15 GERMANS, DEFEATED, STANDARD OF PRICE r NEEDED TO SUPPORT LEGAL POINTS MADE FOR, - AGAINST MARRIED TEACHERS Briefs Filed in Suit Which Will Determine Rights of Mar ried Women to Be Placed on aa Equality With Unmarried Instructors in the Schools, -A .Hill' ii;;; THE : OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND.? SUNDAY MORNING. APRIL 18. 1915. FAIR VVMEN WHO ARE POPULAR IN NATTOl CAF?1TL n DRIVEN FROM BUSINESS NJEGRITY OVERLOOKING W. F, Woodward Urges Uni ted Commercial Travelers r to Support Stevens BANQUET AT HAZELWOOD Cat-Throat Competition XiUs Trade, Asserts Speaker, Who Makes War ' ; v on Slashing of Trices. .'William F. Woodward, secretary ' treasurer of Woodard, Clarke &, Co., wu the speaker at a banquet of United Commercial Travelers, the only secret traveling men's organization, held at the Haielwood last night. Mr. -Woodward made a plea for support of .'. the so-called Stevens bill which would permit independent manufacturers to - designate the retail selling price of their products. "Competition may be the lif of trade in some instances," asserted Mr. Woodward, "but cut-throat competition m me aeain or iraoe. wnoiesaie price cutting of a nationally advertised arti cle of merit in an endeavor to bring people into stores, price cutting for the niimflu tit natmlnff nff Inw Twin uh- stltutes. is not nnlv rllshnnpwt hut It f is immoral. :-V;"Independent manufacturers build p a business through liberal national f 'advertising, payment of aood wares. employment of capable salesmen, and 'fix a price that gives an adequate i'profit to Jobber and retailer, only to have some firm absolutely spoil the same and market for the product by advertising it for sale at a price cut way below cost. "Cut prices force buyers -to believe that something is wrong with the prod uct, that the manufacturers are not putting as good materials Into it as they had been. Let one or two firms undersell a standard article of estab lished reputation and it is not long be fore that article goes into disrepute.' Or, having induced buyers Into the Store by reason of advertised cut rates. It is hinted that the article isn't what It formerly was and cheap substitutes re Sold instead. ... "By a ruling of the supreme court it Is contrary to the Sherman anti-trust law for a manufacturer to fix a selling price and yet nothing is more vital for the protection of the manufacturer's business and the business of thoge who honestly try to handle the product at a fair profit." Mr. Woodward cited a number of in stances that had come to his attention. P. K. Arlett, supreme counselor for the United Commercial Travelers, act ed as toastmaster. The entertainment portion of the program wag. furnished by Mrs. E. M. Hogan and her picka- ninny in southern songs. Members of ! room in the Masonic temple after the banquet ' v , - : T i Day . of Prayer v For World Peace f Today is Peace Sunday, and the movement is being observed In many communities throughout the United States. .- Today is also the anniversary of the destruction of San Francisco by earth quake and fire and Peace Sunday is a direct outgrowth of that event. Wishing to 'institute a movement of lasting good on the anniversary of that momentous event, the San Fran cisco ministry decided to observe to day as one of prayer and supplication that the world war may soon be con- ; eluded, and everlasting peace descend Upon the earth. , U Communications have been sent all over the United States, and favorab'e response has been met everywhere. In Portland seven pastors will make peace the subject of their discourse at either or both services today. LEGAL INTELLIGENCE Saturday In the Circuit Court Judgments. aeJ E110"" Moyln vs. Jamee T. Mojito; Covey Motor Car Co. t. Oregon Surety Casualty Co.: dtamlaaed. atoiwd.Landry Albert kicnky; . Pelfic Amusement Co. t. W. Winnick GlBUiiKHed. ' .H- stubrd v. Ida T. Desmond et 1: voluntary nonsuit. ' . - Brabaaon Edwin King va. Sophia Charlotte Kins; decree. ;??nV,AcAle'3r.,r'- w"rd Ackley; decree, f . a AWord Ta. VVilliam J. Summer! et J;- order ronflrmlng asle. Forest City Foundry & Mfg Co. vs. Q. W. Siote' et al; Judgment for plaintiff. K. Parriah va. First National Life Aa orance Society of America; Uanaf erred to Ivderal court. f Catharine C. Slgrlit va Jacob eecree. Blgriet; W. H. -Yelton vs Will V. LoomU et 'al; order cunfirminc mule ,iCarl g. Ooerlr va. Ida B. Goerlg; decrea. .Ambrose B Scott vs. Frederick Lawaon ct SI; dismissed aa to W. J. Summers Qtav Tafs va. Inman-Poulsen Lumber Co.: .ejamiaaed. , Hew Buita. - Harry B. Lewis va. Glaphia E. Lewis; di vorce. . J. M. Knoor vs.J. A. Leitxel; to collect sore. - f Charlaa W. Sinclair v. Northwestern Trust Co.? to recorer money paid on a contract. , Angelo Santavlcca va. Antonio L Santls et al; foreclosure. Blra. Lao Katzky vs. Lavrsoo H. Carter, executor estate Hat tie L. Carter, deceased: foreclosure. .-Merchants National bank of Portland, Or vs. Northern Brewery Co.; to collect rentals. t Emma Jackson va Karl C. Jackson; di vorce. . A. H. Sprague vs. Inman-Poulsen Co.; fvrwuBi injury usuiages. A. j. rrestoa vs. j lect commUsion. ' K. Mar tin; to eol- Idaho State Life Insurance Co. vs. Hugh B. Carey: to collect not. ; Frank B. Bmlth A Co. vs. Chester W. Han sen; to recover money collected. Margaret Humason vs. Augustus B. T. Orr transcript on appeal. . ' Artiolea of Incorporation. Betall Merchants' Protective Corporation; capital stock. $500; R. 8. McCarL M. Cohen end G. Balllet. Incorporators. BROADWAY DlftWORKS Aaaomce the openlag of that new WEST SIDE OFFICE vin bsoaswat, nia wash. West aide phones l Xar. 883, A-5588 I' Briefs of both plaintiff and defendant of the suit brought by Mrs. Maude I. Marsh-Richards against the school board for reinstatement as a teacher in the Trades school have been presented as the reply brief of the plaintiff has the necessary matter on which to base he expected to make a thorough study Incision, it is not expected that judgment Mrs. Richards was removed from her position last January rouowing her marriage to Attorney Orin R. Richards. The suit will be the basis of deter mining the right of women who marry to demand that they be placed on -an equality as teachers witn- unmarried women. FOB XA2LBXSS TXACKXBS. Salient points of Attorney Coy Burnett's brief for Mrs. Richards are: But four causes for dismissal of teachers are recognized by law-r-immor ality. Intemperance, crime and gross neglect of duty. Good cause must exis which personally disqualifies the individual teacher j Derore a teacner can be dismissed. ; - All laws touching upon employment of teachers must be construed, together. 'The permanent tenure of office law was passed to insure permanency of their positions to teachers so long as they exist. ' If teachers can be dismissed for marrying, they could be dismissed for joining a church or a lodge. ' . Dismissal of Mrs. Richards 'cast a stigma on the marriage relation. Quotations from the opinion of Dr. John H. Flnley, New York state com missioner of education, setting aside the action of the school board of New. York City In dismissing Mrs. Bridget C. Piexotto in 1913 when she sought leave of absence that she might bear a child. AOAZHST MARRIED TEACHERS. j -Is a 'teacher who violates her contract and admits the viblatlon entitled j to formal charges and a formal hearing and to compensation for services' not i rendered from the time of her discharge to the date of the hearing? is asked 1 in the brief for the school board by : Attorney Jay Bowerman. Mr. Bowerman believes not, ' The brief cites thse points for the school board: . ; A teacher is eligible to teach provided the school board sees fit to em ploy her. Her life certificate is not involved in this controversy; there is no qnes tion but what it remains in force. The board has full power to discharge teachers as it may deem necessary. iiuio vv--- w'w "2Z "J v .v".. uu - ""' Mrs. sawyer insists that the changes record be accorded. i Br0ej j - The tenure of employment of a teacher depends solely upon the pleasure, T '7imn ... of the board, providing the formal record is made of the matter. " A-tndin IVLt l7t No- stigma is cast upon marriage; the board "merely requires all of its.' her understanding that the sketch teachers to follow the inclination of all, or nearly all. women to give their would be given much more in accord husbands and homes he undivided attention of a wife." , ? CB ith her ideas than it was, and Of the married teachers called" as witnesses for the plaintiff, ail had been nat 8h would not have consented to employed after they had been married at least four years. Only one was i production otherwise, employed in the regular branches and the others were employed in the do-i a one thing Mrs, Sawyer, Mr. Qll mestic science departments, for which their married life peculiarly fitted bert and those who 'have seen the them. . j sketch as produced are agreed: It REPXiY TOB MAXBXSS TEACHERS. I W"'l d0- t ' . , ' rrv. .... .x.- . .v. t "The sketch as presented ignores i nc qucoiiuni nBnt?u ucitnue Mrs. Richards held her position nent employment and not under contract, as the contract was for 1913 and Thl yrt-r-.- .t-mr. .iim.. w ., i nf i.! The defense attempts to eliminate chapter ST of the 1913 laws, and assumes that is the only school law In the state. If that be done there is no board of directors, no powers of the board of directors are fixed, no bonding provisions or school elections provided for. there are no certificates of qualification for teachers and no method of exam- inlng teachers exists. ' . j It is ridiculous to contend that this section is the only school law in. Ore- gon. The question is whether, other laws apply. So far as the laws deal with the same'subject, they "must be construed together. " The contention of the defense results when analysed In a contention that a teacher holding a contract has a more permanent position than the teacher : qualified and acting under the permanent tenure act. ! The state certificate law, while it does not require the school-board to employ every teacher who Is qualified, does prohibit the board from saying that a teacher who holds a certificate is not qualified, as it provides that a teacher who is qualified cannot be discharged by the board. I It Is contended that the writ should not be Issued because the board would discharge the teacher in any event. Without regard to what the board might oo on a hearing, although it is contended a teacher cannot be discharged on ; ic only;payment of salary and not retention of position were involved. i Tb legislature Intended that the permanent tenure act should secure per-' manent teachers in their positions' unless and until they should become dis-' qualified by failure to meet some requirement of the law and net some idea or whim of the school board Authors and Producers of Play at-Outs, Sequence of the Plot Shifted for Effect Mrs. Harold M. Sawyer and Mrs. Folger Johnson, Who Wrote !"Even Up," Resent ., Tamperings Made for 1 Dramatic Reasons by Walter Gilbert. , The old conflict between the writer of a play, who wants it presented as he wrote it. and the nroduppr. who ni p. sents It as he thinks best, has been renewed in Portland during the past week. .The play Is "Even Up," written by Mrs. Harold M, Sawyer and Mrs. Fol ger Johnson, Portland women. The producer is Walter Gilbert, late INSTRUCTS CLUB WOMEN - p:: "w'''iy III I -";ir k ; vx W -'-i'i.&&M&X&&2&? v4 -v. J " X. till h X V VA; V ; s fHyf h t'U- - 'S r $1 W V-r5 - v - - vT?; h'' V sill I A vKm -1' Mmfir Cr ; 1 : -'1.x lx M 5 I ; . it m t , 1 Mrs. Urquehart Lee of Washington, D. C, who teaches parliamen - tary procedure to the presiding officers of women's organiza tion a in the national capital. . Among her pupils at present are some of the leading women ot Washington, ' 1 " - - "- - ' , , ' K - -1 . . . . i : to Circuit Judge Morrow, and as soon been received Judge Morrow will havei- his decision. As the court has said of the subject- before making his der will be rendered for some time. uu lu' V w,r V 4 mo nui uiiviitu iu iun utao, under the statutory provision for perma all statutory law except one provision. of the Baker players. With Mary Kd gett Baker, another Baker favorite, he has been presenting the sketch at the Empress. , Mrs. Sawyer, speaking for herself and Mrs. Johnson, who is In Califor nia, says emphatically that the skejeh is not presented as it was written nor as its authors desired. Mr. Gilbert says that he and Miss Photograph by Harris ft Swing. il A . It' " ' K I. v - Mill! V -. U IU - i i - -"f& ". ffiv-'.A -; - A " Hill f: Vs I I I f ' W IMMlkW ' ' ' !u--:'!T -:: ' ' I - - Vi " 11' --.1 I Baker have done as well as could be done witn the sketch, and that the changes that he admits were made were necessary to strengthen it 'dnnutlo nrlnrlnlo " said Mrs Saw- yer yesterday. "The thing which we iMha to keVp tne audience guessing about until near the last is revealed not far from the beginning, and there " uuu Vit vejy ope1y i?,tre.s d - """ " "" l11 ,deth; tv . w a, a Tn P1 the sl-.etch, as outlined y M- Sawyer, is that two thieves, . h11 a young woman, attempt to "pull off a Job" in the same room, whose tenant they both know to be absent, at the same time, neither hav- ing any knowledge of the other until they meet in the room. Each aocuses the other of being a thief, but both maintain that they have a perfect right to be there, the man claiming to be the. tenant and the woman that she is the tenant's sister. Each succeeds in tian being to make the audience believe jt too, and that both are In the same room by mistake. The denouement comes when the man tells the girl that she has "got ten away with his heart," and both confess their true charactsr. They divide the loot and make their exits together through a window. That is the way Mrs. Sawyer says It should be played. As played neither deceives the other at all, and the audience Is. puizled only in wondering when a plot is going to develop which, it develops, is never. Colleges Get Share Of Denny Estate University of "Washington and Whit man Remembered Handsomely is Will of Please Womaa. Seattle, Wash., April 17., Mar garet Lenora Denny, who met her death March 30 in an automobile accident, bequeathed $185,000 to pub lic institutions and societies, among them the University of Washington and Whitman College. By the terms of the wiiradmltted to probate Thurs day, $50,000 is given to the state uni versity, and $45,000 to Whitman col lege. ' She also bequeathed $70,000 to the Pulmonary Hospital of Seattle, of which she was a member of the board of directors at the time of her death; $3000 each to the Women's Relief so ciety of Seattle, the Congregational Home Missionary society, the Seattle Seamen's Friend society, the Florence Crittenton Home, the Young Women's Christian association and the Ply mouth Congregational church. The gift of $50,000 to the University of Washington must be invested by the regents In notes and bonds secured by first mortgages on real estate in Washington. The interest is to be used in the establishment of six fellowships one in each of the departments; I of school of mines, civil engineering, history, English, pedagogy and. phar macy, to be known as the Arthur A. Denny fellowships. The $45,000 bequeathed to Whitman College, together with $5000 she gave to the trustees during her lifetime, to go toward the establishment of a chair of liberal arts to be known as the Mary A. Denny chair. Seattle, "Wash.. April 17. Hearing- of the famous Goldfield Mer ger Minxes cojnpany receivership case, involving' the disposition' ot sev eral millions of dollars and of marked interest to thousands of shareholders In this Seattle corporation all over the country, has begun in Federal Judge Neterer's court. The : hearing will probably continue a -week. Rail Men on Bill at East Side Luncheon Bustaess Men's Association, to Be Ad dressed by Transportation Interests at Monday Function! The wit, eloquence and musical tal ent that lurk in the ranks of Portland railroad men will be paraded at the Monday noon luncheon of the East Side Business Men's. Club tomorrow in the Sagamore club hall on East Mor rison street. Frank B. Egan, soliciting r freight agent' of the Southern Pacific com pany, has been selected as chairman of the day. He says several stunts have been prepared that will make a shipper forget an overcharge on freight. I Freight men of the differ ent lines will appear from the bet ter sides of their personalities. . . Among" the musical specialties Is an augmented orchestra of the Transpor tation club, of which IL T. Schuma- kj . ill SCKULDERMAN NAMES 11 IB 0 J 4 5& II vfv III l v-' I II III I r Is sHtk H I II Il K I- i i - ir o i il .jthu ... JM ' Photographs by Harris St Bwlng. Top, left to right Mra. Prederlco M. Qulntana, wife of the new counselor of the Argentine embassy in Washington; Miss Elaine Pujo, daughter of the former representative from Louisiana, whose engagement to William B. Reily of New Orleans has been announced: Miss Lota Towner, daughter of Representative and Mrs. Towner of Des Moines, whose engagement to marry Jerry . Albert Pierce of Denver, has been announced, i Bottom, left to right "-Mrs. Atlee Ppmerene, ., wife of. the senator from Ohio, who recently was elected president of the Congres sional club of Washington: Miss Constance Drexell of Philadel phia, who recently returned in a hospital at Deauville and who has joined the ranks of the Congressional union' in Washington to aid in fight for suffrage. MILWAUKIE TO VOTE ON THE QUESTION OF BUYING PER PLANT Alternative of Securing Bull Run Water by Meter From Portland Will Also Be Given Milwaukle, Or., April 17. A special general election will be held at Mil waukie May 1 to vote for or against a charter amendment instructing the city council to purchase the property and rights of the Mllwaukie water company and the Minthorne Springs Water company by either arbitration or condemnation. The decision of the voters will be mandatory upon the council but the council. If the amend ment; carries, may pursue either the arbitration or condemnation method. The voters will also vote on a char-, ter amendment advising the council as to whether they favor buying Min thorne Springs as a water. supply for the town or prefer buying Bull Run water from Portland at a fixed price per gallon. Initiative petitions for placing the advisory amendment on the ballot are now being circulated. The charter amendment for purchas ing tha two plants would authorize and Instruct the mayor and council to ac quire the plants by voluntary sale within. IS days after the approval of the amendment. If the owners accept the prices offered or by condemnation if the city's offer is refused. W.! S. XTRen represented the water companies and Councilman B. G. Skula son the :lty of Mllwaukie in the legal matters preliminary to calling- the elec tion. ; The Bull 'Run water would be secured through a meter at Krrol Heights. The contract with Portland for the water has been signed and a municipal pipeline from Errol Heights to Mllwaukie is now under construc tion. : " A Citlsens Committee," with F. C. Harlow as chairman, and W. li. Coun sell, Mayor Albee and others as mem bers, was formed this afternoon to combat the amendment for acquiring the local plants and send letters to voters urging them to vote for Bull Run water In the advisory amendment. cher lis leader and1 "Jim"" Sutton, lo cal freight agent on the east side for the Southern Pacific, has gathered Some singers. - ' x. Representatives of the " various transportation lines will be allowed a few minutes to talk about every thing but "shop." Among those who will be called upon are: F. 11. Fogar ty. general freight agent of the North ern Pacific; H. A. Hinshaw. general freight agent of the Southern Pacific; George H. Smitton, assistant general freight agent of the Great Northern; W. D. Skinner, traffic manager -of the S,. P. A S.: W. A. Bobbins of the O W. B. N, legal department; J. . E. Werlein of the P. R.. U A P.; H. N. Kennedy, general, freight agent of the Great Northen Pacific Steamship com pany of San Francisco; D. C Freeman of the Oregon Electric and others. from France where she was a nurse MRS. HUMASON FILES APPEAL FROM EDICT IN ESTATE OF SKIER Attorneys Present Plea to Set Aside Cleeton's Refusal to Invalidate Orr Divorce. - Attorneys for Mrs. Margaret Huma son yesterday filed an appeal . from the judgment of County Judge Cleeton, refusing- to Invalidate the divorce de cree of Hannah M. Orr and Augustus B. F. Orr and the judgment cloning: the estate of her sister, Mrs. Mollis Burke Orr. Mrs. Humason has been fighting, tn the courts to secure possession of the estate of her sister, estimated to be worth 180,000, on the ground that Orrs divorce from his first wife was secured by collusion that he might marry her sister and secure the sis terV estate at her death. The case -has been fought In many phases' and has already been before the supreme court.! The present ap peaTJs ten the circuit court. Jaybird. 'If you v-" a bird, what sort would you rather beT "lt3Qta!Z29 "Why, an eagle. ! He's so majestic. What sort of bird r would you rather be?" ''-! "I guess I'd rather be a Jaybird." "The deuce! Why a jaybird?" "I've never seen a jaybird shut n in a zoo.'' RUPTURED? Yon know the discomforts of aa ill-fitting trass, the. distressing;, discouraging feeling of a rup ture not properly held. The Seeley Truss recommended, by us, gives you immediate - relief. Our- skilled - operator guarantees perfect fit- Hundreds of satisfied patients testify to the effi ciency! of the Seeley truss properly fitted. Remember the Woodard Clarke & Co, guarantee backed by. a reputa tion of 50 years' standing is be hind this service . Let Us Explain Personally. : Woodard, Clarke & Co. WOODLARK BUILDING ALDER AT WEST: PARK y i r 1 CHIEF EXAMINER OF STATE CORPORATIONS . ' : . !.-1 . - J,. G. Richardson, Portland Lawyer, Selected for Posi tion; Came Here in 1893. Henry J,s Schuldernian, who has been appointed corporation commissioner to succeed R. A. Watson on Msy 1, an nounced last nlghfjthat he has ap pointed J. G. Richardson of this city to the position of chief examiner for the department. Mr. Richardson has been associated in law practice with George Tazwell for the last two years. At the last primary election Mr. Richardson wa a candidate on the Re publican ticket for the legislature. He came to Oregon in 3 193 from Minne apolis. He is a graduats of McMinn vllle college and of the Oregon Law school. He was admitted to the bar in 1909. - He Is a member of the Cham ber of Commerce and the Multnomah Amateur Athletic club. Mr. Schulderman spent several days in Salem last week getting acquainted with state officials and getting an in sight into the work of the office he will take the first of the month. : ; Germans Retaliate. T , Copenhagen, April 17. (X. N. 8.) A Berlin message states that In retali ation for the British' treatment of sub marine prisoners, the Germans Intend to bring eight British officers, one a son of a former British ambassador In Berlin. t( Mad geburg jail and place them In cells. "Painless Dentistry Is Interesting" I . ' :- DR. E. G. AUSPLUND By always doing as I, sdver tise, have made my business a clean, sweeping success. EXPERT SERVICE! LOWEST: PRICES! All wbrk warranted 15 years. Best bank references. We replace teeth without plates which cannot be told from your own. We give absolutely reliable and up-to-date dentistry which will please you not only in I6oks,-trat in active service. Our artificial teeth are 'guaranteed to fit, to stick-to your mouth aftd to feel comfortable. . V i ' Gold ICrown and Bridge Specialists i I ' Plate Specialists ' Flesh-Colored Plates v.. $10.00 Good Plates , ......... .. . . . . .j ;g.00 Porcelain! Crowns ............. ...$3.50 to S5.00 Gold Fillings I .00 22-K Gold Crowns .....S3.S0 to j;5.00 22-K Gold Bridge $3.50 to $5.00 Extracting , . . 50c Osaa I isr i s p. xJ We are always busy, because our success is due to the fact that iwe do the very best work at very lowest prices. Electro xar tkb i two-stoxt ! BtrrxBzvo or szxTs Ajra' WASXxzroToxr sts TOBTiutwn. cojursi In One of Most Brilliant Bay onet Charges of the War French Are Victors. WITHSTAND HEAVY FIRC Pranch Artillerymen Vow Commas Xtoads Xeadlag to Colmar, Cap- ital of Upper Alsace. lly William Philip Simms. . (-nlted praaa Staf! Corrpon(lot. Paris. Aprll 17. In one of the most brilliant bayonet charges of the entlro war, French.' chausseurs have carrlnl the summit of Schnepfenriethkopf, overlooking the Rhine valley, In Al sace, the war office announced in an official statement tonight. The victory was won A'tf a week of desperate fighting. In a series cf short dashes, the French carried one after another of rows of German trenches on the mountainside. . Thcj fought their way through wire entan glements and over heavily mlnel areas in the face of a galling fire from -the enemy's machine guns.... liv fore a solid line of coldsteel the Ger mans on the crest finally broke and fled .down the eastern slope. important Tiotory. Capture of Schnepfenriethkopf, ac cording to French military experts. 1' uiie si me mvai inipuriaoi yiciori" won by the Vosges armies in their ad vance toward the Rhine. Karly In the week the French fought their way to the foot of the mountain, gaining nearly a mUe in a 24 hour battle. The summit of the hill lies two thirds of a mile above the Rhine and from their new position French artill erymen can command the roads leading to Colmar. capital of Upper Alwuct?, and but IS miles away. The lihlno itself now lies but 22 miles away from the French armies advancing over the mountains. , . On the northern bank of the river Fecht, a few miles north of Hcnhp- fenrieth, the French hsve made fur ther progress, according to the official communique. Trench Closer to Shine. At the same time the attacks against the German positions near Hartmann- weiler, 18 miles to the south, are car rying the French closer to the Rhine. In other sectors of the French-Fland ers battlefront, the French are main taining their positions in the face of German attacks. In the Lrette Hills, west of Arras, three German counter attacks against the positions taken ny the French yesterday broke down under artillery fire. At several points along the Alsne valley, , French heavy artillery destroyed several of the enemy's shelters. North of Mesnll, in - the Champagne region, German attacks agalnBt the French salient were easily repulsed, , - : . s Bombardment Kills Many. Paris, April i7. XJ. F.) Three civil ians perished as a result of the bom bardment of Amiens by a German Taube. Three persons who were wounded when bombs exploded near the famous cathedral died today. Tea were killed outright. The German also dropped bombs upon the railway sta tion of St. Roch. , I have devoted the best part of my life to this particular study, snd'find that it is well worth while. It makes me both friends and money, and gives me the satisfaction of knowing ; that I am doing something good for humanity every day I work. TRY My Painless Methods My Sdentific Work Hy Yery Reasonable Fees Dentists come and go, but the Old Reliable ELECTRO PAINLESS is always with you. Don't forget that. Denfcic ess cr. Sunday . S t - . u