The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 29, 1919, Page 11

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ae mene ! PAGE 11 THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, NOV. 29, 1919. | Nippon Schooners 4,181 CHINESE "igre Sshooners_ a RANCH "6. |YAKIMA LANDS ON WAY HOME... Rack = EGGS EASIER ““"* es 2 GOVERNMENT 3 Balances 248 i Sail Aboard the Blue Funnel ee erie ear | clearings ..ceesrsns 2216:540 WATER Liner Ixion ; J toatancen vere. " Status of New York R i G HT neon nm fishing Stock Exchange Terms to suit you. We have a plan whereby you can become inde- pendent. "| Denlira Say That It Is Too Risky to Ship East acific trip this sea-| ‘The local fresh ranch egg market | The Datbo Mary, the smatiest|is on t «eo of a break. \ Quo-| of the fleet, arrived at Anacortes this | tations Satur¢ airly steady Wee She is only 150 tons, A sixthi but d that Monday |™ mer is expected at Anacortes! would see lower Heavy storms are thought to |< irther price redu delayed her, She is the final! tions in sight r to make the trip this season.| ‘The One hundred and elght soldiers, bein, by way 7 BONDS threatened re Market prices Also the Blue Fun government bonda am Head cone Private wire to all impor. J) V8ncouver island Friday, claiming New York stock j they had be paid off in Russian and New York ‘curd hich have greatly decreased After the veasel had been # [/ delayed a short while, the militant JOrientis were pacified by the prom : 1898 iwe that all grievances would be ad. | ilece Stocks and Bonds justed on arrival home Captured by the Ho! ‘ 119 Cherry It im the traditional right of the men British Tommy that his grievances | Chinese | ,, epatriated from Rus Rurope and Canada just before board t liner Ixion at vel with stil rtion camp on with present weakness of the market Is due to 4 ned receipt | » early winter eaxon adjusted ore he embarks, | OF rly wint ying seasor with the sudden halt of Chinese, whe ved in the Brit | lovak legion, exercised this priv. |*hpping to F centers, Deal Jers say that tra fon of the risky these | they would rather | cra. f market here than by th rload ph morning, with one quotations are holding | £4 wenger on board, He dull tn att | prted by order of | line rtato é les are the White, immigration com activity At Willlam Head, the 180 ate nt time, The 1 4,000 Chinese cooties, re firm from laboring in France dur.| 4 ing the war, were n board. .Spe lie" for high apple prices th 1 bunks betwe a had been|!* the prohibition law, The A Kodak as a Christmas Se cg | siaee ‘pon erate Gift: is highly appreci- bats ated even in after years. | Local Markets — Frice Paid Wholerale Dealers ® for Vegetables e IN & RHODES, INC. astern Call, Phone or Write Us. We Are Making Weekly Trips. viki in Rus re rescued b: din the legion. from Seattle at 1 |ppreciated: new alibi that dealers are giv- apples took & large carge the mammoth Blu in the Puget Sound: | | Oriental service. Suite 200—Alaska Bldg. Frisco Shipyards MAIN 3174 May Ask for Men! SAN FRANCISCO, Nov, 29.—Un $9.49 to $112.21 *Portland Market Report” ‘The umbrella Is more "Denver Market Status ” raincoat in Peon eae the raincoat in France. lens union men return to work. the | California Metal Trades asnociatior has announéed the intention of ad. | vertining next Wednesday in th East, North and South for men to operate the yards shere. council simultaneously will launch a send apaign of advertising n thruout the country to keep out | Peppers of the Bay region Lg ge a Conditions in the - same, only a small portion of 40,000 workers being on duty Watson Will Take | sisitneat" oi. TOG | swe voR 12 —De Outside Passage iow during them svceisboen, 9.50 oh Sh io order that ond a3 aciaslion ‘ab ae et value of your Liberty The steamer Admiral Watson, Ad-| — oe H . " tet ov coe 4th Vietory Vietory || MFAl line, will take the outside pas- | + Le Se Ps Public Markets If you MUST sell yours, wet what they're worth "New York Coffee and A AND VICTORY BONDS Sugar Quotations ‘Huet SELL your Liberty or Victory Honde, BELL to UR ee BUY more Liberty or Victory Bonds, BU vs Movember 28, 1919, the closing 4s te te Me 3 Se |i saKe direct to Seward on her way| GR4.08 S91.00 99630 991.5 3 North next week. Southeastern ad a aes Alaska points will be passed up by the Watson on the northern trip, but | measese 2 The Story of Painless Parker Dentist 995.82 g9L18 4 $91.72 S900T $92.08 810099 Biel an we @eduect 37 8 $50 bond and $2.50 om @ $1,000 bend. We abe will stop along the chast when WESTLAKE | market plus the accrued interest. Meanicipal Rend Heese—Capitel 3 Central Ratiding. Seatth> Mate 7227; Etuete 2540, Established Over a Quarter Century returning to Seattle, The choosing | of the outside passage was made be- cause of the closing of canneries along the southwestern coast, and the greater speed to Southwestern Alaska by that route. that route. TUBERCULOSIS menaces your com- munity. It menaces your very home. Yes, it menaces YOU. TUBERCULOSIS killed 150,000 Amer- icans last year and just as surely it will kill 150,000 this year. YOU cannot put it aside as an unpleasant fact, but you can help PREVENT it. At last we know that Tuberculosis can be PREVENTED and can be CURED. Join the forces that are successfully throt- tling the White Plague in your community and provide health insurance for your neighbors, your- self and your own family. Don’t pass a Red Cross Christmas Seal Booth without buying—encourage those who are selling. Use Red Cross Christmas Seals Each Seal Is a Penny’s Worth of Cure and Prevention. Dates? Cora be made to} Grape Fior Vem Piake Whit CORNER 4 ‘ DAMY PrRopUCTs Prices Paid to Shippers Fresh dairy, per DAIRY PRODUCTS Prices Paid Wholesale Dealers Serateh Food oe Sirew + Wheat Quotations at Stockyards POULTRY Prices Paid by Wholesale Dealers x Docks v Salted | 4 to Shippers Pulls Calves Best cows aad beiters HIDES, TALLOW, WOOL Wholesaler to Consumer r cows and steers, No. «, Cows and steers, S nor stags, No.1 alfskina, No. 1 1 atage, No. i stage hides skins, 6 The and under, No. 1 green or salted, ea.4.0008 200m or green kip skins, No. 1,00@ SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES (By Himself) When I started practicing twenty-seven years ago, only a few people had their teeth looked after by dentists. Nearly everybody waited until an aching tooth got so bad that he had to go to a dentist and have it pulled out. That was about all there was to dentistry for the average man or woman. Something was wrong. Mil- lions of people knew nothing of the benefits of dentistry. DR. They were ignorant of the dangers of diseased teeth and. unclean mouths. I got to wondering how the many benefits of good teeth could be made known to everybody. | All I could see was just one way — ad- vertising. And so I advertised. Having no money to buy advertising, I went out on the streets and took dentistry to the people with me. I told them that good teeth were a blessing and bad teeth a calamity. 1 explained dentistry to them in language they could understand. I had beeh taught in college that den- tistry was a noble profession, agd that a dentist's first thought should be to benefit the great public and make the health of the masses better. I was en- couraged to go on with my street talks when I found that the more good I did for the people, the more good I did for myself. Business grew so fast that 1 had to get other dentists to help care for the patients. To properly look after such a large practice, I had to put my affairs on a business basis, and so I came to see that dentistry v is much a business as it was a profession. The college did not teach this, but my ex- perience did. no escape from it. If dentistry to be en- joyed by everybody, its cost must be brought down to a point where every- body could afford it. Money must be saved wherever possible. As time passed, a. oped by which a lot of s fected. There was nothing very smart about this system. It was just com- mon sense put to a good use. I knew system was right, for I was giving satisfaction and my business was grow- ing bigger. Talking on the street did not go far enough. Only a few people could be reached that way, and so I took up newspaper advertising. The business grew faster. The growth was steady and sure, for the system was bringing good dentistry to the many, where only a few people could afford it before. PARKER One office after another was opened, until now there are twenty-four complete offices where the system is used, and these offices make up the largest organization in the world practicing den- tistry. The plan under which den- tistry is practiced in all these offices is now called the E. R. Parker System, and the trade mark of this System is shown below. Under the E. R. Parker System dentistry has been put where it belongs. It is no longer a luxury for the few,-but a benefit for the many. Tt has made dentistry better and it has made the prices lower. It saves a pa- tient’s time and makes fewer visits necessary. It has to a large extent put an end to the fear of pain. Offices using the E. R. Parker Sys- tem are finely fitted up with new and useful dental appliances. The tion rooms are cheerful and homelike. Visitors are welcome every week day from 8:30 A. M. to 6:30 P. M. Under the System no charge is made for ex- aminations and advice. Patients are plainly told in advance the price for having such work done as their teeth need, so there may be no misunder- standings. Work is done under the specialist idea. This means that each dentist in the Parker System offices does that kind of work in which he is most skilled. Being the founder of the E. R. Par- ker System, and through it having built up the largest dental practice in the world, and put dentistry before all the people, I feel a natural pride in see- ing that the name “Parker” has now become the dominant name in dentistry. It stands for dental work that is satis- factory in every respect, and it stands for moderate prices. Parker dental of- fices serve the same purpose in den- tistry as department stores serve in wearing apparel and other human needs. They are able to properly care for the teeth of all. Many people have had work done un- der the E. R. Parker System. They know that this work is as good as science, skill and experience can make it. Those who do not know about Parker methods and economies are particularly invited to call and see how, from a very small begin- ning and from preaching dentistry on the streets, the Parker ideas have grown into a system that is used by more Reg- istered Dentists than any other plan in existence. All the advantages of the E. R. Parker System are now open to the people of Seattle, for a complete office has been installed at Second Avenue and Madi- son Street, by Dr. Robert Shanklin and associate dentists. Every reader of this paper is invited to call and have a free examination of the teeth made, and find out the reasonable price for having dental work done under the widely-known E. R. Parker System. REGISTERED DENTISTS MEMBERS E. R. PARKER SYSTEM Second Ave. and Madison St, Seattle, Wash, Dr. Robert Shanklin and Associate Dentists Al) sizes, B4 to 930 Per Year. Title Trust Co. . ‘ 7 4 at Columbia "Ne atairs to climb Phone, Main 1564 b This Space Donated by.a Friend of The Anti-Tuberculosis League ‘ Headquarters: 315 University Street

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