THE CHABLOTTE NsrwS, jULY 16. 19)1
am
hit
J .
9
Edited by Russell Eendeison
1 o —Bussey’s hotae
^ ft=nce in the third
and Loman's
th«- outstaodine:
•\v.' s^ame at Cone
;: ft-npiiora winning
If .'ti the moimd for
" the Spinners’
t-rtni. Perfect sup-
to second sav-
. '.’f man stole on
•.!. -'as put otn of
'.■Id'.p of the sixth
..f (i'.siiutinc I’m-
V. He keiu munib-
V ordered off the
; hissing him as he
■ port gate.
!. the third spasm
■*r.'.pv and again in
■ and a stolen
In the fourth
•,n-:;es». an error and
B.?
AB
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31
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8
14
17
2
Ludetus Won
For Phillies
Philadelphia. July 14.—Two home
run drives by Luderus enabled the
Phillies to dow’n the Pittsburg Pirates
in an exciting game today, two to
one. He hit for the circuit in the second
inning and with the score a tie at
one all he drove the ball over the
right field wall in the 9th, with two
out, breaking up the game. The crowd
carried him off the field on their
shoulders. The game was a pitchers’
battle beaween Chalmers and Adams,
but the former would have scored
a shut out had Doolan not scored an
error.
Tigers Bump
Boston's Bean
Philadelphia AB R H O A E
Knabe. 2b 4 0 l 2 2 0
Pa?kert. of 4 0 1 2 1 0
Lobert. 3b 4 rt 0 2 2 0
I.uderus, lb 4 2 2 10 0 0
Walsh. If 3 0 0 4 0 0
Beck, rf 3 0 0 1 0 0
Doolan, ss a 0 0 3 2 1
Dooin, c 3 0 1 4 3 0
Chalmers, p 2 0 0 0 3 0
Totals 30 2 5 27 13 1
Pittsburg AB R H O A E
Bryne, 3b 4 10010
Leach, cf.. ...... 4 0 1 3 ,0 0
Clarke, If 3 0 0 2 0 0
Wagner, ss 4 0 0 0 30
Miller. 2b 2 0 0 1 3 0
McKetchnie, lb.. ,. 2 0 0 12 0 0
Wilson, rf 2 0 1 2 0 0
Gibson, c 3 0 0 6 0 0
Adams, p 3 0 2 3 2 0
Totals 27 1 4x26 9 0
X—Two out when winning run
scored.
Score by innings:
Philadelphia .. 100 000 000—1 4 1
Pittsburg.. .. 010 000 001—2 4 1
Summary: Left on bases. Philadel
phia 3. Pittsburg 4. Home runs, Lud
erus 2. Sacrifice hits, Chalmers, Mc
Ketchnie. Double plays, Doolan, Knabe
to Luderus; Paskert to Knabe. Struck
out: by Chalmers 3: by .\dams 4.
Base on balls: off Chalmers 3. Wild
pitch. Chalmerc. Time 1:30. Umpires,
O’Day and Emslie.
Detroit, Mich. July 15.—The Tigers
got five runs in the first inning today,
one more than they needed to win
from Boston. The affair ended 9 to
4. W’ood issued two passes, allowing
two hits and Engle mixed an error, all
of which piled in three Tiger runs.
Then Wood retired without a man
dead. Moser’s first offering was a wild
pitch, which let another man count
and a single made it five before a
double play ended the chapter. Two
errors and five hits co.unted four more
in the fourth.
Boston. AB R H PO A E
Hooper, rf 5 1 1 1 0 0
Gardner, 3b 5 1 2 2 3 1
Speaker, cf 4 0 0 3 0 0
Lewis, If 401001
Yerke.«. ss 3 0 l 2 ?. 1
Ens:le, 2b 4 0 0 0 3 1
Williams, lb 4 0 2 10 0 0
Carrigan, c 4 1 2 6 1 0
Wood, p 0 0 0 0 0 0
Moser, p 211010
Killilay. p 1 0 0 0 1 0
x-Wilson 1 0 0 0 0 0
X—Bated for Killilay in 9th.
Detroit. AB R H PO A E
Jones, If 3 2 1 4 0 0
Bush, ss 3 ] 0 4 4 0
Cobb, cf 3 2 2 2 0 0
Crawford, rf 4 1 1 1 0 0
Delehanty, lb .. ..4 1 2 11 1 0
Moriartv, 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0
O’Leary, 2b .... 4 1 1 1 6 0
Stanage, c 4 11400
Willetts, p 2 0 1 0 0 0
Naps Drub The
Highlanders
Cleveland, O.. July 15.—The Naps
gave the Highlanders a severe drub
bing today, defeating them by the
score of 12 to 4. Mitchell pitched a
fine game. Warhop who started for
New York, was chased in the fifth.
Fisher, w'ho replaced him, held the
Naps to five hits. New York’s errors
•aided the Naps. The Naps scored
with the double steal twice, putting the
visitors’ infield up in the air.
Cleveland. AB R H PO A E
Graney, If 5 1 2 1 0 0
Olson, ss 4 1 1 4 5 0
Jackson, rf 4 2 2 1 0 0
Stovall lb 4 3 3 9 2 0
Birmingham, cf -.. .. 4 2 3 4 1 0
Ball, 2b 3 1 1 1 2 0
Turner, 3b 3 1 1 1 1 0
G. Fisher, c 4 1 2 4 1 1
Mitchell, p 3 0 0 2 3 0
Totals ..
..34 12 15 27 15 1
Totals
,30 9 9 27 12 0
By innings. R. H.E.
Boston 000 130 000—4 11 3
Detroit 500 400 OOx—9 11 1
' Two-base hits, Lewis, Cobb. Three-
base hit, Stanage. Sacrifice hit, Mo-
j riarty. Stolen bases, Cobb. Base on
I balls, off Wood 2, off Moser 1. Hit
i by pitched ball, by Willetts (Y’erkes).
I Left on bases, Boston 7, Detroit 2.
' Struck out: By Moser 2, by Killilay 2,
by Willets 2. Double plays, Yerkes to
I Engle to Williams. Passed balls, Car
rigan 2. Wild pitches, Willets, Killi-
;lay. Time 1:55. Umpires, Connelly
and Egan.
'.nninsrs:
000 300 OOx-
001 001 000-
Eamed runs. Greensboro
!e 2. Twn-baw hit, Doyle.
B'lssev. Bases on balls, off
Stuck out. by Eldridge
2 Lef' on bss^s, Greens-
: .^nville 3. Stolen bases.
, ;'.jle plavs. Sharpe to
rioP" Time, 1:30. Attend-
Nugent. Stolen
Cardinals Drop
The Fust Game
Athletics Bieak
Losing Streak
I 1- _The Athletics
b : i-inc: s'reak today by de-
: 2 to 0. Plank pitch-
r , i.nd wa.=5 given perfect
r . > pitched a fairly good
; bv Hallinan beat him.
- . . : AB R H PO A E
Brooklyn, N. Y., July 15.—The Cardi
nals ran against a stone wall today
and dropped the first game of the se
ries to the Dodgers by 2 to 1. Nap
Rucker let the Cardinals down with
six .safeties and made a new record for
the league with 12 strike outs. Tooley's
misjudgnient of a Texas leaguer in
the nrst was all that prevented the
great southpaw from securing a shut
out.
St. Louis. AB R H PO A E
Huggins, 2b 3 1 1 2 2 0
Hauser, ts 4 0 0 1 3 0
ElHs, If 4 0 1 1 0 0
Koney, lb 4 0 0 9 0 0
Evans, rf 4 0 3 0 0 0
Mowry, 3b 3 0 1 4 1 0
Oakes, cf 4 0 1 4 0 1
Bresnahan, c ....300340
Sallee, p 3 0 0 0 0 0
x-Bliss 1 0 0 0 0 0
]^hite Sox look
Opening Game
Chicago, July 15.—The White Sox
took the opening game of the series
1 from Washington by a score of 9 to 5
I today. It was anybody’s game up to
; the seventh inning when Bodis’s ter-
! riffic drive sent home three runs and
I cut the game on ice for the Sox.
I Washington. AB R H PO A E
Milan, cf 4121 0
Schaefer, lb 5 2 3 10 1 0
Elberfeld. 3b 2 1 0 4 1
' Gessler, rf., 3b .... 3 0 1
Walker, If 4 0 1
McBride, ss 2 0 0
Cunningham, 2b ... 4 0 0
Henry, c 3 0 0
, Hughes, p 3 1 1
x-Conroy
New York.
AB
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Daniels, cf ...
. 5
0
0
0
0
Wolter. rf .. .
. 4
0
1
0
0
Hartzell, 3b .
4
0
1
1
0
Cree. If
2
1
0
3
0
Knight, ss .. .
, 4
1
1
5
3
Chase, lb .. .
2
3
6
0
Magner, 2b ..
. 2
0
1
2
0
Blair, c
. 3
0
2
7
4
Williams, c .. .
. 1
0
0
0
1
Warhap. p .. .
. 2
0
0
0
3
R. Fisher, p .. .
, ,
. 1
0
0
0
0
x-Wilkinson ..
. 1
0
0
0
0
Totals
33
4
9
24
11
x—Batted for
R.
Fisher
in
9th.
By innings:
R.
H.
New York ....
100
300
oon—
4
9
Cleveland ....
023
112
30x—
12
15
Two-base hits, Chase 2, Wolter.
Three-base hits. Turner, Stovall. Sac
rifice hits. Ball, Olson, Magner and
Mitchell. Stolen bases. Birmingham,
Ball, Hartsell, Jackson, G. Fisher, Sto
vall. Double play. Ball to Olson to
Stovall. Left on bases. New York 3,
Cleveland 3. Struck out: By Fisher
4; by Hartsell3. Base on balls: off
Fisher 1, off Mitchell 2. Hit by pitch
ed ball, by Mitchell 1. Wild pitch,
Fisher 2. Umpires, Mullin .and Per-
rine.
♦
CHIP DIAMONDS. ^ ♦
“By Hen.'
Quick Doctor! he’s heaps worse!
Anyway Bussey hit another over
that Greensboro fence.
Not much consolation in that, how
ever.
SOUTHERN LEAGUE RESULTS.
At Montgomery:
R. H. E.
Montgomery .. .. 000 000 202—4 9 3
New Orleans .. 060 101 000—8 14 0
Tannehill and Gribbens; Frazier and
Nagle. Umpires Pfenninger and Hart.
Matthewson
Tnmmed Reds
By Hank, there’s not much to that
kind of pitching.
Better sell him to Mike Kahoe.
’Tis refreshing to read of thy per
formance!, at least, Averett, during
thes perilous days.
The whole thing in a nutshell: punk
pitching.
, Nine hits and four runs are suffi
cient to win ’most any game, a^d
that’s taking the cork-center into
consideration.
Everytime we frame up to do a
little boosting the team violently ob
jects.
J. Pluvius knocked out both An
derson and Winston today and easily
won the game. Wish he had been on
the job permanently in the Spartan
city.
Seems that he stayed until the
third, got disgusted, and left.
Oh well, we can afford to lose one
once in a while. (HeyI wake him up
quickly, he is dreaming!)
Bussey seems to be having a hard
time of it in this circuit. Looked like
he got tired waiting on his teammates
to turn a trick, so he leaned up
“agin’* one that sailed over that
Greensboro fence.
If it wasn’t for the $alary limit
bu$ine$$, Greensboro, we w’ould not
say it, but we do hope you head that
Twindell bunch off before the curtain
drops.
Confidentially, if these Patriots had
the confidence that Twindell bunch
had we would take more stock in
them as winners.
Total
.33 1 7 24 12 1
0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 30 5 8 24 15 2
X—Batted for Hughes in 9th.
Chicago.
McIntyre, rf ..
Lord, 3b.. ..
Other sports Continued
On the Twentieth Page
I Am a Specialist
IN THE CURE OF ALL
Chronic Diseases
of Men aod Women
0 1
0 0
0 0
3 0
01000
0 12 3 1
0 1
Ct 2
0 0
0 0
1 0
1 1
n 0 0 0 0
20 0 0 27 S 2
AB R H PO A E
021
. 1 2 4
4011
4 0 2 1
4 0 15
2 0 0 0
4 It 1 8
.3107
.3000
Brooklyn.
AB
Davidson, cf ..
4
Daubert. lb ..
4
Wheat, If .. .
4
Hummel. 2b ..
. . . . 4
Coulson, rf ..
.. .. 4
Tooley, ss
. . . . 0
E. Zimmerman,
3b.. 2
Erwin, c .. .
3
Rucker, p ..
3
Totals .. ..
. .31
AB R H PO A E ■ Bodie, cf
1
1
2
0
1 4
0 0
10 0
1 0
0 0 0
2
0
, McConnell, 2b
1 1
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
2 0
2 0
5 0
0 0
2 0
0 0
Tannehill, ss
Payne, c ..
Scott, p .. .
Scott, p
0 10 0 0
Score by innings:
St. Louis .. .. 100 000 000
9 27 8 1
R. H. E.
17 1
Brooklyn
.. 000 020 OOx—2' 9 1
R. H. E.
100 000 100—2 9 0
000 oOO 000—0 4 3
Crisp, Plank. Double
- to Harrv; Murphy, Bar-
C.-.sp to W’allace. Hit
Thomas. Base on balls,
rf:’ Powell 1. Umpires.
! Kvans.
I'i^or has succeeded in
♦ ' io an hour.
Two-base hits, Ellis, Hummel; dou
ble plays, Hauser to Huggins to Ko-
! ney; Tooley to Daubert; Daubert to
Hummel. Left on bases, St. Louis 6,
Brooklyn 7. Base on balls, off Sallee
2. off Rucker 3. Struck out, by Rucker
12, by Sallee 2. Time 2 hours. Um
pires, Klem and Brennan.
Game Rained Out at Anderson
Special to The New’s.
Anderson, S. C., July 15.—The game
scheduled here today betw'een the
Twins and Electricians was rained out.
A double bill will be pulled w^hen the
two teams play on these grounds
again.
This was Swindell’s day to leave.
AB
R
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1
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1
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2
3
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2
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1
4
1
2
0
2
3
2
0
8
1
3
0
1
2
7
2
0
0
7
5
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
32
9
10
27
18
r
V
(irolina Assoaation Standing
Team
:nston-Salem
^jrwnsboro
^HARLOTTE
Vdiianburg
i'^ndersoii
I'Oroepville
Won Lost
P C
46
22
.676
43
26
.623
32
38
.457
29
39
.426
28
40
.412
28
41
.406
X—Batted for Young in 5th.
By innings: R- H. E.
Washington .. 004 000 100—5 8 2
Chicago 000 024 30x—9 10 3
Base on balls: Off Scott 4, off Ba
ker 3, off Hughes 3. Struck out: By
Scott 1, by Baker 3, by Hughes 3. Two
base hits, Schaefer. Three base hits,
McConnell, Hughes, Schaefer. Home
run, Bodie. Sacrifice hits, Payne, El
berfeld. Stolen bases. Walker, Mc
Intyre. Double plays, Payne to Lord;
Elberfeld to Schaefer to Henry. Time
2:25. Umpire, Dineen.
Rustlers Put
One Over Cubs
Boston, July 15.—Johnny Kling wore
a smile tonight for his band of Rust
lers put one over on his old team
mates, the Cubs, the score of 17 to 12.
The game was a slugging match all
through, seven pitchers being used.
Zimmerman walloped out a home run
with the bases full, but the crop of
errors, which established a new league
record and the heavy batting of the
Bostonians neutralized this feat.
Score by innings: R H E
Chicago .. .. 000 023 610—12 16 8
Boston 071 004 41x—17 14 2
Summary: Two-base hits. Archer,
Goode, Sair. Three-base hits, Flaher
ty, Tenny. Home runs. Schulte; Tink
er! Stolen bases. Sweeny, Herzog, Mill
er 3 Archer. Base on balls, off Mc-
Intvre 1, off Richter 2, off Toney 5, off
Mattern 1, off Pheiffer 4, off Brown
3 Struck out, by McIntyre 1, by Per
due 1, by Toney 1. Sacrifice hits,
Kaiser, Herzog. WMld pitch. Perdue,
Toney 2. Umpires, Johnstone and Sas-
ori. Time. 2:30.
DR. WM. H. MOSS, Specralist.
Rooms 3 and 4, Davidson Bldg.
Charlotte, N. C.
You, who are now and perhaps
have been for years suffering from
Piles of any variety. Rectal Catarrh
and Ulcerations, Chronic Constipa
tion, Diseases of Kidneys and Blad
der, Female Disorders of any nature.
I say why wait longer before com
ing to consult me in regard to your
case? You will come, but perhaps
when it will be too late. NOW IS
THE TIME.
TO ALL WHO ARE SUFFERING
from any of the above diseases and
have been disappointed in obtaining
a cure from the use of many reme
dies and treatment at the hands of
unskilled physicians, YOURS are the
class of cases that I especially invite
to ^
CONSULT ME FREE OF CHARGE.
I DON’T CARE PARTICULARLY
what other doctors think of my up-
to-date methods of treating chronic
diseases which come under my
specialty. It’s what you think that
concerns me. I desire, and am striv
ing to have your good will and pat
ronage. To get that I have two things
to accomplish. First, to be able to
do my work as I advertise to do it;
second to do it at a price and on
such terms that a poor man can
take treatment and be cured just the
same as a rich man. Give me a chance
to see and examine your case, and if
it be one that is curable I’ll give you
a chance to get well.
If you can’t call, write.
Directions to win a Caroline League
pennant: first, make up your mind
that the thing can be did and then
turn the manager (one without
scruples preferred) loose with your
bank account with full but free direc-
tions and tell him to go to.
P. S. If this does not work go to
that Twindell bunch for further in
structions.
The, only difference betw'een the
Hornets and that Twindell bunch is
that the profits taken in at the Char
lotte gates go into the hands of the
club directors and that amount of
filthy lucre taken in at the other
place goes to the players.
At Memphis:
R. H. E.
Memphis 000 000 000—0 6 1
Chattanooga.. .. 000 000 001—1 6 0
Newton and Adams; Bartley and
Higgins. Umpire Carpenter.
At Birmingham:
R. H. E.
Birmingham.. .. 100 100 OOx—2 5 1
Mobile 000 000 100—1 7 2
Prough and Elliotte; Burleson and
Dunn. Umpires Fitzsimmons and Rud-
derham.
At Nashville;
R. H. E.
Nashville.. .. 020 000 100—3—8—1
Atlanta 100 101 010—4 7 1
Case and Munson; Johns and Mc-
Murray. Umpires Collifiower.
At Savannah—First Gamee:
R. H. E.
Savannah 001 000 000—1 4 2
Albany 000 210 000—3 5 2
Robertson and Giebel; McCormick
and Matthew^s. Umpire Moran.
Second game:
R. H. E.
Savannah 000 000 0—0 2 3
Albany Oil 010 0—3 5 2
Grabble and G«ibel; Mayer and Mat
thews. Umpire Moran.
New York, July 15.—The Reds met
Mathewson today and lost as usual by
a score of 4 to 3. Harry Gaspar gave
the big fellow a battle during the
early stages of the game and once a
home run by Hoblitzel put the Reds
on even tern:;^ with the Giants, but
Fred Merkle finally blazed the ball
into the leftfield bleachers, with two
on bases and that was sufficient, al
though a ninth-inning rally that net
ted two runs had the Giants worried
for a few minutes.
Score by innings: R H E
Cincinnati 000 001 002—3 10 1
New York .. ..010 003 000—i 9 0
Summary: Two-base hits, Becker 2,
Marsons, Doyle. Home runs, Hoblit
zel, Merkle. Stolen bases, Snodgrass,
Bescher. Double plays, Gaspar to Mc
Lean to Hoblitzel. Left on bases, Cin
cinnati S, New York 5. Base on balle,
off Gaspar 3, off Matthewson 1.
Struck out, by Gaspar 4, by Matthew
son 4. Wild pitch, Matthewson. Time,
1:45. Umpires, Rigler and Finneran.
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE
At Columbia:
R. H. E.
Columbia 010 100 000—2 8 4
Jacksonville.. .. 301 100 010—6 10 1
Clark and Pow’ell; Lee and Leary.
Umpire Kelly.
Don’t talk too much about the val
ue of silence.
At Charleston:
R. H. E.
Charleston.. .. 000 000 000—0 3 3
Macon 000 101 000—2 6 1
Durham and Bentley; Douglas and
Reynolds. Umpire Hoagland.
Columbus and Augusta—rain.
In the game between Pitts-burg and
Philadelphia yesterday a peculiar in
cident came to light. The Philadelphia
team defeated the Pirates by the
score of 2 to 1 and both of the win
ning team’s runs w^ere made on
home run drives by Luderus. Certain
ly was the Stella stuff in the rarest
form.
Charlotte has won another. And
Bauswine pitched it. Oh, Bauswine’s
a good fellow when he wins.—Win
ston-Salem Journal.
Substantiating the fact.
Chances favor Charlotte keeping
thirdplace—over Sunday—Winston-
Salem Journal.
Not if we had Sunday ball.
Just exactly what Cliff Averett
meant by chosing Charlotte will be
more readily understood when it’s
made known that the Twins had
enough of pitchers and that Cliff had
been to Greensboro in timea past.—
Winston-Salem Journal.
Maybe he likes our city water???
And by the way, that Cliff Averett
has won two games for Charleston
since joining the Hornets.
That’s a pretty race In the National
League. Only 5 games difference be
tween fifth and first place.
If the attendance keeps decreasing
we are going to print the names of
those who go in our personal mention
column.—Greensboro Telegram.
—And the Fannabelles in the social
column—we ’spose.
Charlotte’s defeat brought forth with
startling suddenness the fact that
Coutts is about as good a pitcher as
anything else Cross can lay claim to.—
Greensberry News.
And then we have nothing to brag
on. That’s why we are w^here we is!
Bausewine is suffering from a blister
on his finger and cannot make the
sphere break properly.—Spartanburg
Show! that ain’t nowthing. That fel
lag Mordicai Brown ain’t got no fin
gefrs atall almost hardly.
Big Shou? is After
All Right-Handers
Umpire Kelly says that the big leag
uers are looking for right-haaid hitters
in preference to those hitting from the
off-side of the plate. Asked why this
was, Kelly replied that scouts had told
him the prevailing idea was that left-
hand hitters are easier meat for the
pitchers than the right-handed bats
men.
JOHNNY KILBANE
WON DECISION.
Los Angeles, Cal., July 15.—Johnny
Kilbane outboxed Patsy Kline for 19
rounds out o{ 20 at Vernon this after
noon, winning the decision after one
of the greatest foot races ever seen
here. Except in the eighth w'hen he
fioored the Cleveland boy, Kline was
unable to reach Kilbane while John
ny would not take a chance and mix
it, being content with outpointing his
man round after round. Neither man
was punished to any extent and after
the §0 both looked as fresh as dai
sies.
on the fit of your Collar
depends the symmetry of
your scarf and the serenity of yoyr temfier.
“H & r* Collars are. made of pure Irish linen,
not poor domestic cation. They last longer,
because they’re much stronger. The care with
which they’re made shows in the wear they with
stand. ' —
Here in every shape and height that’s right for
day or night.
2 for 25 Cents—sizes. >
H. C, LONG COMPANY, Agents
There is as Much Difference
in the quality of Dental Work as in shoes, clothes or laces. You request
the best you can afford in those things, why not in Dentistry, the considera
tion of which, is far more important. “Cheap and Good” from the very
nature of the work cannot be synonymous in dentistry. You can get dental
work for almost nothing and its worth it; Good Dentistry is not merely put
ting back the proper number of teeth or filling cavities. Restoration must be
made in a manner not only capable of masticating, but so the lips will
unconsciously remain closed, or in rriiddle life you will be the victim of par
tial deafness. This is not the only trouble experienced from unscientific
work. (Ask your physician). You are a Judge of cloth or a horse, but
Innocent regarding Dental Work. Don’t you think It will pay you to spend a
little more money, perhaps, but be assured of honesty. Judgment and skill7
There is a way, even if you have to study the dictates of your purse.
Call 233 any time from 9 to 12 or 2 to 5 for a convenient appoin^m^t
PR. C. M. BEAM
310-11 Real ty BIdg.
Some Good
Advice
Let Us Put Your Teeth In Perfect
Condition.
The hot days will be twice as pleas
ant and your health will be greatly
improved.
TERMS DON’T WORRY; THESE
ARE ARRANGED TO SUIT.
WE ARE MAKING A SPECIALTY
OF PORCELAIN BRIDGE WORK.
This is without doubt the most beau
tiful and lasting work known to Dental
science. In cases where one or more
TEETH have been lost we replace to
look so natural that detection is im
possible. Ask to see skmple^ of this
beautiful work.
Examination Free
No charge for Painless Extraction
where other work is being done.
Our Patent
Suction Teeth
They Never Slip or Drop. •
$5.00 a Set
We Guarantee Our Work for 16 Years.,
Our Charges are the
Lowest
Filling in Gold, Silver Plati
num and Porcejain
50c to $1 and up
Gold Crown and Bridge
Work. $3, $4, $5
CONSULT us TODAY.
Lady Attendant.
Baltimore Dental Parlor
(Incorporated)
PAINLESS DENTISTRY
Reference—First National Bank and Union
National Bank
22 South Tryon St. Appointments Can be made by Phone 3S5.
Open daily 8 A. M. to 8:30 P. M.; Sunday 10 A. M. to 3 P. M.