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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 9, 1920)
8 B THE OMAHA SUNDAY iiUU: fflAlvm The Omaha Bee PA1LY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BKE PUBLISHING COMPANY. NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publiaher. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tb Associated Pnaa. ol watch Th Hee is a Bieiatmr. U ex v Mattel eaUUed to tin am tot puhllcatloo of all Qwa dispatches ndltea to tt er not otherwise credited In this paper, and alto the kcal sews published herein. All Njlils of publication of out special lapelchea are aJto reeerred. BEE TELEPHONES Print Branch Eichanta. Asa foe tM T1 1 AAi Department ot rartloular raraoa Wanted. 1 yici 1UUVJ For Night and Sundar Sarvica Call! dltorlal Department Tyler 10001. llreuleUon bepartuient ...... Tyler nKMi. adrerUsuif Department .......... Xjr 1000L OFFICES OF THE BEE Boma Office: 17th and Farnan. Branch Offloes: Ames 4110 North i-un Bouih Blda J318 N St. Council Bluff U Uoott 8L Walnui lit North 40th Part HU Uatanworth I Out-of-Town Officaat Kew Tort OOca St8 riflh Ate. Weshlnnoe. 1311 O St. Chleaio Btaaar Bid. Parli JTrince 4 SO Boa 8t.. Honors ,&4. S. The Bee's Platform Naw Union Passenger Station. A Pip Lin from tha Wyoming Oil Fields to Omaha. Continued improvement of the Ne braska Highways, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfares leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. A short, low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. DEFRAUDING OUR WIVES. With the ballot in her hand and good stand ing in the political parties, woman's property eights are going to have recognition in places (where she is now regarded as a chattel in Chi cago, for instance, where an indictment for embezzlement against a man accused of ap propriating to his personal use stocks valued at $42,000 owned by his wife, has been quashed jby a court "It is impossible for a husband to steal from Jiis wife, or for a wife to steal from her hus band," says this learned judge, "because law frays they are one." This opinion may be law in Illinois, but the court which renders it is not court of justice, because its decision is based on a wicked, inequitable and selfish masculine interpretation of matrimony inherited from the tone age. Cave man stuff, with its physical maltreat Bient of women, its grab and carry off court ships, has been modified only, not abandoned. Property is what man has always sought, and in the stone age woman was the most desirable property in sight, so he fought to possess her. Now he woos and wheedles her into marriage "and then gives his congenital cave man propen sities full play by grabbing her property, di verting solely to his own use the fruits of her labor, and otherwise practicing what is es sentially "cave man rough stuff" adroitly per petuated by laws which legalize the robbery of women through matrimony. Is it not true? Dear reader, look about you. Consider the evidence before your eyes in your own neighborhood, among your own friends and associates. Do you know a married woman fcnywhere, a true wife, a good mother, who has been a faithful worker in the home, whose toil and economy and loyalty to her husband and ( children has been adequately recompensed finally? Do you know a husband who divides the property profits of the life partnership called marriage on a 50-50 basis with his wife? We are considering here the real women, not the parasites who attach themselves to a hus band merely to be pampered and kept, who dodge work and responsibility, who lead idle, useless and shirking lives. They deserve no consideration from any source. Who can look the truth in the face and say that "it is impossible for a husband to steal from his wife?" Are not all husbands doing it consciously or unconsciously? Are they not everywhere coolly pocketing the profits of the matrimonial game with never a thought of a fair division of the surplus? Ask one of these affectionate sinners "why he does not declare a dividend for his wife, and he will tell you the home is in his wife's name, that his life is in sured for her benefit, and that his will provides amply for her when he is gone. "When he is gone." Get that. When he can use it no longer the home will be wholly hers, and the life in surance, and the property. But not until the hand that writes his checks is stiff in death. And suppose the wife dies first! How can the husband square himself then? Has he not, s a matter of cold fact well, say it yourself. boys and girls of today, at practically no ex pense to their parents. Marbles, tops, kites, stilts, balls, jumping ropes, hop scotch a score of games gave them joys in abundance. But later the pleasures of boys and girls came from the family purse. Their recreations were paid for. They learned to be spenders, and have car ried into manhood and womanhood the belief that amusement can be had only for a money consideration. As a consequence we are spend ing hundreds of millions for recreations. Our purses are always open, and if we do not have a care many of them will be empty when we really need money for necessities. Kansas Labor Law. Addressing the Methodists at Des Moines, Governor Allen explained the Kansas labor law is not in any sense intended to bind a worker to his job or to close the gate of opportunity to anybody. It merely aims to prevent a group of men from conspiring together to shut off the supply of anything needful, and through the artificially created scarcity and suffering re sulting therefrom to successfully blackmail the public into meeting their demands. It is pos sible, as the coal miners amply proved, for such a group to throw the entire social life of the country into discord. Such power should be permitted to nobody. Were the mine owners, for example, to undertake its exercise, they would be very quickly brought to bar, and none would benefit more directly from their dis comfiture than the miners, .who, after all, are a part of the, community, sharing in its privi leges and expected to assume some of its cares. The illustration applies to any basic industry, and may without violence be extended to all. Kansas has sought to evolve a substitute for the strike, to the end that justice may be done in settling industrial disputes without interruption of orderly productive operations. The law may not be perfect, and very likely is not. It is an outgrowth of experience, however, and as time goes on and its defects are discovered, it may be remedied so as to meet public requirements. Strikes may not be totally eliminated, certainly not through the operation of law, but they can and should be made so remote as to be com paratively negligible in the industrial life of the nation. Mother's Day. Mother! The holiest name on earth, the at tribute that connects man most closely to his Maker. Nothing in animate creation approaches mother in importance. She is the embodiment of the productive force, the thing without which the world would have stopped long ago. To her we owe our existence, from her we drew not only our sustenance but our inspiration. She comforted us in sorrow, soothed us when unhappy, and commiserated our childish griefs. Our feet were directed into right paths by her, and at her knee we learned those first great lessons whose abiding influence has shaped our course through life. When in trouble, we sought mother; to her we carried our first triumphs, and with her we shared our most perfect joys. And this is Mother's Day. On it we are asked to give her testimony and proof that in the hurlyburly of life she is not forgotten, that no matter how busy, or widely separated, she still shares in our lives. The tenderest ties, the loftiest sentiments, the holiest relations, are those that bind mother to the race. Let today then be an everlasting reminder of what men owe to the mothers of the race, and paiticu larly to that dear one who went down to the Valley of the Shadow to bring forth the babe whose chiefest solace should be in remembering her and whose pride should be to call her blessed! As the Twig is Bent. The "crev of snendine" which has been the subject of so much speculation and condemna tion is not wholly a result of post-bellum condi tions. The inflation of currency the world over has supplied much of the cheap money now so Treely squandered in the gratification of vanities ind appetites, but behind it all was a general Jesire to spend and a fixed habit or spending. Where did thev originate? ' We have but to go back to the time, not so far away, when parents began to teach their children that money was the source ot pleasure. Rnv and cirls of a veneration ago had just ys good times, just as much pleasure, a the Farm Labor and Food Supply. A shortage in food is imminent as a result of a reduced crop yield for 1920. Fewer acres will be cultivated, because of shortage in help needed to till the ground. That is a condition and not a theory. It grows out of the unusual demand for labor in urban industry. Agriculture is at a distinct dis advantage in that it lacks the attractions that go with city employment. A great deal of the work on the farm partakes of the nature of drudgery. Modern improvements have softened much of the hardship that once was the inevita ble accompaniment of life in rural districts, but no invention of man has accelerated or modified the processes of nature. Therefore, certain things must be done at a certain time, and this means long hours of arduous toil during the planting and growing seasons, and most strenu ous efforts during harvest time. Against this the city offers hours of work regulated by a time clock and a wage contract, with plenty of amusements to fill in the leisure time between knocking off and going to bed. This is the side of the picture that allures the boy from the farm. Only when it is too late does he see the other side of the picture, that his wages are not enough to meet his wants, that he must continually deny himself the gratification of some desire awakened by his contact with the larger world, and that ma terially he would have been better off 'had he stuck to the plow. "Urban employers should make it a point to discourage farm boys from leaving their rural homes and employment to come to the cities, and should use their good offices to persuade the country boys who do not make good in town to go back to the rural life," says the Minneapolis Tribune, quoting the president of the National Dairymen's association. "How are you going to keep them down on the farm?" is not yet answered, but if the big city employers will follow this advice, it may lead to some good. At any rate, the situation is serious enough to demand most careful consideration. Farm labor is needed to produce food, and with out food city life is impossible. The Successful Man's Life. From the age of. 20 to 30 a man has his op portunity to develop' into efficiency in whatever trade, business or profession he prefers: from 30 to 40 comes his chance to be the head of a family, own a home and become proprietor of his business, or establish a satisfactory income rom his profession; from 40 to 50 he may build up and invest a surplus that will yield a sufficient annuity to provide for the higher education of his children and the lifelong needs of himself and family. Then what? Secure in the possession of a competence, shall he continue his money-making in competition with younger men, or retire from his business otr profession? There is a wide diversity of opinion about this matter, both as it relates to a man's health and the com munity's welfare. The man of 50 with a com fortable fortune is in a position to greatly in crease his wealth, if in business; or to remain a highly valuable community asset if in a pro fession. But there is another side. Is the best life one wholly devoted to business enterprizes or professional achievements? Labor, with shorter hours, takes its recreations and hours. of ease as it goes. Business works all the time, along with the profession, day hours and night hours. No whistle blows to check the constant efforts of either. Can there be a well-rounded, satis factory life for the successful man without ex tended recreation, wide reading in general lit trature, the study of social conditions and time devoted to their improvement, acquaintance ith his whole country and with foreign lands y personal observation? There is a goal in every race, a time to stop and think of other things. In life is it the final solemn moment when the doctor rises from his chair at the bedside? Or is it when the man has enough to insure comfort in the future? ' The 20 years from 50 to 70 might be well spent by the tetired successful man. "Uncle Joe" Cannon, just past his 84th birth day, promises the opposition many a good run yet Douglas county republican women at least have a definite idea of what they want. Senor Carranza's press bureau seems to be out of commission. A Line 0 Type or Two Haw ta tha Una, let tha snips fall wtiers thay . rouijh. her ' qmfTahin jrl Whine st K each sprout sunny spaces, ROUNDEL. Spring peers out throuiti-her leafy laces. Burstimr the Up tQfOUfrn sprng p Curlo'ua beei';ombuzaiag about SeAilg tie' flowers' opening graces, ASF Hris are Tmildlng with never a doubt. Happy children with rosy faces Ivep in the sun with laughter and shout, While, peeping like Pan from her hidden places, Spring peers out! ANCHUSA. , We had profiteering in flags in 1917; w hy not flowers in 1920? BssaNsBIMBaMBM The Rourke family knows the home grounds. "HOW comes it," queries A. S., "that the letter 'o' follows so conspicuously after the first letter in the names of each of the leading can didates for president? Jo-Lo-Wo sounds like a Chinese laundry." MORE significant, it seemeth to us, is the 'o' that follows the first letter in the name "Hoover." Doubly significant, indeed. It was thus in "Roosevelt" and in "Woodrow." Al though not superstitious, we should be inclined to bet on Hoover. "IF I SHOULD DIB TONIGHT ....'', (From the Council Bluffs Nonpareil.) What everyone wants is to retain that appearance of natural sleep, the simulation of life, so that the .visual memory will al ways remain sweeter. It is for this that memory will always be associated with proper professional service. Ben King & Co., Funeral Directors. THE state of the world today is so like that which followed every great upheaval in history, that the philosopher is not vastly con cerned about the future. After the French revo lution, as after other social eruptions, there was a lowering of public morality conjoined with a general desire to get rich without working. And so world without end. What Is Home Without the Adverb? Sir: Oregon, 111., Is agitated. One of the leading mothers has thrown down the gauntlet: her sun, age 5, uses adverbs correctly. It Is the infallible mark of precocity; it seldom happens before 10. The village scoots the idea; secretly it is praying for adverbs, more adverbs in the home. H. B. K. SURPRISED, naturally, by the statement of the Lord Chancellor that the first business of the theaters is not to sell chocolates, but to present the drama, Mr. A. B. Walkley explains that in London drama is presented as an agree able accompaniment to the eating of chocolate. "Fair Americans chewing gum," he says, "are nothing to it." ADD FAMOUS DOUBLINGS. (From the El Dorado, Ark., Times.) If in need of monuments see or write Rev. W. F. Little, P. O. El Dorado. He will call and show you pleasing designs. WE look to California to produce a tablet which, dropped into a glass of water, will pro duce a passable claret. It should not be more difficult to achieve than a beef-tea tablet. Popular Science. Sir: Your technically inclined readers will be interested in a new law discovered by Dr. Remsen, ex-President of Johns Hopkins, and given to the world in an address at Urbana sev eral months ago. "Jn any discussion," said Dr. Remsen, "the heat evolved varies inversely with the knowledge displayed." Expressed as a for mula, this law takes the form H equals V-K, in which C is a constant, the value of which de pends upon the units used for II and K. In order to determine the value of C, I re cently performed, with the help of the Professor of Heating and Ventilation and the Professor of Political Science, an experiment on two speakers at a debate on the League of Nations. The heat evolved was determined by directing a meas ured quantity of air at a given temperature against the speakers and noting its increase in temperature; the knowledge displayed was de termined by the Professor of Political Science. As a result of this experiment, I am able to announce that when the heat units are ex pressed in B. T. U. and the unils of knowledge in ounces, the value of the (J becomes 1. Ap plications are simple. It is estimated that a million B. t. u.'s are evolved in the course of one afternoon of debate in the United States Senate. Substituting this value in the above equation, the value for K becomes one one millionth of an ounce. ENGINEER. AFTER the ad writer learns the meaning of th? word "peer," he should be instructed that it is not complimentary to a commodity to claim that it is a "by-word." FIRST AID TO THE LONELY. (From the Bridgewater, S. D., Herald.) I wish to express my appreciation and gratitude to the numerous and kindly dis posed ladies who were with me at a time during the late absence of my wife. You were a wonderful help to a man in his hours of loneliness. I am expecting that my wife will be away again in tie future. Be as sured that I entertain happy recollections of your visit. I also liked the lunch. S. E. Doughty. P. S. I will deliver wearing apparel any time after office hours. How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. EVANS The Second I'ostt (Our guess is that she got the washex.) Dear Sir: Please do not fill the order for the power washer that my wife ordered. If you have you will do me a great favor if you will stop it. Just write her a good ex cuse, but don't tell her I wrote you. Her Husband, etc. "WANTED Experienced single man to work on farm. A. A. Benn." Hedrick, la., Journal. Usually they advertise for an experienced married man. What might be their respective qualifications for agricultural employ? WHERE DINING SOLITAIRE IS INFUSED WITH ULTRA SATISFACTION. (Card of the Cafe Norval, Lima, O.) Dining alone is more often to be found boresome than otherwise, except at the. Cafe Norval, where the unaccompanied diner is pleasantly seated within an environ ment of companionable cheer; infused with the joy of it all and the ultra satisfaction of having tastefully prepared food served in a correct and unassuming manner. "PAUL SOUSE was arrested last night for being soused when he failed to tell detectives his name." Omaha Bee. Give a dog a wet name, etc. WHERE BORROWING IS NOT A VIRTUE. (From the Rapid City Journal.) If the pious person who swipes my Daily Journal from my steps on his way to early mass every Sunday will kindly leave his name and address I will be pleased to present him with a year's subscription to the Journal if he will leave mine alone. M. M. McKee. WE like the candor of Tailor Altman, who has an establishment in Springfield. Sezze: "The first time since being in business I have decided to accommodate my customers." Academy Jottings. Sir: Would Mr. Swinghammer, "prominent lawyer" of Atlantic City,, qualify for Chief Knocker in the Academy? E. E. L. Sir: Allow me to nominate a breezy Im mortelle, Miss Daisy Outlaw, of Guntown, Miss. MRS. J. A. D. AN uncommonly secretive statesman is Mr. Harrington of Algona, la., who announces that he has withdrawn as a candidate for repre sentative "for reasons that are personal to my self." THE ENRAPTURED SHOPPER. Sir: I am having trouble getting my wife past a millinery display window filled with $12 and $15 creations with a sign, "Priced regardless of cost." , ANXIOUS. "CYRIL sank into a chair with a tiny cup of coffee balanced on one knee." Sat. Eve. Post. Cyril would de well in vaudeville. BAIT. (From the Minneapolis Journal.) Waubay, S. D., wants a good pitcher and catcher. Will pay gpod salary. Fine fish ing one block from ball park. Would like to hear from Barrett. Address Theo Ter hune, Mgr. ALL the writing men that we have met or have inquired about are for Hoover. But none of them are attending the convention as dele gates. B. L. T, REDUCING MUSHROOM HAZARD. Last year I wrote of an old man whom I saw hunting mushrooms. I asked him how he told the good from the bad, the safe from the un safe. His reply was: "1 stigs to dem I knows." However appetizing a mushroom might appear, he re jected it unless he knew the variety to be a safe one. A professor in the University of Illinois was kind enough to send me copies of his reports on mushrooms and to- express his approval of the plan of "sagging to dem you knows." It is all right for scientific gentle men to study the subject of mush rooms and to make use of "dem dey knows to be safe." The advice to the ordinary mushroom hunter is likewise "to stick to those he knows," even though he deprive hfmsslf thereby of some plentiful and safe varieties. But here I read an opinion by a great naturalist, one of the greatest in the world, a man pronounced by Charles Darwin to be the best ob server ho had ever encountered Henri Fabre. In Henri Fabre's book on "The Fly" there is a chapter on mushrooms and insects. He found that insects are fond of poisonous mushrooms, as mueTi so as they are of the safe kind. He knocked out the folk lore opinion that insects avoided poisonous mushrooms. This sign takes its place on the discard along with the silver spoon test. But Henri Fabre built up as well as destroyed. He lived in a wild district in rural France, on the foot of a mountain side. His peasant neighbors all hunted mushrooms on the mountain side. As Fabre walked abroad prosecuting his studies as a naturalist he encountered mushroom hunters daily. He made it a daily routine to greet them and inspect their tinds. At first he was dis turbed and perplexed to find all kinds of poisonous mushrooms in the baskets and to be told they were eaten without harm. Upon investigation he found that there had not been a single case of mushroom poisoning in that prov ince for many years. And then he discovered the reason. It was the universal custom to boil the mush rooms in order to remove the poison. "In my village," he writes, "and for a long way around, the rule is to blanche the mushrooms, that is to say," to bring them to a boil In water with a little salt in it. A few rinsings in (told water concludes the treatment. They are then prepared in whatever manner one pleases. In this way what might nt first be dan gerous becomes harmless because the preliminary boiling and rinsing have removed the noxious element He says that after such treatment he has eaten without harmful re suits such highly poisonous mush' rooms as the ringed agaric, smooth- headed amanita, blue turning bole tus, mottled amanita, lemon yellew amanita, olive tree agaric, and the belted milk producer. lie concludes: "A good prellmiu- Drug Store sHsMv -wmmtmammmm Service Satisfaction in quality sat isfaction in price all round satisfaction that's what you get at the Sherman & McConnell drug stores. Buying for five big progres sive stores means quantity which we pass on to our patrons. Ever changing stocks assure the freshest of drugs and sundries. "You save time and money by trading at the five Sherman & McConnell drug stores." A Few Monday Specials 50c Pebeco Tooth Paste 33c 25c Waltke Medicated Skin Soap 19c 50c Pompeian Massage Cream 39c 60c Syrup Figs 44c Sherman & McConnell Drug Go, Five Good Drug Stores ary boiling is the best sareguara against accidents arising from mushrooms." He bolls an musn- rooms regardless of their kind. Nor did he find that boiling in any way lessened the succulence of flavor of mushrooms. He expresses the hope that he may be the means of popu larizing the wise Provencal home re cipe for making mushroom eating safe and thus add an appetizing change in the monotonous, diet or the poorer farming peoples. Li. C. C Kelger, commenting in mo National Geographic Magazine ror May, 1920, on this method proposed by Fabre, says: "Other reliable evi dence speaks against tins practice. Snakinsr or bollln does not render a poisonous species edible. How to Avoid Boils. J. D. M. writes: "I would like to ask you if I have the boil disease. About two years ago I had eight boils. This year I had seven, and still have four on:my neck. Every time one festers I get more. 1 have them fixed with a black salve, and sometimes 1 have them squeezed. Will you please tell me how 1 could get rid of them? Have I bad blood? Do I have to diet? KErLT. A good way to get eight boils Is to dress the first one witn a salve. If you want a surer way to get eight, use poultices. To prevent boils on the neck keep your skin very clean, wear soft collars, do not shave your neck or in any way scratch or irritate the skin. Do not eat candy or desserts. If you have a boil and wish to avoid having oth ers, do not poultice; do not use salves; keep your neck very clean. After washing with soap and water, apply borax water. Do not wear any garment which irritates tne skin. Boils are not caused by bad blood. ODD AND INTERESTING. Violet is the mourning color of Turkey. Reindeer are more numerous in Norway than horses. It is estimated that about one half the globe is' composed of iron. As a rule, workers in copper mines are Immune from typhlod fever. There are in the world about 3.000,000 lepers, two-thirds of them being Chinese. A paper chimney, 50 feet high, and fireproof, is a curiosity to be seen in Breslau. The rock of Gibraltar has four hugo reservoirs, capable of holding 5,000,000 gallons of water. , A French chemist once collected enough iron from human blood to make a finger ring, which he wore as a talisman. A curious instance of extreme color blindness recently camo to light. A postoffice clerk could never balance his accounts; examination proved that he was unable to dis tinguish between the colors of the stamps he sold. The famous old city of La Paz, Bo livia, located In a valley more than 12,000 feet above the sea, is the highest capital in the world, over topping Lhassa, the far-famed capi ta! of Tibet, by several hundred feet Recent investigations tend to show that the lark is not entitled to the reputation of being tho earliest riser; it does not rise until after linnets, chaffinches and a number of other birds have been up and about for some time. At a Chinese wedding the "beggar chief 'is always invited. He brings a plate and begs from all the. guests, but in return keeps all the other mendicants from the marriage feast. The beggar chief of a big Chinese ciiv makes as much as $15,000 or $:'6,000 a year, and out of this he pays tho common or street beggars to keep away from social gatherings. More than 2,000 croupiers and other employes are on tho payroll ot the company which operates tho famous gambling casino at Monte Carlo. At the Shakespeare hotel In , Stratford-upon-Avon the rooms are named after the plays of the im mortal bard. Some are strikingly appropriate: the dining-room is "As You Like It" and the bar is "Meas vre for Measure." SPRINGTIME LEVITY. "Hear about Bill Bottlonoaft? llo'a got cas of lumbaKo at his house. I ku' I'd hotter run over (ind help Him drink It up." The Iloma Sci'tor. "What did you y when you wia found lonilna- out of tlia pantry with your bands nil rod?" "Oh, 1 "aid I had Jammed my flnora. BoV Life. . Poela wife, (during quarrfll) Too ured to 8y befora our marriage that I a your inspiration. I'oct Yes, and now you ra my ex asperation. London Answers. "Why don't you provide jomethlnE for a rainy. day?" , "Ain't 1 (tot everything-? Nonclild t real and chains." Kantian City Journal. Visitor (at disciplinary harraik And are you here for taking French leave? l'rlsoner No, ma'am. Swiss watches. The Home Sector. Dressmaker (gushingly) Ah. my dear niMdam. I consider that the most perfect fit I hnve ever feeo. Penr Madam Perfect fit, you say! Well. It should Ilka you to see the one my hna liand will have when he sees the price! I riiuburgh Scotsman. Cox Some one gave him a tiper cub Box 1 hear your friend, the naturalist, has met with an accident. What was it? nnd said It wua so tame it would eat off his hand, .uid It. did. Pallas News. "Jlay in Qrand Opera This is now possible on the Apollo-Phone. "his artistic instrument brings to homes not only the privilege of hearing the great artists, but playing with them. Mpollo-phone Gombimtig the "Phonograph and theJpolb flayer Tlde-llI &. Suppose the ApoUit does cost us both a little more. s I A.HospeCo. i Omaha I lets you accompany Caruso, Galli-Curci, Kreisler, or any artist, or should you wish, you may have a great pianist accompany them. The fact that we offer the Apollo-Phone to our clientele is evidence that we con sider it an instrument of pronounced artistic merit. A visit entails no obligation and may prevent future regrets Please tell me about the Apollo Phone without obligation on my part. Name Address I I 1513 Douglas Street The Art & Music Store YOUR OLD INSTRUMENT TAKEN IN EXCHANGE The Proper Way iGood Dentistry, as well as any business, is built on faith. We believe in the merit of our services and know that our work is conscientious. a r - mm Our patients have faith in us and what we do. We would not dare decrease that faith by inferior dentistry. That is one reason why those who come here for dental care in rease daily in numbers. Drs. Church and Haller G00 Paxton Block Tyler 1816 16th and Farnam J J vs Jr Automobile Owners! ...The... 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