, color, and that every organ| cutting was done to effect renaira to fm the body which the blood reached | @ remarkable was this condition re- by the medical men that doctors mummoned from different parts of | unnecessary. the city, to see if they could furnish | explanation. Not one had ever seen heart of such a condition before. ‘The woman was taken to the hospital | tlon. The ambulance from No, 1415 Second av re she had been to visit a friend. She was known as Kate Leary | She | Twenty-seventh street and Tenth ave- - ‘waa unconscious when taken to the | rue. Bospltal, Her pulse was very rapid, | ine third time the patrolman turned tn eyes had | q call, this time at the corner of Thirty- Gontracted and her extremities twitched | rst street and Twelfth avenue, vely. No physician in the hos- | 0g pend a od ied | covered there was no alarm sounded without regaining consclou ‘he doctors then made an examina. Whieh convinced them that th Account of his discoveries: have performed oy 7.00) autopsies e seen anything this case.” Every drop of blood ti a dark @ocelate color Was fluid ang without mixture of human blood with of potassium would turn the ut not the dark choc: Drevatled in this case, iat of the maid. Ted blood’ corpuscles. could. be seen through the glare, but were ‘ y No Evidence of Use of Drugs, “A brownness of the blood might be used by the excessive use of coal ucts, but no such color as this. . there was no other evidence of id and bottled some of the bkwod. W. ive gent it to Columbia University fo | am very impa- he result, aa T never heard @f such @ condition 'as this before. The y didn't leave us any nearer the “All we have been adie to learn ot|™ is that she lived somewhere! gu walked into town! nee of about fi lies. Th truly th js mMarkable I have ever seen. "tt Fe| — _ SHOT DEAD IN AN AUTO, Chauffeur Found with a Nullet in jurba, CHICAGO, Nov. 1%.—William Rate, a Chauffeur employed by Dantel Canary, tor of a garage hero, was found 1a an automobile to-day, two mil It’ Is thought Was @ bullet wound cn the back was hanging hatever was 4 person. The automo- vA Gnd the corpse were discovered by | ne was backed up OM One side of the road and the wheels Were blocked with a timber to keop the $ rolling down an {incline into —_———— 102 Pieces of Property For Sale, AT the hour of going to press | the advertisements} | have already been received at the Main Office of The World for: insertion in New York's great “want” medium —The Sunday Over $,000 additional advertise. ments of the foregoing and yari.} | ous other classifications will be received before closing time to. Sunday’ World Want Di-' } rectory 6,020 adverti: 9} ~—s ments of all classifications po HELP” Guide. ~ On last oot morning the rece Office—r, ” MATS BLOND [EDSON MEN CUT CMICLITE HE “‘lemarkable Conditions Dis- ~ closed by an Autopsy on the _ Bodly of Kate Leary, Who Died at Presbyterian Hospital. OUT FIRE ALARMS Their Own Apparatus, MILLIONS’ WORTH OF | PROPERTY IMPERILLED.. Fail to Work Owing to the Tampering — Commissioner Hayes to Ask Drastic Action. Miltlons of dollars’ worth of property | was in danger of burning to-day while the police tried three fire-alarm boxes | }in an effort to call the firemen to the ‘Terminal Cold-Storage Warehouse, cov~ ering the entire block between Eleventh and Twelfth avenues and Twenty-sev- enth and Twenty-eighth streets. Fire Commissioner Hayes learned that the alarm-box wires had been de- Mberatly cut by the Edison LAghting and Power Company shortly after mid- night to-day, The alarm wires are in the conduits of this company and the) tome of the Kidison’s circuits, Under| the law the company should have nott- fled the Fire Department immediately, but ft seems tu have considered this) Flames were discovered in warehouse No, i8, ot tho Eleventh avenue side uf the butlding, by Patrolman Peter Hogan of the West Thirty-seventh street sta- Hogan mn to the alarm box at Twenty-ninth street and Eleventh avo- nue and turned the fire call, There vue no response to this, and after ten min- utes the patrolman ran to the hox at Again there was no response, and) Half an hour after the blase was dis- ind, realiaing that all the fire boxes) |in the neighborhood were out of order, | he patrolman called up his station- house over the signal telephone, Because of the delay in the firemen had gained quickly fined to the third floor of the ware- house In which it started, but for a time the entire block and all the con- tents of the warehouses were in dan- wer. Tho loss is estimated at $5,000. “T am going to find out what this Edison company means,” sald Fire Commissioner Hayes, when all the facts concerning the cutting of the Fire De- partment wires had ‘been laid before im by the police and Fire Chief Croker. "TI wonder if they imagine they are running this city, Dastardly Piece of Bt enn, I have never heard 1y plece Of business, With such a fire as this one waa, to begin with, and any kind of a wind, the whole of tho west side might have | been swept out of existence before the lire Department could have got into wetion, I can hardly ¢ it | when I think of how the calmly cut and not a we authorities about it. How m, » And the fact that it has gon vered is beenuse thore was no y for turning in an wilarm. all demand the fullest inveggl- of this act and ask that the tH son Company or the Individuals belong. | ing to It responsible for the cutting of | hall be penalized jaw Will permit, [ would bn 4 the company have ite franchise to use the condults re- voked. but I suppose some way of its escaping this will be dug up by shrewd lawyers or political friend: ILECE FE OFOOWE, J, SL German Girl, a Passenger on. Lucania—Grenadier Guards Band Gives Concert at Pier. ‘There was band musio both on the! the nephew Inherited the old man’ tune, but he soon lost the mone’ dropped out of sight HIS ELOQUENCE SAVED HIM. dock and on the Cunard line steamship | Lucania when she pulled out from her | dock this afternoon on her way to Liv erpool, The Grenadier Guards Band gave @ farewell concert which lasted | until after the vessel pulled out into the river | The British band «oes back to Eng- land after a viait to Bt, Louls and a| clty some days ago and gave a concert | A band composed of Enalis en, mem- of the Musical Union, were down | e the Grenadiers off, and they al- ternated with the returning playere tn | the rendering of suitable selections, Registering as living at Zion City, Ul, accompanied by Carl Hodler and Freeman Haebnel, representatives of “Elijah It Miss Ruth Hoefer, the | Feputed wealthy German girl who ts Dowle, the Dowle, sailed on the Lucania, | had been troubled by hay fever, and for relief he was making @ round trip on the Lucanta. M. M. Coneys, United States Deputy Burveyor, who has been assisting Lep- wy-BSurveyor Bishop in supervising the work of the Customs Inspectors ou tho lors at this port, sailed on the Lucanta oe 8 two montha’ vacation, her passengers were Mr. and Mra, William Booth, Lieut.-Col J. H. Cowan, Rev. Ernest Lyon, United States Con- areas a ‘KU | reported to be enguged to Gladstone | on of John Alexander |? J. Sergeant Cram, who sailed, sald he 4 Davis’ . Wires Deliberately Destroyed by ale ot the twelve jurors sworn will not serve. When the jury was com-| Son of Theatrical Manager Dis- Employees of the Lighting’ pleted yesterday Foreman Ellwood Hendrick asked Justice Davis tf he could (| ing | ‘bly be excused because of the serious !lness of his mother-in-law, | posstbly Company While Repairing) When Abraham Levy, Miss Patterson's counsel, was consulted about this| | requeat he refused to give his consent to the retiremont of the forman, Mr, | Rand a With this single exception, the jurors left the court-room fully pre- TAKEN FROM BOX (Continued from First Page.) court-room on Monday has been construed as an Indication that Iso objected to his belng excused, pared to come down to serve at the trial Monday morning, None had of- fered any excuses, or even hinted that they had any objections to the duties they had sworn to perform, Old-timers, when asked about the ealling ot | the eleven talesmen to be present in court Monday, declared that there was) | nothing unusual in the order, Three Boxes on the West Side PRECA UTION ALWAYS TAKEN. ‘The Court always takes such a precaution in a big trial, in order to be, be used The narrow oblong space with the barred door where the young woman has been confine’ through tne dragging summer months has now more of the appearance of an office than a cell In “Murderers’ Row.” The Iittlo tabdie where tho former Fiorodora gir! sits and writes is littered with slips| of paper that she has been preparing carefully ever eince the first day of her incarceration. a f COMPLETE RECORD OF HER LIFR. They contain a complete record of her life from the moment she met “Caesar’ Young until the tragic morning when he was slain in the hansom Day after day she has noted down facts and cirsumstances crowded ead. into ho up in her memory, Through the long, silent hours she has nursed the vivid recollections of her past until they came before her eyes in the form of actualities, Then she wrote them down with particular care of detail, Whenever her memory began to la: wait until one of the store-rooms of her brain would give up the missing ink and allow her to gv on with her story, As the result of great patience and tireless mental effort she has not only made an accurate record of vast {mportance to hor in her trial for murder, but she has quickened the steps of the hours and lessened the worst feature of her ordeal of imprisonment, ARRANGING FRAGMENTS OF THE STORY, She worked on these stray leaves of memoranda up to the day hor case was called to trial, whereupon she began to arrange them tn ehronological order in preparation for the crucial moments when she will have to face the circumstantial charges of the prosecution, ordered up and These notes und jottings, made by the actress in her cell, will, her at- torneys Attorne: conelatencies of conduct that might be Inferred from outside appearances, Tney will prove that her love for the hookmaker was steadfast through- out her quarrel Patrick Trainor, Nephew of the Late State Senator, Dying in Roosevelt Hospital — Police Seek Supposed Assailants. Patrick ‘Trainor, FYfty-sixth street, a nephew of the late State Senator Patrick Trainor, ts dy- ing of a fractured #kull In Roosevelt | Hospital Forty-ae ing for the men who are responsible for his condition, ‘Tralne yearn ago. through bad speculations, and for some time past had eked out a Mving by driving Says He Was Strack, it Thureday night he told h® wife that he had been | ed by several men tn an Eleventh e saloon, “We quarreiled over Irish home rule. They got sora and slugeed”— Then Tralnor foll sprawling upon the = Noor, He wi thought influence of Hquor turned for nother load, making alto. es unconscious, but “his wife| gether sevon trips, The only avenue that he was merely under the | of excaoe for the girls was by t She put him to bed | vator ee and vainly tried to revive him. | , Sixty ersons employed in the ¥ Mrs, Trainor became alarmed Friday | flre-escape morning over the condition of her hus- band. She telephoned to Roosevelt Ho | throe-story | pital and Dr. house. He found that Trainor had a fractured skull and ordered the man re- —TeseGiiiiieemen moved to the hospital, | | ‘Trainor Is thirty-eight vears old. | During the life of his uncle, Sonator | Trainor, he was active in west she polities, When Senator ‘Trainor Only trip to Canada, They returned to this | time saved Joseph May, fifty years old, of the Mill on the in the on the ¢ “g the Ipta “The the prisoner, @ hard York te Jucob ef No. to-day » oh and end intrate Frees Parker Orator Arrested for Drunkenness, been arrested at the last night, after having created a dis- turbance there guess we ought to send you to! Whitman, with a amile. ts @ Republican ommitted sutelde while suffering from ta temporary cation of mind or be- CHASE AFTER THEATRE caure she she had Inherited a] vd taint of insanity from her mother. * Miss Fox's mother, It is sald by mem- Crowd Pursues and Catches Als berg of the family, had been subject! | Weed Thief Who Tried to to fita of mental demingynent for a Steal Old Man's Waten, | Magistrate Mayo in $1,006 ball ¢ chain ii Bp te Sanat suraed lable to fill the place of a juror who might meet with an accident and be! junable to appear, Nan Patterson 1s not idly awaiting the opening of her trial. working methodically In her cell upon & mass pf memoranda which will She is by her lawyers in hor defense. ¢ life during her friendship with the bookmaker as have cropped he would relinquish the task and With elaborate method she has these records of her memory so that her counsel may take them refer to them whon cross-examining the People's witnesses, believe, tear to shreds the evidence of tnotive that the District- y will adduce in building up his case. They will explain many {n- Acquaintance with htin, and thatythere was never any last bitter | leading up to the tragedy. | LL FRACTURED BOY HERO SAVES MNSTEROUSLY) GIRLS I PANIC Ran Elevator Seven Trips While Flames Raged in Factory: | Building in Grand Street This | Afternoon, A brisk fire in a five-story bullding, | Nos. 177-79 Grand street, at 1 P.M. | to-day was attended by the rescue of twelve girls employed in a shirt walst | factory on the top floor, by a colored | elevator boy who made seven trips | through dense smoke and a crackling Dlaze on the second floor, The fire started in the Standard Cellulold Company, epeee | thirty men were employed, It quickly spread to the upper floors on account of the inflammable matertal, Harry Alexander, of No, 316 West Fifty-ninth atreet, was at his post in the clevator car when the biage started. He pulled for the top floor at once and got a load of panio-mad girls in the shirt-waist factory of Kislak & Alpert, Then, taking them to safety, he of No, 414 West] . and the police of the West venth Street Station are seareh- T waa worth $00,000 a few Ho was reduced to poverty | a truck. when he went indy Skull Practured, bulla nand boys, wot out on the The b spread to the adjoining pullding at No. 81 Grand Paddock called at her street, but was got under control. and win amity to sak at the right Family with Whom She Lived) Thinks that, Fearing Insan-| ity, She Committed Suicide Found in Spare Room. Hotel No. 1, from a term Island when he was arraigned Jefferson Market Court to-day sharge of intoxication. May had Hoffman House Hisle Fox, sixteen years old, who had lived with the family of Dr. J, Clement Justin, of Bergentine avenue and Twen-| ty-third street, West New York, for the nd,” sald Magiatrate Whitman. Isand \s no place for me,” said “after having been through campaign, 1 stumped from New ), Indiana for my friend Judge! iyet etx vears, was found dead to-day t Judge or | With a bullet 1 in her head and ation; y the doctor's revolver by her aide, ds Ma It ls belleved by family that she The Magistrate nomber of years ond had‘ been in an ylum. She Is now living In Callicoon, viddure, elghitern ® Market steret years old, wir h N.Y. Mra. Justin went to the girl's room to call her this m.tn.ng and found the} at Cor rom & ) was mate and the In the Esvex Market Court on a | LG ‘spare bedroom. Sbe of attempted larcery, was ly the bel and beridg| ie wae arrested on T avenue, | her la ce revolver, which! chage of several blocks It ts she ba chianed possesion of without the knowledge of the family. re he atom; ving at ga leaving ihe over to a theatregoors, SHOT ER HED out « number of sheriff « th | mibilieta as they sped by: THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 19, 1904. JURORS MAY BE YOUNG PALMER FLEES ASYLUM Where He Has Been Placed, Beoause of Nervous Disorder, PRETTY NURSE AND A JOCKEY MISSING, TOO. While Efforts to Keep the Es- cape Seoret Are Made Par- ties Are Searching Woods and Town for the Fugitives. STAMFORD, Conn., Nov, 19—Arthur M. Palmer, the twenty-seven-year-old son of A, M, Palmer, the New York theatrical manager, has escaped from a Stamford sanitarlum, A handsome young woman nurse disappeared simul- taneously, and @ well-known jockey who has been under treatment at the fanitarium is also miasing, bvery effort is being mado to keep the escape of Palmer and the jockey and the disappearance of the nurse s¢- cret, but to-day parties of men ‘are searching the woods near the sani- tarlum for the men. Waited Mis Opportunity, Young Palmer {s much like his dia- Unguished father in appearance. He is handsome and fascinating, and despite the nervous disorder which made his confinement In the sanitarium necessary he {9 an excellent talker and a de- Nghtful companion, The necessity of placing him jn the sanitarium developed 4 Year ago, but after several months of rest and treatment he was let go, dn September last his father and step- mother, a prominent New York club woman, thought him safer In the eant- tarium, and he was sent back, much ogainst hie will, Since then he has been await! 4n opportunity to es- capt, His attentions to the pretty nurse Were most devoted, and It ts sald now that she did not discourage them, Disappeared in the Night, Just how Palmer and the jockey got away has not been explained, but it is believed that the nurse let down the | bars and drew back the bolts that kept them in restrain, Palmer ts sald to have fled with the nurse and jockey at night, and net until an hour later was the escape discovered. Immediately wearching parties were organized, but the escape had been well planned. and it Is believed that the trio have crossed over Into New York State and arenow safe from the Connecticut authorities, Until 18 young Palmer waa the con- stant companion of lis father, Four- teen timos the youngster had crossed to Burope and back with hie parent, and the roving spirit took possession of him, In the early epring of 186 he boarded a ship bound for San Francisoo and for months worked before the mast. Arriving at San Vrandlsco with greatly improved health, he was brought back to New York by his father. After that trip the young man's pe- cullarities began to assert themael and he was confined tn the sanit Mr. Palmer chose Stamford place. for hig son's treatment, he, An, refused to claim the body. was known here, he having formerly —_—_—_— owned & handsome country home in Hotel @ Le cliei g aueee eE TRENTON, N. J. Nov, 12—A man EW YORKER ATO FUND UP Former Lieut.-Gov. Woodruff One of the Victims Who Were Stopped at Rye While Speed- ing to Big Football Game. RYE, N. Y.. Nov. 19.—Eleven automo- hillats, on thelr way to the bie football game at New Haven to-day. were ar- rested as they speeded through here, tt being charge’ that they were travelling faster than the fifteen miles an hour permitted by the village authorities, Lieut.-Gey. Timothy L. Woodruff was one of the men who pald a fine for dis chauffeur. When Mr. Woodruff walked into the Court room there was a large crowd of curtomtty seekers present, the news spread rapidly through the village. Mr, Woodruff eid that It was very embar- rassing for him to have to appear under such ciroumstances, and he said that he should not have been arrested, He told the Juetce who he was and Justice Wileox said he was pleased to | meet him, bur that in view of the fact |™ that he admitted that he had violated the speed law there was nothing for him to do but to fine the chauffeur, so Ward was accordingly fined $10, whieh Mr. Woodruff pald and then hurriedly Jefe the room. Other New Yorkers arrested were J, 1, Bleir, W. 1, Crosman, William A. Hall. Ajnte Delayo, Charles De Forest August Dieta and L. P. Smith, C. W. ddieton, of Marrisburg, Fa.; Proctor, of Lakewood, and BE. W. Lew a colored chauffeur who was driving a macuine In whieh were two beauti- wonien, were also arrested, Thoy all pald fines ranain, ‘The authorities o the rush of autos to- from $10 to got y for and strung jeputtes along timed auto- Offenders were stopped by men sta- who were signalled with Boston Post road. wh tioned aben handkere! ON CHILD LABOR Miss Marrietta A. Kevser, secretary of the Church Assocation for the ad vancement of the interests of labor, wil speak on child labor before the Wom #\oase was adjudged an acctdent, rium. | the BATTLE NOW ON Reported Pressing the Japan- ese Left Furiously, JAPS IN TURN TRY TO TURN HIS LEFT. Struggle Opened with Terrific Artillery Fire, Which Is Kept Up for Several Hours—War Office Has No News, ‘ armies below Mukden ta tn full swing. rumor, though !t admits the activity al ready, The Russians, according to Gen. Kuropatkin's report, are pressing the Japanese left, while a significant move- ment of the Japanese is reported at) | Sintsintin, forty-five miles east of Muk- | den, A spectal correspondent telegraphing under last night's date says the ba! has begun and that thunder of the | guns ts unceasing, | This desnatch says a severe artillery fire was opened on the Russian right, | commencing daylight to-day and lasting for several hours. There was also intermittent firing during the day. | The Russians are expecting a general attack on the part of the Japanese. = | Owing to the prospeot of both armies | | Seeking winter quarters soon, some of | the war correspondents are leaving Muk- |den, while two out of the five American | Attaches, Lieut.-Col, Walter 8. Schuy: ley, of the Second ted States alty, and Capt. Carl Reichmann, of the | Seventeenth United States Infantry e been recalled, The Spanish Attaches have already gone. rr “WHO IS FOLK?” Governor-Elect of Missoart Tells a Story on Himself, ST. LOUIS, Nov. 1%—Gov.-Elect Folk! tells this story on himself: During the campaign he was sitting| on the platform in Mexteo, Mo., while a tooal orator, waxing eloquent in his ar ralgnment of boodling, thundered out; “And who Is this man Folk?’ No one answered, and this seemed to Pease him. He repeated in a still louder tone: LOW MU St. Petersburg Hears that Great appears from Sanitarium,) Fight Is Raging—Kuropatkin SAYS LAWYER TOOK PIN, _ ; Loals Sptegel Held im $2,000 Ball for Examination, outs Splegel, a lawyer, who has made a Pr of setting aside for felte1, Daf Nonds, was arrested to-day, chargéd with the Inrceny of @ diamond cluster pin, valued at $1, from Max Jorrisch, & Bowery pawnbroker, Spiegel was arrested by Detective Bernard Phood, of the District-Attor- ney's oifice, on @ warrant Issued by Juatiog Wyatt of Spevial Sessions, Jorrisch says the pin waa obtained by Sulegel on memoPandum and gold. by Splegel on memotndum and sold. servicw rendered Joriieh in a bond transaction, Juatice Wyatt held Sptegel tn $2,200 ball for examination Monday, ({ura'shed, eee — —— SOAP and gentle applicatic Skin Cure, when all else fails Ce ae DIED, CUTICURA OINTM ENT, the great Chica, garment workers struck in twenty fac- tories of Chicago to-day, following a walkout. of 450 cutters, The strike crippled business concerns which are MALLOY.—On Nov, 17, 1004, JAMBS MALLOY, beloved husband of Mat+ waret Claffey, native of Kings County, Ireland. + Funeral from his late residence, No 261 Avenue B, Sunday, Nov. 20, at 2 P. M. Relatives and friends are re~ spectfully invited to attend, Interment Calvary, _—_—————— UNFURNISHED ROOMS TO LET, SIX THOUSAND STRIKE. Garment Workers Out to jorce Agreem CHICAGO, Nov, 19—Six thousand ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 19—It ts re- ported that a battle between the two The War Office does not confirm the along the line indicates both armies are members of the Nationa! Wholesale Tailors’ Agsoctation, The strikers be- long to the Special Order Garment Workers’ Unton, The National Wholesale Tailors’ As- sociation recemtly served notice on its employees who belong to the Special Order Clothing Workera that when the | Agreement with the unton expired next March no mors contracts would be en- tered into except with individuals, This ' | ultimatum was the cause of the strike. Brooklyn, UNnaing wane for Foomt: reasonable, LAUNDRY WANTS—FEMALE. WANTED— londays. yrtle ave, B'klyn. = sD ~ ed bosom lroner on 5 nk ‘ork on waive. Bream Laundry, 416 “And I say, fellow citzens, who is) this man Folk?" | A little man in the front tow spoke up In a volee that could be heard all | | over the hail: “Oh T'll bite! Who Is Fol ‘eral minutes before the! ld continue, = TWO DEAD FROM GAS. HAVERHILL, Mass., Nov, 19.—Arthur | Nichols and Mra, Mollie Croaler, both jot Kingston, N. H., were found dead |from gas asphyxiation in a room in the Aetna House to-day by Landlord Gor- | don, who noticing a amell of gas had broken open the door. -The couple regls- istered at the hotel last night. The Will- iam Crozier, husband of the dead wom- Supposed toa be John B, Cassidy, of East Liberty street, Schenectady, was found dead in bed this afternoon at Clayton's Hotel, He had been aa- Phyxiated probably by aceldem. One ga8 jet in the room was burning, while the gas escaped from a second. Ho ts one te nate arrived a frrenton last ew } havi trip by trotiey, suited TILL NOON, The Simple Dish That Keeps One Vig Well Fed, When the Doctor takes his own medicine and the grocer ‘eats the food he recommends, some confidence comes to the observer. A grocer of Oseian, Ind, had a practical experience with food worth 8 attention. “Six years ago I became so weak from stomach and bowel trouble that I was finally compelled |to give up all work in my store, and in fact all sorts of work, for about four years, The last year I waa con- |fined to the bed nearly all of the \time, and much of the time unable to retain food of any sort on my stomach. My bowels were hadly con- |stipated continually, and TI lost in welght from 165 pounds down to 88 pounds. | “When at the bottom of the ladder | I changed treatment entirely and) |started in on Grape-Nuts and cream ‘for nourishment. I used absolutely |nothing but this for about thre» |months. I slowly improved, until I | got out of bed and began to move bout, | “I have been Improving regularly, | and now in thé past two years have) been working about fifteen hours a day in the store and never felt bet- ter In my life. “During these two years I have/ never missed a breakfast of Grape- Nuts and cream, and often have it two meals a day; but the entire brenkfast is always made of Grape Nuts and cream alone. | “Since commencing the use of} Grape-Nuts I have never used any-| |thing to stimulate the action of the | bowela, a thing I had to do for years; but this food keeps me’ regular and} in fine shape, and I am growing! stronger and heavier every day, “My custonters, naturally, have! heen Interested, and | am compelled) to answer a great ¥ questions about Grape-Nuats, ‘Some je would think that a eimple dish of Grape-Nuts and cream | jd not cai eal, one through ‘to th»; it will, and In the fashion,” / out H, Macy & Co,’s Attractions Are Their Low Prices, ACYS B'way at 6th Ay th to 35th St. OUR 08 fe It is a fact that BOOKS PRICE BOOKS — the product 1 the BOOK TRUST— ALL OTHERS ASK $1,08 REALLY COST MACY’S MORE THAN THEY COST ANY OTHER STORE, yet Macy’s price, 98c., is a full 10 per cent LESS than that of any other store in New York City. If we bought books as cheaply as the other dealers, who sell them at $1.08, we could sell them for considerably less than 98c, and still make our regular margin of profit. But as long as the Book Trust is intent upon driving Macy's out of the Book business we can expect to be discrimi. inated against, simply because we decline to upset the Macy store system and permit the Trust to name prices that afford us greater-than-necessary profits. At 98c, we offer thece late publications that you cannot buy elsewhere in New York City under $1.08, While the saving on $1,08 books may not average more than 10 per cent, on other lines it is much greater, in some instances our prices being but ONE-HALF what others ask, House of Fulfilment—Martin, Debonalr—Payson, Beatrice of Venice-—Max Pemberton. | Bishop's Carriage~ Michelson. pose big ver sict hed Chaistmas Eve on Lonesome—J. Fox, jr, Boss Tom—Kemp. A Chicago Princess—R. Barr Whosoever Shall Offend—M. Crawford.| At the Moorings—Carey. Old Gorgon Graham Lorimer, Land—Bar Never-Never ett. Freckles—P, Porter, Tommy & Co.—Jerome K, Jerome, Blazed Trail Stories—E, White, The Common Lot—Herrick, 98¢, Three Graces at College—G. BE. Jack- son, 98¢, The Girls of Mrs, Pritchard's School~ T. T. Meade, 88¢, The Little Colonel in Arizona—A. T. Little Roya! sts. The Brown Virgillus —Bacheler, oes Waris The Castaway—Rives, 89¢, ee ee ee eee | the Givery—M. #. Wiking, O8e. Juvenile Books, Complete assortment of Juvenile Books in Paper, Rag and Linen. Books for Older Children, The Rider of the Black Horse—E. C.| The Arrival of Jimpson—R, Barbour, Tomlinson, 98c, American Boy Life of Theodore Roose- Cantreer the Navajos—Capt. C. A. rai Blue Drigon— irk Monroe, 88, Red Cap Tales —S. R. Crockett, $1.79, The Boy Captive of Old Deerfield—M. P. W. Smith, 88¢. An American King—E. S, Ellis, 68¢. On the, trae of Pontlac—E, Strat- eC, loner Sherburne—A, Douglas, 88c, Low-Priced Cloth Sets, 89, Shak, i 1,32, Bulwer} volumes ot.0& Cooper § tokamen, Bae’ Thackeray, 10 volumes, $2.41. ani 5 volumes, 54¢, Eliot, 6 volumes, $1.44, Southworth, 5 volumes, 54e, Bronte, 6 volumes, $1.44. Tennyson, § volumes 54c. Hardy, Thos. 5 volumes, 54c, Kipling, § volumes, 54, 1905 Calendars, 1905 Diaries, Baleony, 35th Bt. side, A completé line of Calendars for Splendid assortment of Excelsior 1905, at prices ranging from Qo, Diaries for 1905, at prices ranging to $2.41. ifrom 240, to $2.81. WORK for Make Your MONEY YOU Your MONBY | WORK tor YOU <= Know How Much You Spend— And for What You Spend It, ou DEPOSITORS’ ACCOUNT Dept. affords You every ECON- OMY of The MACY CASH System And EVERY CONVENIENCE of Any CREDIT System, AND YOUR MONEY IS EARNING JN- TEREST WHILE IT IS WITH US. You can deposit as much or as little as you please and have your purchases paid for out of this sum, Every month we will send you a detailed statement showing what you have bought and how much money remains on it. On your daily balance we allow 4 per cent. interest, compounding the interest every hree months, ; EVERY PENNY AND EVERY DOLLAR EARNS INTEREST FOR YOU DAILY UNTIL WITHDRAWN, YOU CAN TAKE YOUR MONEY OUT AT A MOMENT’S NO. TICE, We run no banking business; there is no drawing of checks, with the temptation to mone ere aa Macy sells only for cash. AT MACY'S THE MAN WHO PAYS HIS WILLS does not make up for bad debts by higher He is not called upon to pay for the expensive mac DEPARTMENT. _— inery of a CREDIT’ ae {3 req 0 probe that the _Jast pay the store’s expenses, including tts bad s—ITS PREMIUM DEVICES, ITS TRADING STAMPS and ALL OTHER SCHEMES. a ‘Thousands have opened deposit accounts with us, realizing the value of this “up-to-the-times” saving method. - Ses? pee See <a eee |” Geet <le” = CR Se eee ee eee ee ng 4