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WOULD SHOOT SHY BLONDE WHO HAS HUSBAND'S LOVE Mrs. Lillian McCloskey, Suing. for Separation, Makes Sen- sational Plea in Letter. SCARIFIES HER RIVAL.! Begs Spouse to Leave Liason and Return to Sane, Clean Life. “Donald, Y rushed into Healy's with | murder in my heart—Donald, can you realize it—murder—and {t looks as though you are going to keep this up and force me to kill So runs a letter teeming with the heart throbs of a wife in her Inst dos- porate attempt to win back the affec« tions of her husband from « “‘tall, strange, shy-looking blonde" which was to-day read {nto the record of the Su- preme Court In a sensational separation sult filed by Mrs, Lillian McCloskey, former confidential secretary to James Gayley, Vice-President of the United States Steel Corporation in New York, against her hueband, Donald H. Mc Closkey, Who worked with her in the same office as a clerk, but who {s now head of the Moto Block Import Com-} pany, an auto supply firm at Broadway and Sixty-elghth street, The romance aprung in that office ts revealed by Mre. “losk: in aff-/ davite a compl in the acti Sho tells all about the plans that she and her husband-to-be made; how, when she had promised to wed him, she raw the onportunity to make him y man and omplished it, iv, she says, to have his affections when she ne the blond w d them most stolen by an in the case, who 1s called Bertha Horte Mrs, McCloskey | fy now living at the fa le Switzer- land apartments, No. 7 Riverside Drive, BEGS HIM TO COME BACK TO A CLEANER LIFE. The leiter addresved to “Donald Dear’ runs on; “Is there anything a heartbroken wife can do to make You realize what you are dping, and | being you brek to hes, to y and « cleaner life? Will you try to put f my place during the lons, toty nights and try to appreciate what you are making me suffer? It WS o'clo kK Int rd and Lhave been unable to close all night: the pain in my he beara i my of the must « fe my lo Rothing in ence “Los wa third etreet to kil passing yet car wit wait! rvin « for you and shed eurt into Hea Donald, ean yy « with Ald what | © note down on my black for having tie desize, and white ail 1 had needed was have cawoht her, ost I : ©) evident a few ny time from a awfol thing. Turderstind yeu h of tromble, but think If you van how it tle that trousle would be ax compared wit as wowd hase brow et, Donuttd, yous me vo it SAYS HARSH THINGS OF HER RIVAL'S CHARACTER. “Marling. ie tint all you exy to aie of Whe? Ts there ne mh strly love of wom ant Ave Hons to le: all our wor- res, plans and h Mt for nothing, of agit w ' werth ha f What do t you ky we you an \ ver men ans bren doing vou rigot ating, only you “wn Kx ep what our Life togetien Is over, when la way sine, and L realiae that We can never be man and wife again and kaow that the happy years wiert eve just the seu and thes the years when aw rath when He helt some poomive And respect, and hoje and love never to retin ne tt, darling boy of mine, your me rah! one great apueal to you to take eads of your mixspent mon and be a man again, You have many in the wold who love vou, many whese hearts would break If they only knew how you have lived and are living, the wreck you have caused, Wor their sake come back toa better life Don't f ne hy telephone cons Versathing Remeinte; you have» mach aweet diversion every walle T have only the tanety tor ‘ no whieh Pocan do ing wardly agalast all the injumtiee tha been done me an only humen and self- ryation is a mon ins "t know how in your chosen life, but been capable of many things 1 don't understand. Devotediy, “LILLIAN,” Toe brief states that the amounts asked for are only o feir and reasenal Analuded in the “we we THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER Yankee Market for Titles and Riches Dead, American Girl Tired of Bad Bargains THIS 1S “Getti | etting Her Eyes Open i at Last,” Says the! Comtesse de Bois Lucy.| —“The Number of In-| ternational Marriages | Is Decreasing All the Time; Soon There Will) Be None at All Except | for a Rare Love Match.” “She Is Tired of Giving Everything toa Foreign Husband and Getting Return No Advan- tage She Couldn’t Have Had Without Marrying Him.” “In European Society All Bars Are Down to Amer- ican Women and They Don’t Have to Marry Abroad to Be Received” By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. The American girl has “got wise.” Daisy Miller is no more. You remember Datay, the one widely popular creation of that weaver of exquisite, tortuous English, Henry James? Daisy was the American girl of a generation ago, who gig- glingly invaded Europe with eyes blue as a bolt of baby ribbon, @ vocabulary of “aln'ts” and “real sweets,” and an innocence all uncorrupted by strawberry festivals and Sunday school picnics. She was the enfant terrible of romance. In Mr. James's novel Daisy died of a fever, unmarried. Therein Mr. James showed himself charita- bie, at the expense of his wonted realism. For the Daisy Millers didn’t die—not till after long years of paying the price for the shoddy goods of the title mai MAS“ ket. The Daisy Millers became the lawful prev—mvan- ing wives—o? all the counts, barons and princes who preferred marrying money to working for It, And now, pity the poor European nobleman! Willing as ever to be a! bridegroom for revenue only, he can't find an American customer. The slump in American heiresses for titled husbands was described to me vividly to-day by the Comtesse de Bois Lucy, a charming American woman who has just returned from Paris. The Comtesse is the first to admit that she isn’t the best proof in the world of her theory. The widow of a million- home | aire lumberman, she married the Comte de Bois Lucy in Paris, after a courtship of two years. But she made amends for her mistake by divorc- ing him in nine months, and by eluding the alimony, which a well-to-do American woman has usually to pay @ helpless man of title if she wants to get rid of him, Ludlow Street Jail must seem the most amazing institution in New York to a visiting lordship! “The American girl is getting her eyes open at last,” the Comtesse affirmed, with a gay nod, We were in her private sitting room at the Ritz-Carlton, where she had just breakfasted, “The number of international her position at all. marriagen is decreasing a!! the time. | coer nobility seriously on tne Con- Boon there will be none at all, ex- |tiient. To the wearer of it a title le cept for a rare love-ematch. Tbe [usually no more important than tho American girl ie tired of bed bar- (consclousness of colonial ancestora is gains, She is tired of giving evory- (to an American.” thiug to a foreign husband and get- | It didn't seem to me that the Com- ing jn return mo advantage that |te#¥e had chosen the most apposite of ting f Ithout | OMPAri#ons to exprese the nexligibility sho couldn't have had without for rank abroad. I've known a few of marrying him, For in Buropean #0 |i. several million descendants of the ciety all burs are down to American " Mayflower, [ut I am sure she had no women. They do not need to marry | tiought of satire. ad in order to be received.” Then why,” she continued, “should 1 the title counts soctally for| the American girl give up her birth- allt”? ed, With some Ine | TSKt for 4 mexs of pottage, when she ZN tat St ie iy s lives {CHM Ket all the pottage she wants with- he uso shat one out making such a eacrifice? only (true ACY ‘8 | should she apend money on a man who should know better. can do nothing to make her position in pean’t count in the case soctety more assured, and certainly will They don't take in the after one of an American woman," repeated the}do much to make her miserable? Comtesse, “AM that is asked of her In] WHERE THE COMTESSE HAD Lonton or Paris or Rome is that sho THE ADVANYAGE. Hull be attractive and npathetie, | “If T had been @ young girl when I fu BOURZWAM! Bay / 1 CANAYE,'! | tlements. They do not allow ardent Why | ‘Twe ENGUSH NOBUP. WILE HAVE ‘To G0 WTO * TRADE® and to forget « disagreeable experience. {I have four lovely children to help me." As I looked at the Comtesse I wasn't surprised at ti nsible decision she had reached. She is the national, that is, Lillian Russell, type of beauty, all cool blue eyes and firm pink cheeks and strong-looking yellow hair, It's a type that knows how to take care of itself excellently wel As if in answer to my thoughts, she exclaimed, “I didn't leave my money with the Comte when I left him. “E said to my husband, ‘Young man, you'll never get another penny from me. I might try to get you a Job. But that's all’ other American women as do marry abroad are keeping a very keen eye the marriage contracts and set- lowe-making before marriage to pull the wool over their eyes. They are Generous, if 1¢ pleases them, but they keep the purse strings in their own hands. “The foreign nobleman is a wonder- ful lover, He can persuado » woman that she is the most glorious thing tn the world; in fact, all the world to him. | Hut personally I do not believe that | he ever marries an American woman for love, The feminine type that he prefers im the pretty daughter of the 27, 1913. _ UCKMEN DUCKED | SAUTOGOT SHOT IN THE TONNEAU Four Hundred Bulleis Flew When Fire Started Under- neath Machine. CUMMINS GIVEN WEEK 10 PREPARE: Prior to Entering Sing Sing for Four Years. Three men—Gua Netisen, a director tn the Brandt Awning ¢ Neilsen, his brother, and Arthur Riley who operates the Mulrone H started from Medford, L. L, for Mattituck for the purpose of doing a@ Iittle duck shooting to-day. ‘ompany COUNTESS DE BOS LUCY start out better equipped than did this one. First of all there was a benutiful ig $1,000 Stoddard-Dayton motor car; t followed @ big “bunch” of clothes, accompanied by plenty of food; several bottien, with the corke tleht in; rain- | coats, overalls, duck-shooting capa, and duck-#hooting coats and trousers; tobac- pipes, cigars, cignrettes, In fact, everything that one would naturally take on a few hours’ ducking expedition Then there were any number of cartridges and some powder, with three rifles: thrown in, They started. SUNSHINE MADE IT REAL DUCK: ING WEATHER. Even the elements generously contrib- uted, and proceeued to duck the ducka- men with sunshine before they really threw open the clutch on the machine, In fact, It wan real ducking weathor, They journeyed. ‘They laid back in the big car and be- wan counting the ducks they were quing to shoot, a the Middle Island road it seemed to aay, at each revolution of the wheels, duck duck, duck, duck, duck duck! Visions of broiled, frted, be ate fricussed and atuffed duck arose before they had even got the liquors and cigars. But, an they were smoking the cigars some- thing happened. It happened just about 4 mile north of Medford. It was ono of those big happenings, which happen when ono least thinks they will happen. duckmen or whatever ot may «| duckmen, or whatever one may ne THE NOBLEMAN WiLL HAVE TO KEEP HIS “NOBLENESS" A SECRET oes to Furope, haw a beautiful time, refuses to take any of the men serious- ly and comes home to marry @ nice American man, as she should do. “One result,” added the Comtess with a merry amile, “is that the ba rupt barons and princes and counts are compelled to do a litte work. “The impecunious nobleman is the busiest Little commnissio: jerchant im the world. Me always has « ‘friend’ with the most remarkable portrait or inlaid escritoire or piece of tapestry going for e song. In @ perfectly natural way he suggests to ome woman that she buy ber floral decorations from @ certain es- tablishment; to another, that she purchase # toy lap dog from a spe- Gial dealer. Me even receives com- missions from dresemakers ‘or sending them women patrons. Only himself and the various merchants are in the secret of his activities. “When he has any okt pictures and furniture of his own left, he selin them, When he hasn't, he may stock up a chone to call them, suddenly noticed that the car was burning underneath them ‘They wore just in the act of picking the duck from their teeth at the time and they atopped the car and ducked out of it, In an instant they realized there were SOME cartridgee—SOMIE powder In that car, Anf they took one took, and, satiatying themacives the fire couldn't be ducked, they ducked. ‘They ducked straight for the woods, Each ducked in a different direction, They ducked behind trees or anything else that was behind-duckable, iff! Wow! Bang! Chow! Waffe! rented house with antiques fresh from the factory and pass it off on| And the duckmen ducked. Amorican tourists as his estral | With fury the bullets sped through th halls. woods and threatened to Uckle the no “The poverty-stricken man of [of the three duckmen, which were visible title obtains board without pay- | from behind three neparate trees, ‘There ment by rushing from tea to tea | were 4 rounds of ammunition, on cet aud by dining ont as much as | ridges, 40 bullets. And the duckm ponstble, Me cultivates the rich |ducked #0 thnes, ‘They ducked until American family, though he may | they couldn't duck any more—and then De hopeless of marrying the daugh- ter, because he fe thus insured many square meais. “Occasionally be takes long chances! they ducked again. They began to feel ducky; they felt ducky and each pald the other looked ducky ua a result of their ducking. concierge, the Janitress, as we should say in America, The cocotte Im the | only woman tn Paris who really at: | tracts men by her charms, | “It is the understood thing that a) Married nobleman should keep up a least one other eatablishment besid that tn which his wife dwellx—using | her money to do it, if necessary. Now | what American girl i# going to stand for such # performance? Formerly she | didn't know foreign standards, She is Sjenough to get the proper perspective bless unsophiaticated these days So she | at gambling resorts, but he usually! And not one single duck was shot! hangs on to every pit of cash ho gets! When the reckless drunkenness of the and ina ft Ko an Incredibly long | bullets had ceased the duckinen ducked way, He learns to be an excellent) out from behind the trees, where they manager, The great drawback is that) had been ducking, and ducked over t ho must not seem to work, the road. And all they found, as a reli would be beneath his dignity. of their expedition, with its food, bot- Jobs must always bo under the -|tlos, clears, cigarettes, tobacco and That is why his great forte is com.| pipes and other things, was a crumpled mission work, which his wide wo-| mass of iron in the middle of the Mid q ance and consummate tact en-| dle Island road. ble him to perfurm with some auc-|, And this Is the end of the story of vane. three duckmen who went ducking, oc — ducked, had to duck, and, though #) But the market depression tn helr=|«hots were fired, they didn't get a soll- esses worrles him," concluded the! tary duck Comtesse. The heiresses shouldn't worry, how- ever. They are avenging the Daisy Millers, Some duck aneoting! MEN DRAGGED 50 50 FEET. ‘Then she is received everywhere 4nd) made my lust marriage my life would very ne is sweet to her A marriage] have been spoiled, Now IL am old with a man of tithe does not impr “t nt that MeCloskey has been nay-} and whtle washing dishes the saupis ing to bis mistress for living expenses |embraced and kissed each other, ean 0h tal /each dish was dried, he says, there was “ nent jain ailditional $1,200, | Klee ‘cording to the metoranium, The|WIFE DENIES SHE EVER inane heust ameou which MeCloskey's in- KEENAN, nay minced, xplaining the incident with Mr, insan submitted Keenan, Mra, Me(loskey says fa i” an, S210 & year itely unirue that we wer The basic of Mrs. McCloskey’s sult i /in an exa<sera ra ruleae aiasiey, ASA jel and inhuman trett: | aod it is wholly false that any Pe the | vent, desertion and a he | guests were Intoxicated were n Lost la da three yea after they |known to my husband, and He Kn vor omaried. her husoand siiowed HIS that their deportment was proper and | Vet sof a waning affection for her. |decorous, My husband never told a HUSBAND DISAPPEARS AFTEK sreater filsehood in his fe than when | he states that 1 was smoking cluarettes: 1 have throat and ear trouble and can’t *u [MANY MSRITAL SQUABBLES. osse and the marital res wo Krew strained complaint, untilen April oth Ax soon as the guests at this party vloned the plaintiff | te talks about left Mr, Keenan waited Finally, on Aug. 1 behind and helped me tidy up. the tint staves, Mrs. McC os: |rooms, [never kissed hin. it is a most nous letter stastig ‘ly ile on the part of my hur wen on nus! band, who se to bring my actions merous ovcnsi at a window ut Broad-{to the level and character of his mis way and cnty-second street, This tress."* Apastnent, the letter said, was ovcupted by Miss Bectha Horton 4 foe Vian Mrs, Mecloskey visited the apartment | Frank Lewis, forty-two years old, man: ‘mentioned in the letter and asked for #8¢r Of What ts known ax the German, ae tie whe nie out, Hotel ty Bast ‘Thirteenth str was | the vomutaint states Gat Misa Adelaide £2tvieted of maintaining « disorderly ‘ , 4 "house by Justices Zeller, Russell and M Horton, a sister of the Miss Bortaa, . Inerney in Part V. of Special Sessions sponded to the call at the door, MUSH Oday, This makes the elahth time Adeinide sald that she her sla ewis hax been convieted of this of- Knew Mr. Mot utimately well | fen He was sentenced to sis menth The young woman understood My in the workhouse, Lewis was arrest Closkey. to his wife,;on Aus. 11, after tnapector Myer mg 1 4 pe In his own bevaif Metloskey says that onee while passing his wife's apart: | ments on Riverside Drive, he looked in ‘it ARI ped to 8 degrees through the Venetian blinds and saw [perature dr Were last about Afteen couples dancing the tango, MEHL Tie freeze destroyed a large | He says he saw his wife dancing with ajamount of immature feed crops. The tall, falr-complexioned young man. Be.) cold W is prevalent throughout the xas plains ia SUNG. | tween dances the couples adjourned to & parlor and enjoyed highballe and cigarettes. When the company had he saw a Mr. Jeek Keenan end Mrs. MeCleckey go inte the kitehen 5 interview = FAUROT TESTIFIES ~ AGAINST MURET; = PROSECUTION RESTS. | Detective a & Reads Den-| tist’s Stenographic Statement. Elaborate counterfeiting paraphernalia! was in evidence to-day in the United States District Court, presided over by Judge Hunt, when the trial of “Dr.” Ernest A, Muret, associate of Father Hans Schmidt, confessed murderer of | Murot ts | charged with having in his possession « copper plate of one side of a twenty dollar oil Chief Inspector Faurot of the Dete>- | tlve Bureau continued his testimony | from whore he left off on Friday, iden tifying the various articles found by him in “De. Muret's St. Nicholas avenue Jat, On table were a very larke eam jera, copper ahoets, a sinall hand print: ing press, boxes and bottles of jonls, a box with Klass aid which oould be like real money. Inspector Faurot read hin interview with Muret, immediately after his ar- reat of the jatter, the interview having been taken down by sergt.-Detective John J, O'Connell in shorthand, In this eneeser declared thar Anna Aumueller was resumed een paper that looked | fagainet Dr | ward “——= | A horse owned by Samue 35 South Third str Hleteh of driven Father Schmidt was the man who pro- Vided moat of the counterfelt plant ana] by Frank ‘Winters of No. 349 Rudney who suggested everything, street, ran away at corner of Moret told the inspector, according|Metronolitan avenue and line to the Interview, that he wan with{ treet, Williamsburg, thi morning Schmidt when the latter bought the| Shortly after 7 o'clock, when a news capers, They first printed postal, Paper wax blown over ite head, The cards, and then Vather Schmidt ta | Felis xnapped when Winters tried to Jeheck the animal and the cart bumped truck at Haven t it would be nice to make money} 5 er street, mm the press, During the summer—|!nte , oleae told Muret that he had a girl Muret pee eels sald he did not believe him, wna], fr ; living at No. 2% Metropolitan avenue Schmidt replied that he should see the did not ave the runaway and was struck ut he never did a But he never did ane her, be) tis ter, ankle was broken and he was “ [injured internally rank San On cross-examination Attorney Derby | twenty-seven, of No. 8 Metropolitan went Into the Seamidt homicide case, | ayen evidently with the desire to ahield his! of Hen from any connection with the murder of Anna A ‘aurot ad- rnitted that Muret had told hin that he bad never seen Anna A amueller, I you Know of any other charge Muret?” Derby asked repiled the inspector ‘ Ie yado strenuous oy jection, and was sustained by the Court Inspector Maurot then said that he knew of hy other charges against the prisoner Several te testifies to ¥ pocihcos the Mat at No. go St Nicholas avenue and to No. S16 West One Hundred and Thirty-fourth str where the nterfeitingy t found , and Frank Sarinte, ¢ o. @ North Blghth str sprang at the horse's head and were dragged fifty feet before they released thelr hold Bath wore kicked about the lege and ined on the arma, Polican Keys feaily stopped the antmal, Ex-Lax Fo nty-one, Not yet, orney by nen swe Detective Frank Cassassa ed Muret, identified several articles of- fered in evidence, Among therm two pleces of bout an and apparently sige of a ent Dill, Cussansa said loner I, nor t made to who arrest Here'y/4ood news for sick folks |eufferers from constipation Ex-Lax is aw never-failing ty and ap itive take Just right you would sw jehocolate, That's what Ex-Lax like, in looks and taste gulping down pille—no ot to-awallow — tablets —no tasting liquids, like our gran dies used, Ex-Lax does the busi- ness, ne no mistake about it, yet Muret t m8 iy thn n No more hard- nasty f. Prosecution rested and Attorney Derby asked for a dismissal of the ine dictment againat his client on the ground that the Government had not established @ case against him. The motion was denied and adjournment taken Ull 3 e’elock, wre ] Emit! Never did a duck-shooting expedition | das the car bounded over | Constipation This Wonderful Chocolate Biliousness and All Bowel Troubles coems justi like chocelate candy, for] at al tervention of the United States Supreme (Court between him and four years at least of imprisonment @ hard labor in | Sing Sing, William J. Cummins, the ‘former head of the Carneigie Trust |Company directorate, to-day to Justice Gavexan in the Crim- Hranch of the Supreem Court. Againat the protest of his counsel, ; Herbert C. Smythe, Justice Gavegan committed Cummins to the Tombs for a week, giving him an opportunity to close | up his business affaire before being taken to Sing Bi | The events in court were preceded by @ heartrending acene at the Hotel An- sonta, where Cummins bade goodby to hin wife and two grown daughters, Mary | \ and Rena. Since the Court of Appeals decided againat him last week Cummins had not left his apartment. With him overy moment was an agent of the Na- tional Surety Company, which wont bie bond for $75,000, When word came to Cummins at the Ansonia to meet his attorney at the courtroom this morning the banker called his family about him and tried to cheer them with freah assurances | that he would soon be with them in, ‘Their tears broke hie nerve, and when he at last forced himself away from | their arms and took the elevator for the ground floor he was shaken with In appealed to Justice Gavexan to continue the bond unti! the result was known of the attempt now being made in Wash- the courtroom Attorney Smythe ington to get @ writ of error for Cum- mins from the Supreme Court. Diatrict- Attorney Whitman objected strongly to uny further delay in sending the former banker to Jail and the Court concurred, | «ranting Cummina week in the Tombs to clone up hie affairs. Cummins was convicted in Novem- ber, 1911, of grand larceny in thi first degree in having taken to hi own use $140,000 deposited in the Car- negie Tri teenth Ward Bank. by Juatice Vernon M. Davis to not lees than four years and elght months and not more than eight yeat months, For two yeara C cessfully evaded serving ble COUNTESS OF CARLYLE. AGAIN HEAD OF WORLD “WHITE RIBBONERS” W. ¢ Uy nial Conclave Finishes Trien-. With Elec- tion of Officers. i Lady Countess of | Carlyle, was re-elected President of the, Women's Christian Temperance Unton of the World thix afternoon, following a ningle ballet at the Academy of Mu-| klyn, where the general con-| ‘The election | overruled the protests of Lady Rosa lind, who by Miss Agnes Slack, secre- tury of the organization, and Mrs, Ran- Iph Clarkson sent word that ahe could not Ml the place even though re- election came, On the opening ballot the entire En lish delegation, carrying out Lady Ro: valind’s wishes, cast Its vote for Mra, | Lilian Mo N. Stevens of Portland, Me, who has been Vice-President. ‘The twenty-nine other countries represented | all voted for Lady Ronalind, and the electt Was made unanimous, Mrs. Slevens was re-elected vice- preaident, and Misa Slack of Ripley, Derbyshire, England, and Miss Anna A. Gordon of Evanaton, Ill, secretaries, Mra, Mary F. Sanderson of Danville, Quebec, Canada, was again chosen treasurer. Capt. Richond P, Hobson, member of | Congress from Alabama and candidate for United Staten Senator from that State againat Oscar W. Underwood, was made an honorary life member. The convention first vated $190 as @ eontribu- r Htowalind Howars ale tnt vention Is now in resston. Laxative Relieves it’s chocolate all through, Ex-Lax unclogs bad bowels, corrects acid stomach, puts an end to jousness | and all troubles arising therefrom. | You feel like » new rson when Ex-Lax gets your bowels continue in splendid healt take an E: K every then, No pain or griping—po bad spells after action, Ex-Lax is the best physic the medical world i art baer | Price 10c, 850 and 50c, tion to Capt. Hobson's eampaign fir but because of the fear of politics this | contribut Alamaba Chapter of the Wo f. [ Jeffries Howard, son of Lady four and ex-Gov. Glenn of Nrth Carina ale made life members. The triennial convention will « night with apecta! exercises, jevem t qualifying the order to the extent of & 3 was Inter changed to the 1 tos musical A ‘programme has been arransedd, after the entire oudtence sings be with you til we meet agai j delegates will vote the we al Journed. a A Nevere Shock n irs} (Prom the Pittata nat.) |Banker to Wind Up Affairs), q.(Promibehituimrah Post) rave had a sudden ahock.” Taskedt my barber If f A severe one A Social Leader’s Advice to a Debutante— “Remember, my dea: Good Teethkeeping means good health and winning smiles—both indispensable to social success.” Rely on the habitual night and morning use of Dr.lyon's P ect "oa the teeth Ageages the harmless method of polishing. Dr. Lyon's is safe. It is a smooth, gritless powder which Prevents the formation of tar- tarand the beginning of deca: Teach your children to use Dr. ell at night. willinsure them against future tooth discomfort and prove the ‘best safeguard to their health. 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