The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 9, 1920, Page 2

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a a RIDAY-SATURDAY SPECIALS: —no C. 0. D. or phone orders; one to a purchaser—these specials, except the lind eum, will not be delivered; can be easily taken by purchaser. —buy your holiday gifts now—pay next year - use these reasonable terms of payment —“ Your Credit Is Good!” on purchase first week! —on purchase frat weekly amounting (0 payment amounting te payment payment a1— $150— $15— 50 75 — 50 1.50 $200— 20-— — 00-- 2 $300— 0 $2.25 $500— $50 — a wonderful 2-day sale of water sets— regular price se —this seven-piece Water sot, ex actly as plo tired, ts realty & remarkable wains even at the regular prices; made of clear = crystal, eta cut in the Unoletm remnants go at & week 7 » ineludineg Bh printed and inlaid pat~ r THA In piecea from § to 20 yarda in jd anes. sino & IeEtHS Ago we BEt on a linolghm 5 remnant sale an by o following tar morning every piece ‘* - 4—our ad wy Price Vice bs to eall early tomorrow morning $1.98 regutar €228, $200 vature rns inlaid itnoleum with eotors gh to back that cannot wear off; ngi2-P8. $2.80; epecial Friday- y Saturday, Ba —8 patterns heaviest printed Itnoleum, al! beautiful dealene: ular price al Friday-Saturday, $4.27. COND FLOO! buy toys now— pay next year! ‘ai dies to see our big downstairs TOY STORE; you'll enjoy your visit — so will the kiddies! child's blackboard: special— $1.19 vewutar price $1.30 —handy sine chil. dren's folding biack board; height set Op 40 Inches: wine of writing eurface, 12815 Inches: height . $2.85 Beget 3s socks: °-. $3.50 ppt mechanical hook and ladder: special— gray or white, with pink or blue borders; size 624,76 inches; regular price $4—; special Friday Satur $8.95 fegular price $135— 200 mostly al-woot mixed plaid blankets, in pink and white, blue and white or @ray and white; size 10x80 inches; regular Price $15—; special Friday Saturday, at $8.93. wegular price $1.5 thie mechanical hook and tadder tw wound “y after which it runs along the floor, and when it hits atomatically ralses: special Friday-Saturday, 98a this Toy Coupon and llc (Cat It Out) —wT get one of these oute little colored horns; made of wood; 5% Inches long: apecial Friday-Saturday, te. (no mat orders) TOY DEPT. of these roneters jo on 6 tomorrow and Satur- Gay, wine 10215 Inches; will hold ‘i2-pound turkey: this fs a welf-baster; regular rice $i—; special Friday- turday, 6Pe. weaular price 96.50 —this ts a aix-pound tron with full polished steel face and heavy nickel pated top regular price $6.50: spec Friday-Saturday, ¢i2n THIRD FLOO! eo WITH ovr FREE RENTAL DEPARTMENT *ESTABLISHED- Le. SEATTLE : "OND AT PINE HOTEL CLERK TESTIFIES A person often does more good than he realizes when he tells a * suffering friend how to get well. J. | N, Tohill, clerk Lottie Hotel, Evans > Wille, r constantly with pains in the | beat, while on duty, * iabecles of my thigh. 1 wan treated |ten days without pay. by the dottor for rheumatinn but ~ Children’ | found no relief. Upon recommenda- © tion of a friend, I tried Foley Kidney » Pills and began to get relief almost ’Twas a Rather Dear Movie Trip TOLEDO, Dec. $—Patroiman A. s Coughs promptly dow 7 TAY STAR WANT ADS i Ss ro) aa “ own which is to be staffed by Brings New Fish Preserving Plan Bringing with him a fish preserv. Ind, writes: “For weeks I eut-|Seardato Went to a movie om hie|ing device which ft is declared will Suspended for revolutionize the fish industry, Otto G Ericson arrived here Wednenday to arrange with the port commission for the installation of his device tn this city. Ericson'’s method of pump- serious conditions| ing brine into the fish Is raid to be a4 checked end more immediately.” Good for backache, Giving the ity be gSyolded | | far superior to the usual methods of _ theumatic pains, stiff joints, sore " | refrigeration. » muscles.—Advertisement, land have formed a« firm of their women. THE SEATTLE STAR ‘To Him Who Waits 4 Co; published by epectal arrange ment with the Wheeler Byndioate, Ino, The Hermit of the Hodson war | hustling about his eave with wi usual animation. The cave was on or tn the top ef & little aur on the Catekiile that had strayed down to the river's ode, and, ect having @ ferry Ueket, | had to «top there, The bijou moun. tains were densety wooded and were Inferted by ferocious squtrrels and woodpeckers that forever men- aced the summer transients, Like « badly sewn strip of white braid, a | mucadamized road ran between the green skirt of the hills and the} foamy Ince of the river's eden A dim path Wound from the comfort Able fodd op & frocky height to the hermtt's Gave One milo upstream | was the Viewpoint Inn, to whieh dimmer folk from the city came, leavirg cool, électriofanned apart ments that they might be driven about tn burning suaehise, shriek ing, in gasoline laiinched, by spin ie léeeed Modreda bearing biatikest Of #hielda | ‘Train your lorgnette apo the her: | mit and let your eye receive the per poral touch that @hall @ndear you to the hero, A man of forty, fudgtng him tatr }ty, with long hair curling at the ends, dramatic eyea, and a forked brown beard Itke thone that were | |impored wpen the Weet some years jago by eeifappotinted “@ivine hea) lers” whe suceceded tha grasshopper locrop, Hie outward vesture appeared to be a kind of gunnyeacking, cut and made tnte @ garment that woald have made the fortune of « | Londen tailor, Hila long, welhehaped loingern, delicate nose, and polso of the cans tr thelr caves in @pote indicat ed ber rude crosses ehipped in the stone wall above The hermit's home wae not alto gether a cava The cave wan an sedition to the hermitage, which was « rude but made of poler duobed with clay and covered with * beet quality of rust preef sinc | roofing. In the howwe proper there were letone sinbe for seats, a rustic book case made of unplaned poplar planks, and a table formed of « wooden slab laid across two up Copyright, 1920, by Doubleday, Page| An 0.HENRY Story a Day “You haven't quite bit it,” ghe mid, platotively, “I wae moving rapefully at t arma of another, Mamma had oné of her periodical attacks of rheumatiam In both et bows and shoulders, and I had to rub them for an hour with that hor. rid offiniment. 1 hope you didn't think that amelied ike Qowers, You know there were some West Potnt boys and a yacht load of young men from the city at last evening's wéekly danes. I've known mamoim to sit by an open window for three hours with one-half of her register ing 85 deer and the other half from bitten, 4d never eneeze once. Hut just let a bunch of inectigibles come around where [ am and she'll begin to awel! at the kouckles and shriek with pain. And I have to \take her to her room and rub her arma, To #ee mamma dreaned you'd be surprised to know the number square inches of aurfies there are t her ama, I think i mrumt be de lightful to be @ hermit, Thnt—cas fick—Or gabarding, ten't it?that you wear is so becoming, Do you make it-or them-—of course you must have change>—yourseif? And what a blessed relief it mitt be to wear sandals Instead of shoen! ‘Think ter how how we must suffer mall I buy my shoes, they always Winch my tesa Oh, why can’t there be lady hermits, toof ‘The beautifiilest and most adoies cent Trenholine sister extended two slender biué ahklos that ended in two enormous bite allk bows that almost concealgd twe fairy Oxfords, also one of the The hermit, as if impelled by a kind of reflextelepathic action, drew his bare toss further beneath bis gunny sacking, “IT have beard about the romance of your life” mid Mim Trenholme, voftly, “They have it printed on the back of the menu‘ecard at the inn. Wan ehe very beautiful and charming?" “On the Dilla of fare muttered manner raised him high above the) the hermit; “but what do I care for claws of hermits who fear water | (he world’s babbie? You, she wae of and bury their money tn oyster-|the highewt and grandest type Then,” he continued, “then I thought the world could never contain an- other equal to her. Bo I forsook it and repaired to this mountain fast. hem to spend the remainder of my life alone—to devote ant dediente my remaining years to her meqory.” “It's grand,” mid Mim Trenhotme ‘abeolutely grand! I think @ her mit's life ie the ident ona No bill cotlectors calling, Mo dreaming for dinner—how I'd itke to be one! Mut there's no #uch luck for ma If 1 don't marry this season, I honestly believe mamma wil foree me into right pleces of granite—comething between the furniture of a Droit temple and that of « Prondway beofetenk dungeon, Hung against the walle were skins of wild animals | purchased in the vicinity of Bighth ‘treet and University , piace, New| Yor A The rear of the cabin merged into the cave There the hermit cooked his meals on a rude stone hearth With infinite patience and an old axe he bad chopped natural shetves in the rocky walt, On them stood bie stores of flour, bacon. lard, talcum-powder, kerosene, bak ing powder, godamint tablets, pep |per, satt and OtivoCremo Emulsion for chaps and roughness of the [hands and face ‘The hermit had hermited there for 10 yours, Ile wan an aenet of the { Viewpotot inn. To ite gucets he was | second in interest only to the Myater- fous Echo tn the Haunted Gten, And the Lover's Leap beat bim onty « tow inches, flatfooted. He was known far @ut not very wide, on account of | the topoeraphy) aa a scholar of brit lant intellect who had forsworn the world beenose he had been silted tn & love affair, Every Saturday night the Viewpotnt Inn sent to him sur. |reptitiously @ basket of provisions Mo never left the tmmediate out wkirte of his hermitags. Guests of the inn who vinited him said his store of knowledge, wit, and secintiliating Philosophy were simply wonderful, you know, That summer the View potnt inn whe crowded with guests. So, on Saturday nighta, there were extra enon of tomatoes, and s«trioin steak, Instend of “rounds,” in the her. | mit’s basket. | Now you have the mntertal afiera- | tons in the case, So, make way for Romance | Rvidentty the hermit expected a visitor. He carefully combed his long hatr and parted his aportotic beard. When the 9$-cent alarm clock lon a stone shelf announced the hour lot & he picked up his gunnyeacking | | ekirts, brushed them carefully, math Jered an oaken staff, and strofied slowly into the thick woods that sur- | rapnded the hermitage. | ile had not long to walt, Up the faint pathway, slippery with tte car-| pet of pine needien, tolled Beatrix, | youngest and fairest of the famous| | Trenhoime sisters. She was all in| | bine from hat to canvas } pamps, varying in tint from the shade of the} | tinkls of a bluebell at daybreak on a} spring Saturday to a deep hue of al Monday morning Sat 9 when tho | washerwoman has falled to show up. | | tentrix dug her cerulean parasol! deep into the pind needies and sighed. | The hermit, on the a. t, removed a grass barr from the ankle of one xandaled foot with the big toe of his lother one. &he biued—and almost starched and ironed him—with her | cobalt eyes. | “Tt must be #0 nion” whe anid in | little, tremulous gasps, “to be a her- mit, and have ladies climb mountains | to talk to you.” | ‘The hermit folded hin arms and | leaned against a tree. Beatrix, with | a sigh, settled down upon the mat of Pine heedles like a bluebird upon her nest, The hermit followed suit; | drawing his feet rather awkwardly | under his gunny sacking, “It must be nice to be @ thoun- maid he, with ponderous light | ‘and have angels in blue climb | up you instead of flying over you." “Mamma had geuralg ald ¥ ‘and went to bed, or I couldn't me, It’s drendfully hot at that | horrid old inn, But we Hadn't the money © #0 anywhere else this surm- mer.” night.” said the hermit, “1 olimbed to the top of that bie rock above us, 1 could seo the lights of the inn and hear a strain or two of | the music when the wind was right. | | I imagined you moving gracefully in | the arms of others to the dreamy | music of the waltz amid the frag. rance of flowers. Think how lonely I must have been! The youngest, handsomest, and Poorest of the famous Trenholme asters sighed, | That sottioment work or trimming hata. it fant that I'm getting old or usty; but we haven't enough money ieft to butt In at any of the swell pinces any more, And I don't want to marry— unies# it's somebody I like That's why I'd like to be a hermit. Hermits jon't ever marry, either, do they?” “ttundreds of ‘em," mid the her mit, “when they*ve found the right one “Pout they’re hermita” anid the youngest and beautifulest, “gecaus they'e lost the right ona, aren't they?" “Shecause they think they hava” anmwered the reciusa fatuousty. “Wisdom comes to one in a moun tain cave an well as to one tn the world of ‘wwolln’ aa I believe they are eatied in the argot.” “When one of the ‘wwolls’ brings ft te them,” mild Mies Trenholme. “And my, folks are ewelln That's the trou! Rot there are eo many swells at the seashore tn the um- mertime that we haniy amount to more than ripples. fo we've had to put all our money tnto river and harbor appropriations, We were. citrix, you know. There were fou of um = I'm the only wurviving one The others hare been osarried off. All to money. Mamma is so proud of my sisters, They send her the lovelicat pen-wipers and art cal endars every Christman Tm the only one on the market now, I'm forbidden to look at any one who hasn't money.” “But—" began the hermft. “But, ob.” mid the beantifulert, “of course hermits have great pots of gold and doubioons buried some- where near three great oak trees. The? all bave.” “I have not,” regretfully. “I'm so sorry,” anid Mien Tren- holme “I always thought they had, 1 think I must go now.” Oh, beyond question, she was the deautifulest. “Fair lady—" beenn the hernft. “I am Beatrix Trenholme—some call me Trix,” she ald. “You must come to the Inn to see me.” “IL haven't been a stone’sthrow from my cave in 10 years,” said the hermit, “You must come to see me there.”* whe repeated. “Any evening except Thureday.” ‘The hermit emiled weakly. “Good-bye,” she maid, gathering the folds of her paleblue ekirt. “I shall expect you, But not on Thurs day evening, remember.” What an interest it would give to ext the hermit, tho future menu cards of the View point inn to have these printed lines added to them: “Onty once) during the more than 10 yearn of existence did the moun- leave his famous cave his lonely tain hermit drawn to the inn by the fascinations of Miss Beatrix Trenholma, younge and most beautiful of the celebrated Tronhélme sisters, whose brilliant arriags to ” Aye, Tho to whom? hormit watked back hermit At the door stood Bob Binkley, his old ‘friend and com panion of days before he had re nounced the . world—Ftob, himself. arrayed like the orchids of the vreenhouse in the summer man’s polyehromatic garb—Bob, the mil Nonalre, with his fat, fiem, smooth, to the shrewd face, his diamond rihey, sparkling fob-chain, and pleated borom, He was two years oller than the hermit, and looked five unger. © Hamp Elteon, tn epite of piskers and that going-away bathrobe,” he shouted. “I read about you on the bill of fare at the inn, ‘They've run your biography in between the cheese and ‘Not Re sponsible for Coats and Umbrellas.’ What'd you do it for, Tamp? And 10 yearg too-coe whilikins®™ “You're just the samo,” sald the hermit. “Come in and att down. Sit on that limestone rock over there; It's softer than the granite.” “I can't understand it, eld man,” HUMOR PATHOS ROMANCE aald Kinkiey, “I can fee how you could give Up a woman for 16 years, but fet 10 years for a Woman. Of soarie 1 know why you did it, Everybody does, s4ith Carr Mhe jilted four or five besides you But you were the only one whe took to @ hole in the ground. The others had recourse to whisky, the THURSDAY, NECEMNER 9, 1929, £07 Bit those years had not been hoctifited—head wiey AR breieht him the star and pearl of all the world, the foungest and beautifulest of “Hut do fidt come on Thoreday evening,” #h@ hed inetated, Perhapd by now she Would be moving slowly and gracefully to the #trains of that | waltz, held clomly by West Pointers lor city commuters, while he, who ‘nad read in het even things that had recompensed him for 10 jont yearn of life, moped like some wild animal in ite mountain den. Why should— | “Damn it,” said the hermit, aud. dent 1’) do itr | He threw down his Marcas Aure- jooket came thrn the Iron ente, with its itimnéfie granite posts and wronght iron lampholider “What is going on her tonihtrs arked the hermit. “Well, sah,” said the fervitor, “a i having de reg’lar Thursday ¢ve fin’ dance tn de casino, And in the frill room dere’s a beefateak dinner, | eah.” The hermit glanced op at the inn on the hillwide whence burst suddeniy 4 triumphant strain of splendid hase mony. | “And wp there,” said he, “they are playing Mendelasohn—what is going on up there? “Up in dg tn,” anid the dusky forty #éven shades of blue. | waa when he was irresistibly | t | soe her great eves shining Klondike, politics, and that #imilia ome, “dey is & weddin’ goin’ on. Mr. similibus eure But, say—Hamp,|ttus and threw off his gunny-nack Faith Carr was fust about the finest toga. He dmeged a dust-covered | Binkley, a mighty rich man, am woman in the world—high-toned trunk from a corner of the cava, and| marryin’ Mins Trenholme’, nab. Aifficulty wrenehed open its lid. | young lady who am quite de belle of and 4 and noble, and playing | with 4 and Pale to wie at ail kinds of| Candles he had in plenty, and the | de place, #ah.” e riainiy was a cracker.|C2ve was soon aglow, Clothes—10 wr ore an magi agac | years old in cut—scissors, razore German Children Are 5 shoes, all Kis discarded attire “after I renouneeé the world’ in wate ataneal tf enid the hermit, “I nover heard of nxings, were draceed ruth) Retarded by Hung «| ha and be in? lensly from their renunciatory rest) German ehildren are two yes her again. |and strewn about in painful di*-|benind in growth, due to under “she married mo,” eaff Binkley. | order, urishment, Carl Crowl, whe hae The hermit leaned against the A pair of ectesora soon reduced bie juny mpleted @ four mont gen wooden walls of iia antecave and heard gufficiently for the dulled!.¢ Pocteland, told the members of wriggied hin toon razors to perform approximately the notary ctrh at their Iuncheon | “1 know how you feel about i," thelr office. Cutting hia own hair a) the Arcade t ding W day, Was beyond the hetmit’s skill, Bo be Crow) declared only combed aid brushed it bacie ward as smoothly as he could, Char ity forbide up to consider the heart burnings and exertions of one eo long retnoved from haberdashery ana boclety. | At last the hermit went to an te ner Corner of hia cave and began to Mg in the soft eafth with a long tron spoom Out of the eavity he thus made he drew a tin can, and out of | the enh $5,000 in bills, tightty rolled and wrapped in oiled silks, He wi & real hermit, as this may anew yon. | wild Hinkley. “What elae could she |ao? ‘There were her four sinters and her mother and old mag Carr—you remember how he put all the money | he had trito dittgible balloons? Well, \everythitig waa coming @own and nothing going up with ‘em, as you might may. Well, I know Edith as well as you do—altho I married ber. 1 wae worth a million then, but I've ran ft up since to between five and vin, It wasn’t moe she wanted a much aswell, it about Bice this: She had that bunch on her hands, and they had to be taken care of. Vdith married me two months efter t there ¥ tle danger of Germany turning to iit heviem. YOUR TEETH X-RAYED FREE 4 @id the groundequirrel act. I] Yot may take a brief look at him | hough she Liked me, toa, at the | 4s he hastens down the little moun- ume.” tainside, A long, wrinkled, bidek| frockcoat reached to his calves.| “And now? tnqutred the rectus. “We're better friends than ever now. She got « divorce from me two | White @uck trousers, unacquainted | with the tallor’s goose, a pink shirt, ) hite standing collar with brilliant | years aso. iS aaa Wek butterfly tie, and buttoned con rer This ie certainly «| STe® galters, But think, sir and] ve Bye no ad ‘Tout | madam—10 years’ From beneath « fagny dugout you've built here, But you always were a bere of fiction. like you'd have been the very one to strike Edith’s fancy. Maybe you did—but it's the bank roll that catches ‘em, my bey—your caves and whiskers won't do ft. Honestly, Hamp, don't you think you've been & darned foot™ ‘The hermit amfied behind his ten sted beard. He was and always had been so superior to the crude and mereenary Binkley (hat even his vulgarities could not anger him, Moreover, bis stadies and moedite narrow-brimmed straw bat with a/ striped band flowed his hair, Seeing |him, with all your shrewdness, you) |could not have guessed him You would have eatd that he played Ham. let—or the tuba—or pinochle—you | would never have laid your hand on > your heart and maid: “He ts a hermit) who lived 10 years in a cave for love of one lady—to win another.” | The dancing pavilion extended! above the wnters of the river. Gay! lanterns and frosted electric globes thed a soft glamor within it A) hundred ladies and gentlemen from BD. LR Cark tas shove tha witie poor age Nhe | the inn and summer cottages fitted || each morning between the rid iti iittle mowntainaide haa |i 8nd about it. To the left of the|| hours of 9 and 10:30. been almost an Olympus, over the| ‘sty roadway down which the her-/] No cost of edge of which he saw, emiting, the, ™t had tramped were the inn and] whatever. grill room. Something seemed to) be on there, too, The windows were! Drittiantly lighte@. and music wae) playing—musie different from the twoateps and waltzes of the casino bana, | A negro man weartne @ white NEXT WEEK bolts hurle@ in the valleys of man below. Had his ten years of renun ciation, of thought, of devotion to an ideal, of living scorn of a sordid world, been in vain? Up from the world had come to him the youngeat and beautifulest—fairer than Edith —ane and three-sevenths timo lovelier than the seven-yearswerved Hachel. So the hermit emiled in his beard. When Binkley had relieved the hermitage from the biot of bis pres ence and the first faint star showed above the pines, the hermit got the jan of baking-powder from his cup- board. He still smiled behind bis beard There was a sfight rurtie in the @oorway. There stood Edith Carr, with ali the added beauty and state Miners and noble bearing that ten years had brought ber. She was never one to chatter. She looked at the hermit with ber large, thinking, dark eyea The hermit stood still, surprised into & pore as Motionicas as her own. Only bis sub- conscious sense of the fitness of things caused him to turn the bak- ing- powder can slowly in his hands until its red label was hidden against bis bosom. “Tl am at the inn,” enid Raith, in low but clear tones, “I heard of you thera I told myself that I must see you. 1 want to ask your forgiveness, I sold my hap- | Dinese for money, There were others | to ba provided for--but that docs not «xeuse me. I just wanted to see ‘you and ask your forgivences. You have lived here ten years, they tell tne, cherishing my memory! I was viind, Hampton. I could not ste then that all the money in the world cannot weigh in the senies against ® faithful heart. If—bvut it ts too late now, of course.” Her aswertion wae @ qnestion clothed am best it could be In a lov. | tng woman's pride. But the thin | diewuiee the hermit sew easily that | his lady had come back to him—if he jebose, He had won a golden crown if it pleased him to take it, The jrewant of his decade of faithfulness was rendy for bis hand—if he desired to stretch it forth, For the space of one minute the! old enchantment shone upen him with a reflected rndiancea. And then by turns he felt the manly sensa- tiona of indignation at having been disearded, and of repugnance at hav- ing been—ax It were—sought again. And last of &ll—how strange that it | should have come at last!—the pale | blue vision of the beautifulest of the | Trenholme sisters illuminated his | mind's eye and left him without a waver. “It is too inte,” he mld, Mm deep jtones, pressing the baking-powder can agninst his heart. Ones she turned after mhe had Rone slowly 20 yards down the path |The hermit had begun to twist the lid off his can, but he hid it again under his sucking robe, He could sadly thru | the twilight; but he stood inflexible jin the doorway of his shack and made no sign, | eee Just as the man rose on Thursday evening the hermit was seized by the world-madness. Up from the tnn, fainter than the horns of elfiand, came now and then a few bars of music played by the |casino band. ‘The Hudson was broad. ened by the night into an illimitable |wea—those lights, dimly seen on its opposite shore, were not beacons for prosaic trolley-lines, but low-set stars | millions of miles away, Tho waters jin front of the inn were gay with fireflies—or were they motor boats, |amelling of gasoline and oil? Once the hermit had known these things and had sported with Amaryilis in the shade of the red-and-white-striped awnings, But for 10 years he had turned a heediess ear to these faroft |echoes of @ frivolous world. But to- night there was something wrong. The casino band Was playing a walte-a waltz What a fool he had been to tear deliberately 10 years of his tife from the calendar of exist- ence for one who had given him up for the false joys that wealth—“tum ti tum ti tum U"—how did that waits REGAL DENTAL f x Neglected Teeth Are the cause of much pain and actual sick- ness. Most of this could be prevented if a. competent dentist were consulted soon¢ enough. This old, established office offers you the services of expert dentists—men of experience—who have made a thorough study of dentistry and know it thoroughly. No mat- ter what may be the nature of your trouble, we can take good care of you here. All work guaranteed. Our methods are painless—we won't hurt you a bit, X-RAY WORK , We are prepared to do dental X-Ray work in all its branches. Complete modern equip- ment. FREE EXAMINATION! { We will be glad to examine your teeth and yw give you expert advice without charge, y Boston Dental Company | ' | 1422 Second Ave, Opposite the Bon Marche,

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