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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1911)
THE , OREGON : SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY 29, 1911 FEW MlfJGR BILLS PASSED- OLYMPIA REMAINS QUIET House Extremely Cautious Reform School in Limelight; 5 Legislature ;7; Liberal With Pensions. -; : : . (SjterUI Dlpteh tn The laaratM . Olympia,, Wash., Jan. 58. The third week ofthfi legislature closes with these bills actually sent to the , governor for signature, although there are scores of measures on their way between the two bouses and will be passed up, to the governor before another week end va cation Is taken: H. B. 27 Appropriating 110,009 for emergency printing, 6. B. 1 Appropriating $75,000 for leg islative expenses. 8. B 30 Providing for the recall of officials In cities of the first class. 8. B. 44 A public wharf and dock bill. ' ' ' S. B'. 30 A deficiency appropriation fbr extradition of prisoners and for re wards for captures of criminals; appro priates $35,000. The senate has Introduced 122 bills and the house 196 measures the mem bers would like to see made Into laws. House Is Cautious. Before this session of the legislature finishes Its labors it is probable that there will be a thorough Investigation of the management of several of the Institutions under charge of the board of control as well as the proposed In vestigation of the National Guard af fairs and the public lands department. The resolution to sift the charges against the guard has already passed the house, which this winter Is proving to be the raott conservative and cautious branch of the lawmakers. The senate hb8 Its hatchet out for any and every oie of the appointed officers and some of the elected ones. A legislative com mittee appointed by the legislature of 1909 to Investigate public ' officers brought In some ugly charges aga(nst the manner In which the public lands are being disposed of and the methods employed hy several of the state's eruls-.., ' era, which, it is chnrged In the report, has the sanction of Land Commissioner Roes. The probing of these findings will be taken up by the senate probabjy next week or as soon as some private investigations are completed which were undertaken by members of the com mittee on public lands. Reform School In Limelight. And now the state training school at Chchalls Is .thrown Into the limelight by recent charges preferred against C. C Asplnwall, superintendent, by Roy Langford of Tacoma. This young man was discharged for alleged incompe-tency-'Trom the position of baker for the Institution, and Asplnwall alleges the charges of cruelty and mismanagement are the result of the discharge and a malicious fabrication. Langford's afff davlt has been filed with Governor Hay, and the attorney general has beeq or dered to accompany, the prosecuting at torney of Lewis county to the reform school and thoroughly sift the charges. It Is recited In the affidavit that two hoys named Charles Rhodes and another named Brown. from Belllngham, In company with a boy whose name Is not given, were brought to the institution together. Brown and the unnamed boy ran away, hut Rhodes was sick In bed and knew nothing of the escape. How ever. It is alleged, the detail officer went into the dormitory where Rhodes was. took him down into the basement and without taking the trouble to question him gave the lad an unmerciful beat ing, breaking a finger, and using him up so he Was hardly ahle to stand on his feet. In this condition he was set to work in the bakeshop. The detail officer William Baker told Langford it was his practice to "Intimidate" a boy and question him afterwards, finding in this way the truth was more easily cllcittd. When the Belllngham boys were cap tured the detail officer Baker com menced to beat Brown, and he fought back. He was hit over the head with a paddle and his scalp cut open and one of his ears almost torn off. Lang ford states that Baker told him he knocked Brown down 20 times with his fists before he "subdued" him. The affidavit states that every boy who runs away receives a beating of from 75 to 100 blows with an oak board about three feet leng, half Inch thick and three Indies wide. Prosecuting Attorney John R. Buxton states that the Lewis county officials are determined to sift the charges to the bottom, and If there Is delay on the part of the state officials to make proper Investigation they will start ac tions for prosecution against the offi cials who have been guilty of needless cruelty to the state's unfortunate charges. New Dental Cod. A new dental code Is before the leg islature for consideration and is backed up by several dentists of the sound cities who are dissatisfied with the ex isting code. The bill provides for the appointment of an examining board of five examiners, all graduates of some recognized medical school, who shall receive a per diem of $10 while actually employed tn examining applicants. This hoard will submit to applicants a list of Z0 questions on the departments of mechanical and operative dentistry, den tal materia medica with associated sub jects, dental anatomy and physiology and chemistry which pertains to den tistry The applicant Is to answer any 10 of the queries in each department. The grading of papers will run from zero to 100 and a percentage of 60 must- be had to obtain a license. Any person falling In one examination may take the next. The bill also provides that temporary licenses can be given to those dentists comfng into the state from another- state where they have held a license and also for graduates of recognized colleges, these temporary certificates to hold only until the next regular examination Is held. The code also puts a ban on dentists advertising , In the papers. Budkin Waits for Confirmation. n.e coaflrmatton of the appointment of "frrank N. Rudkin of the supreme ' bench to the federal judgeship to suc ceed the late Judge Whltson has' not ' reached Olympia yet although President Taft has made the appointment which has been accepted by Judge Rudkin. As Boon as the commission reaches Olympia Rudkin will resign from the su preme bench and the governor, will ap point his successor.- Who this appointee will be is the subject of speculation about the state house and among the iantnrjuqgea."" Rankin eome ftum .North Yakima and It wjould seem prob able that his successor would come from the east of the mountains district but this is not likely for of the nine members of .the highest court six were lected from eastern Washington points Crowe and Mount from Spokane, Cfcad- wlck and Fullerton from Colfax, Gose from Pomeroy and Rudkin from North Taklma. It is an- open- secret that Governor Hay will tender the place to Harold, Preston of Seattle as soon as Kudkln resigns, and this man Is the unanimous choice of the eight Judges who . will remain on the bench but whether Mr. Preston would consider the appointment favorably is problematical. There la neither money nor glory In the job greater than he has at present in his own practice and the appointment could only be for two years 'or until the next regular election. Ex-Governor Albert E. Mead is spoken of as a pos sible appointee; Attorney General H. E. Bell has the Indorsement of the solid Snohomish bar association; Judge Jere Neterer of Belllngham has many friends who Are urging his name to the gover nor; O. C. Ellis a prominent Democrat of Tacoma and WC Chapman of Seat tie are also frequently mentioned as possible successors to Judge Rudkin. .. Liberal With Pensions. The present legislature shows a dis position to be generous In the matter of pensioning of public servants who have passed the 60 year age limit. First comes a bill to. permit judges who have served 18 consecutive years on the su preme bench and who are over 60 years of age to retire on half pay. This could only apply for many years to Judge Ralph Oregon Dunbar who Is In the middle of his fifth year term. As the Judge IT hale and able to turn off more work than arty of the members of the supreme court and as he loves to work, It is not probable that even If the pension Is granted It will ever be asked for by Judge Dunbar, The fire men of cities of the first class will prob ably be granted pensions after reaching 45 years and having been In the service 20 years upon their asking for retire ment. State Superintendent H. B. Dewey has a bill prepared to permit teachers to receive a pension after teacnlng 80 consecutive school years. Pensions for Teachers. In talking about the proposed teach ers' pensions Mr. Dewey said: "The enactment of such a measure would do more to build up the teach ing profession tn the state than any one thing. The present Itineracy of the teachers is the curse of the pro fession, some 40 per cen cease teach ing within five years in Washington. This law would keep abler men and women In the service the class of teachers who now seek more lucrative fleius of labor. ,TUei request for the enactment of this measure comes as an earnest and unanimous appeal from the teachers throughout the entire state from the smallest one roomed building to the largest high school or normal school; from a profession that numbers over 7000 and since last November from a profession that numbers over 7000 voters." The senate he's passed and sent to the house a memorial to congress ask ing for a restriction of immigration from the Mediterrean countries. The memorial recites the fact that for the year ending June 30, 1910, a million aliens came Into this country, 600,000 from eastern Europe and western Asia.' The arguments on the adoption of the. memorial brought out some Interesting statements from Senator Arvld Ryd strom, who is a railroad engineer in the Deschutes valley ih Oregon working on contracts for the Hill and Harriman lines. "Kor the past 15 months," said Senator Rydstrom, "it has been Im possible to get enough laborers. We had agencies in Portland, Seattle, Spo kane and California, but were always Bhort about 7000 men. Wre did not have to exceed 2 per cent of Americans at work with us and about 20 per cent of Scandinavians. The rest, the only class of men we could get, were Ital ians and Austrians." Mrs. Hutton on Job. Mrs. May Arkwright Huttoh of Spo kane is spending a few days tn at tendance on the legislature and lob bying for several reform measures she would like to see enacted. From here she goes to Salem and will observe tne way they do it In our sister state. Mrs. Hutton was a leader in the recent campaign for equal suffrage and when the victory was won last November, led In the monster demonstration in Spo kane. There are those who assert the lady will build a few fences and when the time comes will file her declara tion to enter the gubernatorial race. From the good politics that were played in the campaign and from the money that Mrs. Hutton could spend and never miss who knows Washington might yet see a woman at the head of the administration, The Joint committees on appropria tion are working on the needs of the various state institutions and the sup erintendents and managers are being given audience to state what will be needed for the next two years. A large Has Cured More Ruptures Than AH Operations Ever Performed No Hospital or Doctors' Bills; No Loss of Time From Work, and Not a Single Penny to Pay If You Don't Get Better. No longer any need to drag through life In the clutches of rupture. No earthly excuse for letting yourself keep on getting worse. No big expense to stand in your way. And you won't have to take a single rent's worth of risk. Think of that! you. who have spent dollar after dollar without finding a thing that has done any good. Think of that! you who have been afraid that some day you'd have to risk the dangers of operation you who dread the surgeon's knife because you know it results in permanent weakness or death about as often as in recovery. In the last 24 years more rupturod people have been cured without opera tion tnan oy an me operauujiB yci formed. . Cured without leaving home without being in bed for a single day without losing a single hour from work. Cured by the wonder-working Cluthe Truss (Cluthe Mechanical Massager) something so remarkably beneficial that In 99 cuses out of every 100 relief is Immediate and in most cases cure begins at once. For this is far more than a trtiBS far more than merely a device for hold ing the rupture in place. Try It at Our Bisk. We 'have so much faith in the Cluthe Truss that we are willing to Jet you prove by trying It at our risk, Just what it will do for you. We'll make a Cluthe Truss especially for your case and give you plenty Of time to test It if It falls to hold your rupture securely In place, when working and at all bther times if it doesn't do you a world of good then it won't cost you a single cent. For your Protection, we guarantee all this in writing. , . Cure Takes Place While You Work. We .guarantee that with a Cluthe Truss on you can do, right from the first, any kind of work, exercise, ride horseback, take a bath or awlm (this truss is waterproof), . etc., with abso lutely no danger of forcing the rupture out. ' You see this truss unlike all others Is self-regulatinir. self-adjusting, can't slip or shift away from the rupture open ing; automatically apd Instantly coun teracts every one of the strains or sud- I rtpn mnvpmpTitM which with ordinary trusses, are almost certain to uirow tnu ruDture out. And, In addition. It does something no other truss or appliance iq the world does It gradually overcomes the weakness which Is the real eause of rupture All day Jong, without any attention Whatever on your part. It automatically COURT GLORIES FOR AM' AMERICAN GIRL if?:.,'..., 'lb' ;';."., U V M 1 I V IV-Vu, VV( f-?v t?7 Jr'j ".ft-JV . -! mv -( S V By the elevation of Montague ElLot to a gentleman usher in the royal household of King George of England, court glories have come to another American girl. Mrs. Eliot was Miss Helen Agnes Post, one of the most popular girls In London. She Is a daughter of Lady , Barrymore, who was the daughter New York. number of new buildings and new ground is being asked for but It seems to Le the disposition of the committee to use the pruning shears on this class of demands and spend more on main tenance. Woman Lobbyist Ejected. A sensation was created In the capi tal city Friday by the forcible ejec tion from the floor of the house of Mrs. Mary Trumbull, superintendent of schools of Clallam county. -This lady has been twice elected to that office, likes her Job and is trying to get the legislature to fix things so she can hold over indefinitely by amending the law that a county officer can serve only two consecutive terms. Mrs. Trum bull was caught red handed lobbying on the floor of the house and the sergeant at arms was instructed to eject her. She was very Indignant and has sent post haste for her husband, who she says will "fix" the bad men who were rude to her. Last week Mrs. May Arkwright hutton and other women lobbyists were told to keep out of the legislative chambers between the hours of 9 a. m. and 10 p. m., and as the house has established a rule that no lobbying is to be permitted during these hours it is evident that the rule Is for women as well as for men. Hillman Agents in Contempt. (United Preti located Wlr. Seattle. Jan. 28. E. J. Kirk and M. J. Webb, accused by District Attorney Elmer E. Todd of tampering with the massages the weak rupture parts And this soothing, stimulating, muscle making massage strengthens just as ex ercise strengthens a weak arm in most cases soon makes the ruptured parts so strong and sound that the rupture open lug Is entirely closed up and no sign of the affliction left. That Is how the Cluthe Truss has cured some of the worst cases of rupture on record. Among them men and women 60, to 70 years old, who had been ruptured 20 to 50 years cured many of them after everything else, including operation, had proved utterly useless. Free Book Tells All About It; So that you can Judge for yourself, we want to send you a free book we have written a clothbound book ad vice. Even physicians who have read It say It is the best book ever written on rupture. Itsums up all we' have learned in 40 years of day-after-day experience in the successful treatment of over 280,000 cases. It deals in simple language and fhotographlc illustrations with rupture n all its forms and stages; explains the dangers of operations; puts you on guard against throwing money away. And It tells absolutely without mis representation all about the Cluthe Truss how littlest costs how It ends all expense how It frees you forever rrom the torturing harness which makes other trusses so uncomfortable (noii- for liquor completely rooted out of springs, band, belt or elastic around your nJs gyetem. His corporation thought it waist, no legstraps nothing to pinch, economy to try and save him, rather dilate. B'lu eric ui UIIIU'. AI1U llltt UUUK explains how vou can try a Cluthe Truss at our risk, and how we guar antee to fit you perfectly, no matter where you live. Also In their own words It tells the experiences-of many former sufferers gives their names and addresses per haps you know some of them. Book sent in plain, sealed envelope. Write for It today,, don't put It off don't try to make" up your mind one way or the other until you see. as told in this book, I how thousands an badly ruptured as you, haye been restored to full strength and usefulness. Just use the coupon, or simply say In a letter or postal: "Send me your book." Jn writing ua, please give:.our box num ber as below: RELIEF COUPON -""BOX 81CIiUTHJ5 123 East 93d St.. Hew Tort City. Send me your, Free Book on The Cure of Rupiture. Name. ......... .t. Street... Town ,y. of the Jate James Wadsworth of veniremen who have been summoned to appear in the C. D. Hillman trial next Tuesday, were-found guilty of contempt of court by Judge Donworth today. Kirk was sentenced to six months at the federal penitentiary on McNeil's island, and Webb to four months in the King county jail. New Hlllsboro Hotel Open. (Special Dlspatrh to The Journal.) Hillsboro, Or., Jan. 28. The Hotel Washington was thrown open to guests this week. It is a new three story brick, finely furnished, and Is modern throughout. It fills a long felt want and Is destined to do a good business. Messrs. Wann & Gifford of Portland have charge of the Institution. HARD DRINKERS SAVED AT EDGE Of RUIN Business Corporations Choose Neal Institute as Place for Valued Employes to Successfully End Drink Habit It Is really startling the number of men who are right at the edge of "the falling-off place" and fall to reallre their danger. Excessive drinkers rarely see them selves as others see them. They realize, of course, that the crav ing for drink Is stronger within them than it once was, and they know that they are compelled to drink oftener to satlsfv that craving but they do not know how often their growing habit Is the cause of much concern and earnest discussion among business as sociates and those who are interested in their welfare. Many men, once excessive ' drinkers, who were absolutely freed from the bondage of desire for drink by a three days' stay at the Neal Institute, did not go of their own accord. They were persuaded1 to take the treatment by Intimates who could see what strides they were making toward bankruptcy in health and fortune, be cause business Instinct, once bright, was growing dull under the poisoning effects of alcohol. Several bright and brainy men, beads of departments in corporations and business houses, have gone to the Neal Institute sent there by their com panies In a last effort to save them.. One bright Portland business roan went home during the past week light hearted and happy, and with all tne ternoie nanoicap or resistless ae BWBMWB"WsttMHweMMsAlbeMMMtaej BOYS TAKE FANCY 10 GARDEN CONTEST Registration Will Begin Feb. 3, When Prof. Bouquet Talk on Gardening. With the illustrated lecture by Pro fessor A. G. Bouquet of the Oregon Ag ricultural college, in the T. M- C, A. auditorium' on February 3, at 8 p. m., the registration for the boys' garden contest will start. This seems likely to prove one of the biggest "stunts" for boys the Y. M. C. A. has ever inaug urated and already scores of boys are asking about It. , j Professor Bouquet's lecture will be j on gardening, and will be open to all who are interested, whether boys or j girls, men or women, in nis nrsi lec ture he will treat of the preparation of the garden and the construction of hotbeds. On February 10 he will give a second lecture on the planting of seed and the care and cultivation after seed ing. Each lecture will be thoroughly Illustrated with stereoptlcon views. The gardening contest is to teach the boys how to grow vegetables and interest them in practical gardening. Many of them will make good profits from their small plats In addition to the opportunity they will have of win ning prizes. The details have been worked out by a committee and a set of fules adopted. The contest will be In charge of G. C. Hatt, who conducted the Junior poultry contest last year with success, and all the reports of the con testants will be made to him. The public schools of the city have been invited to form gardening clubs and the school having the club that makes the best showing as a whole in the contest will receive a special award, j A number of principals are planning to help the boys in the formation of gar den elubs. SOY BEAN TO SOLVE PROBLEM OF HIGH COST (fnited Preng Lesed Wire. Paris, Jan. 28. If Li Yu Lin's say beans prove to be as nutritious as he claims, he will have done more to re duce the high cost of living than all th-i tariff experts combined. So confident is Yin that his discov ery will prove a boon to "squeezed" hu manity that he has spent $400,000 In 01 semi-arimciHi iuuu. me piuui upeneu for business today. Here, according to Yin, are the food products to be extracted from the soy bean: Cheese, milk, caffeine. Jelly, oil, flour, bread, biscuits, cakes, sauces and a variety of vegetables. Yin Is 30 years old and Is an ex perienced chemist. His workmen are Chlhesa, the machine Is of Chinese tn- i vention and the raw material com-s from China. Hobble Peril Menaces Man. M'nlted Itmh Oaard Wirn.) St. Iouis, Jan. 28. "Hobble pants" so tight that a man must take off his shoes before ho can peel his trousers are to be the "real thing" this summer, according to leading tailors here. Scotch effects and pencil stripes In grays, browns and blues are to lead the list of fabrics. Corset-cut coats with nar row shoulders and flaring skirts are to be "the good." and vests are to be sent to the side lines, with, two piece suits the large noise. than let him go on to wreck and then break In a new man. "This man," wrote his employer to the Neal Institute, "has been associat ed with us for 16 years in an import ant and confidential position. Kor the past three years he has been addicted to drink and the habit growing worse as time passed until, like all other cases of this kind, his position and his very life, for that matter, are now at staka. to say nothing of the happiness of his mother and sisters. We will jrladlv co operate with you in any way to restore him to his former self, as he Is a very capable and reliable man minus the llnuor habit." Three days at the Neal Institute did for this business man just what the Neal Treatment has done for thousand!! of others all over this country. That mother and sisters welcomed home a son and brother who had en throned dignity and was no longer a slave to drink but master of himself. This case in only one of manv simi lar ones. It Is a great deal better to save a bright, brainy fellow than to "break In" green hands and manv firms have found that It is not only good business but sound economy to go a little beyond ordinary lines" and help victims of excessive drink get on their feet, sober, with cleared brains, brightened eyes and nerves restored. The Noal Treatment is simple, yet very attractive. Dr. Neal, after many years of the most painstaking profes sional and thorough study, experiment and investigation, has found and dem onstrated that the drink habit Instead of being a disease or an inherited af fliction, is due to the stored up wison In the system coming from the con tinued and excessive use of alcohol. After discovering and demonstrating this he found the antidote for thi pot son, and Its administration results In the neutralization of this poison. The poison thus antldoted and neutralized is eliminated from the system, and the desire, appetite and craving for drink at once destroyed or lost. Bushels of letters from happy folks In all parts of the land can be shown giving testimony tp the fact that the Neal Treatment does cure in three davs' time. Dr. Howard James of lioston, a specialist in liquor cases declares. "The Neal Cure is in ' all practical .sense of the term a specific for alco holism In all its mannestatlons." Those who have carefully investigat ed the Neal Treatment -are the' most enthusiastic in indorsing It.- Investi gation, ia most- earnestly, la vlUd. - T be Neal Institute guarantee' satisfaction or a refund of the money. If Vou have a friend who would like to rid hlmsplf of the drink habit, wrlte or wire the Neal Institute, 354 Hall street, Portland. Or., for further par ticulars and booklet. Telephone Mar shall 2400. The Neal Institute Is open day and night. ' Protect Your Lungs Get a Chamois Vest This Changeable Weather Is Bad for Your Health We have every style and shape in Chamois Vests and Felt Chest Protectors. No one should be without one. Worn in time, they save you many a hard cold and cough. Come in tomorrow and pick out one for your self. Children's sizes also, in all sizes and weights. Percolators, Coffee Pots Hot Point Irons Hot Point Electric Iron . . . $5.00 El Tosto Electric Toaster . $3.50 Iron and Toaster with one interchangeable Woodard-Clarhe & Co. FOURTH AND WASHINGTON STREETS YOU CM'T ALVEOLAR Is Guaranteed for Life; It Does Away Entirely With Plates and Bridgework. DIOSST THIS, PLEASE. Our guarantee Is such that you cannot possibly lose. Most patients that come , to us have been told by other dentists ! that they must wear a plate for the rest of their lives. As bridgework cannot flon where vou haven't teeth at both ! ends to anchor the bridge to, in such , eases, as well as all cases where bridge work is poHSlble, we can spply your missing teeth with beautiful, artistic, clcanlv, comfortable Alveolarteeth, and guarantee them to last for life. If for 1 att-y reason the work proves defective or ! unsatisfactory, we repair or make it ; over free of charge. If neither can be 1 done, which Is SELDOM, but sometimes j the case, we then make you the best platri possible. Our guarantee simply means that Instead of destroying your ! natural teetli to which we anchor, wo 1 prevent their destruction, thereby assur ing the patient' and ourselves that the Alveolar teeth. In 49 cases out of 60. I are going to last for the remainder of i vour natural life. If not, then No. 50 gets what the other dentists told you was your Inst resort before you came to us a 'plate- and the best that can be i made. Our Alveolar teeth are the most 'beautiful and natural looking teeth tm j aglnable. They cannot be told from I nature's product. We can Imitate na . tore so nearly that we defy anyone, I dentists or laymen, to tell them .from I the most perfect natural teeth. Kach tooth Is set in its own socket, separate and distinct, spaced like natural teeth wliere best to d-J so, lapped in othet j places. The cusps occlude with the ! opposing teeth, and in some eases wo . put them in crooked purposely to match ! and occlude with your other natural i teeth. The work Is so remarkable and j so perfect that we cannot do it Justice by a written desorltil Ion, nor could you ; believe! it. It sounds too good to be true, but we can show you samples. I counterparts of the work, let you sen i for yourself what It is. There are 11' i Rex Dental Co. offices In the west. jAbout -80,00a people in the United States I aro wearliiK Alveolar teeth. About 50,000 were stf oiled bv the Rex Dental ; Co. About 2000 people of this city and state were equipped In this office; 89 ! per cent of these, if not all. will tell you thai ithev are delighted and that lit's the test investment that they ever 1 made, if asked. We will gladly refer ypu to as many as you care to see. The Bridge Specialist's Guarantee 1 Is' that if your bridge breaks or Pyor rheas (loosens), or pulls out. or breaks off vour naturaliteetb to which he has i anchored, which' In 'most cases It Is cer- i tain to do sooner or later., yuu jnust suffer the loss, pay for repairs or a plate, Hvhich ; ou must wear, the rest of vour davs. lie says to you, my dear sir. inn-4tUlgwwoxkwaA-iuaran ttwit , aga hint detects in maienai .a no. woniuiansuiu, I did not guarantee your own teeth.-His guarantee, if a real faker, means any old thing. But usually the guarantee Is simply this, that the hrldgework was Little Ads iii The Journal and Tea Pots In artistic copper and nickel the well-known Manning Bowman line a durable, low-priced showing. cord, $7.00 - LOSE DENTISTRY done as good as It could be done, or as? good as he could do it. Then If your own teeth give way that's no fault of his; he says, I cannot guarantee that your own teeth are going to stay there. He says nothing about his bridgework being the direct cause of the destruction of your good natural teeth or diseasing your teeth and gums with Pyorrhea or both. Bridgework is never guaranteed to last by any high class dentist who is responsible and reliable, because all first class dentists will tell you that bridgework at best Is doubtful. Every dentist in this city knows that ererjr word of this article la absolutely true. Yet there are still a few unscrupulous; jaundiced, jealous rascals, who spend good deal of their time trying to divert business from us, knowing full well that he is doing the patient an Injustice by so doing. Bridgework Wont Do. The ordinary "bridgework" which dentists set In between teeth is a poor substitute for missing teeth. It makes the two pier teeth do the work of sup porting A LI. those that are fastened to the bridge, which Is wrong. If the wearer of this bridge bltee on the bridge teeth he puts a terrific strain on the two piers, causing them to be come loose in time, and the gums to become sore and inflamed, and in the end OCT COMES THE BRIDGE. It is a painful piece of work from beginning to end. Then, again, It is unsanitary. Being higher in the middle than at either end, it permits food becoming lodged under It, which soon causes fermentation to set in. bringing more Inflammation and not infrequently Pyorrhea. Bridgework is as much of a make shift as the partial plate. , The bridge won't do. Alveolar Teeth, Where Bridgework Is Impossible. If only your front teeth are left, say three or four or more, we can replace all of those that have been lost on both sides cetur back with perfect Alveolar teeth, whjlst bridgework would be irn possible even if you have eight or ten front teeth to tie to. If you have only two back teeth on each side, say mo lars: we can supply all the front leeth that are missing with beautiful, serv iceable, lifelike Alveolar teeth. This could not possibly be done by the bridge route. And where brldicework 1" pos sible, there Is no comparison between the two. A verv large percentage of our work Is taklmg out bridgework . put In bv supposedly high class dentists and replacing it with the beautiful and ar tistic Alveolar teeth. And. unlike bridgework In another respect, K - la practically painless. No boring or cut tin? Into the dims, nothing to bo dreaded. Now, then, prices being equal, which would you choose? Curing Pyorrhea (loewe teeth), a dli ease given un by other dentists a In curable,, is another of our specialties. We cure It absolutely. It's boastful statement to make, but w can do any tlilr.g. that la poHlble la dentistry and what we do is always of tMTVery blith est class. Our booklets. Alveolar Dn- tlstrv, re free. v Write for one If you ununut, eall.n.VVe have. wimuiM-t-uut . work to show at all time. .. . . . THE REX CENTAL CO., PENTIBTfl, 311 to 311 Ablngton bldg jOsWTS'I t. ; t Terms to reliable people. Cost But , One Cent a Word A.