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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1910)
^— Z e ld a D a m e r o n — P MEREDITH NICHOLSON w n . i o » » Mwrin c*. CHAPTER X X .— (Continued.) Bhe knew that Mrs. Copeland had In trusted Leighton with no such mesr sags, for she was on telephonic terms with Zelda. and Morris Leighton was of rather heroic proportions for an er rand boy. “Mrs. Copeland would never forgive me if I forgot,” said Muni», wishing to prolong his moment at the door. “I shall come if I can,” said Zelda, raising her voice slightly, so that ner father might hear. “And I apologize again for disturb ing. But I feared Mrs. Copeland’s wrath;” and Morris grinned rather foolishly. “You are a faithful messenger, and I thank you very much,” said Zelda, formally; but when the door closed on him and she heard his step on the walk the tears sprang to her eyes in her Joy at the thought that he had remem bered ! When she went back to her father he was poring over his papers at the table. “It was that Leighton fellow. I don’t like him,” said Dameron, sharply. “ I’m very sorry," said Zeld*’ . “ I don’t like him,” the old man re peated; and he did not raise his eyes, but kept them upon the papers. “What dreadful liars we are, you and I, Ezra Dameron," she said, going back to her old post my the mantel. “You have used language to me that is Infamous, blasphemous, from a child to a father.” “Very likely,” she said; "but I can’t discuss these things with you any fur • ther.” Leighton’s appearance had broken the spell; It had given her new cour age and assurance, though it had not lifted the burden from her heart. Hor father was loath to part with her; there was the extension of the trustee ship to be effect; he was about to make an appeal to her, throwing him self on her mercy, when she said, half turning to go: "You need not be afraid—I will sign your deed. And I have not the slight est idea of holding you to account for any of your acts. Only—only”—and her eyes filled and her voice broke— “only you must never speak my moth er’s name to me again!” “ Yes; yes. I understand,” he said, absently; though It was clear that he did not know what she meant. She turned and looked at him mus ingly, with a composure that was com plete; but a barrier In her heart broke down suddenly. “ My girlhood, the beautiful ignor ance of life, has all gone now. It be gan to go as soon as I came home to live with you; but I wish—I wish— It had not gone— so wretchedly, so cruel ly. Good night.” She spoke with difficulty, and he saw that she was deeply moved; and even after the rustle of her skirts had died away in the hall above he stood look ing after her, and listening and won dering. Then he opened a bundle of papers containing his computations and over them in deep absorption. “She will sign it; she will sign it.” he repeated, though he did not raise his head. He went in and closed the door, mut tering, “The corn! The corn!" CHAPTER XXI. At midnight Leighton sat In the old house in Seminary Square debating the situation with Rodney Merriam. “ What we said to her this afternoon evidently failed to arouse her. She either doesn’t understand, or she doesn’t care.” "She understands perfectly,” said Merriam; “but it’s quite like her to wish to shield him. Her mother did It before her. It’s a shame for the money to have gone so; but it was in evitable. and I’ m glad it’s over now.” Morris was silent. Rodney Merriam was growing old and the thought of It touched him deeply, for Rodney Mer riam was his best friend, a comrado, an elder brother, who stood to him for manliness and courage, much as Carr represented in his eyes scholarship and professional attainment. "You never saw Zelda’s mother?" asked Merriam, presently. “ No.” “ Your father and my sister were once engaged to be married.” said Mer riam. “Your father was my intimate friend. Morris. We were boys togeth er at college— it’s your college and mine, too. I’m glad you went there. Your father would have liked it so. Some of the fellows who taught us. taught you. When you saw them you saw gentlemen and scholars. They gave up the chance of greater things to stay there among the elms and ma ples of the old campus. "Your father moved here. He was an ambitious man. There was every likelihood of his taking a high place at the bar; and he had. too, a taste for politics. Then he met my sister. She was the youngest member of our fam ily—only a girl at the end of the war. Bhe was a very beautiful woman. Mor ris. She and Zee are much alike; but Zee has marked traits of her own. I don’t quite account for them. Her mother was a quick-witted woman, well educated for her day. Zee Is more a woman of the world than her moth er was and she has more spirit.” Merriam opened f drawer In his ta bled and drew out a miniature paint ed on porcelain. He put on his spec tacles and studied It intently for a mo ment before handing it to Leighton. *Tt was understood in the family that they were to be married, though there was never any formal announce m ent Your father meanwhile was es tablishing himself. Then Margaret went East to visit a friend of hers. When I got back, a little later, I fou id that It was all off between her and your father. The girl had never been away from home before, and the peo ple the visited put her'through lively paces It was easy to admlrs her. and the admiration from strangers went |a **ed Marlons wasn’t very gay in those days, and Margaret had miss ed a good deal of the social life that she was entitled to.” The old man paused, lost In thought, and Morris was glad of the silence. He was trying to construct for himself the past— to see his father as Rodney Mer riam had painted him, and to see, too Margaret Merriam as she had been when his father knew and lqved her. “There’s no use going into it She stopped writing to your father with out any warning that she had changed. She was completely carried away with the excitement of her New York ex periences. She was not ready to settle down yet a while, she told him. I supposed It would all come right, for I had faith In her. She was a true hearted, gentle woman, but she was proud and headstrong; and your fath er had his pride, too. I don’t blame him for taking it hard. He closed his office here and went back to Tippeca noe. I don’t believe they ever saw each other again. I’m not afraid but that you will do what is right. You are the son of your father. I don’ t be lieve you take things as hard as he did. Don’t do it. And don’t remember what I have told you to-night. It’s a queer story. And it hasn’t any moral at all. Your father missed something out of his life— the fine ardor of .iis younger manhood, maybe. But he had your mother and he had you. It wasn’t he that was punished.” He was silent a moment, and then blurted out: “What does Zelda think of Pollock?” “I don’t know !” Morris rose and walked the length of the room. "W hat does she think of you, then?” demanded Marriam, looking directly at Morris. "I think she hates me,” said Morris. He turned and left the house abruptly, leaving the old man aione with his memories. CHAPTER XXII. Ezra Dameron sat in the sitting- room as he always did, waiting for Zelda to come to breakfast; but as she stood upon the threshold, whence she had often called her good-morning, he did not look up from the newspaper with his usual smile. She was touch ed by the pathos of his figure. He seemed older, more shrunken; his pro file, as the early light gave It to her, was less hard. His lean cheeks had the touch of color they always wore tn the morning from his careful shav ing, and his long hair was brushed back with something more than its us ual uncompromising smoothness. A certain primness and rigidity In him which had often vexed her, struck only her pity now. "Father! ” He rose and turned toward her with a pathetic appeal In his eyes. “Good morning, Zee,” he said. Hab it was strong in him and they usually went to breakfast as soon as she came down. He took a step now toward the dining-room. “ Father, I wish to speak to you a moment,” she said, kindly; and he paused. “ I am sorry for what hap pened last night. I was not quite my self; I said things that will always trouble me If you— unless you can for give me. I was wrong— about every thing. You must let me help, If I can help you— In any way.” He said nothing, but stared at her. “What angered me was that you weren’t quite frank, father. I didn’t care about the money. It wasn’t that —but if things haven’t gone well with you, I wish to share the burden. No— I mean It— that I am sorry— let us be quite good friends again.” She went up to him quickly and took his hand. “ Father,” she said. “Zee, my little girl—my little girl,” he began brokenly, touching her cheeks with trembling hands. “Yes, father,” she said, wishing to help him. *T have been very wicked; I have led a bad life. I must not harm you; I am not fit------” “ You are my father,” she said, and touched his forehead with her lips, wondering at herself. She led him to the table and talked to him brightly on Irrelevant matters. The situation was now In her own hands and she would not fall again. She usually visited the kitchen after breakfast to make her list for the gro cer; but this morning she went back to the sitting-room with her father. The autumn morning was cool, and she bent and lighted the fire. “ Now,” she said, rising quickly and smiling at him, "there are those both ersome business matters that we were talking about last night I wish to sign that paper------” He shook his head. "You can’t do it, Zee.” The deed had been tom to pieces and thrown upon the kindling In the grate— half had al ready been destroyed. "That Is probably Just as well. We shall make a new one,” she said. In a m atter-of-course tone. ”1 wish you would tell me, so that I may under stand. Just what it is that has hap pened.” "It's a long story. I thought I should be able to make a great fortune for you. It was my greed—my greed. What I proposed about the deed was purely selfish—to shield myself. It Is a grave matter—I have betrayed you— 1 have betrayed your mother's trust I have robbed you.” "I haven't been robbed father, and I don’t Intend that anybody shall use such words to ms. We »hall make the deed; no one need ever know that any thing has happened.” ’'You are kind; you are more than generous. Zee; but I was mad when I asked you to re-create the trust last night I am a bad man; I must face r v sins; I havs lived a lying, evil life. I am a thief, worse than a thief.” ” My father can’t be a thief,” she •aid. T am a thief—your uncle will see that I am punished. And It will be Deuer so— ir only 1 a n not «rag you down, smirch your name." Her strength— her readiness to meet the situation grew as she saw his weakness. “ How bad Is It, father; have we any thing left? Don’t be afraid to tell me. It’s concealment you must avoid. If we haven’t a thing------” Her tone reassured him; he lifted his head with more courage. "This house— the place In the coun try— they are free. They are yours to day. My investments”—he hesitated and blinked at the word—"they can not come back to injure you.” “Then this house and the farm are still ours.” “They are yours, not mine. I have wasted so much! It was a fortune— nearly half a million dollars when I began throwing it away." “I don’t believe that’s very much. When you haven’t a million you’ re— you’re not in It!” and she laughed. “The loss of anything else isn’t worth crying over. And then, you might have made a great deal more out of It” He flinched, knowing how culpable he was; but her generosity and kind ness were lifting his spirit. ”1 have given you an option on a piece of ground—you may know It— out by the creek, and have received a thousand dollars on account of It. Il may be binding on you. It grew out of my necessity. It is not fair for me to talk to you of these things at all. You should take advice of some one else—just as though there were no sort of tie between us.” “We are not going to do it that way,” said Zelda, decisively. “We are going to understand this between our selves. Now this strip of ground that has been practically sold. What is there about that?” “The money should be returned, or offered to them. Balcomb was manag ing it------” “ Mr. Jack Balcomb?— then of course It wasn’t regular.” "It was my fault, Zee.” “ I don’ t believe It. He was contriv ing a pitfall—that is what might have been expected of him. And he came to our house and pretended to be our friend!” “Yes; he pretended that; but I pre tended much more. Deceit is some thing that feeds on itself.” (To be continued.) C om b D rie s I lu lr E u o ilr . Numerous devices for drying wom en’s hair have been designed recently, the majority consisting of complicated ^ electrical fans or contriv ances, which proved per fectly satisfactory In every way but entirely imprac tical In the ordinary home. Some simple arrangement, similar to the one recent ly devised, serves the pur pose much better. It consists of a com bined comb and hair dryer which in appearance close ly resembles a pair of curling Irons. The comb Is metallic and has a hol low back, fitting Into which is the heating iron. The latter Is In two parts, forming a spring to hold It In place when slipped within the hollow back of the comb. In using this hair dryer the heating iron Is held over a gas Jet or other flame until hot and In serted Into the comb. The heat is transmitted to the teeth of the comb, drying the hair as the comb Is drawn through It. With this device the hair can be very quickly and easily dried at the same time as tho necessary operation of combing the hair. If J u 11 ib S u e e s e d . Julia Marlowe once yielded to the insistent demands of an ambitious girl admirer who had deluged the actress with sweet notes begging an Inter view. and told her tS call at the hotel on a certain afternoon, when she would be glad to see her. “ I saw you In Romeo and Juliet last Monday night,” said the young wom an, "and have just been insanely curi ous to ask you a question." "W ell, what is the question?" said Miss Marlowe. "In the potion scene I want to know what you are thinking about when you He there supposed to be In the deep sleep from the effects of the drug you took.” " I ’m not thinking,” said the actress; “ I’m hoping.” "H oping?” "Yes, hoping that I won’t sneeze.” MOUTH AMERICAN C lllE S . SAVES STATE CASH H O O S IE R C O N V I C T ’S VALUE TO A B IL IT Y OF IN D IA N A . K n o w le d g e G a in e d In P r is o n S a v e * C o m m o n w e a lth $15,000— Q u e s t io n s s to W h e t h e r H e Is E n tit le d to R e le a s e T h e re fo r. Indianapolis, Ind.—When a "trusty” In a state prison, by a close application to his work and to his books for a long period of years, so perfects his knowledge of building that he can de sign and superintend the cutting and erection of steel In an addition to the prison In which he Is confined and thus save the state approximately $15,000 In the cost of a building estimated to cost $90,000, Is he entitled to release? This question has presented Itself to Governor Marshall. The prisoner Is In the state prison at Michigan City. He has grown gray In his confinement and was long ago made a "trusty.” He was originally sentenced for murder, and several years ago was released on parole. On complaint r f some of hts relatives, with whom he became in volved In a controversy over an estate, he was returned for violation of his parole, and has been In the prison ever since. Now there Is no one to whom he could go If he were released, and to let him go would be turning him out Into the world an aged man, without friends, and without a place to which he could turn for shelter and care. The state prison has become his home, and he Is too old to seek another. His Identity the governor does not wish at this time to make known. According to the report made to the governor, the prisoner undertook the task of drawing the designs for all the steel to go Into the new cellhouse and the new hospital for the criminal In sane, now being constructed. The steel was cut according to his drawing, and the builders have not yet found a piece which did not fit when taken to the place for which It was designed. While the erection of the steel, It Is reported to the governor, has heretofore cost, at the state prison, from six to seven cents a hundred pounds, the steel In the buildings now under way Is costing for erection only about two cents. Under the plans Introduced In the construction of the new cellhouse by James D. Reid, late warden of the prison, the building Is being construct ed at a cost of approximately $300 a ceil. In view of the fact that in other states where cellhouses have been con structed recently, the cells have cost approximately $1,000 each, the record being established Is one In which the state can take Just pride, the governor holds. ---- — ■ ■ wi coe \he late General Cordon firm lleved the Coco de Mer to be tt bidden fruit, and the Seychell lands to be the site of the Gar Eden. This Idea was so firmly In hla mind that he caused sou; to be taken of the surroundln for the purposo of treeing the ci of the four rivers, and the result firmed him In his belief. ’ tta d a rrn S p ir t« Seen In A r n e u lin n , B r a s il. C h ile n n «l P e r n . The municipality of Buenos Aires will have Its own exhibit, but this wll> not take into account the indescribable attractiveness of tb- largest city In the Southern Hemisphere. Here alone Is an object lesson of the progress and accomplishment of South America. The business and social life there Is equaled only by that of London. Paris or New York. The luxury and display are exceeded not even by these capi tals. But what is seen in the metrop olis of Argentina by no mejins ex hausts the astonishment of the Individ ual who for the first time becomes really Interested In our sfster conti nent, says Albert Hale In the Ameri can Review of Reviews There Is no place In the exhibition for Illustration of the development of genuine civiliza tion In these cities of South America, but tn their way they express even bet ter perhaps than railways and trans portation all that Is to the credit of these ten republics celebrating a natal day. Manaos, 1,000 miles up the Araa zon, Is as modern as Kansas City. Rio de Janeiro, which the traveler on the way down must pass, with Its mngnlfl cent Evenlda Central, Its beautiful har bor Just nearing completion at a cost of $50,000,000, can put to the blush many a city of the Old or New World for the excellence of Its civic progress. !f thli traveler Is wise he will not be content with the exhibition alone, but will cross the Andes and learn further lessons from such cities as Santiago and Valparaiso In Chile and Lima In Peru. They all manifest the spirit of the twentieth century with as much vigor as our cities display and, as a rule, they are far more beautiful, sur prising as the statement may appear to the untraveled North American. Roots Barks Her! That have great medicinal powe> raised to their highest etficlenc purifying and enriching the bloc they are combined in Hood’s s partlla. 40,366 testimonials received by. count In two years. Be sure to Hood’s Sarsapar Get It today In usual liquid fo chocolated tablets called Sarsa METHODICAL MR. BLINX; *11« ot to Two Hit? BETTER HEALTH WILL RESULT EARN V o rk S ta te S ic k M a n H a d S e a r c h e d In V a in f o r H is U n c le ’s H o a rd . W H E N W E MAKE WASH DAY A HOLIDAY I I I J. P o rtland , O regon New York.—A negro woman with an advanced case o f leprosy has been living In New York for more than seven years, aeeoclatlng with people of her own race. The nature of her ailment did not become known anti! recently when she applied at Belle vue hospital for treatment Ths woman told the physicians that she had come to New York from the West Indies more than seven years ago. and was sick then. She had been married only a short time, she said, when her husband deserted her. According to her story, she was passed the last few months wandering about the city, with her child, sleep Women are like babies; they have te ing In the parks at night Their food was what she could beg or find. cry tor nearly everything they w ant and fortheinsii. sum o f $2.25. wii Oregon Compress Clothes Washer, j little machine, works tn an or$ wash tub with ' cally no effort. U can work it) cU. a tub o f clothes inj minutes. It’s u culation of hot 1 soap and air tha^ 1 the work. 1 PRICES: 4 Tin Machine ¿Galvanized Iron.^ Jopper ............. Express pref N ever sold in stores. Send for one A g en ts w an ted everyw here. COLUMBIA MFG. CO. 131 Tenth St., Portlendf REASONABLE RATES ' A k i W a s*. 15 00 PHdaa work or Tor» wTlb- orf PUt.i S3 50 M 15 00 ,S«I R o iW PUt-. W t Good M * a r Plata « * N e w Y o rk . _ {T h T I V RELIABLE DENTISTRY L e p e r In ORCH/ WHY WASH YOUR LIFE *' F I N K E BROS. Although there Is a hidden law un derneath, each lightning flash Is as freakish and capricious as cynics say of women. Some of the incredible ac tions of lightning read like mysterious dreams of Poe. Superstitious »«vanla still seem to endow It with a kind of Intelligence an Intelligence Aflat seem* midway between the rough, lumpish In telligence ot the universe and the dte criminating Intelligence of animals. Keen, capricious, malicious or stupid, farseetng or blind, behold it squirming, writhing, twisting out Into space, harmlessly flickering among man and trees, or loaded up to the cloud* with Instant death and destruction. t in im C le ttr "I am, I have been all my life] Mr. Bllnxom, according to the York Sun. "a very methodical I rise at a certain hour, tak breakfast at a certain time aa<t downtown dally always at a minute by the clock; but this di tome unaccountable reason I myself starting two minutes and really It quite disturbed couldn’t understand how or w had gained that two minutes. "But that wasn’t tho only be] lng thing that was to happea this morning. At the office took off my hat the office boy, he could check himself, start from me with a look of astonls] A man who earns In to see minutes later looked at me for | meat with what was clearly ment, and another man who » a little later still started back when he saw me with ’Er-r-r—hi To the thousands of per ha— ’ before ho collected hlmse got down to business. sons who suffer from ail "Then, at a later time yot, ments of the Stomach, Kid sent for my stenographer, who ! monly very calm and sedate, neys, Liver or Bowels, and when she came In she all but la who therefore feel half- at me this morning, and she to be quivering with merrlmen sick all the time, we want something all through my die could It all mean? Ret) to urge an immediate trial What was lost In wonderment over of Hostetter’s Stomach Bit until It came time to go out to 1 eon, when, a9 I was drying my ters. W e know from past I happened to see myself In a t experience that it will be Then I was ready to laugh after! got over my amazement. of great benefit to you and "My head looked like that bring about an improve wild man of Borneo, my hair up and twisted and tous] ment in your health. It is mixed had somehow forgotten to WILDCAT AWAITED THE FISH for Indigestion, Dyspepsia, hair this morning, and no wo( Constipation and Malarial had created a commotion. But M in is t e r and P o s t m a s t e r K ille d the glad of one thing. This made A n im a l a n d S a v e d T h e ir Fever. Try it today. clear to me how I bed come t( R a in b o w T ro u t. that two minutes In starting from home, and that was a McMinnville, Ore.—The Rev. A. M. tlon to me, anyway, for I an O ld -T im e E s p o u s a l R in g . Williams, pastor of the Presbyterian A particularly beautiful form of es methodical.’’ church here, came near losing a rain bow trout that he had just Jerked from pousal ring was known as the "gim- Do not regard the flea with the North Santlam river because a mel" or linkod ring, which was made hungry wildcat was standing In the In parts, which, when brought to contempt; It Is about the only bushes waiting for the fish, or other gether, assumed tho appearance of ture which gets any work out of •he ring shown with clasped hands. morsel for Its dinner. Williams did not know the wild 8 a v e s E d g a of Pie. E. J1UHTON - A..nr*r unit M OWARU Lem iville, Colormlo. 8|f*ci;uen price; cat was near until he turned, after A wire contrlvanoe, patented by an Hilver, fl. C old, Silver, *J.5o; Gold. 1. landing his fish, to take It from the Illinois man to lift a pie from an oven o r C o p p Lead, e r .il. Aiulliiw enveloi*M and full »nt o n application. Control and Umolro hook. The animal had stepped from Is designed to operate so that the edgs (M lioitud. Reiurentn): Curbonute National Bai: the bushes that line the bank and was of tho crust will Dot he broken. In the act of putting its paws on the fish. It Is hard to say which was the an SCHUMACHER FUR CO. most surprised, the minister or the HOOD RIVER ORCHARD M anufacturers o f Fura. R aw Fura b ou g h t and wildcat. «old. Fu r» rem odeled a specialty. 2 0 9 M adiaor for sale by owner; choice ten a Williams called H. M. Hoskins, S i., bet. Firal and Front Sta . P ortlan d, O re g o r miles from city, elevation abou postmaster, his companion on the trip, feet, almost level, red shot soj and they killed the cat and saved the D A T C M T C COPVRIQHTS AND TRADE MARK! acres 9ix-year-old trees; balan; I A I t i l I O ?<->cur<xL Book o f accurut« trout. Price $1,700, easy terrr -----— ■ - . inform ation frev on request state. reliable party will give work ci . J K MOCK, 719 Board m Trade RJdg.. PertlaW. Or. (Late o f U. 8. Patent Offlue, Wanhington, D. O.) and caring for adjoining ten amount to at ply on purchase pri FINDS $50,000 IN HIS BED dress P. O. Box 131, Portland, or A 5374. Waverly, N . Y .— Edward Powers, a poor young dry goods clerk of this hamlet, had the unique experience of finding a fortune o f $50,000 while try ing to arise from his bed, to which he had been confined for some weeks. K it llle C a r r i e d 1 'r a p 3 0 0 M i l e s . This fortune, which was composed A few days ago an eagle was mainly of stocks and bonds, had been killed at the Ellison ranch near Edge- hidden away by Powers’ eccentric wood In the upper part of Siskiyou uncle, Willard Martin, and when the county. On one of Its feet was at uncle died, ten years ago, his nephew tached a No. 3 steel trap which had searched in vain for the hiding place. apparently been on the big bird's Powers took hold of the large, old- talon about two weeks fashioned bed post to pull himself to It has Just been learned that on a sitting posture, when suddenly his 183 M a d iso n S t . November 22 an eagle got Into a No. fingers slipped Into a secret little cav 3 steel trap belonging to N. Green- ity that his crafty uncle had built slate of Plymouth, Amador county, Into It. Powers called his sister, and carried the trap away with It It Helen, with whom he occupied the Is believed that the eagle killed at house left them by Martin, and she Edgewood, which Is about 300 miles found the fortune. As soon as Pow from Plymouth on an air line. Is the ers Is strong enough a trip around the same that escaped with Greenslate’s world will be undertaken by the pair trap about ten days before. I .llf h t n l n f f . M y s te r io u s a t«« M ade 17 50 $5.00 f 'Am Parcata. (ratal .............»50 a 15 00 u U « r«realm FiKraa. 11 « W ta P U a ,. a * k k a ll fmiom ItvarOw mh 50c Compare Our Pri «how. jo s h . . . » « " I n « » With oa that W# offer > ooa m m nd >ou f i l l nion i *11 a work and you cannot gat.MC] iter i work anywhere, no a t t a r ‘h o * m uch you ; r W e fln lt t I bridge worfc j of on# • Kw day a I* PUt rata Plata arc arArrta O ur ^ w ore * W Paialeee G u a r a n t ie d P erfect •». to e i»-e f-» o w p p atron *. / o r » H o iiU u . o a » . O u t o f-to w s • day. !>o b ettar w o r k any a!Im ° l j f t1?,ri °P*r*'*r * THE NEW YORK D EN TIS TS ■ A •TrR D B T A l'T. M g r N ote Sa. a. t o l p a. 9 a. ■ » 1 * a A L tw. Pm» mi Santas. P-ibst Boil Sad Sob’ SS. W t. W in. Ptatawr mo Via T AKE A PÒè* OF PESO’S BEST MEDICINE . to - C O U C H » g, C O U P » Cor.u't. Velar Crown» 22k SrMfoT.- Ca!4 nitron Eo.m.1 Fill!« Sitar Fini»«« Som) *»M Piatta P i -'..» E l " ’ ■ S W T «• A H w o r k f u ll y rotoon n too* J" J L ~ Wise Dental Co Painless Denti» ;