The evening world. Newspaper, November 13, 1912, Page 3

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Barat orserrcesceeeraey aU oduceeineinede esr rT Een UUPEIp aaaqanulagrapeann SME -(SUSEDTOSIITGH Visiting: * Surgeons Sagene Yk ; ‘Clinic; to See Navel New } Method ‘Applied. SOME X-RAY “MOVIES.” rs rarrel Sews Together ~ Tay Blood Vessels, * & sewing machine was used this! Morning for stitching the stomach and) the tudisting toBether iu a pationt. At @ clinic in the German Hospital held by Dra, Wiley Meyer and Martin [ent- ing for the visiting surgeons’ to tho e1 Congress of Surgeons this latest dof neediework on the human) Wer demonstrated in an operation! ving « malignant tumor of the; t among sewing machine if Aooks like « polished “ to: h oop ot the Intestine. toxether. the tumor ‘was removed and part By the stomacii ‘opening was stitched, @ inestine was then stitched to the, a8ti ‘opening with the machine in & ni double row of stitches that\made the sutire; good and leakproof, since, the maphine does not dro} a care! seamstress would. The Je- vice drew much interest and admiration | frog? the visiting syrgeons, who crowded th@folinia. Amother ‘demonstration of delic: lework on living tissue, this t! and, was giver by Dr. Alexis mm ‘who recelved the Nobel prize. / “SARREL SEWS TOGETHER TINY BLOOD VESSELS. Ag the Rockefeller Institute this af- te iierBoon Dr. Carrel gave threy demon- ® strgtions of the. suturing of ing together sted .blood . vessels each about. 04 match stick ts thick. When he sees at orice that it requires @ Proficiency with the needle. yDr. Carrel has been practising so Jong Ga stitching together the’ veins of $oReOEthe man who in dropping a sor cut off the tip of his nose and y that of hie toe und got the pieces mixed ‘in replacing them would be jinterested in Dr George R. Stewart's citnic in Gt. Vincent's Hospital this afternoon. Dr. Stewart cut off a plece of ‘the ‘healthy bone tn the front of the leg of, ia patient and transferred it to the patient's’ arm in place of a piece of bone ‘which * was diseased, and which gh reronyee. The grafting will take eMfect.at once and in time bring about Dractically @ perfect cure for the arm bone “MOVIES” AND X-RAY . SHOW PROCESS OF DIGESTION. A conmination of the y and cine- matograph was demonstrated this after- noon ty, Dr. Lewis Gregory Cole at No, . avenue, to show to an audience 1S surgeons the action and ap- pearance of the stomach and intestine , Ageati Bismuth, which’ orb | up epadue Mm an X- introddeéa into the stomach of. a De- atent., ‘this ‘substance moved down along the stémach and thé intestines its ternoon, The attendan stems, too, has reached mueh ae the 2,500 surgeons who ready registered at the headquarters wt the Waldorf-Astoria are more ti hree times as m: as attended the wo preceding congresses. At the business meeting iret step toward an inte: tract of surgery was taken on the n pe umede by Dr. Franklin Martin} k “Bull 6qut Such @ great dy we Mterature is being brought out ery day inthe field of surgery that lor @ surgeon to keep up with, it un: aided would be a sheer imposmbillty. v0 ke several di mad it parts. of the world, f rated yesterlay is to co! various digests into one international N affair. ‘A nominating committee for-the con- aresp Waa clected, consisting of Dra, W. L, Cousing of Portia) Me, H. P. fewman of San Diego, Cal. anti F. A. fg esley ae at Chicago. Dr, W. Arbuthnot Lane, the noted London surgeon, invited the congress to (pgneet in London next year. Hie r o-night “Chropic Intestinal ‘Sta: xpected to bring out a record au pf medical mem and womei Papers i be read by Drs. Richard R, Smith 54 fate “Rapids, Mich., John G. Clark jelphia, Robert C. Coffey of Ore, and Joel B, Golathwait ye Boston—ali in the ballroom of the ‘eldort-Astoria. ‘A large party of surgeons vistited the javy Yard to-day on @ speci ug, to of the battleships and the hospitals day the | : (¥fom the Dahlonega (Ga.) Nugget.) ‘The. other day Uncle Peter Garret, the ditch walker, raised his foot and Now, home. When we Have people to ner {t isin ‘restaurants, whether my dining- room table is solid mahogany or 1 he Tiron Fag a x na N lolabalolaetoteley ca ffhom S= : HUMAN STOMACH “Man Would Still Be Living i ina Mud Hut If, Woman Didn’t Crave Beautiful Things’ MT ARTICLE bi} A SERIES Wouk This Times,” phonse.” of Bones K. 0.’ “Hurrah for the Dressed Woman! What the Business World Do Without Her? | She Helps to Keep Money Circulating and Makes Writes “Should the Fashions of | Our Grendmothers Be) Revited Most of the, Flat-Chested, Hipless'| Women of To-Day Would Look Like Bags | | ” Declares “H. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMIT HR. “Man woukd atill be living in @ mud hut if woman did not crave ; Deautiful things.” This is the text of a letter written in defense of the Well Geot'l “Al. oft i he ae OF THIS WAY (fF IT Wares “ALBONSE well-dressed woman by-s man reader of The Evening World. On the other hand a woman writes to me saying that her husband complains because she spends \too much on clothes. “You never buy anything for the house,” is his reproach—and she add enuously: “He got perfectly furtous.when I said: ‘What's the use of throwing away money on things that nobody sees. You can't take the furniture out walking with you!” This view that nothing but the spectacular pay8, that we live and dress more for the street and the casual admiration of the passerby than for our homes and relatives, iq suMciently widespread to warrant consideration. Im Now York many a wife pays more money than her husband earns in @ week for her tailor-made sait. And girls who earn $15 900 for thelr street gowns. day in'an pie wetting forth the: Queen ef. ‘de noe the worse for nows or car ts te ee her clothes—strest, onlt, $35. OUR WORKING GIRLS DRESS LIKE QUEENS. Admitting the greater cheapness of woollen materieis, labor, &c., in Eng- land the gown in' which Queen Mary takes her morning walk or drive is one which many. sil duplicates among us, York working Hero! is the letter of the\wife who thinks} beautifying the home super- fluous. She writes: HIS WIPf’Ss CLOTHES MEASURE A MAN'S SUCCESS. Dear Madam: Why do you encour- age men to reproach. their wives ‘e hard enough to with without being encour. aged in their grouches, complains that I spend all the money on things to wear, that I never buy beautiful for the ' house, rfectly furious when I, iy shotld I'waste money oh furniture? Tcan't take it out walking with me!'? You know perfectly well that a beautifully gowned wife Is the best advertisement an sabi Gous man can have. Wherever 6, ever she meéts, she ts, we ‘entertain very litt! Paris Evening Gowns and Wraps at Half Their Original Cost- * \ All our latest imported Models of Evening Gowns and Wraps, especially imported tor the Horse Show and Opera season, are offered at greatly reduced prices. Original models from Poiret, Worth, Callot,+Paquin, etc., value $125 to $350, ii Aine $50 to $1 75 Tailor-made Suits, value $75 to $200, French Model Hats, $10. Wéaisend Hernardl levevesesvecevsvssosesesevoesesee suesseveseseoreet shin MAKES LITTLE ‘DIFFERENCE : WHAT YOU ‘NEED— My fusband | don’t you think he is terribly un- reasonable? MRS. L. D. In view of this general Shari phastioe ot] What do, other women think of ‘tite Paying more for the letters of two mas- , one of whom criticises adversely the fashionable fi; HE THINKS WELL-DRES: ED ‘wo- MEN ARE NICE. Dear Madam: Hurrah for “the well-dressed women! What would the business world do without her? Bhe helps to keep money cl and this means good tim Mra," Calico pays for}: Let powder her nose if she wants to. Man would be living in a mud ‘hut If womaa did not crave beautiful things, By golly, she is nice! ALFONSE, WHAT WOMEN WOULD - LOOK LIKE IN OLD-TIME DRESSES. Dear Madam: Some time ago one of your women correspondents, in defending present fashions, inquired: “What woman would appear in the street in the low neck, short sleeves akirty worn by our should these sty for ved most of the iy ohe hipless women of to. would look ‘like es of vores” But our grandmothers, never wore uch gowns in the street. -H. K. 0. pis Tate Laat STRAIGHTS HAVE: BOY .BABY. Mr. ena ‘iMard ~ fara -D. Straight of No, 22 East Sixty-seyenth street are re: selving |conkratulations on ‘the grrival of;a.s0h, now a week old. Mother nnd eon ,ereGothg well. She was, Miss Dorothy Whitney, younger daughter of William C. Neier who inherited $1,- 000,000 from hii f ¥ ). Not» dentri ine “an. elaivor: she and, Mr, Btraight were q rhea tin Geneva, Switzerland, Sept. 18). c ‘They .returped from China, only re- cently to prépare for the visit of. tht stork, © Mr.) Straight was. formerly American Consul-General at _Mulden, Hie repfeaonted, In Chin financiers who were: ‘So wito swotjate. 7 M meric Paget is the new baby's Pi at this sale $35, to $100 New York 330 Fifth h Ave., A WORLD “WANT” WILL GO GET IT. Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New ‘York World). e American |. $300,000,000 loan China attempted to ne- WOMANS CRAVING For the BEAUTIFUL | | TO TRY-CHARLES H. HYDE ON'BRIBERY: CHARGE, NOV. 20. Justice Goff Grants ' District-Attor- * ney’ Whitman's: Motion in Case of Former, City Chamberlain, berlain, Nov, 2, before Justice Gat, in the ex- traordinary ‘term of the pret ourt, on the charge of bribery. Betore ‘thi of the gunmen opened this mornii trict-Attorney Charles Whitman ared’ before Justice Goff, and announced he had notified Mf. Hyde's attorneys that such @ motion be made to-day, None of Mr, Hyde's @ttorneys appeared in the court room whkn they were called for. Mr. Whitman immediately moved the trial for ‘héxt Wednesday, and his’ re- quest, accompanied by an aMdavit'iot notification 'to Hyde's Jawyers, was granted by Justice Goff. Mr. Whitman then mbved the election of @ special panel of 100 talesmen from the special fury let to try the case and this motion, too, Was granted by the Court, ea vase thal Nand ideally ther Freest: will go to trial Wednesday, Retort. GEYLON TEA | PUT. THE OTHER | FIFTEEN CENTS LIN, Ad BANK. . Ed Sa dy, wc Per’ au ce IT’S WORTH A ‘QUARTER TRY.IT ’ YoO WILL SAY 80 YOUNSELY. GROCERS SELL Ir. HENRY. HESSE, 320 Sixth Ave., 24-26 Ste. Charles H. Hyde,’ former City Cham- satirical young “how bea thing, to desk, “T don't want it!” borly Ie} pol on Mri One little pale-faced girl with a pre- woman would be if were as important as he fi .as she thinks she {i “T really don't know, young thing, while glow came into her often thought that if replied the fatr vd, glinting But Thave average man is, he would have such a contempt for himself served that for a-while ye: thought we would ‘have a regular Yoiae time blizaard. LONDON i ama > A i tt li jd il i" nm wilt ‘And Curl $3 75 “Garniture’—A complete and stunning feather trimming for. the season’s fashionable hats, combining a 32-inch | ostrich band with a prime plume drooping over back . , Regular Catalog Price $10.75 Clusters of three black feather tips Regular Catalog THE LONDON FEATHER CO. Largést Ostrich Plume Makers in the World Retail Dept., 21 West 34th Street PARIS 3 MR ELY DONT WAT) THIS BABY, SO.HE TOOK I |TOTHE POLE STATION 9 He Left It There, Too, as a io was humming @ sad litte tune when hy Court, slung the baby from under his right ann Michael Kelly's my name, of No. 99 Pearl street. Take the baby now and do with ft as the you'd like to have it yourself?" “Got a big family already,” lor. ‘Then Kelly marched out. The infant, tagged Exhibit A, or something of that ort, in Taylor's courtly fashion, was sent to the matron in the Adama street “Let us send around to the Kelly hou tain's directions found a walling woman “Shall we arrest Michael Kelly? asked Capt. O'Connor, » SALE OF PLUMES : Commencing to-morrow African Prime Quality French ‘SPECIAL SALE PRICES $Q75 $375 $498 REGULAR CATALOG PRICES 1,200 Suits. Reduced. Horse Show Models ‘ini’ the * + Stunning. New Materials Former Values: / $17.50, $20 and: $25 Now 10. | Foundling Till Mrs, Kelly Got Busy. came tnto the Adams Street Brooklyn, this afternoon ant Reduced to Thursday’s Sale $20.00 Small Jacket Suits,$10 $25.00 Ritz-Carlton Models, $10 $20.00.New Norfolk Suits, $10 $20. 00 Hussar Coat Suits, $25.00 New Cutaway Suits, $17.50 Two-tone Diagonals, $20.00-London Tweed Suits, $25.00 French Serge Suits; FREE Alterations ; Regardless of These Tremendous Reductions SALE AT ALL FOUR STORES. the top of Complaint Clerk ‘Taylor's he crooned. “Some ‘on my steps this morning. Ww provides, Maybe ald Tay- f ie Station downstairs, to fi jor. the boss of th hour (ater and vs ie $i tn Pearl street." he sald. $10 the steps at the address Kelly had “My baby, You'll do nothing of the kind,” said ‘s, Kelly. “I never sen? any of my T will atten: jars, The teacher had asked the to write an answer to the ques- It Is Easy ‘to Reastn . The Economy of ‘Buying At the Fischer Piano ene old face wrote this san We Guarantee A Saving of From $50 to $200 Fe oe ||| Pianos and nie Pianos = | 9185 to 91,500 ° Have you lakes Hot and ate Moate, Tasty. recery Slebes. Dressing dy Adding wn ‘ei ‘ ar . Pianos Exchanged Liberal’ Credit ti J. & C: Fischer Factory, ‘Salgsroom, 417 West. 26th : “Street, Near 9th Avenue, ae ci tes nt i i ull Hale jury Real & Novelty Laces Greatly Reduced sin Price Princess Bands and Edges, $1.00 to 4. so” per yard. Regular price $1.65 to 7.50; er yard. Novelty Lace Bande, 45c to $4.50 per ‘yard. Regular price 75c to $7.50 per yard. Net and Venise- Allovets, 60c to $3.75 Regular value 90c to $6.00 per yard. Real Bohemian Edges and Bands, $2.00 to6.50. Regular value$3.25 to $10.00 per yard. Bruge, Point Applique, Duchess and Rose Point Laces reduced 4 to 4% ‘Jarnes McCutcheon & Co., Sih Ave. & rash st. wala Feather Novelties ‘Two days calla Plumes, Extra Width $475 ‘ $g75 ‘$675 | 2 Drives Away || Headaches rw, $150 Price $4.50 ROASTED COFFEE “STRAWBERRY JAM | CANNED CORN | FRANCIS H. LEGGETT & COMPANY’ BUENOS-AIRES

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