Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 173, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1922 — Page 4

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The Indianapolis Times Earle E. Martin, Editor-tn-Chief. F. R. Pcters, Editor. Boy W. Howard, President. O. F. Johnson, Business Manager. Publlshed daily except Sunday hy The Indiana Daily Times Company. 25-29 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis. Member of thè Scripps-How arci Newspapere. Client of thè United Press, United News. United Financial and NEA Service and member of thè Scripps Nswspaper Alliance. Member of thè Audit Bureau of Circulations. bubseripUon Kates: Indianapolis—Tea Cents a Week. Elsewhero—Twelve Centa a Week. TELEPHONE —MAIN 3500.

For thè needy shall not always be forgotten; thè expectatlon of thè poor shall not perlsh forever.— Psalms 9:18. Racing Death T RAFFIO cops work in thè very heart of Constant danger. But you rarely, if ever, hear of a traffic cop being killed or even struck by an auto. There are two reasons for thts. Tbey are: 1. EJvery auto driver is more or less afraid of a uniform. He takes mighty good care not to hit thè policem&n in charge of trafile. Because thè driver is eautious, he does not run down thè trafile eop. 2. The trafile cop, in tura, is cautious. He obeys thè rules of thè road —does not step suddenly into thè pathos oncoming autos. Being cautious, he escapes injury. There you have thè solution of thè auto-accident problem. Elsewhere in thls issue, thè Times prints a news story revealing thè tremendous toll of auto accidents. The truth revealed by this story is horrifying—more ffian 11,000 Amerlcans killed yearly by autos and a thlrd are children; In addltion, a property loss of at least a billion dollars a year. In Indianapolis there ls an average of one automobile fatality every slx days. About 80 per cent of locai fatalities so far this year have been children or young persona. If all this happened in one glgantic catastrophe—for instance, a town de6troyed with 11,000 killed and a billion dollars in property destroyed—thè whole Nation would be shocked. But thè auto-toll catastrophe eomes bit by bit, a lise blotted out or left crippled here. a lone machine wrecked there. And, because thè toll of auto smashes does come bit by bit lnstead of all together. drivers and pedestrians lose sight of thè fearful total and lapse into thougbtlessness —carelessness. In this ca.mpaign to curb auto accidents, a campaign now sweeping thè whole country, hundreds of suggestiona are being made. Many of them will be adopted stricter trafflc regulations, parking rules, erection of additional safety zones, and so on. All these are helpful, bnt thè toll of auto smash-ups will not—can not —be materially redueed unless thè generai public keeps in mlnd this simple rule ; t The rule: In every safety first campaign thatf ever hsia been waged, it has been learned that regulations and automatic safeguards are of little help unless backed by Constant personal cautionThe curb for auto accidents is not something mysterious and hitherto undiscovered. What’s chiefly needed is: Cautious drivers. taJcing no dangerous chances. Cautious pedestrians, never risking their livea, constantly on their guard. A certain percentage of thè population chronically Is reckless or in a half-trance condition. For them. and for inexperieneed children. traffio must be made aa fool-proof as posslble. For this purpose. no proposai can be too severe.

When You Buy THERE'S one retali store for every forty famiìles in America. William G. Shepherd tells this to a convention of advertising men. _ . r . One grocerynian in twenty falla each year. In thè long run, according to John Wanamaker, only one man in twenty-five who go into any kind of merchandising makes e success of it A fine thlng to be in business for yourself—your own boss. But do a Jot of thinking before you try it If you, later on, start a store, what line of goods should you eelect, to make you thè most money? This !b your first thought and an important one. But thè number of dollars taken In by a merchant doea not always determine how much prosit he can make. On thè average. says Shepherd, to run a store takes 17 cents out of each dollar received by thè grocer. Similar figures are: 19 cents on $1 for butehers, 25 cents for hardware dealera, 24 cents for clothing sellerà and 26 cents for shoe dealers. The figures vary, according to thè amount of eales. As a business grows, overhead expense is carried on thè shoulders of an increasing number of dollars. Tfcia means, less overhead for each dollar to carry—provided overhead doesn’t increase at a faster rate than groas sales, which it often 'does. Shepherd calls America “a natlon of emmter Jump era " One worker in each ten Is engaged in 6elling something. And two-thirds of these 8,000.000 sales clerks are engaged in seillng food and clothing. For each three farmers there’s one person behind a connter. For each four factory employes there’s a store clerk or a store manager or a store owner, selling thè things produced. The trend seems to be toward a point where every one will be distributing commodities, nobodv producine. That point, of course, never will be reached, but thè tendency toward it is strong enough to emphasize that our greatest problem of economics ls ons of distributlon rather than production. Sugar and Tariff SUGAR is up in price! The Pennsylvania Sugar Refining Company has declared a 900 per cent dividend, It was announced In thè same edition that carried thè above story. In other words, each shareholder was given nine or more shares of common stock for one he held. Next March, thè company announces, it will pay a quarterly dividend of $1 cash on each share of thè old and new common stock—sso,ooo,ooo worth. One dollar on each share does not sound so big as $lO on a share. Tet thè vlsible asseta of thè company, warehouses, etc., were not increased by $45,000,000 because thè stock was watered. Such clever schemes serve to conceal profits from thè ignorant public. Yet thè high tariff. recentlv installed, puts a tax on forelgn sugar. The price is due to go up more until it absorbs thè margin created by our trade wall. The sugar industry is one of thè “infant Industries” that howled for aid against forelgn competitors. Beveridge supported thè Harding administration that passed thè tariff. He talked for it Some folks are stili wondering why he was beaten. The March of Science r-raO promote scientific researcb, America industry spends $70,000,000 annnally. That is good news. What American industry does in thè scientific field is but a mali part of what Science as a whole does to make lise better. In our brief day, thè world has done a lot of backslldlng. We have wiinessed nations collapsing economically, peoples weakening morally countries on thè brlnk politlcaliy. SomeUmea thè outlook been eo

gloomy that we wondered if humanity were not at a standstill. Then we were heartened by reStlization that Science marched on, even through catastrophe. Science tipped thè scales for a better world. Our generation has seen it conquer thè air. It has sound new foods for hungry populations. It has taught man to hurl intelligence through thè ether. It has given him thè automobile, thè tractor, thè motion picture, thè telephone, all new in our day. Science harnessed electricity, turning night into day. It steemed floods, conquered droughts, produced thè X-ray and vaccines, toxins and medicincs to defeat thè ravages of disease. It fought famine and ignorance. Science has held in check all of man’s naturai eneir.les, everything but those devised by man himself, of which thè worst ls war. Science stili goes marching on. Some day it may conquer war. ft Glimpses Ab Coue would say, passing thè ship subsidy bill is getting Hardingor and Hardinger. • • • It looks like membership in thè Henry Cabot Lodge is now limited to Henry Cabot. • • • As soon as our cities doublé deck themselves to eliminate motor car congestion thè fashion in transportation will change to aeroplanes. Then we can use thè upper deck to catch thè casualties. • • • The allies cught to lay for thè man who sold thè Young Turks to them for soft and tender birds. • • • Newberry’s name is off Senate roll. says headline. But Newberryism’s scar is not yet off thè Senate’s soul. • • * Georgia woman was Senator for a day only. That's about as long as thè average nortnal person can stand thè atmosphere there. Let’s hope thè Near East Confercnce docsn t brew a Xear East mixture.

Letters to thè Editor

To thè Editor of The Times: I have watched. with. some interest, thè discussion araong your readers relative to Mrs. R. C. Perkins suggestion that. corporal punishment he legislated against. I do not believe in brutality, and there are laws now against such. But I have been in homes, and doutless so has thè editor, where ‘‘Johbnie'' or "Mary” would embarrass their parents and everybody present by their aete. Reasoning with them was thè same as “casting pearls before swine,” but if “Johnnie” or "Mary" had been taken in a private room and a tight corporal pnnishment administered, It doubtless would have caused them to act as common-sense children should. T note that some of your correspondents support their argument by quoting thè well-known saying, "Spare thè rod and spoil thè child,” and naming King Solomon as thè author. The sarae was not uttered by King Solomon, i o„ it is not so recorded in Holy Writ. But he probably believed in that. theory When he sald, "He that spareth his rod hateth hia own son.” It was Samuel Butler, in "Hudìbras,” who is responsive for thè injunction quoted. A. D. P.

Permit Usto Say We can all be thankful w© are not among thè 163,500 who are in Ja.il. Seattle women held a baklng contest, so Seattlo kids are happy. What this country needs ls soefes guaranteed for 10,000 railes. A Ft. Worth boy who sound a quart of nitroglycerin will recover. One tells us she dislikes long skirts because they are so effeminate. The tre© of knowledge la hard to climh. Heiress to $40,000.000 saya she will marry a cartoonist, and lf that isn't love there isn’t any. Paderewski, thè pianist, ia back in America. It must be great to get paid for Just playing around. Man asks divorce because, he says, wifey shot a.t him Ave times. Some husband3 are so touchy. Business men not cutting much ice these days held a convention in Texas. They were ice men. Fake money bought good booze in Highland, X. J, but it is usually just tho other way around. What makes us laugh out loud is seeing a girl with bobbed halr one day and long ha ir thè next. The handles on aluminum frying pans don’t get so hot, but thè pan 3 are too light for hitting husbands. They seldom have lightning in thè polar regions, so that would be a fine place to go to teli a lie. Fuel hint: Thinking about eoa] prices will keep you warm. What this country needs is onions too polite to smeli in company. Just to be thè first one, we wish all our readers a Merry Christmas. TOM SIMS. Streets rtv 11 BETON BRALEY YOU like Iraight sti-cets that are metaled and paved And icari to a definite placo. Trini, rerular streets that aro well behaved And easy to map and trace. They ìead from homo to your daily Job And back to your home again, Broad streets wora smooth by a humdrum mob Of patieiijfly pioddmg men. But I like Street that are queer and quaint, That lea<l —well, 1 know not where: That dwindle at length to a trail that's faint, Wliere thè wanderinx pilgrlins fare. Vou like thè Street where you can't get lot, I ni tond ot them where I can. The waveritig ao.itesi roads. imbossed By thè "iiracti a! jiaiii-.g man.” fon nkr thè stn-ets that from end to end Are old and f.imthar way. I love ttie by-ways tliat wend and wend Tlll lost in thè dtstant haze: So Iteei to your Street that is straight and fine, A earefully nieaaured track. And 1 11 Ught-heartedly foìlow mine. All over thè worhl and back ! (Copyright. 1922. NEA Service )

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

STABILIZE MONEY OR FACE FASCISTI, SA YS ECONOMIST

Leaders in politica, industry and labor are viewing with mLxed alarm and kopo thè asoendency of new and powerful politicai lactors abroad. Will America feel tbe effeets, in some parallel movement, of thè labor victory in Erigi and? Or of Fascisti success in Italy ? NEA Service asked Prof. Irvins Fisher, noted politicai economia t, to answer. Here ia thè first nonpartisan discussion of this subjcct, of its cause.! and elfects, in America. By IRVING FISHER, Professsor of Politicai Economy, Yale University. NEW HA YEN, Conn., Nov. 29.—A recent eircular sent to bankers and employers expresses deep anxiety over thè Fascisti victory in Italy and thè gains of thè Labor party in England and elsewhere. It prediets that thè same idea of thè politicai doniination of labor will soon appear more explicitly In America and will threaten thè existlng order. I believe bankers and employers, not to say thè rest of us, have cause for anxiety. But what thè eircular overlooks is that, as Roosevelt so often warned us, thè only reai escape from thè danger of an overturn liea In redresslng reai grlevances. What is needed is to interpret thè recent labor unrest as symptoms of social diseases needing to be cui ed. There are soveral such social diseases which I eottid name, and probably several others which would be reveaWi hy a searching investigation. But here I shall point out only one—probably by far thè most important. This is thè unstàble money growing out of thè war. Unstàble Money ls thè Cause But what has unstàble money to do with reoont labor unrest? We do not remember seeing any mention of it in thè nawstiupors. Yet to find it

Do You Remember Away Back When —

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This building, nt Pennsylvania and Market Bts„ was thè Federai buildijig It ls now occuplcd by thè

At Last *Hil Ida li ’ Gcts Reai .Job on Stage as Hawaiian Girl on Beach at Waikiki

Thl t. tho flfth of a seri.' of ix Btorlo by Josephlno Vnn and Grlft dcB'.Tibtng- how he, posili* a country k-lrl. ooiifht to uri on tho stillo tu New York

j By JOSEPHINE VAX DE G VI IFT NEA Servir© Staff Wrftor NEW YORK, Nov. 29.—The next morning I sou.ght out thè oflices of : Mr. Zlegfeld of thè - 'FolUcs." Tha elevator man inI —l nflEai formed ma tliat ! Mr. Kingston and Aarons wera -e -; thè uksting dir?c- ---! Being known to Mr. Kingston and i /■ * fcarlng reengni- ' '' tion. I doride! on WW&BUr 1 Mr. Aaron. With- < in tho oflice I was greetod by - '> J Mr. Aurons* col- | , . j ored mon, Wtl- >. \ /% liam, who stin k / bis imad out from n littlo J squar© apertura Miss \an de Grifi "ls Mr. Aarons in?” T queried. “Ile is,” sald William tersely. "I want to sea liim.” I sald, "about getting a job." “Tbero is absoluteiy nothing dolng,” sald AVilllain’ and withdrew haughtily. Three men who wero sitting about thè office laughed. I burned. I wanted to Itili them. William's haughtlness had stari ed | another day wrong. T tried a half | dozen other otfices wlthout success. Eventually I landed in t Ito bur- ! lesque distrlct down nt 701 Sovonth j Ave, But neither was there anything doing in burlesque. All burlesque recruiting, it seems, is done in June. j The various blond young women were I very definite about it. They didn't. seem partlcuiarly sorry, either. I went back over some of thè beaten tracie. There I sound thè same office, thè same attendante, with their "nothing today, dear,” thè same little groups, patient, clean, smiling, Idnd, but looking a little hungry. There remained one name on my lif.t, a name I had somehow circled around. It was that of Charles Blanev. Dispiritedly I macie thè climh to Blaney’s office. A man was sitting thero. “Do you think,” I said, “tliat you could get me a job carrying a spear or something?” The man stlrred. “Why, I shouldn't he surprlsed. Harry, here’s a young lady that would ! like to carry a spear.” “Harry” carne in from some where down thè hall. He looked me over and bethought himself a moment. “I teli you,” he said. “we’vo got a stock company up In thè Bronx that’s putting on ‘The Bird of Paradise’ next week. I think thè cast ls all filled but if you’d like to super in that—just for thè experience, you know —” v

IRVING FISHER

we do not have to seek far. We can trace our way back in three simple steps from thè recent politicai demonstration of labor discontent to unstable money as a prime cause. The first step brings to unemploymont as thè grievance which, more than any other, caused labor to make its recent. politicai commotion.

Fletcher American National ank. The pi. -ture was t.ikon by thè W YS. Basi Photo Company while thè

Joy mounted to my head and modo me dizzy. I eat down abruptly, Ati hour Later I delivered into thè banda of James Garey, director of thè Blaney Players at thè l’rospect. The ■ ater In thè Bronx, a note which stateli that in thè wrlter’s ©stimation ! thè bearer was an carnest and dej pendable young woman who would (S rTC£JM9J j J \// I | V-f'' bm ; ibmbmbb SI r ili lipnjiyjjjj JOY MOUNTED TO MY HEAD AND MADE ME DIZZY. ; make good at any task assigned ber. : Tt was signed by Harry Blaney. James Garey was reading a piece of stage script when t handed him thè noto. He road it earefully. “All right,” he sald, “come back tohiorrow at 1 o’clock and we’ll make you a beautiful Hawaiian girl.” I ran all thè staira up to thè elevated rallway. I was happy. I had landed a Job. It made no difference that there was, no pay attached, no future promised, nothing at all to cling to. Hadn’t Harry Blaney said I was dependable and he bolieved I would make good? i went back for rehearsal thè next day and thè next and learned thereby that my duties in “Tha Bird of Paradise” would ho these: Together 1 with something like eight other damI seia, also supera, I was to ioli upon [ tho stage at thè rise of thè curtaln and givo a rousing rendltion of "On tlie Beach at Waikiki.” Following this we were to register joy, grief and disapprovai as these sentiments were called for by certain principals in thè piece. (Joy at thè prosperi of food. disapprovai at thè prosperi of work, terror at thè erup tion of a volcano). Some timo later we were to sing "Alolia” (until thè curtain Comes down, now girls, see if you can’t remember something) and at thè end

Labor in England held thè Lloyd George government responsive for thè vast unemployment during thè last two years and will hold thè Bonar Law government responsible for putting an end to unemployment. Next we trace back this depression of trade and unemployment, whether in America, England, Italy, or elsewhere, to thè fall of prices in 1920 and 1921. Always and jnevitably a great fall of prices kills enterprise, closes factories, discourages farmers and throws men out of work. Going stili farther back, we may trace thè fall of prices to thè defla-

United States Now Owns 375 Arrned Vessels of Modem Type

QUESTIONS ANSWERED You oan gei an ani verto any question ot fact or Information by writing' to thè Indianapolis Times, Washington Bureau. 1322 N. Y. Ave., Washington, D. C., enclosing 3 cents in stampa. Medicai, legai, and love and marrlage advice will not be given. Unsigned letters will not be anßwered, but all letters are eonfidential, and roccive per- | sonai replies. Altiiough thè bureau does Hot requlre it, it will assure prompter replies if readers will confino questiona to a single ; subiect, writing more than one ietter if an- ; swers on various subieets are desired. — EDITOR. Q. —How many arrned vessels are owned by thè United States at present and how many are under constructlon? A. —The following are thè arrned vessels owne<l by thè United States at present: Eighteen battlships, first lino; 281 destroyers, first lino: fourteen light mine layers; fifty-nina submarines; three fleet submarines. The following are stili owned by thè

structure was stili oecupied by the postoffice.

were to kneel down in thè apron of thè Rtage withp arms uplifted while thè hapless Luana made ber way up thè side of thè mountain. At thè second rehearsal I got on intimato torma with Katie. The next story will be on wluii Kafie toid me of stage lise and my first—and last—performance.

T <T The First Private Bank HISTORICAL JERIES Stoughton A. Fletcher 1808—18S2 T N 1830, with a capitai of $3,000, -L Stoughton A. Fletcher opened an !, extihange and banking house at No. 8 Bhst "Washington Street. In the fiO’s \'e batik was moved to No. 30 East vYashington, where it stayed until JOIO. From here it ivas moved to ihe preseli location of the Fletcher American Nt ional Bank, thè direct successors of ilio business and tho old- , est banking libbre in tbe city. “Fletcher’s Bank” for 83 years has helped In- . j dianapolis and India uà -grow. Under no ■ ! circuinstances will there be any u?via- | i tion from the conservative, legitimaié banking policies upon which thè reputftion and success of this institution lvas bpen built. * . Fletcher American National Bank j Capital and Surplus $3.,000.000

tion of credit and money beginning early in 1920. And there you have it! The chain of causes: Deflation, fall of prices, unemployment, producing politicai vindlctiveness. And thè worst of it is that neither labor nor capitai has yet cleariy seen thè situation. Labor is therefore now on thè rampage and ls quite likely to hang thè wrong man to thè lamppost: while capitai does nothing except to deman d that nothing be done. When both sides demand and obtain stable money over half of their diffidi lties will disappear.

United States, but are of an obsolete type and are to be sold: Two battleships, second line; ttvo monitors. second line: eleven cruisers, second line; twelve light. cruisers, second line; four mine layers; twenty-one destroy- ; ers, second line; twenty-seven subma- J rines, second line; twelve patrol gun- ! boals: five river gunboats; nine yachts; fifty-four patrol vessels of from 100 to 500 tons, and seventy-seven patrol : vessels under 100 tons. The following are under coristruc- i tion: Ten cruisers, first line; thirty- ì five submarinea, first line, and three fleet submarinea. Q. —How dld thè Cheyenne Indiana formerly dispose of their dead? A. —They hung thè dead body 1 among thè foliage of thè foresta, a prey to thè vulture, or else swathing it with willow branches, placed it with thè feet southward in some cottonwood trees, together with a plentiful supply of food. arma and tobacco, to b> consumed on its voyage to thè happy hunting grounds. Q. —Is there a snake which travels with a sldeway movement? A.—Tea. there is a snake which travels in a sldeway movement rather than straight abead. It is known as thè sidewinder. a species of rattlesnako sound in thè desert regions of Arizona and southeastern California. Q. —How may flowers he kepi fresh i n water? A.—Any klnd of flower can he well preserved for at least two weeks by putting a little saltepcter or cariton;<te of soda in thè water In which thè flowers aro loft standing. The usuai method of preservine cut flowers in a condition of froslmess ls to d'ssolve small amounts of amrnonium .biondo. potassimo nitrato, sodinm car bollate or camphor in thè water into which thè sterna have been inserted. The presencc f one or otlier of these drugs keeps thè flowers from losing Hieir t urgidly. by stlmulating tbe cells to action and by opposing germ growth. flowers that have already wilted are sald to re vi ve if thè stems are inserted in weak camphor water. O —Have sardines pr-ales or flns? A—Sardines bave small. caslly rcmoved scalea and are usually run through a machine that will remove thè scalee immedlately aster they are caught. Sardines have no flns. Q. —What was thè price of wheat during thè World War? A. —During tbe World War thè price of wheat was fixed at ?2.20 per bushel f< r No. 1 r.orthem spring grado. This 1 lice went into effoct on Sept. 1, 1917. q.—VATiaf ls thè meaning of thè name Shakespeace? A. —No other name In thè English has had so much nonsense written about its meaning. It appears to be one of thè many “phrase-names” such as Lovejoy, Doolittle. etc. The name nieatis simply "shake spear." q.—How much is allowed an enlisted man iti thè United States Navy for clotlies? A.—The naval act raising thè clotb ing allowance of enlisted men of thè United States Navy from st>o to SIOO was passed .Tuly 1, 1918.

NOV. 29, 1922

Small Hope Held for Ship Subsidy By HARRY B. HUXT NEA Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON. Nov. 29.—Cespite all posslble administration pressure, all rossible trading for support, all pledges of soft bertha for "lame dttcks,” a counting of noses in thè United States Senate shows unmlstakably a hard row ahead for thè Presidente ship subsidy bill, which Congress w r as called into special session to enact. The probabilities of success appear to be unquestionably on thè side of *the opponents rather than of thè support,ers of thè bill. This for thè teason that they have a doublé chance to defeat it passage. First, by actually voting it down if it develops they can muster enough votes to accomplish that end. Second, by prolonging debate and preventing a vote by March 4, if it appears they might not be able to slaughter it on thè roll cali. Here, in a nutshell, is thè situation thè Administration forces are up against: The thirty-six Democratic senatora will oppose thè subsidy bill as a. violatimi of fundamental party poi iey. Nine Progressive Republicans are so definitely committed against thè measuro that no posslble trade or inducement can swing them to its suppori. These are Borah, Capper, Ladd, La Follette, Lenroot, Norbeck, Norris, McNary and Brookhart. That makes a total of forty-flvq votes definitely arrayed against subsidy. Due to thè vacancy caused bj* thè resignation of Newberry, it leavee Just fifty votes as thè greatest possible total for thè bllL In thè romaining flfty, there are least seven who may be classed as doubtful. These ara Cummins o 5 lowa, Curtis of Kansas, Ernesto 2 Kentucky, Harreid of Oklahoma, Me* Cumber of North Dakota. Nelson o$ Minnesota, and Sterling of South Dakota.

BOOKS

Cliildren's Boom, Indianapolis Publio Library., St. Ciair Sepia re BOOKS FOR CHII.D MUSICIAN "Maaters of Music,” by Chapin. “Young Peoples History of Music,*’ by Whitcomb. “Wonder Talea From Wagner," by Chapin. “A Child*B Guide to Music,” by Mason. "Home Help in Music Study," liy Brower. IF YOU ARE WELL BRED You know that second wedding.a are always very conservative, and elaborate ceremonies are out of placa. The woman marrying for thè secord Urne riaver wears white, nor does she wear a veli, carry orange blossoms or have flower girls or bridesmaids. There are no elaborate flora! decorations. She may, however, have one maid of honor. if she desìrcs. Marriage a ia Mode Among thè Albanians, exogamy, or marriage outside thè tribe, is thè generai rule, thè Miridite clflcftains carr.ring off by force a woman from one of thè neigliboring tribes. The. wives of thè Principal inhabitants of Oroshi Irave. It is said, all been acquired in this way and. far from resenting thè circumstance, are proud of it. They make devoted wives, *exceedingly jealous of thè hushand's honor.

EXTRACTION OF TEETH ts nw tho rnest important. pbaaa of dentai work. WE ARE SPEOIAT.ISTS in extracting by thè ■’MAXOLIMI AfETHOD.” although we are more concerned in th caving of them. Many a tooth that w riithlcsaly roraoved might have been savori. Mogi docayeri teeth are never so far gone that tho akflfnl dentisi ean not, by some of thè new sud advaneed methous. manage to preserve them. However. if they have cono to tha extent that extracting must be resone.! to. why not place yourself in the banda of specialista? 18—TEETH—18 Had 18 teeth extra et ed by thè MAXOLINE METHOD and can trutlifnlly say the method ixi not be beat. Never felt a paia. Or no baci aster eflfeets whatewer. H. GILBERT, 408 North Garfield. 14—TEETH—14 1 ani past 72 years old and had J 4 teeth extracted by the MAXOUXE METHOD wlthout the least trollhi eor pain. StR. H. DUBOI9, Poblin, Imi, 16—TEETH—16 Had IH teeth extracted that I have dreaded and pnt oflf for year, as 1 was afraid I could not stand thè pain. But uni sore well pleased with thè MAXOLINE METHOD of extructiiiß, as they never liort a pnrtiele. MRS. ANNA KINGERY, ISSO South Sheffield.

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