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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1908)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL', PORTLAND, SUNDAY AiORNINO, .'NOVEMBER X, 1S03. New : Books AND THEIR PUBLISHERS - R3' f'" ' i n-u -uxn rx. ynLrLj'-uX--u' v CT 4 TIIEATHICAL' NOTES 'hi- . & i LOTIU3E." by Marguerite Boir vet. A story ia& way be tween a child's book and a full srown fiction. It la a story of those quaint and gal lant days wHen New Orleans was epend- - lngr- In prodigal titra valance ths fabu lous fortunes that had been coined by Old wor'd snvants out of new world plantation, and society was a riot of ' continual revel. Into a home of this kind poor' little Clotllde was brought from the quiet country life in France. Old Chevalier de la Motte Leroix at the age of 60 came to New Orleans, broken In spirit and fortune by the rev olution, but attracted by the marvelous promises and possibilities of Louisiana he eoon had his fondnst hopes of a re trieved fortune realized, and then mar ried a dazzling, frivolous young woman of French and Spaiysh blood. Return ing to Franca-on a visit soon after their first child this little Clotilde was born, the young society mother was vastly induced to leave the child with the two maiden sisters o the Chevalier Leroix. The story opens when at the age of 14, Clotllde waa returning to New Orleans after ' the death of her two aunts, and her mother, sow a dashing young widow, was the Society leader of that gay and voluptuous city. It did not auit the young widow, who was lay ing; her net for a gallant Spanish oftl- ' cer to have a daughter, almost a young woman, appear on the scene, and the tory of th book la Madam Lerolx's treatment of Clotllde, and the life the little exile led .In the convent of the .Ursulins Sisters, . with a climax mora sweet and natural than surprising. - . The book la elegantly bound, and Is Illustrated with a number of pictures as quaint and aweet as the story Itself. A. C, McClurg & Co. J. K. QUI, Portland. Price 11.60. . , "A Million a Minute," by Hudson Pouglas. In Its smart cover and gay trappings this comes along an ideal hol iday book. It Is as full of life and the Joy of living as its cover design Is of fold and many colors. It Is a story that not only interests the reader deeply, but keeps "him In a tate of happy expectancy, from begin ning to end. . One of the attractive up to date feat ' urea of the atory is the heroine's perfect knowledge of her own and everybody else's automobile, and the clever use she BiBkeruf ihemr It is a story of little plot, but of much life and love. Indeed this feat ure overshadows ' everything else ee much so that during the last IB minutes - of the eventful romance an Imnortant flauae in a certain will Is forgotten and he clock ticks away from .them a mil- non aouars a minute. A Va Utn. . J " . " , , uvnrvri, m llirCWQ law yer, who had no doubt at some time been thrilled by Jules Verne's hero who toured the world in 80 days through the trick of time, bethought himself that , mere was several hours' difference be tween France and California, and saved iu ine young couple the fortune that the .i-nria ciock nad almost dtne them out of. ine book is well written, and Mr. juglas has not only a vivid lmaglna- i, ui i inv siyie , oi narrative, he publishers have adopted a new I novel Idea In sendlnv nut th firat copies of this first edition, whir-h i tn paste into the back one page of the au 1 bar's- manuscript, ..-Tia--4i nw pub llshlng house, and If they continue to send, out such well written, elegantly bound and finely Illustrated books their success Is assured. W. J. Watts & Co. Price $1.60. ! Tha Round Up" is renewing la Boa ton the triumphs it achieved , there on ,lts first visit. This time the play of , the Arizona desert is beftig given at th 'Hollls Street theatre. Th engagement mois mat stun ine dook uae jewels, ni liib Atvaemy or jausic; jnow xorK, the clear. Just discussions of really im- ! was highly successful. Maclyn Arbuckl portant questions, while through It all still continues in the role of the fat runs tne aeep undercurrent or many snenn. vniy one or tne original Mew needed reforms for women and girls In York cast is missing in the present pro' "this workaday world," especially In I ductlon. That actor is a - buoklng ine tamna Kingdom. , uroatno. un ioi jirai nigni ox xne sea Without discussing woman suffrage ' son he took his place in the spotlight in the concrete, the benefits of such in- j In the center of the stage and refused fluence In the affairs of government ; to move except in a vertical plan. The are plainly maicaiea. next nigm ne micKea nia way into the l ne autnor works tne neavy, serious i or nestra pit, wracltlng th baaa drum matter of the book so cleverly into her ' and frightening- its player so badly that own everyday life and girlish aaplra- ! he forgot to meld a hundred on. aces In tlon that the reader never suspects i his next game of pinochle, thereby until the story is finished that it is a ! starting a fight in the bandroom. The took or aeep purpose, with a cry ror i third night he pitched his rider, who woman's reform and the help of those had to be taken to the hospital with a who can best give it the women or ; broken leg. The management decided the leisure class. For frontispiece exquisitely tinted pi Hah country seat. B Price J1.60. the book has an icture of an Eng- aker, Taylor Sc Co. ni i The Right Man," by- Brian Hooker. --The author has written a bo6k where in the story and the style have en tirely separated themselves, for the former Is neither original,- Instructive or of chaste tendency, while the style vis all of these and more, for the au thor's Vocabulary in linlniM tA -a , mil, wiui mn mui viuumuy mat is trull refreshing. . The time of the story ex tends over only a few days and ii worked out on a great ocean liner en j route ' to Hamburg via Boulogne-sur- jmci, wnn uui mree important charge ters. The author describes the steam. er as "a wallowing leviathan of dusky Iron swarmed over and about with flut tering fresh color and barbarous with a multeKy of twittering farewells." , The three characters that Interest the reaaer are Kicnurd Gordon, an im recunlous violinist with "soul," John mason wno is described by a friend of Gordon's as "A captain of Industry and a golf phark. He has no soul, no nerves, no grandfather, and the body .in a duu moose, ana Audrey Dome the the fiance of Hudson. Miss Dome does observe the conventionalities enough to be under the mild shadow of her in offensive little aunt's chaperonage; hut she finds, no difficulty in leaving ths man she is engaged to. talking to her aunt while she slips out on deck and throws herself In the other man's arms, "a wild thins; palsied with madness pf ns up and declares. "It's all wrong, all wrong,'' and refusing; to break her en gagement, yet demanding a declaration of love from the "soul mate." and tn Short nlfivlnft- fast and lnno with Hum both, and both of them aware of her "Dorothy and the Wizard in Ox," by L. Frank Baum. Juvenile books seem to hold the boards at present, and the way they are pouring in shows that the youngsters are to have a royal feast of books for the coming holiday season. But standing out more promi nently than perhaps any other is this new tate or Mr. Baum s. When the first of the "Oi" books appeared, pa rents as well as children realized that a new creation had come into the realm of juvenile literature, and one that had come to take a permanent place, and this early, opinion has been confirmed more and more on each recurring ap- Searance of the charming characters aat inhabit that enchanted land of Ox. Time - and aaatn Mr. Baum has thought he had rune down the curtain. ana saia zareweu to us, Dut tne de mand from his youthful readers grows so persistent each time that 3ie Is forced Into reoDenlne the wonders of us and telling the children more about Dorothy or the wlxard. It Is perhaps the close sympathy between the au thor and his youthful readers that makes his books so attractive- to them. though tlmy are remarkable for their faculty of reintroducing without renro- durlng the same places and people and nuns, in omer woras, tne most fa miliar of all the Ox people can come right back In another book as fresh ana new as if thev had dust been era. ated. 2 The publishers of MjM Baum's books certainly struck a mln?when thev im- riftrtfMllr thft A . rraatlnna artri rht worthily- hv-they - earried -out their part or tne oargain, for there are no handsomer Juvenile books published than come from their presses. "Daro- tny ana tne wizard in Oz" is a Btrik ing testimonial -to this assertion, tr It would be- hard . to find a handsomer child's book. It is substantially bound in attractive blue cloth, the front covet- Deing m sona gold with grotesque col ored design. It is printed on heavy cream paper and elaborately illustrated In black and white and in colors by junu n. nm. tieuiy dc Britton com pany. Price U.26. exact attitude all the time. ' It Is a book wherein every code of nonor is violated and would be vicious In its tendency if the arlrl didn't Inspire such a feeling of utter contempt, that he could influence no one, not even the most yeutnrul and inexperienced reader i m average reaaer win say, "Of course It turned out all right and she found xne ngnt man," ror the author says They went down together into the oia-woria city with summer in the! hearts," but the reader, as he congratu jaies tne rejected lover, cannot bu wonder what the autumn and wlnte time will bring into the lives of two, so wholly dominated by selfishness. With Mr. Hooker's remarkable clever- arid manufactur ings in manipulating Ing a vocabulary, we may well expect greater work . from his pen. Besides being original and 'having marked dividuality of style he is brilliant and in captivating. The book is well hounil n A la II lustrated in colors by Alonio Kimball in. j.n eiegani ann expensive manner, ttoobs, Merrill & Co. Price J1.60. "'Colonel Oreatheart h-r W f! Ttallo --This Is a historical novel cast In that ever fruitful period of the ro mancer the years centering about 1643" when England was rent In twain; when oi-wu agaiuBi parliament anq ti.ui.;ii BKM.1HSI ruriian; wnen war was In the air and every gallant had the OnrtfirtUnlt V In hn i r. ri hla a.-.,.. -.4 distinguish himself on one side or the fit HAF Jerry Stow waa one who thirsted for .in ana giory ana look up arms, de- bpndfnir nn n hinumA nnf- , s c. ....... v pan uii ICKn and a beautify! horae to carry him to , ii, -ui. in inuKc 'jays, nowever, it required more than these unreliable as sets, and in the space of a few years hto had run tha . m , , t n , , - . . . . . . v . . i i a 1 1 u carnage, love and adventure and was fi'dvto rStlr? t0 a 1ulet nd domestic rc, .uuueu iriiu uimiy ifamerea laurels The story la told principally In dla- . lnUA vrltw m. lltrla ty- mt f t. . . - T - ' w ""U nil QLiiieu a ; manner to be wholly natural, or i'wui wrnaps, ana cnaracter i trifle overdrawn, hut shaw1n v.,,-v. oot; a good deal of osr present -day .tendencies to pay much attention to religion and very little to morals. There are; several well placed and historic (nincun. wno pigy a part In the book among-them being Cromwell. The book is handsomely bound and has a number of unusually fine Illus trations by Lfter Kalph. Bobbs, Mer lill Co. . Trice tl.50. . ! "Hilary On Her Own." by Mabel . Barnes-Orundy. This is a quaint and charming story of English country and W,UV '.Th bright and un spoiled girl, tor It . heroine. The en tire romance could be eummed ud in a , "jui8 Hilary got ' lured knitting shawls and comfortaWes , inn nutrtra wui j irn ner Own llvlnx " . mi ographer In London, and against the Judgment and wishes "of . l er ntlr family, with the exception of her father, . " Ini-tfad of worklnsj she got married. Hut this is the least part of th book, which is fascinating from start to f Inl h. It is th brlsht aylng, th bon "Really Babies," by Elizabeth B. BrownelL "The Muffin Shop," by Lou ise Ayres Oarnett. This is a moat at tractive pair of tiny-tot books, Just from the press of Rand, McNally & Co. Both are elegantly bound and gotten up with a view to beauty and durability, as well aato entertainment for the children. The rt,-"itatly BahteK." tg 'uHTqU" from the fact that on vrv nao-c i picture, and that picture Is the photo graph of some really baby or babies. They are taken standing, sitting. Jump ing, sleeping, out of doors and in. in the sunshine and with nmhrniim and Indeed, in every shape and manner good, wholesome babies can get them selves into. Then with each nlplurn goes the CUteat imarlnahln m m match. Here, for instance, above . the Quaint little maid who i n,rvi-i km. ing a huge umbrella over her, are these lines: Mother may I go out in the rainr "Oh! yes. my darling pet. But hold your big umbrella im. And then you won't get wet." " ""Ghe Muffin Shop" is a story in' rhyme, wherein many of the famous characters of "Mother Ooose" have a chance to return to favor through their escapades with the iriuiTin man and In the wonderful muffin shop. The rhyme has much of the Jingle of "Mother Goose" poetry, without its ut ter vacuity, for here we have some thing of a continuous narrative, and something to make a child think as well as listen. I." a "tudy for a child, with its odd illuminations or brilliantly col ored illustrations. The coloring of the book Is very rich and striking and of such odd design an older person might take it for a product of a high-class arts and crafts shop. inese must prove two Immense fa vorites the coming season. .that he was too strenuous an a at or even for "The Round Up" and gave him his notice. "The Hound JJp" Is on of the heat and cleanest American plays pro dirced. Paul Armstrong has completed for Klaw & Erlanger the bis; naval play, "In Time of Peace," which will be produced by that firm in a few weeks. Alice Lloyd will fill a brief vaudeville engagement before she begins rehears als of her new musical comedy, "The Bonnie Belle of Scotland." Miss L.lo-d Is auoted as receiving J2.000 a week for the contract. John Barrymore, the versatile come dian of "A Stubborn Cinderella" com pany, was talking the other evening with a young woman who desired, as Is customary, to evince a polite Interest in htm and his art. "What, Mr. Barrymore," she said, "what do you consider the prime requi site for success as a musical comedian?" 'A latent inadequacy," wa Mr. Bar ry more i cryptic rejoinder. "Honeymoon Trail," . which was one of the greatest musical comedy suc cesses In Chicago last year, where it ran for over 200 nights at the La Salle theatre, will this season tour the prin cipal cities of this country with Harry Stone In the leading role. Mr. Stone only recently closed with the "8oul Kiss" company, which served to Introduce to A.merlcan audiences in New York last winter the famous English dancer, Adeline Qenee. Previous to this engagement Mr. SJgpne was a leading member of he company, playing the part of the reporter, in ''The Stolen Story," under the management of Henry W; Savage. ' - -- Genevieve Haines, who demonstrated unusual ability a a playwright in her "Heart Aflm"-ls to -supply the ve hicle in 'which John Cort will str Flor ence Roberts this season. The play "Louise" Is said to be of contemporary life and of a dramatic character, offer ing Miss Roberts many opportunities for telling emotional work. Miss Roberts will make the west early In her tour. "The Substitute" is the name of the new play In which Max Flgman, under the management of John Cort, will star this season. The piece Is by Beulah Dix and Evtlyn Greenleaf Sutherland, au thors xf "The Road to Yesterday," and as a personal vehicle for Mr. Flgman s splendid accomplishments. Is declared to excel "The Man on the Box," In which Mr. Figman has so successfully starred during- the last two seasons. It is an American play of, today. "The Merry. "Widow' company organ ized for a Pacific coast tour will open Its season In Paterson, N. J., on Tues day, September J, playing in Trenton and New Brunswick, N. J., before it goes to -the Apollo theatre at Atlantic City for the week of September 14. It will then start for New Orleans, visiting the principal southern cities on the way. . TTehenrsals of Mrs. Flake's new play, "Salvation Nell,' ar progressing rapidly at the Hafckatt theatr. tinilor th Tr sonal dlreotion of Harrison Gray Flak. " ine roie a acruowoman in saloon Mrs. Flak has one of the noes parts f her career. - The- character 01 Nell affords Mrs. Flk ait jaxtraordl nary opportunity.'. Although Mvarjtl ' ithiMKtura Im ttiA piece are members : of , the Salvation Arm Vi "Salvation NT11" la In nn unu a - rengioas play- tn the accepted mean ing of the term, and th appeal of its absorbingly Interesting story is univer sal. The manifold and v picturesque ixLio ih ine lower worm ar tireaencea in a vivid and amusing manner, true to iiie ana mowing- wiu internet. Move ment, color, lauxhter. inualnr. tears. crime, beauty. Joy all are oreaenL "Salvation Nell" might be described as an animated ,croa-aectlon of East oic ure Associated with l(nt risk will be a careruiiy selected company of 40,. la ciuaing hoi brook Bllnn, Hope Latham, (jnariottw Thompson, , Elsie 'RomaUie, Leila Komar-Tvler. Marv Maddern David Olassford, Eugene Reed, Roberl Evans, John Dillon, John Carroll, E. F. Nagle. Judg Downing, R. E. Beeoroft, ley, i Edwin Evansr Mark Ross, Frank- Fo .C. Foy. Herbert Hevwood. David Bur- ion ana nanes i. terry. How Georre Arlisa. who la th TWH1 in Harrison Grey Flake's production of the world-famous Hungarian . comedy at ine neiasco meair. stuaieo tne nart is of surpassing Interest to all serious minaea rouowers or the art of antinar No performance of recent oira ha n awakened so much discussion as the suoue ana magnificently detailed lmper sonation Of Mr. Arliss in "The Devil and In the Theatre Magazine the actor tens as ronows bow he conceived and rormuiated his ideas of the part "I trust that my friends know that I have not many qualities in common with the devil, so that I have not found m it happens that 1 have known a great model for the impersonation In mysel many persona of extreme tvnn. Mv father was in the publishing business a block from the Brltlah museum, which is, you know, the largest library in the world. There flocked about that part or tne city strange men, men of talent and gifts, but who through illness or some oerect of character, often through love of drink, had failed in life. They .were men wno snouia nave Deen sua cesses, but instead they were failures. I got my devil from among these men. "The man was poor. He earned his living with his pen, but he worked as little as possible. He was not a very bad man, but I am not sure that he would not have been had he had occa sion or opportunity. H was very lean, as nearly bodiless as it was possible for a man to be and live. I wanted to con vey the impression of the man being almost fleshless, and while I was think ing of this the picture of this 'man whom I had known as a boy came back to me. The man was of exceeding quiet manners. Iyhave copied his manner as I have his physical appearance, for I conceived that 'that was, the only sort of devil that would have any Influence with the people In Molnar's play. They are persons in society, and that claaa eottld only b -inf luanded hy uggastlon. Dy ugnt, piayrui argument. They could be led, not driven. If they had been servants I might have tried the blud geon form of argument. It wotald have aff acted, them, but not persons In so ciety, accustomed to the refinements of lire. iney would .have laua-hed at the devil who tried to drive them. 'I studied the rol of the devil T do every other part I have ever studied, as long a time as I have. I received the lay early in July, and I brought it ack with me from the other side. Wn came back on a slow steamer. Itwas very emotv. and I had moat nt nn slHa or tne lower ieck to myself. I had the feeling I must always have when I am studying a part, of being quite alone. I like best to oe In tho country, or at least In a room quite alone. When one Is studying a part he creates a 'world of his own, and any Intrusion of the other world, his real world, is a shock. It makes him self-conscious. He has to begin again at the beginning." . Summer Cottages Burned. (United Prww Leaned Wire.) . Rochester, N. Y., Oct. "31. Ten cot tages have been consumed by a fire which is still burning, at Summervilla. Summerville is a select summer colony. The loss is estimated 'at $25,0007 ; .in mi MILLIONS OF Stout Wmifii END02&E THESE FACTS FACTThe Nemo Self-Reducing Corset supports the abdomen while it reduces the hips. This is 3one by the patented Nemo Reducing and Relief Straps, and can't be done without them. FACT When a stout woman at- r tempts to flatten her back and reduce her hips without firmly supporting . her abdomen, she. not only fails to" secure .the desired reduction,- butv sheiactually invite discomfort and ill-health. FACT No corset but the Nemo gives the slightest support to the abdomen. FACT-Every one of the various imitations of the Nemo Self -Reducing' Corset is either useless or dangerous useltst unless you lace it so tightly that you can't move, and dangtrout if you do. , Reducing Straps (patented and ex- . elusive) no stout woman can possibly remold her abdomen into graceful lines and still be comfortable. FACT-Without the Nemo Relief ' Straps no stout woman canenjoy that gratetul sensation otpwfoot aupport. FACT Without the Nemo Dou ble Garter Attachment the flesh will bulge at the bottom of your corset No. 312 anT320 (tall stout)) JOtQ No. 314 and 318 (short Btout) J" "'J'" Other Models $5.00 and $ 1 0.00 Nemo Corsets are sold in good stores throughout the world. KOPS BROS, 154 Sutter St, San Francisco : 'M H 1 Si 0 r: ... . mm mm Our Enviable Succe "The Flamingos word' by Mrs. Edith Ogden Harrison. This Is truly a book of exquisite fancies, and of rare imagi nation, poetic in and simple in expression. It would be Classed With lUVenlla literature I.... 1. could be read with prodt by any one its sub-tiUe is, "And Other Legends of the Earth a.nd 'Sky," which well ex presses the nature of the book. The nrst legend, from which ih. its title, is that of the angel Azrael and the expulsion of Adam and Eve from 'a'den ot Eden, and the sword WhlCh (JOd EUt into th hand, tki. ansel of destruction Is sometimes seen in the forked lightning. The legend of the aurora borealls is founded on that wonderful light which th nhenhV-H. saw on the hills of f;aiiif.- tho h.. In the firmament counts its legend from the pretty romance of Boax and Ruth arid so through the 14 short stories, the legends of familiar things are pre sented to us linked with the stories of the ttible. The book Is elee-antlv hmm a v a striking- cover design illustrative of the first story. There ar a numb. colored illustrations and many original drawings In black and white, all done by Lucy Fitch Perkins. A r & Co. Price 11.60. s "The Panther." by Anne Warner On. can begin to shiver ibefore the leaves or this very peculiar- book are even opened, for its cover design is terror izing and awful in the extreme. It' is thaL Of a von n ST wnman f... 1 and in an attitude of distress, cast upon j a COUch with n .nt Inner v.. panther, Its two forefeet planted on the i bed and its starved neck, wicked eyes i and exultant mouth glaring over the i Kino prusiraie Doay. 'ine sub-title an-I nouncts the story, "A Tale of Tempta- i t Ion " janri th. slanlf uDnn. . i. . -..w -'n1''. , ..,3 , , i two i:uvri deelgn, which is but a copy of the front- 4 tiyparoni at once. ThS StOIV in mirp.lv IvmhAllnal e n 4. to exemDllfv tha nnworfnl K,,t growth of temptation when it has once The beautiful girl is first drawn to the man ft Ka rlara nn In,,. V... a v. - - . . .... v iv.o, UUL lUfi thought of love comes and with -It a terrorizing little rustle among the1 leaves; the temptation grows and the i I . "uuw oecornes a visible kitten I that grows and grows until the full-! grown panther eats out the heart of the ; girl, and in that death comes victory. ' It is a atorv strrui. , I cooeentinn. hut r,m ,7 t i makes' the reader creep In every fiber .C .i , "u " so realistic that ' the Btirring of a window shade or the rattling of a bit of paper would make ; a nervous person -tart with terror while thev u-Ar. r..anrn, . t. book, however, full nf deep, purposeful thought, and its les sona while not riuni quite worth the study. Small. Menard & CO. rlce 11.25.' -r i-i To the Public: We hereby announce that jealousy aftfl prejudice is due to our phenomenal success in our many offices. We again set forth our formal proposition that we are now ready and willing to give $1,000 to any or all den tists, barring none, who can compete with us in painless and high-class dental work of the human mouth, at prices that defy compe tition. In no other 'city where we have an office does so much jealousy exist as among our professional friends in Portland. We earnestly request all our former pa tients to call at this office and have their teeth looked over, and if any of our bridge work, crowns, plates or fillings have given out or proven unsatisfactory we will gladly repair or make over free of charge. Grade Dentistry T BETH WITHOUT PLATES To Introduce the Latest System in Painless Dentistry, We Will Nov. 5, Store; OU; Girt May Die. (Special Dliptfh to Tbt JooruLt Los Angeles. Oct.- ii. Mary Lallv a M rear ola studeht at the VlytPChnlo high school, was probably fatally burned this afternoon while baking a Halloween cake. gh poured some oil into a coal stove, causing an explosion. She was taken to the receiving hospital.. Nervous People And those afraid can now sit in the dental chair with great ease. The management of the Chicago, Dental Office will give J100 to any charitable Institution for a tooth that an operator fails to extract without pair or bad result. Vegetable Vapor Used (inly tythe -Chicago Dontists in rendering the operation of extracting teeth as painless as removing a shoo from the foot, and they do it without the slightest danger to the most delicate patient, and without any '- unpleasant after-effects whatever. I have had 2B teeth extracted and two plates made by the Chicago Painless Dentists. I am delighted with the work and am pleased to have this opportunity to advise nervous women -to have the Chicago Painlnta Dentists do their work. Mra 8. Cake Ore Point. Wash. - 1 have been treated by Chicago Painless Dentists for years. I have tried all the different methods, and I can say unhesitatingly no dentist Or physician has ever operated -with uch success or skill. in extract" ing my teeth they did it without any pain to me it la a great pleasure to me to recommend them and their methods of treatment. Mrs. p. Read, St. Johns, r. I bve Just had J7 teetb extracted, i crowns and S temporary plates made by the Chicago Dentists and can heartily recommend their method as being thor. oughly painless and without any bad result whatever for my part. I cannot recommend the above hirt enough, !, , , Mrs. R. A.Swlgert, Mousy Hook. Or. Testimonials from hundreds of other patient can be seen bjr asking. ' . - r Our Prices Until Nov. 15 v Silver Fillings 50 UP Gold Fillings ; $1.00 UP Porcelain Fillings $1.50 22-Carat Gold Crowns $5.00 Logan Crown $5.00 Enamel Croyn ......$5.00 Bridge Work, per tooth $5.00 Good Set of Teeth ...... . ; . ... .$5.00 Best Set of Teeth . .$8.00 Aruminum-Lined Plates .....$12.50 Gold plates $40.00 We can extract your teeth in the morning and give you a temporary set before night. binding guarantee given with all work for ten yeass. ' ' " wfsS?s?JS&i. Extract Teeth Free pf Charge We Employ No Students All ouf operators are middle-aged, gentlemanly doctors of from 10 to 20 years' experience, ach an expert in his special line. Our work is all guaranteed and kept in repair free of charge for 10 years. It therefore stands to reason that we serve our own purpose best, as well as that of our patients, by employing the most skilled men in the profession. If your old plate has given out arid does not fit, bring it in and we will reset same on plain rubber for $5, aluminum for $8. , . Crown and Bridge WorR a Specialty The best-equipped, sanitary and hygienic parlors in the world. Nine teen offices in the United State. Be sure you are in the right place. Remember, examinations and con. .saltation free to all who visit our of fice. To those who . cannot afford to have their work done and pay cash, we make arrangements on the installment plan. Open daily till 6 p. m.; Sundays 9. to 1 p; m. Ladies in attendance. CHICAGO PPLE SS DENT STS 323 2 WASH. CORN'ERSinil BOTH PHONES-MAIN 38SO. A B340 r . . 1. . 1