nV v 'i-:Jm rll: V. ffx'v-vj') 4 SwVfr& ' Mm .h - - f iffFriil VVf "f.iV4iL H w4r J ''Is' r i-i ! fa M 'Jut? tth f f3 1-.41 iin m ri ?! . .'vr.. ! ?v: to .? WWW J I i-S s . TSf.K!nww WWW II' Phtvs r Ml' :f fit- A,vt a r tip. -4. j i?v - J j; I 'J;P III . 11.1 "" ' n w 1 r. J : i p il V. 1 I -:i A Back View of the Cot, Shewing the Arrangement of the Hood One of the New Full-Length Fur-Trimmed "Suit Cot,' With the OM-Fuhioned Fur-Trimmed Hood 'Xuce" Models) A Charming Mid-Winter Coat That Com- binet the Charm of the Walking pre With U.efulneat. Thlt Ha One of the New Hoodt Which Can Be Slipped 0er the Hat By Lady Duff-Gordon ("UUCIUE-J HERE I show you a couple or tne new coau with hoods. The largest figure li a roomy, com forUbla and oeful garment, which, at the same time, hat all the charm of a walking dress. Notice the arrangement at ribbons m front The hood can, If It is desired, be dipped entirely orer the charming little "topper" and then these ribbons tied in place around the face. The little picture show a back view ot this same coat and reveals how the hood falls when sot in use. The last photograph 1s one of the hood coau with the hood to place. This Is one1 whole combination coat, shaped somewhat like a suit la this climate It Is true that only occeetonally do you have use for hoods la walking, but when you do need them you seed them badly. Oa the other hand, these garments are wonderfully adapted for motoring or for any outdoor sports .la Winter. . , As In all of women's clothes, there le a determined effort toward Individu ality In the coats of the season. No longer is a coat simply a coat to be thrown on as necessity demands look ing like ten thousand other coaU. It Is a creation eomethlng that while useful, must also be 'beautiful, and, as I have said, Individual. ' One new coat of valour cloth, In that deep warm brown tinged with gold and just warmed, tv, with a touch ot red Nature's trium o( tlatlng la wall flower, bloesome having been taken aa a model by Art has Just a great collar LADY DUFF-GORDON, As Tamou. "Lucile" of London, and iott ' mott creator of fashions in the world, writes each week the full ion ar ticle for iiis atwapapcr, pretenun all thai is aewett and best in styles far well dressed women. Lady Duff-Cordon's Paris ettsMuhmeai brings her into clote touch with that centre of fashion. Lady Duf-Cordoa's Apitrican eitab Bihmesh are at Hot. 37 and 39 West Fifty-seventh street, New York, and Ne. 1400 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago. and deep cults ot beaver and pompon buttons to match at the neck and on the wide belt Next, a bottle freen valour actually dispenses with fur altogether, its hfcfh ' collar being kept la position, high about the wearer's chin, by two big amber buttons, and the belt taking the quaintest one-elded curve In front after baring been carried In a high point al most reaching to the collar at the back. To make up for this deprivation, how ever, another model of dahlia purple valour measures no less than four and a half yards at the hem. and Is there bordered with a twelve-wh band ot seal musquash. "Some" trimming, this! And "some" bill to be paid by the woman who eventually owns and wears It or the husband who "owns" the wearer! A quaint scheme there Is, too. In a coat of purple valour, which la deeply bordered at the hem with a band of seal musquash, though Its encircling career la divided and disguised at the Sides by a wM, loosely hanging panel ot plain cloth, beneath which the waist band le alee assed. Caffs and collar, too, there are of the same adaptable and satin-soft fur, which is put to final and effective use for the making of pompon buttons. By the way, the same model looks well in soft green relour and mole fur. Another and quite pleasant possibility for the woman who wantsor Is rather compelled to be economical Is the coat of ponyskln cloth, which Is such a real litre and. Incidentally, raln-reslstlng substitute for the actual fur, skunk or opossum being generally used for Its trimming, and being Its worthy match, aHke In effectiveness snd economy. Then, as regards the fur coats, their very latest and most decorative devel opment Is a full length and, of course, full skirted affair of seal musquash, which shows the somewhat uncommon contrast of the gray squirrel In the high collar and the wide banding at the hem, a narrow bett of the soft gray fur being also Introduced at the side seams and fastened In front A broadtail model gives further proof of the new favor for this very eenslble and smart length, which. In addition to being more protective. Is also mora be coming to the average figure than the full three-quarter coats, which display a few Inches ot skirt also full and ihort-and by this same "cutting make the least. Instead of the most of the wearer's actual Inches. In this case and coat the contrast fur for the trim ming Is a silky soft black fox, which forms a flounce above the hem, and also a curious and very pretty collar carried high np at the back and sides, and then curving .sharply downward la front !i where, however, the broadtail U but' toned closer nP to the tnroa.1. CaajtliSI. Mia. a la reaintiv. Oreal Brtlsla Blasts aWet'sd. How You Can Tell When There's Something Wrong With Your Nerves By Dir. Leonard Hirshberg, A. B., M. A., D. WHEN a doctor Is unable to put the blamp upon the true Inwardness of a disease, he often tells you the patient Is "only nervous," has "neurasthenia," Is "neurotic," suffers with a "func tional nervous malady," Is afflicted with "nerves" or "Imagines" things. If you go to tweoty doctors, an' each in turn tells you that your a y, ment is something of this sort, & iy I, go to a twenty-flrst or even a fiftieth until you find a physician lio Is capable of telling you hon estly what Is, actually the matter with yoti. Socrates set the pace for such carelessness, when he said, "See one promontory, one mountain, one sea, one river, and see all." As a mat ter of fact, there are no two things alike tinder the sun, and Individuals, like diseases, all differ. There are, however, many real maladies ot the nerves, brain and spinal cord. Ffb, moreover, has a name fir more exact titan the words "nervous." "neurotic" or "neurss ihenlc " Many doctors are like Juries. Thev Ignore the foot-rules and yard sticks, which are at' hand to give a precise measurement of a brain or nerve disease, and Instead, use some Inaccurate standard, such as the length of your arm or the first joint of the thumb. In other words, it a man tells them he Is sane or le nervous, they are keen to agree with dim instead of applying the meas urements which knowledge has liven Recently a paranoiac demanded to be taken fro man Insane hospital snd tried before a Jury as to his sanity Psychiatrists who know the tests which reveal paranoia pro nounced him a paranoiac. Para noics are dangerous to those . around, for they are very skilful In concealing their delusions. (Johns Hopkins University). But the Jury said he was sane and set him free. Three days later the "sane" man killed a mother and her three children. This Is not unusual. The popular opinion ' is that a person must either "peculiar," "eccentric." In a fine frenzy, maniacal or melancholic to be crazy. Strange as' It may seem, the most dangerously insane persons do not have their Intelligence disturbed a hit. The hidden, unspoken delusion ot vengeance upon unknown or strange persons Is nursed, arranged and -directed with the stcill and fore thought of a great executive. David Oraham Phillips and President Will lam McKlnley were shot by such maniacs. Real disorders of the nerves, how ever, cannot be so successfully con- reeled as lunacy. The difference between the doctor's guess that you are a "neurasthenic" or "bundle of nerves" snd the actual affection ot nerve tissue Is open and above board. True Injury to the nerves Is shown by twitching of the muscles. There may be tremors when the muscles sre In motion or when at rest. There are flblllary 'waves over the tongue. There Is a tendency of the eyes to be crossed or one eyelid to droop more than another. The eyes may be abnormally bright or dulL The handwriting exhibits vibrations and oscillations. Light flashed Into the pupils of the eyes falls to contract them. Dark ness ,hss no effect to make them dilate. If a crack across the front of the knee falls to make the leg Jerk. It means serious changes In the sense nerves or -the beck of the spinal cord. Locomotor ataxia, diabetes, lead poisoning, alcoholic poisoning and paresis are a few of the nerve degenerations whioo a' "wse symptoms. When the tongue Is poked out'and poes . more to one side than the other; when you can laugh only on one side of the face: when one arm or leg Is shorter, shrunken or slight ly, doubled up: when the 'gait be comes .' changed real disorders ' of the nerves are present. A stamping gait: keeping the eyes always on the ground: rigidity and stiffness in the muscles; facial paralystr; telegraphers', piano play, ers'. writers' and typists' finger and hand palsies; strokes of paralysis;! drop-foot all these are due to nervt changes. But many of the alleged "nervous attacks." neurasthenias, and the large host of 'so-called neurotic and Imaginary or functional nervous disturbances have no more .to do with the nerves, brain and spinal cord than they have to do with the tone or gristle. Such maladies are caused by chemical eubstances, one of which Is called dl-lodo-dl-hydroxy-fndol,' Just discovered by Professor Ken-' dall, the physiological chemist, as' the source of activity of the magical thyroid gland. When these cheml cals from the thyroid, thymus, ad renal and other of the many human glands flow too freely or too abua dantly, or. on the other hand, to slightly, odd feelings and surglngs, overpowering emotions rush like torrents upon the senses, and you' sre undone and not yourself until they are corrected. This new discovery of Professor Kendall, who Is the Isboratory man at the great Mayo brothers' clinics. Is expected to lead very shortly to the Invention of chemistries that! will not only cure doctors of wrong M blaming the nerve for so-called "neurasthenia." but will also curei the victims of these emotional drj rangemenu.