“TONS OF FALSE TEETH. CREAT STRIDES THE PROFESSION OF DENTISTRY HAS MADE Cataphoresis Has Unprecedented Power to Deaden Pain---Startling Bleaching Pro- cesses, “The man woman who is troubled over the necessity of artificial tooth popular dentist the other day, “may take consolation from the fact that there are about 2.000.000 of such teeth manufactured and sold aunually in the United States, allowing, on an av- one artificial tooth every four years to each woman and child Indians, ne much having said a or an inserted,” erage, man, in the country, including groes aud tramps, “On the authority of the greatest manufacturer of dental supplies in the | country, there are 10.000 ounces! of pure gold worked up annually for dentists’ in material for tilling teeth, in plates and solders, the value of this gold approximating $1,000,000, In addition are about 50,000 ounces of platinum used annually by various manufacturers of porce lain teeth, to say nothkg of the large amount of silver amalgum prepared for inconspicuous fillings, in the teeth, “There Is no other over use there the such as those back profession which tle the and has made greater strides during laxt few years than has dentistry, the number of practitioners has stead ily Increased until there e 20, 422 dentists in the Uni Even the little Alaska have their dentists, there being uine engaged in the res How ar ted States towns of tervits lo not lie, the majority pracice in wy “As If these men cannot hb to do. because 20.000.000 of false teeth of gold fillings, between 20,420 106) teeth of ave very much and $1,000,000 worth ete, divided equally dentists allows only about and a Of AS Y little less than S40 worth wold wnnum to each dentist, the popular pract per i mers in large eit amonnts, many m £S.000 to 15.000 at their profes good fall that a 1 below the 118s worked he dis ry of what ; far to them personally exis to iter in 'OH USE cedented power to iden pain “Cataphoresis,’™ ix ge accompanied i. and the cossary to wtih 0H no (43 thout the appre aid no there Is rkmauship in bleaching’ by women CRtaphorK cinted is driven into the current of similar to that is driven Even a much discolored as a of a beanti a elec into tooth that of rors r treatment rendered means, Ia fact by the up-to for nearly everything con. nected It used for killing it propels treadie for entting and the mallet for filling; while | rosiil : dead perve, may be fully white by this electricity is now nsed diate dentist with work. is his the Nerves wise ight Is supplied by the same moans, “The dentist of twenty-five ten Years who has not of times, would Kept ng, nbireast the i by the prospect of a shopping tour, It is probable, too, that artificial teeth the bluish white teeth a few years ago are seldom seen, and the porcelain fillings which are dally growing in popularity, are so Identical in tint and nppearance the teeth of which they form a part that their presence can hardly be detected, Their prepa- ration amd insertion, however, require considerable skill, They are generally first shaped to the cavity, then baked, glazed and carefully inserted, superior beauty of these fillings over the conspicuous gold ones is apparent to the people most in Even now HO common with he conservative C.ARITY IN HOLLAND. ‘ to Aid the Poor Without Them. How Pauperizing . A mo iniatu: x ints Dutch A model in miniature exists lost their hold stored to at re If : i on prosperity are semblance of s« preserved, e young, and, short, the utmost possible least a tien unre the support, ramily ucation is afforded the most a poor colonies of Holland, four in nu ber, are be government unpromising mater not, as migat supposed, a institution, fut one co-operation with the government which ited injuriously to the undertaking ine wis attempted, rest uit colonies owe their origin entirely eneficence (“Mants da un Society of py van Veldadighs ISIS to i meet the exig «1 on Holland rest of Europ 3 encies of des om Wii in « i the tie the Napoleoni era individual forced benef with a hot iy of living from ti repay advances made hood ueted from i ed stallment on the debt re 18 want “Was asked freckles appear place “Of sur ert wi silt “yy “ was, ¢ kn V4 Xi two insane “Couldn't Son “NO Fv pay elbow n i one ask questions?” hiniay was {oo to me i itite the oceasion ery body any sttention 15 or twice, but it Was ie any All AE eX fed] of me was to stand what 1 told and till 1 to, I of any conseguence at wasn't tise, around and deo wae not wasn't anybody all, 1 was merely the bridegroom. Washington speak was spoken ~tar. Why He does a soldier sing? Was Singing. Whint The whether mach on a the inswer depends very he is n regular or The regulars take to fast provements in the modern practition- ers operating room, for instance, into which every instru ment is placed after being used, Ix the ‘hydraulic chair. that every instrament put mouth has been thoroughly sterilized since being previously used, means a great deal to a sensitive patient, “Another special horror has been done away with through the Invention of the dental speculum and the drain. age tube. The former protects the lips from abrasion, while the latter, when placed under the tongue, takes up Sod carries awny the troublesome ‘drool,’ which under the old fashioned system of dentistry was the cause of such aversion to fastidious men and wo men, “If dentistry Improves vproportion. ately during the next fifty years as it has daring the last decade, by the mid. has ust from home in filnences, and thinks of fe solttier come to his lps un In the charge at El Caney deadly white, but making his way up ward through the thicket under fire, singing at the top of his volee that old Presbyterian hymn, “How Firm n Foundation.” The General checked him and asked bing why he was sing. ing. The answer came quick: “That's my mother's tune. I'm so seared it's all 1 can old on to." Wa verlkey Magazine, There is much French and Belgian capital invested in the principal rail way lines of Spain, while Eogland owns many of the shorter lines, and terests, OUR YOUNG FOLKS. The Roses’ Way. This funny little tot who longed to be grown-up, you know, = Had heard that sun and water Wade the tall red roses grow, she ran and close against the garden w (She scarce conld the leaf, she was so very small ! And when the gardener passed { way she called to him in glee “Ita growing, like the roses, John! Just come and look at me! I've watered me all with watering pot, you know, And now the sun is have I begun to grow ?” Margaret Johnson, hem beside t 1 all, lowest So stood reach hat {iver} your shining —please Chicken Culls In All Countries, When one hears the Yankee house- wife calling her chickens with a “Chick-a-chick, ehiek, chick ! Biddie- widdie, wit, wit!" the ery seems the natural that could be the purpose, fu other parts of the world than New England, how ever, the barnyard fowl are taught to answer to The English hel Vis and i one used other ealls calls In for instance, or Co Py COO. u Pen Flin pes, Crermany, pea sylvania peepee, } employed in Hungary, Bulgaria, Inthe Aust: is also Bavaria ince the term is used in combination, Pulla, pi, pi; pul, pul, aiso cecurs In parts the call pu iieie, there of BO eastern FP 1 ¢ 4 (1 with Fusasia cinekschen, Kin tars tin shan tin &is0 Lippschen, Upp, bibeli, bidli; MNArK i ki if, In De Holla: t i : in peeped see, baby his head; bat weet tooth ! sant places fallen, al gentie and never show even when they were a little th less, as the best of children sor are, Not that she ever gave up when a difference of opinion Kit nuderstocd as wellas any o older people are always right, was many vears older than any children. The children were tomed to drive in an old j 1 was so broad and low that there of upsetting. Often the long simmer Lolidaya allowed to start early merning for an all-day play woods, There was a beantiful wood five miles from the town, and in ita depths was a most enticing cave which seemed to have been made especially i yhaeton was uo danger hey in the in the had made up from story books from Scott's “Tales of a Grandfather,” or The girls did not find it quite as exciting as the boys; still, it was rather good fun to i cued, and all that sort of thing. Kit was always left mere or less to The boys always wont through the form of hitching her to a tree. As long as it pleased her | to stay tied, she remained where she was put. But when she once got the | idea into her head that it was too sunny, or that there was a particularly desirable clump of grass anywhere | sloe, Kit untied herself and departed | in search of adventures on her own | scconunt, The children complained of this habit, but their father, who | knew Kit well, only laughed, and tld { them they must learn to tie a different sort of knot, When it came time to go home for tea, or if she thought it was coming on to rain, Kit always turned up. and whinny loudly until came, Then she would turn her head in the direction of home and slowly, giving the loiterers r of time to overtake hier. walk pient; Sometimes it happened children were not quite Kit did noc wait, She would conti to and it ended loiterars having to smartly up. Once they Kit, and sh the children that the ready; hint jog aloug slowly, $ tiie { nie | v i alwnvs ef in un | wil | went to eatel to mind e Put told them that be would not trust nereead not Lome alone. s father then away Bain Hien. they came home when kit vas ady, as she I's knew best Another bad was that Kit had shout the proper le for her to adopt when they driving. Nothing wonld her to go off a slow trot or a fast Pleading, OCCR sional vance that the ehil Lier tha gris Own Zui t was sul were persuade walk nn light switch aut with them, He die He won cotmioriabiy, threatening, and even blow with a ih. were alike ineffect: their father were quite diff rent. Ws not have ign, and r the egrire d an i Ieanit which hac UNCANNY PLACE TO SLEC? i RoC $ i Upon an the Result Belated Hunters Stumble pied House, and ESPINOBA, THE BANDIT. Moxt Famous Qutinw ver Known on the Sante Ve Trail The most famous bandit ever Knewn on the Santa Fe trall Fspluosa, a Spaniard, who hind wenlth nod Hved upon a haclenda upon the io Grande near Mexico Hike intive wa great HY one time the banks of Fe, Now dukox of y imed descent | of Wie Han in af the He thie fie Ohi hin country. ris knight in Cortez wills of ornamented by ancestral fainonus nrtists of of tits painted by He had fied {13311 cattl ted © taught him infriendly fils Los enda, expense, drank Searching for a King's Noady » Tedd Deen susin ind a report be local aut renre i OTe Ory 1: and An Elliot stroe has Just lio arrives taend #1 down town! long dresses, #7 Te Was wanted are fh the least % fs Lilfow ble she encountered a blind man, depend prossl delay park upon charity, She yearned to help | and rent by conflicting 41 first she wanted to give him whole Then she was by the ceadly and felt running for the oe cream parior, Wits of of which compromise jx possible and honor iw gave th Blind man a nickel and with the other nickel bought a glass of oe Cream so da, It will be readily appreciated that to have given away the dime would have deprived this story of one of its strongest morals, Detroit Free Press, “hut wae de bow 1 like hut Gore, appetite this 1 those great conflicts in preserved, She Died With Her Hrood. Examples of parental affection are often seen in the animal world, and this pathetic one was once read in a German paper: “At Neuwendorf the lightning struck the gableend of a barn where for years & pair of storks had built their nest. The flames soon caught the nest in which the helpless brood was piteously screaming. The | mother stork now protectingly spread | out her wings over the young ones,’ with whom she was burned alive, al | though she might have saved horse easily encugh by flight” thine further inv All the ox) been borne by the govern Lis fous ent don nave y Rome Correspot 1a Post igh Lighin, i a summer rh § ¥ tt Kiri gets the will who A man convineed against h euffers most swwhen it ix a4 wos convinees him The man ofl sister always has nore new ans other man Hoek. There is always something to be said on but victory is with the woman who gets fo talking first, A man marries 8 woman who ander stands Browning. and then scts sur prised becntise she sees through him. When a man wishes stand solid with the other sex be makes it Known thnt he thinks there are no ugly wom. on. After a man has been married ten or fifteen years he still comes in and asks his wife what time she is going to have dinner. The husband of on too neat house keeper consoles himself by thinking how he would hate his home if things were the other way.~Chicngo Record. who lives an aunt or hats than ia the 1 Hoth sides, fo A Costly Mistake, “RBriges i= dreadfully nearsighted. You know that hat his wife wears with all those Black plumes In ity” “Yeu I've seen i07 “Well, Briges thought it was the head of a feather duster, and he tied it to hix cane and brushed a lot of spider webs from ihe porch oelling before his wife caught him at It" Cleveland Maio Dealer, sos THE © SHINE” PRIVILEGE, Demanded From Bootblacks im Office Buildings. bootblack's profession has thie trend it oems to have pure inferred boat» Big Sums the followed general modern toward “organization” become a highis Po At least, 14d fie remuneratiy high rates tlie required 14 ing on desirable WELL dey privil frious fi for Cares Patan More people were large sum head of one clusive of § ii Compan ne ex ng rigl of the bhonts ue ferrd idea that boys the business Wis guile little later pe proof of A + nirofesgion i al The night pardon parcel un ou ir ter. au veral father ana of Hi: combinations Wels eI ome 1% heir children CAD There may bed 4 1 i Works on kinds of arses at a din. for. but the no is not you know vou will ¢ fod off and children, food or distri The Japanese could be expected elaborate o« i Goes pot cam mental struggle { saving ard wh half 0 b get a th hance Ares either yout it to your dogs ami oa ite your friends i« all that Each kind of food ix kept in a sepa. rate parcel, and at of the dinner the share of each guest is made up in a neat and bundle Frapcisco Chronicle it among the close tistic ~Nan a Finland Sentenced to Death. The statesmen of the old world, so are concerned, have maintained a wells bred silence upon the subject of the national tragedy of which the closing scene has been enacted in Helsingfors, the capital of the grand duchy of Fin. lated, And because no word of protest has been uttered from a ministerial bench, or read from a blue book bear. ing the official signature of a chanced for, the world has stood by in silence while the Fiunish nationality has been decreed ont of existence by an ukase from St. Petersburg, signed by Cear Nicholas 11, and promulgated by Count Muravieff, the Slavic Bismarck. The import of this decree 1s, that three mile tions of people of the Germano-Finaish hood shall become Russians forthwith, Behind the promulgation are a suillion of gray-conts ready to carry out the will of Muravieff hy the grace of the knout. In the meanwhile, the lmperial weakling whose pen has subscribed to the death warrant of & nation, ix tsp. ing foolishly of the advisability of mi grating the horrors of war-a colnel. dence which would furnish theme an Ofenbach, were it not matter mor meet for the tragic genius of a M «8. Ivan Tonjorefl, in The Arena. {
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers