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“Ss By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Bhave faced the Holy Ter: Becret Safe. In other words, ol, W. D. Mann, Poples, in his office. a ith an impres: | groomed and distinctly spo Claus who has been most - mnisunderstood. Col. Mann ner of Plexion and Parted In the middle. He has patural and particularly did it @hunder when he said: “D—n the Four Hundred!” Just like that. Thad asked the Colonel Z have tnvaded the sanctuary of the | T have talked with ‘Town came away on of a very welle is an elderly gentleman with blue eyes, a rare Burgundy com- cream-colored whiskers, deep and booming voice that reminded me of our old friend Homer's line anent the “many-sounding boom and| what to {dle, harmless society gossip that everybody likes to read. In that way ne an audience for the editorials thought the Four Hundre ought of e a wider range of subjects Fecent revelations regarding “Fads and the newspapers in New York * and the alleged connection of} put together. ¥ paper with the blackmailing Has Made Mistakes. ih | And the Colonel answered] «somett: it has inadvertently 1th-filling d—n, . Once in a while it has br Ttox r q | printed an — untruth wut one altoxether friendly to me, be It really innocent. girl, who understood. | ugh to snap her fingers “The Four Hundred! D—n the Four say: ‘Oh, well, my Hundred: Then, “Tu That slipped Hundred is a y audience, which Is world-wide.” Colonel Stroked Cat. Here the Colonel stroked lack cat that had been Peacefully on a vile of proofs on Of his desk, thus putting he boomed maje ttut! 1 at unawares, @ozed on her caloric bed Mann, en I bought the vay was a Journal of gossip, and I m filth, | fournal of gossip w! q Russia in my private brut to found hose _ lines. have an altoget! cally, beg your pardon The Four y small portion of my| the large slumbering top | the dancers on a Volcano to shame, for the “d—an’" had startled Pussy from her slumbers, @nd it was some time before she again “Fourteen years ago," continued Col. I convelved the sea of a weekly | journeying from car with Edmund B) -Yeats and Henry Labouchere, who was s that an er wrong idea of it. | iva As you know, its first pages are devoted Pn a husband. “Tn these cases, I have been grieved— a Erieved—ho one more so—and done everything possible to right OM that safe. A reporter ‘ed me when I returned "You must get hun- dreds of signed and anonymou - munications revealing society — scan- dais’ and ' answered: ‘Safe-loads. ‘phat was a momentary mental hal- lueination. ant to sav cart-loads. | Know there is no such word ss| joads,’ and of course such com- | ramunications went into the waste sket at once. Tt 1s sometimes necessary to publish | which are not Iibetlous be- cy are truc, as a warning to other people not to follow the !mmor- ality or d—a foolishness of the persons nvolved. *YNow, as to ‘Fads and Fanctes.’ The subseriers to that work are handing jdown to future generations a unique 5 ne firsst printing and the twentieth century can know the interest and the Claxton editions own day. Mrs. Huntington Paid $10,000, will b from Eurone innocent c K its mother the meant: table | “Some of the subscribers may have without br. terested through personal van- And no ot) nat of that? You ask why gay as mu 5 people paid more than others. “People read my paper) They did_ not. Space in ‘Fads and for two @itional page. But we discovered that pages devoted to one sudject | would mar the beauty of the book, so| subscribers were informed that they would bave to take two extra pages or one. “Mra. Collis P, Huntington paid $10,-| 000 because she wanted to. Collis F Huntingten was my most friend and one of the noblest men that ever lived. Ho has fourteen or fifteen ages in ‘Fads and Fancles’ and owlng to my life-long acquaintance with him Iwas able to make many suggestions to the editor. ustice Deuel? He bough: few shores in my paper at my suggestion When I took & over fourteen a intimate kt The | *Tur-Tuterut! any preliminaries Dr. Ogden tanced | | swelling did no tuize the lancet I Beg Your Pardon | hor did’ he use antiseptic in the Ww That Slipped | He did not even wasn the part ope! Unaw upon and in the operation col Our ares." | of hot water was used. years aco. He received the $1,200) “At the tme the girl's sisters were for his ca y daughter's estate. | uneasy and when ten days later the For rformed that ser-|knee began to show signs of blood vice I {insisted that polsoning they called Dr. Ogden. He light compensa-|continued to treat Miss Kraus for me, but her Alt t My wife when they caled | walt and) Hundred and swentleth sireet for $7. v0. sufferings matism of her puny with | Went to Dr Lawyer Abrahams to sue Collier's for their | alarming that he ai 5 Star CHARGES THAT DOCTOR'S NIE Petty Operation in Hospital Followed by 18 Months of Torture. Lying on a cot !n the Polyclinic Hos- pital is Josephine Kraus, a beantiful young woman, whose remarkable strug- ele against death 1s destined to go down {nthe annals of surgical history. ‘The girl, eighteen months in the hos- pital, has been Hterally cut to pleces in the endeavor to eave her life from |the ravages of blood poisoning. Since Four she was carried to the institution she Hundred” |has lost fitty pounds, and trom a healthy girl, whose only apparent | trouble was rheumatism of the kni has become a pitiable skeleton. Hos. pital physicians have struggled to check the inroads of blood poison, other operation 1s ahead of the brave| | irl, who says she must get well. but an-| Out of her remarkable case a lawsult has grown in which Miss Kraus sues Dr. John P. Ogden, of No. 40 West Polsoned by Knife, She Says. | Miss Kraus charges that had it aot |been for the gros carelessness of Dr. | Ogden in failing to sterilize the instru- ment e first operation on her knee she would not to-day be a wreck in the Polyclinic whh waich he performed “Miss Kraus was afflicted with rheu- left knee, and in com- two sisters and len for treatm to-day. her «HE‘WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, AUGUST 3, 1905. OL. MANN, EXCITED, SAYS “D-N THE FOUR HUNDRED!” » Then He Gracefully Apologizes > for the Word—Warrior-Edi- tor Studied as He Talks of | Fads and Fancies, Society and that Safe Full of Scandal. | tw have w eton, bu » FOUR LEAP 10 MAN CRUSHED STREET OUT OF ON PLATFORM | BLAZING HOUS | IN SUBWAY Two Girls Badly Hurt in Caught by Side of Car at Escape from Flames Set by Firebug. goes by t « deaths and inju wate bug c t of the city To-day's fire was Ger the sta were EF lowed tou sons who were nie house to aid thei. Girls Lea; wound, ‘i may oteen y he street. pitened forw nu herself a bh the bx q Mic and oid, Foijgl ihe sad ; eut abou c d Mother cng Ch When goin} p nen gor the blaze hen bey & for ti dicendiary we AU Aue concsion that |» Pony 1 searen | the Brooklyn Bridge | Station, board a car a bout sixty persons platform when a Rickert ving board lost his ear and urve in the whirled nbout His ne tracks a bleck as he es rushed to to be the and was stopping the ad recel right taigh been bad y i Who was ¢ nus, was able | his nami 1 address, and eaid id know » wae hurt, Necesnary troller, of the os bis life ¥ be in danger, and an operation was ly but it Is expected that he will not have to submit to the knife, as he + con-| 4s recovering rapidly, His son. a physi- ron| clan in Nyd and The| John A. M resident of the in- hourly vulleting aw to bis ‘oondil “sete some ra ex: TRAIN DES | FROM TRESTL Spreading Rail Flung Cars Into Creek from High Bridge on! Baltimore and Ohio Road, Near Johnstown, Pa. JOINS TOW of a train on a tres- | by the | to-day mortal! seriously was were Isted an engine, a yacnes, Mitisburg, bruises Jumping bone and Hoovers- Huffalo; spine ville; bruises, ford, sprained n farm and brulses | ‘That the forty passengers on the train escaped death ts marvellous, | ————— | STAMP TAX RECEIPTS LOWER, ALBANY, Aug. 3—The total recelpis from the sale of slock transfer tax stamps during July were $308,740.80, ‘This sum ts conslderwhly less than the re- celpts for June, Which amounted to $440.209.6). Comptroller Kelsey attributes the falling off to the fact that June was the first month that the new law operated and brokers and others laid in ving gilaget sock of aimmps Wa {ey was a si hina cattle ladihietdtii Aili ka tll a, ate, wen Peckham ty the wife of the F. A. Peck ham, who ‘9 one of tne witnesses In |contempt o the Supreme Court of the Distriet of Columbia, in connection with the Grand Jory investigation of the cotton scandal, Peckham has refused to | testify whether or not he knew Edwin | WOMAN KEEPS COTTON SECRET Contents of Safe Deposit Box, Closely Guarded by Mrs.' Peckham, the Subiect of Fi- nanciers’ Speculation. © secrets pertaining to the cotton | {n the Agricultural Department | 1 in a box in the Madison Safe Company August of last} y Tw tents o the box of a stri . whien Mrs. Hree Jenlously "This question w day in the cotton finanglal district. Mrs in S. Holmes, the disgracede crop statts- Yebin whose indotment the Goyernment ip seokin, 3 head, Sirs. 3 dollars for PYTHIAS GENERAL DEAD. INDIANAPOLIS 3—James Mr Carnahan, Major-G uniform rank, Knighs of P: y-day at his home in Wood after an weeks, llmess o t The Natural Laxative ‘Water was awarded the Grand Prize at the St. Louts Exposition, 1904 for its Purity and Excel: lence, Easy to take Easy in action—Ease for all stomach ailments, FOR CONSTIPATION Tailor Shops: 110 Fifth Ave Even the most bungling custom tailor wilfsometimes fit his client; but generally that indefinable something called “style” is lack- ing. If you want a guaranice that your garments will have the acme gf good fashion for half custom tailor cost, buy~ Atterbury | | System Clothes | sawk the Man Who Wears Them,” $18.75 | Some $30 and $25 Suits marked downto Salesroomn: | 39 and 4) Cortlandt Street, | elothes, Also furnishings, Bole Agent. New Hut, Conn, Mrs, Peckham ormerly was the wife of John Pay, a Chicago newspaper man | She was divorced from him but prior to that conducted a eniili business in Chicago under the name of Sarah De |}uye. About two years ago ehe came | |to thiy clty as the wife o Frederick | |Peokham and established herself tn | Broadway nr the frm name of thie) Saruh De Faye Company, ‘Phe lease for | the premises was signed by L. C. Van Riper, who wis spoken af in Secretary Wilson's o: n Randal report Ast August proceedings tn bank- Pockiiam by Chicago treaitenn Bho in: clared herself solvent. A box ta, the Madison Safe Deposit Company was in her naane, and an account | tor about $3,000 in ‘the Lincoln’ ‘Tr he box contained wort) jowelry, pice er A wen a Paes Ney | . SEPHUNE KRAUS get well.” | as been YOUNG BRIDE ENDS HER LIFE WITH POISON - Mi on long time," said Miss en Lose others w a de ke me feo! discoura ——E——— CRUISER COLUMBIA SAILS. ited States ser Colu las! Alexander SPECIAL SALE OF MEN’S, WOMEN’S and CHILDREN’S SHOES We have made important changes in our Men’s Department, and decided to discontinue over 200 lines. ‘ll This necessitates the forcing out of over 9,000 pairs of Men’s and Boys’ Boots and Shoes. Sale also includes a ||] number of lines in Women’s and Children’s Departments \ll which we also discontinue or reduce. MEN’S WOMEN'S LOW SHOES Black Oxfords, were Sale price. k or Tan Pumps, Sale price. 3,00 to 5.00....7... 2.7 00 and 6,.00.. 3.75 Tan Oxt ei Black or Tan Oxfords, 3 5.00 w 5.00 and 6.00.. 3.75 at, A ccaner: Z.75 Black or Tan Oxfords, Patent ee 4 00 re 3,00. and 4.00.. 2.45 ts WEIS Ae 3.25 Variety of mixed lots, 1.45 High WOMEN'S BOOTS nd 5.0 Fine White Canvas, ae an 2 x S26 laced, were 5.00..... 3.95 High Black Ce Be 3) and 4.00 2.75 Broken lot Tan, but Variety of odds a 3.00 and wn 1.50 Boys’ and Girls’, sizes 7 to 1014, were 1.50 to 2.50,.1,35 to 1.95 Boys’ and Girls’, sizes 12 to 2, were 1.75 to 3.00.,.1,3§ to 1.95 Large Girls’, sizes 2% to 7, were 2.00 to 44 1.65 to 2.45 N. E. Cor. 19th St. pr Infant’ Soft Sole Boots and 35 Ankle Ties, were $0and.75.... © Infants’ Kid, buttoned, leather soles, were .75 and 1.00.45 & .65 Children’s Wedge Heel Tan, White or Black Boots and Ties, were 1.25101.75 95 & 1.35 eo TY ccroncdanted Price OO eieeistons Over-confidence in our largely increasing clientage for High-Class Tailored Suits brings out this fact, We Are Greatly Overstocked with Two-Piece HIGH-PRICED BUSINESS # OUTING SUITS For Men and Young Men—Sizes 34 to 44. Lateness of the season induces us to offer. them at prices far below cost of production, The’ Season's Choicest Selection of Ster- ling Fabrics in F: Worsteds, including the new Grays Fine Blue Serges, Unfinished Worsteds and Cassimeres in Sale Begins Friday Plain and Faney Effects, Former Valuss $25, $22.50, $20 and $18, OPPORTUNITIES LIKE THIS ARE RARE. : o- THROAT AND LUNGS LIGHT DIAGNOSIS No class of Liseasos requires the attention of a Spectaltat #0 much as Throat and Lang Die- eases. Too much time {@ lost by Dr. P. L, Anderson, the family doctor, who has neither the necessary experience nor apparatus for ‘oll- {ng ono lung disense-from anotier at the Start. Consult a Spectallat at once ; the true condition of your lungs while \r yet time to be cured. C curable. It fe proventable. until incurable conditions A TRUTHFUL TESTIMONIAL, PUBLISHED BY REQUEST. T was too alck to alt up and could Mo, down. "0 te {n Beavwas to choker ts ¥ ny" Pith bie wonderful X-Licht and told mo he could cure me iff would breathe hls edtcated into’ my lungs. Mv lunes were, ¢ Weil in a fow credit for curing meson ceseeves the : § HANSEN, 140 Wost Avenue, Long Island City. Wondertul results are obtaine: of Catarrh, Asthina, ‘Bronchitis, and’ Gost rovention of Con- nach dosing lutely correct €varanteed, Consul- ation and trial treat- sumption, also in the p: mption without the St. (betwe Hours: Dat Monday, Wednei gs tll 8. write for full pare fal hi treatment. weeny Bicthers Semi-Annual Clothing Sale Saves You 20% to 50%. Particular Men. Broken odds and ends and past season’s models, even though reduced considerable in price, do not hold out much of an inducement for particular men, Men who are particular about style, men who are particular about correct and seasonable materials and men who are anxiou: to save money but who are not willing to sacrifice |style and correctness of dress are the men who take advantage of our Semi-Annual Clothing Sale. | Last season’s models cannot ac- |cumulate in stores that disperse the | quantities of merchandise with the |rapidity of “Brill stores,” We reserve no particular style of | material, just hecause this particular jsort of material may be very popu- {lar and can be sold at regular prices. The sizes include every size from garments fitting the youth of 16 to \the 52-inch chest man who wears a ich inseam. The more particular you are the surer you'll find Style, Fit, Material jand Price up to your highest expec- tation, for we siy ANY mixed sult t jin our four stores reduced in price 20% to 50%. ° r $35 Worsted Worsted Outing Suit, 8, $30 or $35 English Any $22.50 or $25 Fancy Cheviot*Sult, $18 or $20 Fancy Worsted Suit, $18 or $20 Worsted Outing Suit, $20 or $22.50 Flannel Outing Suit, $14,50 De) Any $18 or $20 Fancy Cheviot Suit, $15 or $16.50 Fancy Worsted Suit, $13.50 or $16.50 Worsted Outing Suit, $15 or $18 Flannel Outing Suit, $1 1.00 Any $10, $12.50 or $15 Fancy CheviotSuTt, $10 or $12.50 Fancy Worsted Suit, $10 or $12.50 Worsted Outing Suit, nelOuting Suit, $8, 50 Any all-woo! Suit of $3 and #4 value.. : Any all-wool Suit or $4 and $5 vatue.. Any all-woo! Suit of $5 and $6 value. ..seee Any all-wool Suit of $6 and #7 value... Any all-wool Suit of $8 and $10 value. $0.65 Children's Wash Suits ¥% off, Men's Outing Trousers % off, SALE NOW ON, Get the Habit. Goto UNION SQUARE 14th Street, near Broadway, $1.65 $2.65 $3.05 $4.65 279 Broadway, near Chambers, 47 Cortlandt St., near Greenwich, 125th St., corner Third Ave, SUNDAY WORLD WANTS Lx) i $10, $12.50 or $15 Homespunvor Flan 4 RS, ‘ Boys’ and Children’s Suits ‘Reduced,