The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 14, 1917, Page 2

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—— 53 years service to the homefurnisher' % to be expended and is now open to inspection Auto and auto truck expenses Superintendent's office Attendance department .. Printing, meert, and Stationery ‘Telephones, isc ‘Vocational Balartes of Supervisors, our Credits purchases will be added without first payment “4oin the STANDARD silverware club!” 5.95 | cial for the week 85.95. y M2 § for the ro. $21.95, for the week, $7.45. TADD.TO Your| \ACCOUNT = us you have an account here, your additionai —-03e will bring this $1 teaspoons, 6 one, 6 Knives, 6 1 butter knife, 1 sugar\ shell. —strong metal - covered trunk, trimmed in brass; regular price $7. —medium - size ward robe trunk; practical ly arranged interior price $29.50; specias —auitease of genu ine leather brass trimmings regular price $9.50; special 08 to 111 &. Klevemth st. ‘Tacoma. tureCo Seattic. of Seattle Sch wn by the items <7 ject to revision, an nied. posed levy in the office of the Secretary of the jed that at riage, EsTIMATE OF EXPENDITURES FOR 1917-18 \TION— ‘8 office fons and Census . services it and Maintenance of offices. seeds ries Chief Engineer and Chief Mechanic . Keeper's office and stock room $10,000 Kennedy lelaim be den | Additional and Guidance OF INSTRUCTION— Principals and Teach- $ 102,575 900 had $15 era, Day Schools ....... $1,628,590 posit within Salaries of Supervisors, Principais and Teach earned ere, Evenings Schools - 24,500 ales, 8 of Supervisors and Principals 2600 o "ext and Reference Books and book repaire.. 45,800 er, $2 School Supplies . terece 60.009 | Manual Training Supplies: he had in th Shops . $28,000 oe oa aa Art and Design 7,000 by his fal Primary and Induatet 16,000 claimed that — —s 45,00 loan out. c | coenig ees . Jeonsumed almost all of the re C. W. Karner Friday. a 12,000 |mainder of the $15,000. Affidavits filed in connection ogy Mae ag MOR ‘ | One Lilly Boy Exempted |with the application show that the | + Athletic Supplies, Grade Schools . 1 Several anonymous letters were| company lists its ete at $33,- Athletic League, Grade Schools «. 1,990 received by Kennedy, protesting 949.99, but that ft# admitted iMabil ratory Supplies 3,000 against the discharce of Farwell ities are more than $500 In excess! Graduation Blin ite |. Lilly, who claimed that he was| of this amount Salas ” 91,845,440 [indispensable to the Lilly seed ne queen of the King county} The application charges that the EXPENSES OF OPERATION— farm. On investigation the district | Miss Rose Nelson, re-| officers, E. Tilton, president, Wages of Engineers and Janitors . board denied his claim, but grant-| ceived her official insignia Friday/®04 T. M. Holden, manager, oper Fuel . ¢eeere . ed that of Wilmot H. Lilly, man-) afternoon, at 2:30 o'clock, when|Sted the company for their own Home Economics sapetie e EXPENSES OF MAINTENANCE— ager of the and Electrical Grounds Repairs and Replacement of Equipment $ Newton H. nied them indu Foster, His board and recommending, many cases, that they be de- wife's ANOTHER SCRAP O OF PA P. wa. IL, RICH CLAIMING EXEMPTION, IS KENNEDY'S PLEA “The number of wealthy men in Seattle who are exemption on the grounds of claiming tonish- ernment L. Ken dependent wives is ESTIMATES OF EXPENDITURES AND RECEIPT Aoteal yrange a OF SEATTLE SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 1, KING COUNTY nedy Friday (Required by Chapter 134, Session Laws of 1909) Kennedy is appealing all of these claims to the district in known on} antomobile row as a broker In av-| aper,” fied a claim for jdischarge on the «rounds of a de pendent wife ment, aceording to Kennedy, show- state the time of her mar says fed. | Spurck Giv ‘ovember, $35,000 tn securiti ter had spent 1916, and most of this additional in his business. that he will jommend to the board that Foster's information a on comm made for o in the last year. she had that Fos- 4 rec. Details obtained lby Kennedy from William Spurck, |ir.. Thursday, shows that altho he deposit within « ye he fons thers year and a half and $5,000 on de| h only for land than his arck admitted that the money bank was given him it pl an we of 4 me The Monson brot hers, v founders iven Ho sald he had loaned about $6,000 and his personal bills | grocete ther, but him to proprietors an ipplies .. Other afternoon _ attractions secured by adustrial Insurance, Laundry, etc 5 srasse | ere perretes their appeals to the | gcheduled were a baseball game be-| Property owned by one of the offi 271,280 | president. The district board de-|tween Renton and O'Brien, a band | ers, ts cited as illegal strial claims gy = | A band concert and carnival will| 3.000 emall banks in Seattle hor Heating |he held on the grounds every even-| Which were purchased from th Plumbing. : company at $1 each, and the mon-| Painting and Kalsomining, ey entered on the books as pay: “HAS INCREASED rm ‘ STAR—FRIDAY, SEPT. 14, 1917, PAGE 2 CHARGES EXTORTION Hesketh Declares Teachers Are Victims Councliman Robert B. Hes | plies for a position, the first act keth, who has taken a fiem artee siving ah Rory of hereeit is] | to deportt $2 an a registration fee stand against extortion by em |1, Gruer that she may be looked] ployment agencies in the past, | up. has taken up the fight of many Pay Five Per Cent “Many say good-bye to the fee teachers of the county against 1 ° hile thor re the Pacific Teachers’ Empley then and there, while those who a placed are requested to sign a con association, which, he (tract to pay & per cent of their compels teachers to pay first year’s walary within a #: 60 per cent of their first (fied time. This amounts to 60 month's salary to obtain jobs | cent of their frat month's salary for thom The present manager of In a letter to The Star he chal agency appeared before the license! lenged the school authorities to! commit of the city council re atate their position on the matter, cently and protested very at and asks expressions from teach ors on the system. Hla letter, in part, follows “Why should school teachers pay for their jobs? “In outlining his policies, Super intendent Burrows hasn't sald a word about the ‘hold-up’ system practiced on school teachers who} are required to pay to @btain thelr whether this {s a proper welcome | Positions, In justice th Mr. Bur-|for a newcomer to the state I want to say that he ts the ond, whiy a teacher should 1¥ against ressonable regulat and yet admitted and seemed pr |to submit, In writing, that be had charged and reeetyed from one woman, !n return for placing her in three positions in the last four years, $123.60 Wants to Know Reason “This leads one to wonder, firat, Jonly one In authority in school mat-| charged a fee each year wh ters who has even admitted he was' she changes positions; Opposed to such ® practice, Now/|the city, state and county o jhe has a chance to act handle the matter thra official de Has a “Cinch” “There {s an agency tn our city nas the ‘Pacific Teachers ment agency.” This agency | for some years past has seemed to have ‘a cinch’ on. the placing of teachers tn city, county and state | positions, and when its representa tives have been questioned they partments; fourth, why the teachers themeaclves affairs Perhaps kn the teachers are well able to take care of themsclves, but the condition has bothered me for some time "If the it fn achors will tell me that good system, and that they |have referred to Superintendent of atistled with it, I'll let it go at City Schools Frank B. Cooper. Otherwise, T would like to The system {s ® good one for hing done to change tt the agency. When @ teacher ap “ROBERT B. HESKETH.” benefit and used ite funds for their! personal ends One loan of $6 | Mayor Hiram Gill placed the crown on her head | 000, | concert, and « parade of live stock. There are supposed to be about! ment for stock _ Philip Tworoger, attorney for! George E. Tilton, president of the! stand for this state of]. Billy Sunday May Fight in The article hereunder is not our own composition. ook at Your Teet ¥ It was clipped from the May 19 issue of the Saturday Evening Post: dentists are doing a today that, in the would have are showing IDE-AWAKE lot of light of a generation ago, one said were impossible. They things us, for instance, that the retention of cer tain “dead teeth” may mean serious ill ness, if not death “Scientific advance of very recent time has been tremendous; the problems and re quirements of dental practice place it upon a higher plane than it occupied even a few years ago. And the average dentist is stir ring himself to keep abreast with the growing ascendancy lest he be outstripped “Dental educators and titioners have for years urged me the high-grade and the public to recognize imy of mouth condition But only recently has the menace of pyorrhea blind” ab scesses, and other diseases of the mouth been widely accepted as important fac tors in general health. By the romance ef the microscope and X-rays we are learn ing many thing before unkhown; and through these agencies the dentist is enabled to put his finger on diseased cen ters that would otherwise not be seen or positively determined “We are told that a large percentage of our ills, other than contagious diseases, have their origin in the mouth s bad health is one of the most dreaded and one of the most expensive things in life, mouth conditions must, therefore, the m vortant things in 1 healthy mouth is so large a factor in eral health, mouth hygiene should important part of our children’s education It is essential that every child should be carefully taught how to take the best, care of the teeth, We owe it to the coming generations. Ifa gen be “It ig now cepted that septic foci centers of infection h asa id abe scess, may cause serious and n fatal diseases We are hearing of cases of rheumatism and neuritis being cured, of greatly improved, no other treatment than the semoval of certain diseased teet of infintamst ory conditions of certaig ids, headaches, diseases of the eyes, ana emia, indigestion, and so on, being cured by the removal of diseased centers in the mouth “Extravagant claims usually follow new discoveries, and we ‘venture that this is not® an exception 3ut the almost indifference to mouth conditions has suddenly changed * to serous CORCCTA “It is now recognized that the teeth are as important and treat. ment as any other organs of the body, Without doubt, there is much truth in the theory that mouth infection causes diseases in other parts the body; investigations show many instances where illness of one ort or another has disappeared with the removal of diseased teeth or effective treat- of pyorrhea he ways the foci manifest themselve throughout the system are many, and there is no doubt that many obscure illnesses are traceable to diseased teeth; but we do not believe that all or nearly all such cases have their origin in the mouth “Many of us are too prone to lose of me good judgment when new ideas are sprung upon us—particularly if they have to do with our health. We should keep our poise; we should go on uninterruptedly about our business and pleasures. But, as much of man's efficiency depends upon good health—and good health, in a meas- ure at least, is dependent on the health of the mouth—our duty is obvious.” We, the undersigned, are practitioners of modern PAINLESS DENTISTRY PRICES” RULE.” DR. L. R. CLARK In offering you our services, we pledge ourselves perform all extractions and other operations pe a the ABSOLUTE MINIMUM OF PAIN. Fur- thermore, we guarantee complete satisfaction b issuing to each patient a certificate of guarantee, — which is signed by both Dr. L. R. Clark, and by ethe LICENSED Graduate Dental Surgeon who does your work. All examinations and estimates are made and given by Dr. Clark personally. A visit to our offices, or an examination and estimate of cost is freely offered to all. It posi- tively does not oblige you to patronize us, we will thank you for accepting the invitation. We call your attention to the fact that for many / years we have been advertising the “HIGHEST GRADE OF DENTISTRY AT THE LOWEST consistent with the high-grade of skill, service and material which is ws od “OUR FIXED REGAL DENTAL OFFICES DR. L. R- CLARK, Manager. Lady attendants on duty at all times. 1405 Third Avenue N. W. Corner Third and Union. Diagonally across from the Postoffice. Be sure to get to the right placa In every respect Seattl leading dentists. NOT OPEN EVENINGS OR SUNDAYS Our reputation is worth more than your dollars. ),.“We have been thinking and de | liberating over it, and we don't i now yet what we will do about Trenches--He’ ll Hurl Words) a James S. Dagger, 29th Bat- SY GEORGE MARTIN y ha United 3 pondent WASHINGTON Sept. 4— [fl cers of differen ve to go up against is saying no} talion, to Invitations from commanding of idress our soldiers. Canadian overseas expedl- tionary force, will address the 3 to) King County Democratic club at its regular Saturday noon meeting and ntonmer defunct company, said Friday that; Billy Sunday Is scheduled to i t - $ 97,600 Tilton was at all times ready to put| fight the devil here in January, Solera 3 @ aten the cothines an vy ray berry on ie EXPENSES OF AUXILIARY AGENCIES | Charging that the Prudential! {the company on a firm footing | but he may carry hie battle [| JOETSs Dante, av vork city, visited|on the French ros d the bate Medical Department 4 eee wat Savings and Loan association “When Tilton was elected’ Au-| againet the Old Sey to the (sion was ia Ten 2 ork seer oo oe Eee ee ae iecortattes we tishia’: scee | RR a rg Paley » Au an me and tendered an invitation to| of the Somme, iilustrating his lec sineeitiiom @ thee! is unsound and insolvent, and | #ust 24, he attempted to get posses.| French trenches instea - go to France and ad the sol-|ture with a collection of trophies MISCELLANEOUS EXPENSES— ~ That the cost of living has that ite officers are criminally |sion of the books from the oli] learned today dlers and relics of the battle front. Move Parental Schoo! a Away Increased approximately 10 per liable, application for a re- |board of directors, who are re Thus would the rip-roaring | Sine i i Rape rcaestati SE Girls’ Parental Schoo! ; | cent since April was the testi ceiver was made In superior | sponsible for the alleged shortages,| evangelist kill two birds—kal- potent! Home and Orthopedic Hospital Teach- mony brought out before the court ad Deputy State Auditor [nd they refused. Woe then went| serism and Satanism, with one | este at board of arbitrators In the con. | — {nto court and won our demands in| verbal stone. Grade School Launch Room Kauipment and Ste- | tinued hearing to adjust the | St Terror: TR a hearing before Judge Mackin-| Not only would he be in a post pairs .. | wage of street car men Friday. | > tosh,” jtion to give Auld Clootte another Music Festival ee f lt is favorite solar plexus Milk Tristribu: * The statement was de Otto t punch o! a fa ‘oi . ar yp lbhed +4 alte, proprietir of ihe God wats | altos, but if Kaiser Willie hap First Aid ete 1080 Wolfe declared that in contracts '? ] from silly could ya's Few eee MY PERMANENT ROVEM! recently mide by him with the | MUST EACH PRY PENE (pire Peace the ey . United State ve ent for the in New York across the Alterations and Imp ments to Buydinga and oe ro © geverament for t }. James R. Boldt, restaurant keep-| Among Rilly's favor! Hictions rounds . $ ‘om provisioning of 450 soldiers, each i : ttled |man was allowed 69 cents a meal, Pp or, was fined $58 and his chef was about the kaiser, when he battled 10,090 inetead of the 25 eonts whieh was } gA tined $30 in police court Friday | Broadway and Now York laat spring: . f | formerly alfowed, He gave infor. . "a" morning by A v the one wherein he declarec | y & by Acting Judge Bhillip } r dle 1 ap laeethas< ie. Seteed an i |that when the kaiser died and ar ie | preretn = imovesend wholemale 7) 4 Tworoke peared at the gates of hell, the} "Ts. mh Sesbwet), ian. erat’ ius Boldt had been charged with vio-|devil wouldn't let him In | | wolting eugineer, textified before lation of the health ordinance when | wee iheenete y invita: | ihe bawd on what shoaid be con. |, health officers. found a butcher| yj oureey ee ae man mh a leldered @ Mvtne wane, eitime eco throwing uncloaned chicken heads |in the trenches, He has also had 7 nomle authorities an to tae kind o : r <n gl a 000 he me et yey: ApeeBladl pling and legs int@a soup preparation | many invitations to tour the draft j ; © as $ 46,000 general ne tonditions which in the Kitchen of his Third avenue | Army car pga As nas WOMEN’S SHOES TO SELL UP TO $7.50 4 houkl be maintain restaurant. The court directed | ooh no nee nce a netad on ered Interent on Bunge and New York Exchange $ 260,900 That the traction company tne that the butcher be discharged sy ye en toring g0:| Mo°* MEN’S SHOES TO SELL UP TO $5.00 Redemption of bonda : e208 men have been paid less than @ng The case was tried Thursday ¢ 4 ' Geores f § sraooo employed for the same work by tht ah ica) yumm cht al AB ga deorge | At these prices ye offer the best Shoes to be had in the | r ee eae A ve in shin s mon e wr * i TS ° 4 | Bei ae, y% at bt timoty es at, © he generat th somite city pepsi t near the price. We will save you dollars on | MEE Sita Cursone sehort bon at soak $4.2 hax been Maintained by the B. N. FURMAN | Hanes High <in' Alt: [Rin ome hae or eo to the war J From County Attendance Fund 500,006 traction company for linemen, while Fi y 2 bis is! ina gas aete bi Roys’ and Girls’. Shoes shown by u od w: From miscellaneous collections 4550 city linemen have been paid $6.50 ° | Who teaches shorthand,! 15 Minutes by Hands .°"s ces , by us are marked way below © ' D 50 a § ] es by ands! "fi. wearing himself out, one! A the Prices quoted antAvhore ¢ We made heavy purchases re dy, It was otated bookkeeping, civil service, * KANSAS CITY, Mo, Sept. 14.—-|day recently, telling his own Hood | { -™onths ago, at much lower costs than today, and are therefore phi om 916 t resentation of th etre 4 , nd J joc v ere furplus from 1916-1917 ... re r Pes J; Gar eniolovan’ Gane ‘oad oak diana t/ vanced grammar. When a ladder swung in a hori-| River, Ore., congregation what a underselling competitors. yy poe ple poet 5 Apied North zontal position under the eaves of rathole, rumeuaked, de Ps ee, being amount t Ab al dintrict 7 7 “ {the roof o} . rhe theatre « purillanimous, cheap ! nge e ne \ A as beatae CA Reynold thelr representative | are western be Pei wee by eee Page tu a me saat " ng ae Shines epee Shorthand gM NE Ea My Mer ownstairs at urre Ss Dated September 1 | £ terra cotta, O, W, Wyatt hung for| Pilly turned te e question of gw ‘ Re JONES | Oregon and Wathington shal Reporting SchoA 18 tninuton With bis hands to ond otling io #raace end sald 120 MARION ST. 903 SECOND AVE. Hecrstary of § hool District No, 1 lonce the habitat of camels, Arcade Bldg. the rungs 76 feet above the ground, "One of the hardest things 1 a

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