The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 4, 1909, Page 7

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; 4 WUDITOR TELLS “HOW RICH WE “ARE THIS YEAR mt Role Shows Nine Million Dollars In- crease in Total Valua- tions of 1909- pa ¥ mititen dollars yersonal property county this year than last, to the county auditor's Epgiven out today ve of the bic rafiroad com. express companies and car and ean hn 209,191, we Pee eee a, county, againet S27 last year. One hun- : ht million, three han- a meal a thousand, seven hundred seventy-(we dollars ts real bs y and thirty-three million, F Berelandred fifty-five thousand, four hundred thirty-three ts per. Se When the assease Greet Northern, Northern Pacific, & Puget Sound, Seattie Tacoma & Everett inter and express companies are from the state tax com and state board of equall- the“sum will total nearly Last year's final fig 930,542. Only the & Puget Sound and the & Washington are included given out today wment shows, among oth that the board of equalt. Cat the assessors returns on Property from $32,455,433 09,584, and the exemptions reduced the sum to $26, making the exemptions Bi $6,515,490 of the figures In the re Bre as follows equalized valuation of tim. land per acre .. $2.61 equalized valuation of im. | ‘ ee nts en the ome, tmprovements equalized value of im- ts, per land acre . $17.23) valuation of city and dots, exclusive of improve- valuath on ion «oof improve- town and city lots $36,965,207 REAL ESTATE FIRM. f Rice, until recently the and owner of the Hotel ton. Chehalis, Wash. has fer the real estate office of Jensen & Co. Inc. Mr. fl have C. A. Fraser as his the firm nate of Co, and will make a ranches and farm also handle Seat office address Exchange -AL ATH. , opt 4—Driven the faithfulness ing to be*the Prin- pp of Malwa, repeated threats to nm rajah, Lewis Grob, owed potsou they could easily are unjustifiably in debt. i-Annually. HOGE, Prestdent L B SOLNER, Cashie: DInecToRs: Ferdinand Schmitt, 3. 0. Low- man, A St wu ert, ©. Bebb . James D. Hoge. SECOND and CHERRY STREET Lump Now $5.50 Per. Ton _at Bunkers W youf dealer does not have ¥ Phond LatimerWallace Co.. int 5040; Sunset Main neral office, 41 olish oe P “© ur - wh will the eather. ob polisher for ° at our own polish fe! ern 2229 Second land per acre, exclusive | $178.28) $116,860,710) HARRIMAN THE GREATEST GAME IN THE WILL KEEP UP HARRIMA NEW YORK, Sept, 4.—-Three men will rule the great Harriman rail- road province when the wirard bin. j self, now on the decline of life's } activity, gives up the reins. | Robert 8. Lovett, L. FP. Loree and |Jelies Krattsehnitt ‘are the trium virate. All have been in Harri man's cabinet; each is a master in | his own line. Aa the Harriman rail- } roads span the distance from ocean to ocean, #0 must these men, work- ing miles apert but in harmony, rule their great business from New York to San Francisco. | All the three, working together, | Will be satisfied of success if they suece din doing what one man has done before them. “I know one man who is an excep: tion to every rule,” Loree said once. “That man is Harriman—he never | hae had a@ failure.” tn New York Lovett, from his Wall st. osfices, will control the bage fimanctal and legal da of the [sreatest rafiroad system tn thi | world. | At hie desk in the Raliway Ex change building In Chicago, L. F. Loree will wield power over the ex and in San Franciseo will be Krutt sebnitt, “the master builder,” who made great trunk Hnes out of scrap | piles that Harriman bought ; Great Assistants. Each will have an assistant little leas noted than the leaders them iselves. Lovett will be aided by | Alex. Miller, Harriman’s confiden | that m Loree will have John C | Stubbs, traffic expert, at his right hand; and in California, which Har- | timan virtually has ruled, EB. Cal-| | vin will help Kruttschnitt contro! a net work of tracks. Lovett’s career is the most ro mantic of any great lawyer's He was plowing on his father’s farm bear Shepard, Tex. 25 years ago. He saw a narrow gauge rafiroad, and from that time on was interest ed tn railroads, His tion was Mke Abraham Lincotn’s—snatched at random on the farm, until he showed that he was fit for a fight with any earnest young man tn the state. “Some day,” Lovett told his boy friends, “I'll own that road.” He studied law at night and cur- ried horses by day. Then he got work im the railroad’s offices and was admitted to practice. Just four years later Lovett was president of the Houston & Texas Central. Within a few years he came to New York as Harrim: general counsel. Wall st. laughed at the }tall Texan. “Weu have to take off | bis sharp cornera,” they said. They never have. They never wil, It is Lovett who has done | the side-swiping wien any financial clash has occurred in the house of Harriman. The scoffers were stung. He is a six-footer and a sphinx, es- pecially at present How He Went Up. Leonor Fresnell Loree is a rail road man—a railroad aristocrat. His life has been marked by a few fatl- Fireworks at the wt nt If, an Gen, Wm. T. Sherman said, “war ig-hell,” the crowd that wit nessed Iast Monday night from the fireworks grandstand and the | Wsplanade the production of pyro- ‘technic silhouette, the bombardment | of Moro castle, were certainly close ito a reallam of what the interior lof the bungalow looks like which is Joceupied by his satanic majesty "The scenario consists of Moro cas- tle as a plece de resistance in the center, on elther side perfectly out- lined a battleship, and to accentu late the realism, approaching ob- liquely, afloat, come the torpedo- |hoat destroyers. As the destroyers move toward castle, at once gins the sim jon of real war- ; this ts a@tcomplis! with bombs, rapid fire rockets, search- light rockets, sizzers, red fire, etc., lete., and for fifteen minutes the alr lis filled with such a fanfare of blaze, noise, sound, motion and ac- tion that one who has never seen |warfare, and assuming that this false presentment” is anywhere \near reallam, wonders if there are letout hearts in the world which | would beat unterrified in an action |such as was depicted in this great \bombardment scene. In addition to ‘the “castle” show, there were. va lriows set pleces, consisting of N agara Fails, the Saw Mill, Pigeon \Cote with Flying Vigeons, and un lexcelled aerial work made up o' ‘ocketry in all colors bursting as nany as six times to the rocket, ‘nd bombs fully as noisy and sharp « the detonation from a six-inch jnaval gun Wilson's Los Angeles Fireworks company gave this great production and are engaged for a season of five weeku, The ises exceptional entertainment dur- jing the #@fgon, and the bom bardment of Moro castle have set 4 standard which, if adhered to, will absolutely guarantee the prom ise made, | | | ecutive end of the Harriman lines, | company prom-| WORLD—HOW ME LOVETT, N'S RAILROAD ENTERPRIS: THE STAR—SATURDAY,/SEPTEMBER 4, 1909 » LOREE ANO KRUTTSCHNITT WHEN WIZARD RETIRES. ures, but they were the kind that | Hfted him higher and made his foes sorry, He started with a surveyor's chain on the Pennaylvania, Later } he was a division engincer, Final | ly he became president of the Bal- | timore & Ohio. That bluff old man, | Judge Willlam H. Moore, wanted Loree to head the Rock Island. “What salary do you think's | " said the judge, and he wrote out a contract that Loree waa |to get that salary for a term of | years, whether he made good or j not. The railroad insured Loree's | lite for a fabulous sum Loree wanted the Rock Island to \be sorged with freight-—he wanted | tonnage, Moore wanted the rond | butt up.” Loree quit, but got his big | salary fust the tame. Loree thought ) he was right, for there was Harri- jman doing the same thing—going after traffic first, building up bis reads later. Harriman and Loree friends and got together. Now Lo ree heads the Delaware & Hudson, one of the most profitable roads in | the country. } Julius Krattschnitt with an ambition. He. a was a boy like Loree, 8:00 & m-—Gates open. Salute state and territory 9:90 10:00 a.m a m—Grand fraternal and | jf 10:30 a. m—Wedding in captive Pay Streak 11:00 presiding, grounds Music and 11: 1:30 30 00 oo m.—-French fet ™. 200 46 20 P P p. m—-Country sports, free Streak. p. m.—Grand International Amphitheatre. 20 became | ae All Day—asket pienics on Loke a m.—Typewriting contest, pb m—Concerts by Tacoma bands. p. m—Children's parade, Colonial and French fete . Auditorium. to 5:00 p. m.—Reception by Ladies’ Auxillary of Seattle Day, Washington State building. | held a surveyor’s chain along a rail road right of way He rose and rope, but always boasted he could drive a spike or saw a rail with the | beat of section men. } Kruttschnitt on the Job, | Ever since Harriman linked the Vaion Pacific with other big went:| ern syste: Kruttachnitt has been bossing the job on the ground.” He passes more time in railroad travel than any other man in Amefs His private ear rushes from pd of the Harriman system to the other, and he keeps a smal of flee force of stenographers and tele graph operators busy all the time. Although his home ts In Chicago, he is as likely to be In Ban Francis ate Cruz as in New Orleans or Portland, Ore. Hile son, a young man of Averell Harriman’s age, if studying rath roading now with the heir to t wisard’s fortune In future the Harriman network of railroads will be the board, and pawns, in the biggest played in finance, law, traffic | construction. Three men will sit at \this game, constantly planning, jacheming, struggling, constantly commanding and conquering. swe sees eee] SEATTLE DAY PROGRAM of dynamite bombs, one for each ——aneerts, Main Gate and Nome Circle, Tacoma banda. nilitary parade, with Waguer's, Fifth Artillery of Vanceuver, and Ellery’s banda. balloon by wireless telephone. a. m.—Seattle Day exerch es, Amphitheatre; John H. McGraw Washington shore dancing on special platform. Pine Arte Hall plente for all, Stadium. Dp. m.~-Special concert, Elery’s band, Amphitheatre. Dp. m—Indian war cance i aces, Lake Union, foot of y Festival Chorus competition, p. m.—Spectacular production of Brocken scene from “Faust,” with fireworks, Ellery’s band 500 a0 p» m—French Fete, Auditorium. p> m.—Dancing, Washington State, New York State, Women’s and Spokane buildings. ; oo foot of Pay Streak Dp. m.—Arrival of King Rex and opening of Carnival Night, Presentation of keys of exposition to King Rex by President Chilberg. p. m.—Fireworks dixplay, foot of Pay Streak. SEVENTEEN LOOSE MATRIMONIAL TIES BIG BUNCH OF wfle mismateo FIND RELIEF IN LOCAL COURTS. - Seventeen more or jess unhappy couples were legally separated by the King county divorce mill in the superior court this morniog, the largest day's work in months | The return of fall and the re sumption of all the courts caused lthe unusual number of divorces. The decrees follow Divorces Granted, Edna W. from Willtam H. Co vert, Georgie from 8. BE. Heeter, Elizabeth from Adolph A. Hetnig, !Mary A. from Peter Helligands, Anna from William Ferris, Carl from Elin Svenson, Helen from Robert Savage, Susie L. from .W W. Sheridan, Lewis from Lea |Wohiman, George from Esther M |Obradoveck, Dora from Charles Stanchfield, Carrie from Robert E Billups, Josie H. from Peter F. | Benolkin, Della BE. from Lather J lGrosno, James from Anna Marie Carnegie, Clara L. from Arthur Parrott, David from Marcella Schwartz Divorce Suits Filed. Mary Ann from Guy Raymond Osborne, non-support TYPHOONS RAGING. | VICTORIA, B. C., Sept. 4.—Five \typhoons were reported raging at one time between the Mariana {sl ands and Korea by the steamer Cyclops, which arrived here from the Orient today, but the steamer scaped them all. | BOY SHOOTS BROTHER. | RONO, Nev, Sept. 4.—Feeddie Miller, the seven-year-old son of C E. Miller, at Humboldt, Nev., shot his three-year-old brother through the leg, practically amputating the limb The children were playing with a shotgun supposed to be unloaded. EXCURSIONS ON LAKE WASHINGTON, | Steamer Fortuna leaves Leschi | park for around Mercer nd, five | times daily, Two hours’ ride, 2 ‘The boy probably will die.| ABSENT WITMESSES DELAY CEREMONY After many trials and tribula tions, Warren W. Butler and Miss Stella May Kernan, of Seattle, were married last evening in the parlors jof the Hotel Idaho, at Coeur d-Alene, Idaho. They left here to get married sev: eral days Ago, wishing to escape the’ marriage jaw, but not wanting to go to Vancouver or Victoria, So they decided on the Idaho city When ft seemed that everything was ready to perform the ceremony , the annoylag discov- ery was made that no one had tak en the trouble to have witnes: present. The ur while these were being The happy couple is returning to Seattle. Se ie ie ee Minin Minin nin ted BANK CLEARINGS. Clearings today , Balances . $827,493.00 176,436.00 Portiand. Clearings today . .$1,045,204.00 Baiances 145,108.00 ERE Plumbing valued at $100 and sev- eral window shades were stolen from the residence being erected by F. J. Houtt at Fourth ay. and Stewart st. last night. Most of the plumbing was already set up. “Chicago Excursions, $72.50” Last of season, September 9, re turn limii October 31, and October 4, return limit November 80. Route, Oregon, Railroad and Navigation Co. and connections. (Via Salt Lake and Denver if desired.) Full particulars, reservations, and tick- ets at Union Ticket Office, 608 First Avenue, Clearings today .. Balances . * Stee ee tees E. B. ELLIS, General Agent. bage of gold and trains of cars the}, game every and 4ESESE EEE EE 'S THREE EXPERTS WILL RULE OOK INSIST WIZARD'S MIGHTY RAILROAD EMPIRE THAT HEH SURE PROOFS (Conctuded.) The crowds were more than en thustastic. They were raptured and ecstatic. The reception was a marker of history, Dr, Cook came down the gangplank at 10 o'clock 1 by @ vast throng that surged joored with wild demonstra Aw, Unt! it Was almost beyond the thousands who the hand of th frozen north Crowds Block Streets. With greatest difficulty the offi cers cleared a path to the automo bile which had been stationed near dock to convey Dr, Cook into ity crowds blocked all the streets so that the machine was forced to crawl along at a snail's pace while the police pressed back the people in front, opening just space enough for the automobile to pass, The crowds cloved in behind and the machine seemed to be run- ning through a sea of human be ings. Overcome With Emotion. Dr. Cook . was ome with emotion, and a& he looked out upon the cheering throng tears welled from his eyes and he exclaimed “Oh, tan't it splendid. | never ex pected such demonstrations It neems too much for have done | “This reception is the best reply that can be made to my envious de tractors.” On through the streets it was a continual triumphal procession such a8 the world has never seen accord led to a returning explorer or | actonttst Enthusiastic Scenes. A dense throng surrounded the Phoenix hotel on every aide, before {the automobile beartag Dr. Cook ar jrived. All along the routesthe great explorer bowed to the crowds that red him. The people went wild nh enthusiaam The only scenes I have ever wit @ that approached the demon- jon here today were some of receptions accorded to Roose in Amerion when he was at the t of his popularity the hotel Dr, Cook was wel officially by Minister of merce Hansen on behalf of the jah government Champagne Toast. party of distinguished men, re ting many nations, then drank # health of the discoverer of north pole in champagne. Jowing the receation, Cook ap on the balcony, in response insistent demand of the He waa greeted by an \@ther tremendous round of cheers jand cries for a speech. “T have had too hard a time get ting here to make speeches,” de- Clared the explorer. “I simply wieh to say that I feel honored to put my foot on Danish soil upon my re turn trip.” A remarkable evidence of the en- thustasm of the crowd was shown jby the way Cook's clothes were torn in a dozen places when he lreached the hotel after the trip from the ship. Meets the King. After the public reception he went to his room to rest, but was |\summoned to appear before King Frederick at 3 o'clock | Dr Cook was greatly embar- |rassed because of his lack of « wultable costume In which to ap- pear before his majesty, but when the king heard of this, he sent the following message: “Tell Dr. Cook to come anyway. Let him wear his hunting costume Thdeed, 1 would rather see him in that dress than ip court costume.” Cook thon donned his hunting @athea and proceeded to the aud Jence, where he remained half an Hour, King’s Tailor Gets Busy. King Frederick embraced the American explorer and showered him with congratulations. The king’s manner plainly indt- cated the fullest credence in Cook's s.atements. to grasp onqueror of the ov what I The king’s private tailor was ordered to supply the explorer with ja complete wardrobe, and was awaiting Dr. Cook when he return led to the hotel |. Commander Hlobgaard of the } Danish navy, president of the Danish Royal Geographical society, Jand leader of several expeditions into Greenland, conversed with Dr. Cook on board the steamer Hans Egede | “I consider the weight of evt- dence altogether tn Cook's favor,” |declared Hobgaard this afternoon “Everything he has said indicates the truth of his claim.” DEAD A MONTH WILL “BE BURIED TOMORROW The funeral of William Barrett, who was run over and killed by @ tram in the Ballard freight yards of ‘the night of August 3, will be \Netd tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock from the chapel of Graham ‘@ FEngemann's undertaking parlors ie interment will be in Calvary ‘cethetery. The body has been held at Gra |ham & Engemann's for over a month, by orders of the man’s rel atives, who wished to have the re mains shipped East, They sent word this morning to bury him here GOV. DENEEN ARRIVES TONIGHT TO SEE FAIR Charles 8, Deneen, of by his son, led Seattle tonight to Governor Illinois, accomp will arrive in visit the ¢ FREE Deafness Cure A remarkable off by one of the leading ear specialists in this country, who will send two months’ medicine free to prove his ability to cure Head Noises and Catarrh dress Dr. G. Li Bast 12th st, Kansas City, Mo. FUGITIVES SENT BACK FROM NOME BIG CROWDS CHEER NPS ATMAPE Interesting and Spectacu- lar Parade Today and Big Display Will be Wit- nessed Tonight. Russians Who Escaped to Alaska from Siberia De- ported and Left the North City Today. Japan day at the A-Y.-P. expo. sition today attracted ae immense crowd, which vigorously applauded one of the handsomest parades seen on the fair grounds, The historical and commercial parade which passed thfough the grounds this forenoon represented both the his- tory of Japan and the growth of that nation’s trade with the United States, dating from the treaty of 1854. One float of the 16 in the rade represented the signing of he treaty by Commodore Perry Fully 5,000 Japanese men and women are on the fair grounds to jday. As each visitor enters the gate today he is presented with a The fugitives, six of whom the| souvenir flag. The flag bears a defense league declares it knows | number, and it entitles him to a to be bona fide political refugees,! gift pearing the same number, escaped to Alaska from Russlan | which is to be found in the Japan convict camps near Saghalien, Ir- | ogo building kutk, crossing the Bering sea in| wkin boats orately decorated today than at When Russia demanded their re jany time this season, 50,000 lan- h, the defense league interfered | terns being strung along the and the department was delayed. | streets. The Japanese fireworks It was declared today that the | nis evening will be a feature of league delayed too long the filing | the day. The visiting Japanese, in of its briefs |eluding Baron Shibusawa, were O'Keefe in a letter explains that | entertained at luncheon today in Alaska was not the place for the | (fy United Press.) CHICAGO, Bept. 4.—One hundred and twenty Russian fugitives were deported today from Nom to Siberia, according ment nmde by the An feal Refugee Defense league, and @ notice received at the office of the United States commissioner from D. J, O'Keefe, a commissioner general of immigration and natur alization The government is reported to have proceeded on the grounds that the fugitives were political and criminal refagees, and violated the immigration act The fair grounds were more elab- the J. eb 4 detention of the teciteaa® for the | the Japanese building, and will be banqueted this evening at the New {t was an unusual case demanding | York building unusual attention. WS PUNT Se SET ON FRE wi flags fluttering beside the glisten- ing silk hats of the party, present ing a pleasing contrast in the bright | sunlight, the visiting Japanese chants were this morning take a long automobile procession through the down town district to | the fair grounds. | The auto parade formed in front weislnkiintimaehs jof the Washington hotel and moved jsouth In Second av., between banks THINK COMEONE TRIED TO DU-| <r'numanity that iined both sides STROY HATED ASPHALT jof the street. Twenty-eight police PLANT LAST NIGH. |men were in the lead, foliowed by ja band. Then came the automobile Fire which is believed to have |bearing Baron E. Shibusawa and his party. Fortyight other auto- been the work of incendiaries par-| mobiles followed jtially destroyed the asphalt plant} A Sightseeing car carrying a of P. J. McHugh, a contractor, at |Jarge number of Japanese children, 26th av. and £. Columbia st. a few) Who waved Japanese and American minutes past $ o'clock last. night.| Mags, attracted considerable atten |In the opinion of Fire Chief Hring-}tion. The Japanese Business Men's hurst a significant cotncidence de. | association of Seattle and the Jap- Yeloped from the fact that while the | #nese Restaurant Men's association [bine was raging an indignation | had a big representation in the pa meeting of property owners was In| Tade. session near by to force the anphalt | 7 PRP plant from that section The fire chief says It is ‘an open BAPTISTS MEET TO choice whether the fire originated | from x nab ile nt she rent at the\* FORM STATE COUNCIL plant or was the deliberate work of firebugs. The latter conjecture is} strengthened when a line of hose! Delegates representing churches |from a hydrant at 26th av. and E. from all over the state held a meet- Columbia-wan rendered useless by|ing at the Greene Lake Baptist some person unknown. When the ‘church Friday afternoon at 2.30. The members of Engine Co. No. 3 hur-|convention was called for the pur. ried to the hydrant to ascertain the | pose of organizing a Washington trouble they found the water turned | State Baptist council. After the off and the wrench stolen meeting E. M. Stigers waa ordained McHugh valued the asphalt plant | a minister. at $15,000. Insurance to the amount of $8,000 was carried. Fire Chief! Bringhurst places the damage at|y * ****¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥¥ HE $5,000. McHugh says he will im-|» WEATHER FORECAST. * mediately rebuild the plant despite | Fair tonight: Sunday fair & * the efforts of property owners to| : obtain a court injunction. en Sees ee = EXPOSITION VISITORS ; WIL HEAR WILLS | Hair Story Is this your sad story? “My hair ts falling out terribly; and tenor, who is said to rank next to what fs left is rough and thin.” Caruso as a male solotst, Will stog) i Now listen to our glad story: in the A-Y-P. Amphitheatré Sun- J “ayers Hair Vigor promptly Gay evening as the soloist with B- jery’s band. stops falling hair, destroys The concert will be free to expo-| dandruff, keeps the scalp healthy.” sition visitors. The Amphitheatre 5 holds more than 15,000 people, so the ian alfstoutd"nane’s Seesee © | Does mot Color the Hair hear the noted singer. Ellery's pro-|I) we pebtish the gram will be an interesting one, and |f Ayers Hatr Viror. Williams will render half a dozen |§ wlll advise you win. numbers in the course of the ial oF ee ea ing. i F. W. DICKEY, Eye Specialist DR. Tr all mental, physical and nervous diseases caused by defective vision and eye strain. TREATING SUCCESSFULLY BY THE MOST ADVANCED METH. ODS KNOWN TO SCIENCE, GIVING WONDERFUL RESULTS DAI. LY IN THE MOST DIFFICULT AND CHRONIC CASES. Dr. Dickey specialized for 20 years in the deeper branches of study, covering the many functional troubles relative to the nervous and mus- cular system, sympathetically causing so many organic diseases to the organic system. Such physical diseases are caused by vision trouble nd cannot be cured by physical treatment of medicine, ete. If it is a vision trouble it is a mental cause and requires the action of light which is, in principle, a mental power, Nature, in its laws, re- stores blood in the diseased parts, and by normal circulation of the blood, absorbing all foreign matter and poison, carrying same out of the system, a natural cure is ‘possible. Dr. Dickey has practiced 3% years in this state and has treated 3,000 cases in the state of Washington, A letter from Dr, BE. Z. Kreidel, Ellensburg: “Dr, F. W. Dickey, “204-5 Peopie's Bank Bldg. “Dear Doctor From childhood I have been a sufferer with headaches, dixy sick hea ‘hes and stomach, constipation and nervous trouble. treated for same all my life but found no relief until last March, when you treated my eyes and corrected my vision and fitted me with glasses properly, which | am wearing constantly in ease and comfort I wish to thank you for the good you have done for me, I highly appreciate your careful, scientific methods, which have proven of the highest satisfaction in my case, Wishing you the greatest of success. “Yours very truly, sfully spells, I have “DR, EB. Z. KREIDEL, lensburg, Wash.” Dr. Dickey has equipped his offices with the latest and mos electrical appliances, giving electric treatments for the m: and muscular troubles. Office furnished most luxurious in style finest of ite kind on the Pacific coast. Glasses fitted, guaran: sult satisfactorily 4n every case or lenses changed free of within one year é CONSULTATION FREE, CHARGESMODERATE. DR. F. W. DICKEY German-American Eyesight Specialist. 204-205 People’s Bank Building. Corner Second and Office hours—9 a. m, to 6 p. m.;Sunday, 10 a, m, to 12 m,; by appointment, Phone Main 5490, charge Pike. evenings Watch The Star Want Ad Columns for Bargains of All Descriptions. American Dentists lead the World MODERN DENTISTRY. CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK. Modern Crown and Bridge Work is an American achievement, and | was unknown until the American dentists had, by persistent perse- verance, demonstrated to the world |that crowd and bridge work was the most practical, beneficial and satisfactory dental work done in the human mouth. CROWNS ON TEETH. A crown, well made, properly fitted and set on a tooth root, re stores the root to its former use- fulness and beauty, and ofttimes surpasses In appearance the natur- al tooth; such care and skill is ex- ercised by the scientific dentist that any tooth in the mouth may be crowned without detection of artificial substitution for nature's dental organs. A tooth may be decayed so badly that onty the root remains, yet if the root is a solid, healthy one, a crown may be made to look so natural that detection is imposst- ble. Tooth crowns are of all grades and makes, and the average person does not know the cheapest from the best and lasting crown, A gold crown is not the most ex- pensive; it is easily and quickly made by the skillful dentist. The Richmond crown is made to order for each individual tooth, and is the best crown, both for looks and wear, on all teeth except molars or jaw teeth. A cheap substitute for the Richmond crown is often imposed on the patient by so-called ethical dentists, whose limited prac- tice in the dental profession does jot afford them an opportunity of becoming competent in the ad- vanced practice and principles of dentistry. Crown and bridge work as it is known in dentistry today was never known in the world until the year 1900, and many new and valuable discoveries have been made in crown work since 1900, and the student of his profession is able to comprehend, demonstrate and utilize them for the benefit of his patients, while the dentist who is in the profession to give as little as possible and charge his patient as much as possible will be slow to use his energy, time and money to practice the modern and advanced methods of dentistry today. BRIDGE WORK TODAY. Bridge work is without question the most abused of any work known in dentistry. The patient has no knowledge whereby to judge good, solid, durable work from cheap, shoddy work, and it can all be made to shine and look good to the unsuspecting patient. Holiow bridge work and cheap bands for crowns are used, and in many cases sound and healthy teeth are de- stroyed by this line of quackery Idone by the dentists who would faint if they should see their name in the public print when and where they had to pay fcb the advertise- ment. Back teeth may be replaced by a bridge if all back teeth are absent if the side .teeth regpain and are | Strong, and it must be remembered |that a loose, weak tooth should never be used for abutments in bridging. Few dentists are competent to do crown and bridge work in a manner which will permit a guarantee to be given, and it is therefore a violation of the code of ¢thics of the Washington State Dental So- clety to guarantee dental work. All bridge work should be made strong and durable’ and in a manner to prevent the gold from showing, and when a dentist tells you that this or that can’ not be done, he means, by himself. Many peo- ple are suspicious because of my extremely low prices for high class dental work. They fatl to realize the modera equipment and time saving devices operated by specialists of long years’ experience at my of- fices. They also forget that it is the people who have stood by me in this long and weary dental fight, und that I feel indebted to them for my very existence in the state of Washington, and I must have new patients all the time to keep these high salaried specialists busy, be- cause the secret of my success is giving the best work for half the gg charged by the combine dent. ists, EDWIN J. BROWN, 713 First Ay, 1 to 14 Union Block, Open evenings until 10 and Sun- days until 6 p.m. for the working people. Bankrupt Sale $23,000 stock of Clothing. Hats, Shoes and Furnishings ai your own price. 424—PIKE ST 424, The pride of every kitchen; a splendid stove in every way. POYNOR—FURNITURE Saves You 30 per cent Waldorf Bt 'MARTIN& CO. 1207 2nd Av. Opp. Hotel Savoy, High Grade Gloves H. L. KLEIN THE SHOEMAKER, Tf you can't get boots or Offices:

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