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T POLICE MSPEETOR CLAD IN DSSSE SES MAN KNFED Out Seeking Adventure in Har- oun-al-Raschid’s Fashion, He Finds It, AFTER A COCAINE SHOP. Hurls Negro to Sidewalk, but the Victim May Die. Tm that Bagdad of the New World whioh lies across the bridges which lead to the City of @ Thousand Sleepa—Will- jamaburg the Blossed—the soul of Ha oun al Rasohid tranemigrated last nig! into the abbreviated, rotund body of the Caliph, John Murtha Bey, who ts chief oMoer of the janissaries of the Tenth Vistrlot under Waldo Pasha. About the time the muezzins should ve been glorifying Allah froin tie ‘ousetops of Williamsburg the Blessed ‘ne thought came to Murtha Bey that never had there been given to him the ight of his domain from the eyes of a mmon person, or even from those of Janissary of lesser degree. Wherever h@ had gone he considered his robes of ‘Mice had given to the unlawful rabble ‘ warning in advance; wherefore he setermined he should go forth into the sreets in an impenetrable disguise hich should suggest no buttons of | *ass nor shield of gold. While the silence which precedes the inding of the midnight bell in Wille Msburgh the Blessed was obtaining, @ &eed Agure slipped from the rear gate < the house of the Janissaries of Her- rt street. Over the eyes of the fgur hich was abbreviuted and rotund, en as that of Murtha Bey, was pulled hat of felt. lowly the figure stole through the rted thoroughfares, avoiding the shied market places where the torches i commerce flickered, possible tes and mindful not | flushing of the assassin’s| Vidnight steel. | In Lorimer «treet, te the Palace * Amusement conducted at No, 168 by « Person of Italian persuasion, the tigure ight the shedows of an overhanging soorway, and there remained, drinking a the Spirit of Adventure, "There eume wently Janissary fooney of the Clymer street house, winging his tasseled wand of off AN ORDINARY BLUECOAT HOLDS UP THE INSPECTOR, Seeing the figure in the doorway, the| anlasary ayprovcied and cried roughiy:| On, rrwamuitin dog of th gutter, ‘ere place you in a dungeon.” Do yeu not know in ne| ture. “1 win Murtha Bey | G'wan, y'souse,” answered the Jan-| sary Mooney, in the quaint idiom of | ut?” echued the Grnouse so that the Light caughe , eh oun . Tam waten- uurred a soming had sro wa ad, beh Pain Inspector Mu 4t the ann which Just too ! y preven Ading {ito the back of the une ju the knife descended! MMspector Wes in ting | bore the nex o assass n| id heard es off wan, came hurry nee. The injure to say he was n District Ho: : is feared, Harry Mitche! o: », 115 Lorimer street, the assailant, | ut to the Chemer street. station custody of Moone 4dr Martha, having deel iv the night the wetehing of cocaine sand the playing of Harou end, went to the Herbert street ice station AMERICAN WOMAN SUICIDE WHILE STOPPING IN ROME. Mirs. Pfister, Fo merly Miss Lough | lin of St. Louis, Was Hope. | | lessly Sick. OM Nov Mrs, Carlos Pfiste w fe of Lieut.-Commander Phat of the an navy aud naval attache at th ul in Washington, com- tted suicide here to-day while de- nident over in able iliness, Mrs. Paster was formerly Miss deste ighlin of St. Louls. HE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5 1912, Arthur Stringer Wants Men to Swat Women’s Hats With a Stone Hatchet “It Is the Woman Who Imagines She Is Highly ed That Is Bar- baric,”” Says the Poet and Critic of Morals— “The Higher Woman Mounts the Social Lad- der the Closer She Gets to Her Primitive Ances- tors.”” “She Adorns Her Body the More With Animal Skins and With Plumes Taken From Bird. ? and She Also Becomes More Inured to Partial Nudity.” Copyright, 1912, by the Pre: BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH ing World Mr. Stringer sums up for ny Evening World readez who cares to undertake the task will be welcomed as the advocate of the defense, If you find a wenk link in the chain of the prosecution, write to me and point it ont, If yon egree ith Mr, Stringer that Woman in essentially sav: ia soul cs well aa in the wrappings of her body, sst your wits to work to releago the new Andromeda from her hidcous bondage. Mr. Stringer calls for 9 new Zincoln in petti- coats to emancipate the slnvens cf fashion, Maybo ho means you? We muet have some other of fashioa than atfil one sugseste] by the p 1 beauty strike. trcceed without 1 unlon—and Ww pra ou “rede nbershlp BEAUTY UNION COULDN'T GET ANY RECRUITS. Besides what really pre woman would care to ns to Beg itty Union? 4 Het of the rarest and y in the unl ve wants t kno che tender yg aniaa, Woman Has In -4-— yposed Fashion Are fashions for women bar- barous? Woman, the trembling prisoner at the bar, appears to an- | swer an indictment drawn by Mr. Arthur Stringer, author, poet and stern critic of our times and morals. | We know that it is a distinct ad- vantage to the quivering culprit to learn the worst in advance, to hear definitely how many gunmen have confessed, and what the contents of the damaging affidavits may be. With this idea in mind and with the realization that few women would care to plead guilty to bar- barism under a suspended sentence which is what I would do if I had only myself to think of—I have per- suaded the prosecuting officer to out- line his case. To-day in The Even- the prosecution, Is to elevate the average at the expens* of the unique. Why hould the woman with brains and eyes and taste per- suade r women to dress simply and becomingly? Why shouldn't she survey the frenks and follies of fashion and say, More power to them! Then is she rarer, lovelier, more charming —more different, more herself, and less everybody else. Let's cheer for the brotherhood of man as | much as you Mke—if yon do like it—but let's oppose the sisterhood with onr last gasp. le, of course, it w Sherman Anti- Maxine Elliott and Lilian and other selfish mous shritude will be ordered to dissolve—or discovered th w forthwith a else to sp) ves over for! eight states, ybe a stern jurist will fine th 1,000, But until thes | things happen | defend whatever we have of individual charm or beauty against all rivals—and don’t let's organ- lize or strike to make anybody any less | foollsh or any p As Mr. Stringer suxgests, mpetition ix alr the race it is is tragi on Herself, Says Mr. Stringer It's th ¢ lized ow ty “ ines e's highly civilized. The h jounts the social Indder, t 1 ie gets Cait Imitive ance with ania skins, with me- via and brig dug from tie h rds, Jeo becomes more inured to partial nudity, She accepts bodily distortion without protest. She returns to fetichisia, Iuxurtat- ing in the rites of those two trng- edies of modern ilfe which may be esiguated as Fashion and profes- sional Society. Ske lapsca back into abvoziginal crucities, ignoring the source of her aigrette, calmly wearing an opera cloak made up of the #kins of eighty ermin ry one of which died of slow torture You suggest that Fasiion has been nposed upon wom I reply that she s impored it on herself, She took the furs and feathers off man, early in the veo, amd left n to make good by nard work, As he more and more be came a specialist in} she more | ACCURATE, | ELECTION —IN THE— Morning World To-Morrow GET THE NEWS FIRST, IN THE WORLD | COMPLETE RETURNS nd more acquired the parade {nstinct. ‘This parade instinct, In nature, lasts ouly through — the rtship period Woma s extended tt over her whole he has She professionalized her has made ornamenta- the main issue of life. Tue vu splendor with her has become so that now, to achleve distinetl has to glitter @ little more than her bor, or acknowledge herself beaten at che only game that twenty centuries have really taught her, |NO DISGRACE IN BEING BEAU- TIFULLY DRESSED. But js there any particular disgrace in cing beautifully dressed? No, the greatest disg: }to a woman is not to be beautiful. Hut there's where the tragedy of the whole vex situation Hes, Primitive woman had t» charm man to win him, Me needed later on, to scrape ‘corn and cook his bear the cave tidied up. to do more than nt vides and grind meat and keep Modern woman has darm man to win him e race for mates—and it has grown nto a tragically flerce race! she has to hold him, and hold him by her charm, even after the inating ordeal, for inan has made machinery to take most of ber oldtime work away from her, and she isn't yet essential to his economic existence, She has to please him or pass on, He has become more critical, more MMecult to stimulate, So every string the sex harp has to be over-strummed. | IV's ike a Une of hurdy-gurdies playing against each other, of Coney Island ballyhoos all shouting for the next comer ‘What we want ts an anti-nois crusade in the matter of dre | mnstend of getting hysterical over | Suffrage, and smashing windows and having hunger strikes, some really thoughtful women shonia start a beauty strike, They should refuse, I mean, to let Iman faced thelr vanity. ‘They should | form a woman's denuders’ league, sud boyeott the male who had anything to do with the old-fashioned woman who It's ke a row Cversornaments herset. They sDOUld pos Coome », Cough Deepeeshe yeas thing, "SBE TOOK THE FEATHERS OFF OF MAN" ce that can fall | Publishing Co. (The New York World.) ! PARTIAL NUDITY ] { Ay se a be De Di te De De tM Dee De et et ete PNre [astions [Mor [fjomen [FaRBaRous? Pebble Helelelok SEVENTH ARTICLE OF A SERIES of “INURED TO “HER WaIsT-LINE GOES UP AND Down ' xA-s LUKE a BAROMET | JHE MODERN GUE, “ FESTOons HERSELF With LIES* to Nberere | find @ Lincoin in petticoa “Swat the fly’ into the more altrutstic SEM RUBBER TURE “NTHROAT ATER -—SHETRES TOE Surgeons’ Quick Work Saves Life of Woman Who At- tempts Suicide. GAS TURNED ON, TOO. ! Husband Finds Despondent Wife Near Death When He Arrives Home. A plece of rubber tube, out from a stomach pump and sewed into windpipe of Mrs, Loulse Amory Newell by surgeons who worked over her has tly in her apartment before rushing her to a hospital after her attempt at self devtruction, may save her iife, At the J. Hood Wright Hospital it was said early to-day that she was “doing very well” and had a chance to recover, The plece of rubber tubing was replaced by a bit of allver pipe after her arrival at the hospital, She will «9 the rest of her life, 1f she lives, with the silver tube in her windptpe. Mrs, Newell, the wife of Frederick 1. Newell, resident manager of the Birm- ingham Iron and Locomotive Company, cut her throat, slashed her wrist and turned on several gas jets in her en- deavor to Kil! herself in her apartment in Palisade Court, . WL West One Hundred and Thirty-ninth street, yester- day afternocn, Mrs. Newell ts thirty-three and pretty. She comes from Chattanoogi Tenn. where she was married to Mr. Newell ten years ago. For about a year she ha been Interested in Christian Sclerce. HER FROM MELANCHOLIA. Poor health, Mr. Newell thinks, ex- | the} BURNED AND ALONE, AGED WIDOW LIES UNAIDED 10 HOURS Although Eighty-Five Years Old, She Managed to Put Out Flames. HER INJURIES ARE FATAL. She Had Been Anticipating a Good Old Fashioned Thanksgiving Day. For ten hours after receiving burns that probably would prove fatal to a strong, healthy person half her age, Mrs. Margaret Kabel, eighty-five years old, lay unconscious, alone and unald- ed, In her room at No, 6% Gates ave- nue, Brooklyn. To-day she ts in St. John's Hospital and the doctors say sho will die. When Mrs, Kabel, who Je the widow of a civil war soldier, and Mved on a overnnient pension, made preparations to retire about 9 o'clovk last night the room was cold and she lighted a small Gan stove that stood on a table, Barlter, while reading, she had thrown a Turk- ish towel about her shoulders to keep off the chill, As she stooped to pick up something near the stove the towel caught fire and in an inatamt her clothing was in flames, ‘The thin gar- mente that clothed the upper part of her body were consumed and her hair was burned from her head. Despite her a Mra, Kabel ts very tive, and she fought vigorously to ex- |tinguish the blaze, She succeeded and then collapned, falling on her bed. Fora TRIEO FOR MONTHS TO ROUSE | few ininutes she screamed with all her remaining strength, but her cries were feeble and other persons in the thou! did not hear her, ‘Then @he lapsed tnto plains the melancholia which has pos- sessed his wife for several months, He tried every method to draw her from that state. As much time as he could conscientiously spare fsom his bur! he spent at his home. For every eve- ning he devised a plan by which he hoped to restore Mrs. Newell to cheer- fulness, ‘The Newells went to the theatre Satur- | them from the slavery of over-dres cry of “Swat the hat!" Some such|, gunday. Yesterday morning Mr. You ask if it isn't men who make|demonstration of antediluvian manners| Sewell thought he saw a change for the | fashions for woman? Precisely. While; might awaken woman to the fact of| better, for his wife w Ny Just how barbaric she still | | Woman has been so busy being pretty for the last few centuries, man has been making himself a specialist. He's be: come the best of hotel housekeepers, the best of root growers and weavers and cooks and metal workers and cave builders and hide dressers. He even imposes his ideas of fashion on women. No woman of fashion wears what she really wants to wear, She wears what some thoughtful gentleman over in Waris desires that she shall desire to wea WOMAN'S WAIST LINE NEVER | STAYS PUT. | Her watst line goes up and down like | a barometer, and she has no more con- trol over {t than the barometer has over the weather. She 1s so wanting in Personal stability that a mode maker three thousand miles away can arbi- —— In increasing sexual allurement ornamentation woman has increased her leceptive instincts, She has made her- elf the queen of dissimutators, | _ She festoons herself with lies. She makes her head-dress tell a way! To-day, for instance, stable went and took John 1 the lines that God gave her. She lies to man, and man knows it. Me also knows that she is lying for he finds it easier at the station. elther side of the tongue. it also keeps a goodly number of males sie Figg nlite : Just young Mr, in very 1 i ‘. iis friend were passing the along Fifth a€enue will persuade YOU. |house, where the chemical POOR WOMEN TRY TO IMITATE | hook THE RICH ONES. And the mention of Fith avenue|@t the corner of Courtlandt and Clin- night, while the votes ar and bis wife, Anastasia, were found brings up another point, It may be|ton streets, about a mile away, Consta- | counted to » wiiein it will be | dead from aspyhxtation tn their flat on jclaimed that this overfrenzied parade | ble Charley k ny, he was standing | Wilson Roosevelt, under the Vanclies street, Jersey City, to-day, by Jénstinct exists only with the woman of|Pikht In front of the house, and he|root of the Hotel Manhattan twelve-year-old Bertha Schram, wealth, with the Fifth avenue type who did some quick figgerin', Wittam Howard ote ws “A of iAeut. Allen, who was passing, sum- \ther tolls nor spins, But the tragic! “All the reg'lar horses 1 out doing |Tresident, and Mi and Mrs Cooke W. mong Dr, Maurer, who examined the nart of the whole thing is that the Third|¢lection work behind spring buggies + Porat differs i dinner rie bie ‘bodies and sald the Coffeya had been javenue woman wants to be lke that) Charley says to himself, “and they ain't!" S00) part, Mise Helen Taft and others, (ead since midnight, Investigation Fifth avenue woman, It's the Ideal/enough to pull the apparatur, 6o-— jill" e the guecia of Chairman Charles, sowed a broken cook on a new gas toward which she yearns, ‘The shop| “Hey there!" he yells to young Mr. |} Ot the Republican National | Move and the position ot the bodies in girl studies her and out of her fruga! | Iock er, “Whoa up! I want to talk |< Mrs. Hilles, The Per | dicsted thet Mrs. Coffey had awakened | i ts partic business h you.” Net rena ae ost and hoste it a) When nearly overe had tried te favings tries tO Freres her magnite eo course, Old Man Rockefeller'a son Progressive dinner part y arouse her husband and while attempt Sence, The factory sir! ready about her! whoas up ‘and Constable Charley he|ccosioe Bate Chairman, WW. H. Hotens| Ing to open a pw had fallen un and makes her “Sunday best" an tml-| goes out and puts his hand on Kika, Ana MPR: TLOESH wii} alsy en- conscious, Coffey waa forty, hin wif tation of the avenue grandeur, The wheel, Fis Se tire cen ieeeale | wife of the suc wful tradesm, oft 1 the name of law,” #aye Char- Middle West grates to Manhattan to! ley ‘get down off that there seat and) be able to eat in her neighborhood and} help unhiteh your bays We need m | Jgence. And so it goes on down the| “But I haven't got time,” says young Rockefeller, I got to be out home di [You say: “What is man going to do|Fe yt Comes From about it? horses even If we have to arrest you to} a nat feeling ts that man ought | get ‘em, Charley speaks up right pert ' adopt militant methods of|then and helps unhitch. He satd he’ t| the suffragetic, resort in his helpless-{drive his own team to the fire, to strenuous methods tw attract | nd some of the firemen a tion to an evél waleh the other sex | !” iM w the regular driver, w r] | refuses to acknowledge, It aff iret me pee: § ompetent to drive t Once convinced that woman te | Qi he ull barbaric, every earnest-minded | , a man should prin himself with a Hina P | stome hatchet, ‘Them he shoud | in PONrih Bt The Chocolate Laxative haunt Fifth avenue, The PR ait ee Sains ROS Em) -TOEr -O78r8y Rutherford, N. part Relieves Both Allments at Once woman, the same as women bave fy or sig playmates Sulla been swatting his window glas nov Charles was swin Ex-Lax is a pleasant, gentle and positive remedy for all condi- ae a eeu ur eres oes Sere tions of biliousness, bad digestion and constipation. put out the blaze he a) Do Not Take the ‘‘Just as Goods.” | ert eI ARTE BI ARTHUR STRINGER, WHOA! YOUNG JOHN D | GIVE UP YER BAYS; WE NEED "EM FOR A FIRE And, By Cracky, the Constable Unhitches ’Em and Drives ’Em Off! D. Rockefeller folks up Pocantico Hills fectionate and her mood remarkably different from that of recent day: when the Janitor, Risenhold Rescheke, floor, He called to the elevator boy, and after determining that it came from the jewell apartments they decided to not- ify Policeman Ke: for the policeman Mr. Newell arrived. ‘There are two entrances to the apart ment, Mr. Newell used the one leading from the vestibule. He opened the door and then, inhaling the gas fumes, feil against tne woodwork of the doorway with @ ery. HAD CUT THROAT AND WRIST WITH RAZOR. He found his wife in a coma tn the bathroom, She was altting up. Gas trarily narrow her hip line and then as arbitrarily broaden ft, the same as you flowed trom an open Jet stove her open and Raid cancer sna on ity Isn't 1t rough the way these Tarry-| wrist deeply lacerated. Mr, Newell's im rene Bian Uke Me. BOR Ohh EAU town officials keep pleking on the Join} razor was near her right nand. She was dressed, Mr, Newell, in hia anxtety, quickly * @ SOM) Kound @ towel around his wife's throat, », Junior's | pr, Chalmers Sangree of No, 671 Weat spanking team of bays away from him and hitched ‘em onto a hook and Iad- down from the Rockefeller home place at Pocantico Hills to pick up a friend He had his ght run- | about instead of his big French car and the sake of man, so two of the he goldurndest, fine orsel ‘o overlook ‘her weakness along thl8) i114 rbioners they oR Ine, 1t accentuates his masterfulness ‘ Rockefoller and cades the | and ladder trucka are, the alarm | sounded for a@ little chimney fire down ty ned Je died at his home yestorday morn is One Hundred and Thirty-ninth street, answered a sunmons in @ hurry an Me, her ronge-box Hes for her, her ‘der truck to make the run to whero a} When he loomed Ine cone he dla limb drapery is a Me to hide ae chimney was cutting up over in North | jer windpipe Gene Getta ae ae ae Tarrytown. When Dr, Dictens arrived from J, eels are a Ue about. her Ae it eae ven] Hood Wright Hospital, Dr. Sangree took her corseted figure is w lle as to Id eer ene ve"| his stomach pipe and forced air. into the woman's lungs. Then the amou- lance surgeon started to remove her to the hospital, but when she was lifted she choked, #0 the cut across her throat nd to her windplpe had to be sewed temporarily in the apartment. MRS. TAFT IN THIS CITY. Hears Re fo-nicht Und ir Same ff with 1) Moone | 08 ta Di TORTI. PLE ERE eins While the elevator boy was looking | unconsctousness, | Tt was 7.90 this morning before Mra. Kabel awakened, She was suffering ex- ating pain, her f% arms and back nk covered with blisters, ‘The aged | woman fell out of bed and then crawled {along the floor to the door which she lopened only after she had worked at the knob for several minutes. She day night and to the organ recital given | (raged herself along to the head of the | with hls at the College of the City of New York | #tairs and screamed for help. This time | his cough ts ‘nearly | her eriex were heard on the floor below. | Mrs. George Barnett, the landlady, was notified of Mra. Kabel'a plight, and she ‘allied an ambulance, women in the affering. Mrs, Par {and the pension ahe received was auf- flctent for her to pay her own way, | Only yesterday the widow had talked | (0 thre landlady about her quarterly pen- ston, which was due to-day. A good | part of 1t was to be put aside for a rol jold-time Thanksgiving dinner, Mra, | Kabel said, | — ee SIEGFRIED BEHRENS DEAD. PHILADELPHTA, Nov, 6.—Slagtried Behrens, dean of Philadelphia must- clans and prominently connected in past years with many operatic ventu died at his home here to-day. He was seventy-two years old, In 187 he began traveling with the Max Strakosch-Adelina Patt! Concert Company, ‘Later he began at Chicago Ms reer am an operatic conductor with the Caroline Riching# Opera Com- pany, and continued when that organ- {zation combined with the Prepa Rosa | Comp my. He organized @ company | headed by Christine Néleson, Patti and Victor Maurel, which sang “Atda’ In this country for the firet time, Mr Hehrens served as looal manager for the Metropolitan Opera Company, rr GAS KILLS MAN AND WIFE. Defect in New Stove Results in ‘Their Death, | Patrick Coffey, assistant foreman at [the Lehigh Val Railroad pier on Black Tom Island, near Communipaw, Ex-Lax Keeps the Whole Family Healthy Try a 10 Cent Box To-day. At All Druggists while the other house did what they It was just after 6 o'clock lust evening | Could to alleviate the widow's tt sald she didn't know if caught a strong odor of gas as he | Mrs, Kabei had any living relatives. She passed through the hall on the ground | had referred only to her soldier husband v _IS RISKY |To Have Clogged Nostrile | Have you a pain over the right eye, pains over the left eye, pains across the front of the head? Do you take cold easily, eneese a great deal? Do you sneeze until you be- come dizzy? Does first one nostril, then the other, close? Have you ® |discharge from your nostrils? Are |you losing your sense of smell? Do crusts form in your nostrils? Do | you sleep with your mouth open? Dees your throat feel dry, as if a horsehalf jhad lodged in it? Have you a dropping lodged in it? Have you e dropping in the throat? Do you have to be constantly clearing the throat? Is your hearing failing? Have you um- natural sounds in the ears? Age those sounds like steam escaping oF like water falling? Do your ears feel like they were stopped up? Does the wax harden in your earat Do your ears discharge? 0 Have you pains in the chest? Have you soreness behind the breast bone? Have you etitches in your side? Have you a dull ache under the shoulder blades? Have you an Irritating cough? Do you spit up a tough, grayish ma- terial? Do you spit up a yellowish material? Do you epit up a dark brown, rusty looking material? ane . eat spreading trom the nostrils and throat inte the car tubes, and this will roby of your bearing, ‘onhers it indicates disease t ry i down into. the windpige and. Tung. tubes, iaoen, cant ahd pmeumont Tanga, cand meunonda and conaumption. Ifyou have aay the" sume of disease, in the nosteils you wt bout getting ridof them at once, it neglects Seateel wit come in one, consumption in Stee? My specialty is obstructed toa dais tat ead nolan and eating come places nthe breathing tubes ve . Mudyine Ue best wey to do thie Th can Bree the Rowtrila without cutting away the bone of Chua leaving the ‘nostrifs, those limportant eteete that were Created by wacure, (0 strain dit germe "out of the a Clogged Nostrils Cured | When Mr, kdwart W. Johnson first consulted fhe herald 1, have bed catarth, i my sostelle OF twenty-five years, I bad a cough thet bobite fred me a great empectally when I went ty pale wea: ded. My appetite failed. 1 got = My ‘nostrils closed taht two years ago and 1 bed to breathe through my mouth, 1 took cold wita every change of weather and coughed all winter. “'{ saw where you cured Jeffries of closed, mas tile and thought maybe you could help Since Dr. treated Mr, Johnson Lad ports that his per ag oy 15 and mouth closed. ih He gets imp in the mornin sixty-one years ‘of age and resides treet, Brooklys, ARE YOU OING DEAF? 1 hare made bead ‘nitses aul deafiiens portant one, My discovery does away with Recemity of passing instruments “into the tubes, whieh measures have proved unsatisfactory, are painful, and instead of curing the disease have often forced it further up into the ear, be shown in the cua of Mr, Wh W. BR. Brown first consult me le salt"? sdy hearing has teen bod since 186" More eral after | first became hard of hearing began to notice noises in my eam, my rigt ear were like the tapping of a bell, he poise “in ay” left ear was like bees My hearing got so bad that people hed to very loud to me, and 1 woukl hai two or three times saying. You can Jou that io order tell whether it was under iat bis hear which while ts in the kite Tance of thir! feet, "tbe nolees which iy {rvubled him have disap , Hie aay, hears better now than he has since 4 Brown is 6) years of age aod resides a street, Brooklyn, F} hare it 1 lew York im 1879, I was the prize winn my class, 1 a competitive examination the position of ta Bellevue Hospital, were 1 served in The follo explain » with Prof, Loomlg will wing Intervie the me: thought of rn Work trila or are Ske abit” taake me a goed tooth, Tt Ficasel to have you walt ay office "Tt will oot Jou nothing for an examination and advice, it ‘sou ramide outside. of the city. weite 1 wall send you my latest book, just | _ DR. J.C. McCOY | 283 Flatiron Building | Broadway and 23d St., New York Hours Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 9 A. to PLM. | Tus . ‘Thursday and Baio eM Simday, 10 aM, to Ie Ms me and Clothes help to make a fellow @ “big bug.” People will always respect you mote if you keep right up to date in ress, onthe Clothes ace? en Women and lidren will give you the appearance of having had your clothes made t order because they are made by high grade tailors, Don’t Need Cash Just $1.00 a Week at either of our two stores. FULL LINE FURS, FUR COATS, Lenox®*e2"5 2274 3" Av.'7 wv. 14° St Bet, 1234 ih.) Bet. Sth @ th Ave,” Open Unt © ©, Me WHY IT |