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_AFEROISCVERY ~ OF DEADLY GER Dr. Gaston Odin Cut Himself With Culture Tube, Devel- oping Dread Disease. PARIS IS INTERESTED. Scientists Eagerly Follow Sa- vant’s Experiments and Look for Great Results. BARD, France, Aug. 14.—The confir ation by Dr. Gaston Odin in a pub- Guhed interview of his reported discov- @y of the identity of the cancer mi- q@obe, and of « curative tincture which ‘WH kill the microbe, is creating the Greatest of interest among medical ecientists. By way of proof that his discovery, fer which medical science has been mrohing for gencrations, is realy all ‘that he believes it to be, Dr. Odin tells f @ marvellous experiment which an @ocident caused him to try on himself. ‘The savents of medicine are talking of nothing in Europe, and the lectures » @ Dr. Odin before the Academies of G@etence and Medicine, at which he will @e into the details of his work, will be @tlended vy distinguished physicians from all over the world, These will add te the bare announcement of his suc- eens, which was made before the Bio- Jogical Society six weeks ago. Gome time ago, Dr. Odin said in his taterview, when he was working with @ome culture tubes containing cancer- @us blood one of them broke, The glass emt his arm and the fuic got into the weund. The physician watched the ‘wound, testing it from time to time watt it developed a cancerous growth. Da, Odin then injected his cancer-cure gerum and the growth disapp' WILL CURE GROWTH IN EARLY STAGES. Dr, Odin does not hold out the hope that bis cure will reach all cases of cancer. It will kill the growth i its early stages. His identification of the cancer germ makes it possible to catch the disease early in its progre In testing the certainty of his identl- fication of tho germ, Dr. Odin had es- sociated physicians give him tubes con- ta'ning the blood of nine persona, each separately marked. He found cancerous germs in six of the nine tues. In every case the tubes were those which had becn filled by his associates without his Knowledge with blood from persons kuowa to have cancer, The other three were from persons not affilicted with the disease. Dr. Odin's discovery makes it clear that cancer may be communicated from one person to another through any skin ‘esion. The physician thus describes vis discovery; “The microbe is a parasite cf the dlood which transforms, develops and itself with incalculable rapidity in a multiplicity of forms. In fe primitive form it is a sort of gela- tine. When the environment allows it out and feeds on callules within ie rench AROUMES STRANGE SHAPES IN DEVELOPING. “Mt grows and forms a kind of film qround itself, then separates into two ‘@olde, each forming a new amoeba, self productive. When the ant fg most favorable it sep- into three to ex fragments, as- of four and five-leaf times the microbes be- in horse chestnut shape, environment becomes resume their active life, t i nat unenorust. Giscoverey enables the physician ff @ person is cancerous, al- lesion of the tumor may be @ tumor {# vieible it en- to whether the tumor is vaccine can already kill the cancer ts not too far 10 affirm that Athi $ i ih i a $ HE ootor, not a tradesman.” Odin was formerly @ teacher and mot take up the study of medicine ‘wae twenty-two. Bariter in the present year Dr. van Wasserman of Berlin, discoverer of the \Blood test for infectious diseases bear- ‘tng his name, gave out news of success. treatments of cancer !n the lower enimais by « tincture called Fosin- Belen. Dr. Von Stein of the Cander Institute of Moscow also announced that fhe had treated many cates successfully, _—— DR. FURNESS |S DEAD. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 1. —Dr. Horace Howard Furness, a Shakes- pearlan scholar of International renown, and editor of “Variorum Shakesp died yesterday at his home at Wall- ity 2 ingford, near here. Deuth ‘resulted from pneumonia, Dr, Furness seventy-nine years old, He was born near Wallingford He was graduated from Harvard in 1854. Turned from the law by deaf- Dr, Furness devoted his life to Mterary work, His father, Dr, William Henry Furness, won fame in the pulpit He is survived by @ son, Hora Howard Furne: —_—— ene to Resign, M4.—Bishop Blair of the largest dlo- Aug. the Falkland Islan fn the world, embracing most of uth America, who attempted to raise (00,000 for church Work in those coun- tries, has succeeded in getting only $20,760, He announces that he wiil Fesign unless an adequate response eppears before September next. The Bishop says that such a course would t be to lead a life of ease at hbme, it would leave nim stranded with- ing Spagna Ps Seed nm on ato ge bine . \ ili “A MAW Teen CAILOISHHESS ,vANErY ANO TENDER ESS * “Women ae they are not inspire me! year-old school girl had written it— ‘Romance {s every man's weakness; love ie every woman's power.” I wonder where all these romantic ™Men conceal themselves, The average man I know anything of is about as romantic as a time table, and to be fair, the average woman I know takes ® very practical, if not a rather sordid view, of what we call love, “Oh love, how many crimes are committed in thy name!" If men were more romantio, women more loving, perhaps we would not have so many “discour- aged girls,” so many “disgusted young ™Moen.” There is a great deal to be said for the contention of these young men that girls to-day are mad about luxury. What did certain types of men talk about before the automobile was in- vented? For the last five years at loas three-fourths of their conversation has been of “my car,” “your car,” “has he got a car?’ &c, And men repeat familiarly the names of twenty differ- ent French automobiles who ould not, to save thelr souls, or rather something infinitely more precious, their cars, tell you of one French artist or composer or poet. HE COULDN'T IDENTIFY THE “WATTEAU” CAR, ‘The other day one man spoke to an- other of a Watteau. ‘That's a new one on me,” admitted the candid motorist. “And I thought I knew every French car there is." But let the young man who says our women are automobile crasy speak for himself: RESPECTABLE GIRLS SAID TO BE LUXURY MAD. * Madam: Some few weeks ago din the papers about a muill- jonaire, sixty-two years old, who hod advertised for a wife, The appli- cant was required to be not over twenty, @ ing disposition and pos good qualities, Well, do you think that man received @ single answer, this man of sixty-two, old enough to be @ grandfather to the one he desires to marry? No, not a single answer—but hundreds, Every apjii- cant tried her best to laud her qua Di we ri ities just as a good salesman would display his goods. ‘Take me," one said, “1 am a genuine blonde. You see, I send you a sample of my hair; please note how long it is! and lemon colored from the root to the end, which is not the case with imi- tution blondes,"* ‘These girls are by no means of the questionable butterfly class; they are respectable home girls. Do you think they are #0 anxious to marry a man old enough to be thelr grandfather because they are starving, or their life ts in danger and this is the only way to save it? Not at all, They ail belong to the middie class, live fairly well and could marry nice young men of their own class. But luxury!’ There ts the secret! Auto- mobiles, jewelry, and all the reat of high living—women are crazy for it. ‘They complain that for a few din- ners and theatre parties some men exgech & Di DAUD, for auch @ NING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUWUS? 14 CURED OWN CANCER New York Girls of To-Day Are Luxury Mad [RQWNING GIRL And ‘the Men Are Daft About Auto Cars Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World.) “AUTOMOBILES JEWELRY AND ALL THE REST OP HIGH LIVING = WOMEN ARE CRAZY oR tT? “Women Are Crazy for Jewels and All the Rest of the Elements of High Living,” Writes S. H.— “(Man Needs Women, Their Childishness, Their Vanity, Their Tenderness, Their Weaknesses Even,”’ Says A. E. G. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “Romance is ry man's weak- ness, love is every woman's power.” With this sentimental phrase a mas- culine reader of The Evening World concludes a highly cynical analysis of the man and the woman of to- day. After all, most of our cynicism is merely self-conscious sentiment. The confessed man-hater {s far more likely to elope with the coachman than is the girl who takes a nominal interest in man. And the most no- torious woman-haters — Strindberg, for instance—give almost invariably the lie to their opinions by marrying the cook or the housemaid. It must take a tremendous amount of romantic imagination to play the leading part in such a social debacle. So, when I find a man who says that ‘but women as they are are a source of mental and moral depravity,” I am not at all astonished to read as the concluding sentehce of his letter a sentiment as romantic as if a sixteen- trifle, of course not; but when there is wrsaith and luxury—well, t! 's aif. ferent. I have only one name for it. ‘The legal side ts of no importance. 8. PART THAT ROMANCE PLAYS IN THE GAME OF LIFE. Men and women do It Dear Mada: not understand each other. is Perhaps this fact which causes or creates the allurement or attraction in the young and 1s the foundation of all romance and the most active source of disillusion, Women live within themselves, their entire course in life is strictly individual- istic. The impressions ‘received from within dominate their minds, their characters, ‘velr true natures, Hence thelr jealousy, conceit, van- ity and hypocrisy. I do not mean fn matters of right and wrong. It {a the inner nature which fs ao very essential for woman's place in society as a mother. Man, on the other hand, lives @ life of external impressions. He receives all his mental impressions from without. Even women ure external impre: sions to him. His course in life men- tally, morally and even physically lies in an outer atmosphere. To men women as they are not are a so of inspiration for great achieve- ments, both artistic and asctentife, To men, women as they are are a great @ource of depravity, mental and moral, When I say women I use the plural, as you may notice, All men are alike in the matter of women, The plural number ts pre- ferred, Every man needs women, their society, their childishne thelr vanity, tenderness, & nesses even, b game sense as the “Johnny” Romance 1s every man's weakness, love is every woman's power, A. E. G. TOO MUCH PERSONAL LIBERTY IN NEW YORK CITY, Dear Madam: As the game of life ts played In New York to-day, there is an absence of conventionality and an excess of personal liberty which, to my mind, Is responsible in a large egres for the dress-paint-and-pow- der problem and the Johnny evils. If, instead of attacking each other, both sexes were to make an attempt to abolish the conditions which per- mit these things, some good might be accomplished. Any attempt, ho ever, to curtail a New Yorker's (male or female) personal liberty or to introduce more formality would create @ howl large enough to be heard around the world, So what's the use? No amount of agitation will abolish these evils, FF, F. GIRLS TRY TO APPEAR TOO SMART, HE THINKS, Dear Madam: The girl of to-day is not happy unless speaking of silly fops with long names, She refers to them as “swell feliows,"" And in thelr company she generally strives to appear wise, I have quite @ few irl acquaintances (not friends), but I must confess there ts not one sen- sible girl among them. How sweeter girls would appear to men if they would only lay aside their sa HE MADE A KITE TOHELP BURY BOY, | THEN ME DEATH Housetop Tragedy Adds to Plight of Poverty-Stricken “Porgie Row.” ‘There !s woe in Porgie Row to-day; for there, where human suffering wae already great, have been two tragedies, “Porgie Row" is situated on the south side of East Twelfth street, bo- tween Avenue C and Avenue D. Fifty years ago, when the east side along the river front was the centre of New York's ship building industry, the four- story tenement houses along Twelfth street were the bomes of ship car- penters, who brought home with them each night strings of porgies they had caught in the Dast River. But evil times have come to Porgie Row. The prosperous ship canpentere have given place to the poverty- stricken children of the . slums. Houses that formerly were occupied by one family now giv. iter to half a hundred gouls. They speak a Babel of languages in Porgie Row, but the oommon ground on which they meet is that of the unselfien sharing of their few worldly goods. Nine months ago, Mike Freno, a labor- er, deserted his wife Kate, who lives on the ground floor of No. 716 Bast Twelfth street, Three mionths later her baby came. She was penniless and ill, and the poor of Porgie RQv gave what they could spare. When she was able Mrs. Freno went out to work by the day, and those women of the neighborhood whose men had jobs took turns in caring for little John Freno. But the fight for life was waged un- equally. Malnutrition, the doctors called {t—it's starvation in Porgie Row —caused the baby's death night before “HOW MUCH SWEETER GHLS WOULD Then em READ MANY NOVELS; THEN BERTHA, AGED 13, LEFT AUNT'S HOME Aunt Frightened, but Appealed to Evening World—Result: Bertha’s Back. APPERR I THEY LAD ASSI08 BART AWD BOASTFUL AR Though she 4s only thirteen yeare old, Bertha Meyer, who lives with her aunt, Mre. Fannie Ruban, at No. 8 Marion atreet, Brooklyn, looked sixteen. She Was precocious, too, and read too many Novels of love and romance. She had f{deas that she would be a ‘fine lady,” and ‘fine Indies” do not rise early and learn to cook and sew. Mra, Ruban had different ideas. She thought the child should learn the housewife's art. Last Thuraday, she renewed her request to Bertha that the child attend more to her household duties. Ae a last resort she threatened to tell Bertha's father, Archie Moyer, who has been living at No. 160 Allen street, Manhattan, since the death of his wife, ; Thursday night, Hertha disappéared from her aunt's home. Her aunt was wild with fear, Sho thought the child had been kidnapped or had with foul play. She appealed to the police last. The undertaker came and said he would bury John for $8. Mrs, Freno had not one cent, ‘The women of Porgie Row contributed, but only #3 was raised among them. Then the children came to the rescue. They fashioned ‘pin wheels” and kites and sold them for a penny apiece to help bury little John, A few who pos- sessed little four-wheel wagons sold them, too, to help defray the funeral expenses, Hight-year-old Abraham Yurd came from Russia only a few months ago with his parents. He could not apeak English, but that made no difference. He could fashion wonderful box kites, which would fly in almost any kind of wind, All day yesterday little Abraham sat In the broiling sun on the roof of his home, No. 718 East Twelfth street, and whittled and tied and pasted Kites. HI finished three of them In a day, and sold them readily for a cent aplece, Last night, with the other children of the neighborhood, he went to Mrs Freno’s flat, where all emptied their pockets of pennies and nickels to add to the $3 the woman had ralsed When it all was cou d they had 8 of the necessary $8. told Fi p they would raise the rest. Early to-day Abraham w back on the roof whittling away at aticks and fashioning kites, He expected to make at leant five. When one was fin'shed ho tried {t to see that it would fy Later in the day, when Max Har- dintz of No, 712 East Twelfth street | entered the yard of No. Ti, he came upon the mangled body of Abraham on the stone flags. In his hand he clutched the cord by which he had been flying his kite, A misstep had sent him plunging from the root death. ‘There 1s woe tn Porgie Row, Now the children and thelr elders must raise $16, for there will be two funerals inatead of one. os Leaves 150 Grand-Chi CHARLEROI, Pa, Aug. 14—Mrs, Susanna Blatchford, aged ninety-neven, died Tuesday at Vesta, this County She leaves fourteen children and 150 grand-children, The deceased was an inveterate smoker, and for the last amart and doast{ul airs and be them- OVI enn ain, te dhe +] twenty-five years had used the same and yesterday to The Evening World. Last night Mra. Minnie Schlang of Jackson avenue, Corona, Long Island, was shocked when #he read The Even- ing World, to learn that Bertha’s aunt thought that her niece was dead. Mra, Schang 1s a alster-in-law of Hertha’ father, Last Thursday Bertha had come to her home and announced that she wanted to spend a week. She had 1912 DRAGS FATHER DEATH WT HER Washed From Boat, Miss Mc- Falls Grips Broker's Neck as He Dives to Save Her. THEY DIE IN EMBRACE. Mother Had Presentiment and Warned Husband When She Le “Aotor Boat. Friends of George H. McPalls of No. 146 Fifty-fourth street, Borough Park, Brooklyn, who was drowned with his sixteen-year-old daughter Marion, whom was trying to eave after sho fell Out of @ boat, said to-day that hie wife undoubtedly had @ presentiment hours beforenand that tragedy was to occur. The Mc¥Falls had been spending ten Gays cruising along the Long Island coast in ‘thelr thirty-two-foot motor boat, the Algemar, putting in at nights @t Bellport, Amityville, Babylon an@ other points, Teh outing over, the fam- fly was returning home. Mre. McFalla, with Alice, the youngest daughter, to take @ train in from Boliport. Mr. McFalle planned to take Marion and Geraldine, fifteen years old, as f Amityville in the boat. They © to make the rest of the journey by train and he intended bringing the boat in alone. As Mr. McFalle was about to start out into Jones's Inlet from Bellport, hie wife, who wae etanding near, called to him and ead: ‘Now don't go tar from shore, Ihave @ feeling of uneasiness. You know neither of the girld can ewim. Please ‘be careful.’ “I shall," Mr, MoFalle lat at her. “There can't de and I'll keep close to shore.” The boat got through Jones's Inlet in safety aod Mr. McFalls started down the coast, and keeping his promise to Mrs. McFalla he hugged the shore. Off Babylon the motor went wrong and the machinery stopped. When he was at- tempting to repair it the boat was car- ried more than a mile from shore by the tide, Then Ernest Barnes and George Shortwell, youths who live in Freeport and who were out in a small motorboat, went to the rescue. WERE BOTH ENGULFED BY BIG WAVE. Three-quarters of a mile off Amity- ville Mr. McFalls went forward, leaving Marion aitting at the stern with Geral- dine, There came a heavy wave and Marion was tossed into the water. Mr. McFalls quickly unfastened @ small ping into it, started for Barnes and Shortwell k ew nothing of the accident and con- tinued ahead, Quickly rowing to the girl Mr. Mo- Falls reached over the side of the email boat and clutched her clothing. But the small boat turned over and as It id Marion scised ber father about the neck. ‘Then for the first time Geraldine, who had stood as if paralyzed with fright, screamed, Tho boys in the small boat turned around, to see Mr. McFalle and his daughter struggling in the water two hundred yards astern of them, ‘Then there came a big wave, Father and daughter were engulfed by tt and nk from aight, Barnes and Shortwell took turns diving. For an hour they searched the waters, while little Geral- dine stood in the larger boat screaming. At 4 o'clock the boys reported the drownings to Amityville, and a party consisting of several New Yorke under Capt, Delancey Ketcham, was or- wanized to search for the bodies. After an hour's search the bodies were brought Into shore by the tide, Marion still held her father about the neck and une of his La ircling her, George H. McFalla was fifty y old and an insurance broker with offive, in Manhattan, visited Mrs. Schaing many times be- fore ard nothing was thought of her request. Friday, when Mrs. Ruban's son went to the Schlangs’ home to see {f Bertha was there, nene of the family was at home, and he reported to his mother that Hertha had not been there, As soon us Mrs. Schlang read of Bevtna's disappearance she notified Mrs, Kuban, and this morning Bertha was sent back to her aunt's home, Her father will see her to-night. Bertha does not relien the meeting. ——— find Woman's Dody tn My: The body of @ poorly dressed woman his morning off Pier 6 in the It evidently had been in the wa some time and had been die- lodged by the pile driver, ‘The woman y an undergarment and 4 skirt 6 no marks of identification. —_—_—— = i} Wear and Tear. (From the Wasiiogton Star, | “My daughter says I have a good | ear for music.” “What does she mean by that There w “{ don't know eaactly. I'm afraid | she refers to the fact that I can listen to some of the things she plays with- out getting the ear-ache The Ideal Summer Beverage Is LIPTON’S TEA HOT OR ICED, dialeeieiansssensnclenionmtitene ¢ I “ Hf You've Tried it— You Know— WF NOT—thon next time, cay te & the man— MOERLEIN'S Barbarossa and prove te yourself that it Is “The Best Bre Bottiod only at the brewery KARL VILL jena ler Phone 70 7-641 Kleventh Ate, iow York City GIRL WHO DROWNED AND DRAGGED FATHER TO DEATH ‘ViTH HER, GIRL SEEKS DEATH BY POISON AMONG DINERS AT HOTEL Maria Fitzsimmons Gives No Reason for Attempt at Sui- cide—Man With Her Held. While @ handsome young woman who startled diners at the Colonial Hotel, One jHundred and Twenty-fitth etreet and Eighth avenue by laughingly swallowing polson, last evening, is recovering from attempt at self-destruction, the po- Mee to-day will endeavor to find out what she has been doing in New York since she came here from her home in Pitteburgh several 4 ago. At the Harlem Hospital, where she was taken, Dr. Cassassa discovered that she had swallowed biohloride of mer- cury, She was revived. The police notified and to them she alleged, that she had taker to end ham and Thompson of the Lenox ave- nue atation she said she was Marie Graham, twenty-three, of the Hotel Irroy, One Hundred street and Ei known there, however, and when ques- toned further said: “I will not tell you who I am. Nothing could force my identity from me," She was made a prisoner in the hos her man companion was ar- jal witness, From him tectives learned that the girl was Marte Fitzsimmons of No, 168 Bronxville avenue, Pittsburgh. * He ald that Miss Fitzsimmons had been in New York several days but that he firet met her Sunday. The man told tho detectives that he was Raymond Domacano, twenty-four, the aon of a wealthy Braaillan planter. came to New York to attend colleg ‘and ts now living at No. 119 West One Hundred and Fifteenth street. TAKE DELICIOUS Waste-clogged bowels, torpid liver and decaying food in stomach cause the sick headache, gas, backache, sallowness, biliousness and indigestion. All women get bilious, headachy and constipated. mply because th don t exercise enough. ‘They don’t eat coarse food, or enough fruit and green vegetables. ‘Those are nature's way of keeping the liver and thirty feet of bowels active, but very few women ploy them, The next best way is ightful, fruity Syrup of Figs. Nearly all ills of women can be vercome with Syrup of Figs alone, ‘here is no need to have sick head ache, backache, diztiness, stomach sour and full of axe #8 spells, sallow | ness, coated te bad breath, bad complexion, nervousness and sion, The surest and safest one or two Syrup of Fig "il feel spl Eddys Bld English auce S The right relish to have in the house all the time. makes good taste better, It things 10c 31 Spring St.,.N.Y | CRANDAL'S Oldest Makers of Baby Carriages | in New York +0. exis 593 Sd Av, | AGED MOTHER OF YONKERS DOCTOR IURED IN CRASH Mrs. Scofield Pinned Under Son's Auto When It Hits Broadway Trolley. In the crash of an automobile with & southbound Broadway trolley cat at Two Hundred and Twenty-first strect and Broadway last night Mra, MM. #, Beofleld, sixty-eight years oid, the mother of Dr. Robert D. Scofield of No, 16 Lawrence stroet, Yonkers, N. Y. Was pinned in the wreckage and later taken to the Fordham Hospital, dying, her skull, both legs, shoulder, left elbow and right wrist having beew fractured. Dr. Scofield and the third momber of the party, Mra, R. A. Fessenden of No, 30 Florence street, Yonkers, were thrown clear of the wreck. Mrs. Fessen. den, it was feared at first, had ouf> fered a fractured skull in addition te numerous contusions and lacerations. At the hospital this ‘morning, hew+ ever, it was said ahe would recover, Dr. Scofield suffered contusions of the chest, body and legs, and may be in- ternally injured. ‘The acene of the accident is lonely one at night and it would heve taken @ hospital ambulance a long time ¢o Fes spond to a call. However, just When Mra, Scofield was lifted from under the automobile another car driven end owned by D. M. Levy of No, 125 Weat Twenty-fifth street came up and carried the wounded to the hospital The motorman of the car which the automobile was Joseph Keone No, 162 East Eighty-seventh street and the conductor was John Murphy of No, 4 Bast 01 undred and Twenty-<fth atreet. They declared that Dr, Scofteld had suddenly driven his car around one of the heavy, wide pillara that supported the Broadway y structure, which at this point Is elevated. ‘The post completely hid the automobile the motorman said, until it veered out and then there was no chance of eves cutting down the speed of either car. IS YOUR SKIN ON FIRE? MERE 18 A RELIABLE WEALING APPLICATION FOR SOZEMA, ‘Try thie Remedy at Our Risk. “If I could only get relief from this terrible itching I would give anything,” said an eczema sufferer the other day. It was very easy for us to advise in such matters now, for our new remedy (Saxo Salve) for skin dis- eases of all sorts, stops the itching right away. But better than that it makes the skin healthy “ in, It is made so ag to penetrate right into the skin and saturate every portion with its heal- ing, germ: ying power. Even in a few days you can eee that Saxo Salve is soon going to clear the eruption. fo other skin remedy can do so much for you as Saxo Salve. It is guaranteed, If it docs not satisf; 'y you when used for any skin disorder we give back your money. ~OVAUP OF FIGS," when the sour bile, clogged up waste and poisonous matter have been gent but thoroughly aren on and Fare your system, without nausea, or weakness, Your head will aes plexion rosy, breath sweet, stomach regulated; no more constipation, gases, pains and aches, your stomach, liver and bowels clean and regular. ‘Then you will always be well-—ulways look and feel your beat, But get the genuine—the old reli able. Ask your druggist “Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna.” Refuse, with contempt, the so-called Fig Syrups sometimes substituted to fool you, The true, rf nul lifornia Fig > nt bears the name AP Company; look For Standard Quality Domestic Rugs AnO Over 1,000 Wiltons and (Maay Oriental verstock Purchase Extraordinary 9x12 Feet Axminsters Reproductions) $21.50 and 17.50 Respectively Other Sizes in Proportion Sheppard Knapp & Co, 39-41 West 23d Street | ] | | | ]