The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 9, 1920, Page 11

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a RR STORES, MOVIES THE VERY BEST DENTISTRY Dentistry Today Is the Highest Perfected Specialty of All Science Tt ts quite true that the public ks imposed upon by many who practice the pro fession who have inferior ability, are unskilled and careless, caring ‘ittle for the health or comfort of their pa tient, DENTISTRY t an exact ing specialty, being of the most delicate nature; the work is almost entirely upon live tisnue, treating diseases, correcting deformities and reproducing nature, To do this successfully, we must have a complete understand ing of the bony structure of the head and face, ns each canal, prominence and open ing bas a specific importance WE ML st BR FAMILIAR with all the important mus WE MUST KNOW the er act location of arteries, veins or the parts supplied by It Will Cost You Nothing to The charm of @ pleasant smile may be killed dy on il-kept set of teeth, Clean sound teeth indicate a large measure ef self respect. sion, and any degree of accu racy ly only acquired by a thorough knowledge of his profession and close observ: tion of causes and results, tong experience, honesty, and good, sound judgment, With out any one of these qualift cations, disaster ‘and failure will result, REPRODUCTION OF NA. TURE to the extent of doing natore’s work, together with the bending of the features so that the work cannog be from nature's own, in such # manner that it ts clean and congenial to the tis- sues, at the same time perfect ly comfortable to the individ- ual, is a9 sciewte not sur passed by the greatest artist or the most skilled Swiss me ehanic, This work ts being done without pain by our modern dentists of today. Ml fitting dental work is not only unsightly, but is un clean, giving cause to um healthy conditions and dis- case, 3 loss of vitality and ef- ficiency, Have Your Teeth Examined ELECTRO PAINLESS DENTISTS “LABORING PEOPLES DENTISTS” J. R. VAN AUKEN, Mer. Located for Years at §. E. Corner First and Pike Phone Main 2555 es Steal Altar and Church Box MOINES, Iowa, July 9.— taking the oak altar from the | church here, thieves passed to the Zion church and ed the poor box, taxing $20. cops have no hunch. Gotumbia Golo ls better Aay. Saeed, seach Optom: nd Mf, z Byes Ex: he op eieouen Deane brain,” Film Canon ‘ion of Joan of Arc ROME, July %.—Eight movie men were permitted to make pic- tures of the canonization of Joan @ Arc, showing Pope Benedict XV. | and they paid $200,000 for the priv. Dege Do You Wonder Fido Gets Angry? SACRAMENTO, Cal, July 9—Is your dog mad? It's easy to tell, says Guy P. Jones, state health officer here. “He has rabies if there are Negri bodies present in the gangtion eclis the hippocampus of the says Guy. THE Sale that 83 saves you big money twice a year on factory-fresh, down-to-the-minute Florsheim Shoes. You. know that: everything about this sale is tight, because these are ‘ Florsheim Shoes and this is a Florsheim Store, and you have learned to bank on Florsheims. Here are some of the prices. Don’t wait for lower ones. high for months to Florsheim Shoes and Oxfords Regular $15.00 to $20.00, now.. * Worthmore Shoes and Oxfords Regular $12.00 to $15.00, now Extra Special—Florsheim In Broken Lines, values to $15. Shoes must sell come. Buy now. $12.85 to $16.85 "$8.85 to $12.85 $9.85 Shpes All one price. FLORSHEIM SHOE STORE 903 SECOND AVENUE NEAR MARIG Cy) DN STREET [sins Fu Fit 1 Ss HOE THE SEATTLE STAR CREDIT HARDTOGET IN ‘SILK SLUMP” CITY, BY JAMES HENLE PA ON, N. J, July The color of this town, in spite of many 9 attempts to look on the bright side of things, is a rich, ¢ No indigo. one Is bluer than the silk mill ed five or proxperity rtat who have en) employes, ix yoars of unexamy The war cut down the of silk fromgFrance Its chance, ‘W than ever. In 1918 the employes struck unsuccessfully for the nine hour day. Last year the 44-hour week Was established. MARKET FLOODED AFTER BREA Y JAPAN But such days ended about two months when the silk market n Japan went td pieces. The price of raw silk dropped from $18 to $6.50 & pound, The market was flooded manufacturing slumped that, even according to conservative estimates, more than 8,000 persons are unemployed or working on part time, while 11,000 woul! probably be nearer the true number, If you allow five ‘persons to every breadwinner you will see that almost half of Patersen's 135, 866 Inhtabitants are in straitened ctr cumstances. At least $0 per cent of the manu impe jon factuting In Paterson t# in the silk) industry and allied trades, so when the silk business t# bad the entire retail trade of the town is hard hit The clothing stores say that no one is veyme: CHIGAGO'S U. S, ~ WETTEST CITY | Raia: \Drink Prescription Whis- ky and Bootleg Booze CHICAGO, July %—Pennsytvanta and New Jersey are the wettest states tn the Union, according to John F, Kramer, head of the pro jhibition enforcemest division at Washington. | But Chicago steps forth | wettest city! | Prohibition’s first birthday found jthe Windy City drinking an enor mous quantity of prescription whisky and bootleg booze, according jto RoW, Stone, acting Mlinots ab |rector of prohibition. {THREE MONTHS’ SUPPLY |LASTS THREE WEE! While the city ts tec ally dry its wetness may be visualized by [these facts: Three monthY supply of Mavor Prescriptions used up during first three weeks of June. Half a miltion $ints of .whisky— $1,500,000 worth at $3 a pint, and costing $2,500,000, counting the average physician's fee of $2—were consumed tn those three weeks Spurious prescriptions, agsregat ing 200,000, were written in the first five months of 1920, accor@ing to Captain Hubert Howard, state Prohibition director, Certain Grug stores regularty buy quantities of prescriptions in bulk from certain doctors and sell whisky to those “in the know” for $7.50 8 bint. Nearly 200 boone robberies oo curred in four months, Involving 200,000 quarts of whisky, the retail bootleg price of which aggregtes $3,000,000, This dotsn't include wholesale robberies. FEW SALOONS STILL SELLING REAL BEER A few Chicago saloons are etl ing real beer. Convention visitors found that out Many, including wome cabaret places, are selling whisky, cocktalis and wine In saloons the average price te 75 cents for a amatl drink; in cab rets, $1. Some bars sell it openly in ordinary whisky glasses and ne attempt is made to have the patron drink hurriedly to get the glasses off the bar. The 200 thefts of booze from re tall stores and private cellars, main ly drug stores, involved 16.927 cases. Curiously, the value placed on it by owners § totaled only 155,631—or about $125 « quart! In reality wholesale bootleggers actually quote lprices per 1,000 cases at $9 a quart, and the lone quart usually conts at least $15. Prescription fakes, totaling 200 000 in lees than five months, were pointed ou® by Captain Howard when he put his new ruling into effect a month ago—that only 100 prescription blanks h good for a pint, be issued to each as the Rulers and Rules Prevail at Dance SAN DLEGO, Cal, July 9—When a high school faculty here ordered dancers at commencement ball dance six inches away from each other students agreed to comply. Girls brought rulers and, cutting them in half, furnished each dancer with a aixinch rule as a favor. 4,000 Purps Make El Paso Their Home EL PASO, July 9.—Approximately ls” constitute EF "aso'’s population. The dog nse drive }is on with a rush. Ceiling Falls i in; Employes Escape ALBA} N July 9.—There was = ort in the soup at the Keeler cafe here today. Also 25 employes narrowly escaped with their lives when the conewete ceiling collapsed without warning Veal f or - Dems | "GRE Cc, July 9 Two democratic presidential as pirants stand a chance of bringing |home the veal if they can mannge to bring home the bacon. John M Phillips has christened two calves recently born on his farm “McAdoo” and “Cox,” and has hinted the namesake will go to the one who {gains the nomination at San Fran- cisco. , Restoration of the Louvain Ii brary will cost the Germans $1,000, 000, ‘The shoe and hat stores say the Pt | pla . ‘The “movie palhcen” st. any their pat more than 60 per cent Th want to buy find tt ex tremely difficult to get credit Tho not many appeals for charity have been made the men out of work have had to draw on their avings and to gell Liberty bonda, UNIONS READY TO WAGE CUTS | ‘The most Kerious axpect of the alt | uation, from the point of view of the {silk workers, is that some employ er Using the present situation to reduce wages. One manufacturer tried to reopen his she a Sia Jay rate, where $35 a week had been the average pay for piece work, A strike resulted. Others have cut the piece rate 20 per cent, reducing it from 20 to 16 cents a yard Albert L. Wyman, secretary of the Associated Industries of denies that there is any concerted ef. fort at present to reduce wages, but he refuses to make any prophecy Unions are preparing to resist any | effort to lower wages. The |very heavy on thelr hands. ‘They have no money to spend and ean af. ford no amusements. They spend age are Paterson, part of the day at home, part at| union offices, and part visiting the | milla to see any jobs are open. | Comparatively few of the men are necking other work. |Adoption May May | Save Lad From | Deportation SAN FRANCISCO, July 9-—Vio tor Anderson, ldyearcid Rurxian stowaway on the army transport South Bend, may not be deported back to Siberia after all Victor's case te now under consid eration by the tmmigratiog commis json at Angel teland Capt. J. A. | White, of the South Bend, has prem. ised to adgpt the little orphan, which may save bim from being fent back to the orp! at Hav. aronk, Siberia, from where he es- caped with the American soldicra Victor's father, a Finn, waa killed in the great war and bis mother, « Russian, became a Red Cross nurse and was killed by the Germans Fortunes of war turned all the chi |dren out of the orphanage where Victor had been placed and the was compelled to ahift for himself He became the mascot of the 27th United States infantry and hid tn an automobile on the deck of the transport as ft saled for America. EMIGRATION NOT BEST FOR JAPAN Can Support Her People at Home, Says Professor BY K. 8. INUIT Japanese Professor in Department of Potitieal Science, University of Southern California. How will Japan solve her vital question of increasing population which in estimated at 600,000 per year? Will it be peaceful or im perialtatic ‘The area of Japan ts about that of | California. Twenty-five per cent ix tillable. But only 16 per cent Is un der actual cultivation. ‘Therefore, 9 per cent still awaits the plow, ROOM FOR MIL MORE ON ISLA} A part of the population question can be met by careful and equal dix tribution of her peop Tt is sald that Formosa, Hokkaido, Korea and Saghalien all can feed many more millions. Continental people figure out the necessity for land by the scarcity of land However, the water area from which the Japanese-people de rive their income t# quite import ant. Undersea gardening is no figure of speech. Roughly speak ing, an average Japanese produces annually about $3 per capita from this source. Again, being an island nation, she ie destined to become a carrying na- u At present 400,000 sailors are supporting approximately 2,000,000 souls of the nation, to say nothing of those who are deriving their live- lihood from the same source on land JAPAN BECOMING INDUSTRIAL NATION History tells us that the nation that has the largest increase of pop: ulation fs usually an agricultural nation. Such has been the case with Japan. to this date, But she is fast becoming an industrial nation. Ex periences tell us that the higher a nation is industrialized the lower ts the increase of populdtion. Already this is showing in figures in large cities of Japan, Thus it is far more advantageous for Japan to send out merchants who will, for example, take orders enough to keep several hundred ‘of her people at home, t to. encour » the emigration of a laborer who can at best possibly feed and clothe one family. HIT, Clear stores and the bakeries com along Main as been cut) men out of work find time! | Lampe, | There’s no question about it; $55 Suits $60 Suits $65 Suits $70 Suits $75 Suits $80 Suits We would like to see Spring. | 25 Hart Schaffner & Marx 20 Suits OFF we're offering you more’ sensa- tional values now than ever before; the fact of the matter is, that these Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes at 25% off are much lower than present wholesale costs. Here are the prices— One-quarter Off $41.25 One-quarter Off $45.00 One-quarter Off $48.75 One-quarter Off $52.50 One-quarter Off $56.25 One-quarter Off $60.00 as many men as possible gef€ in on this saving. Most of you know Hart Schaffner & Marx quality: This is an excellent opportunity for the rest of you to get acquainted — with their quality and these exceptional values. 4 Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Shop Corner Second Ave. and Seneca St: Interchurch Move Will Be Revived N YORK, July 9—The Inter church World Movement will be re organized and continued, it was de cldled here Inte yesterday at the joint mittee and the movement's committe. The report was read by Dr. Philadelphia, rep the Reformed church. ral Ww. F. |Signs the Siaiinin Extract Pledge EVANSVILLE, Ind, July 9.—Mr. tri has signed the lemon extract Petri (other name's Dick) appeared in cop court with a lemon on his breath. “How comdé?” they |wanted to know. “And it made mq ick; I'll never drink it again,” Petri conelnded. Pe pledge. meeting of the business men's com-| ting } j ; | inflicted |Odessa, Washington, Census Announced WASHINGTON, July 9.—The cen- mis bureau today announced the population of Odessa, Was 1,050, an increase of 165, or per cent since 1910 Boy Fights Eagle PARIS, France, July 9—A 13-/ | year-old shepherd's boy on a lonely tm yuntatn in Corsica had a terrible | t with @ great eagle which swooped down and selzed-a Iamb.| When attacked by the boy with a | cudgel, the engie turned on him, and severe wounds with its beak. The lad, stunned, got his gun and shot the bird dead. The’ first experiment in ‘long-dis- tance radio telephoning was made in ¥i. ios. FREEZONE Seems Magic! Drop a little Freez Jone on an aching corn, instantly that corh stops hurting, then short ly you lft ft right off with fingers Canada's reparation claim against Germany foots up to $1,871.000.000 —Truly! _ Xour druggist sells a tiny bottle WOMEN! INSIST ON “DIAMOND DYES” — | Don’t streak or ruin your material in a poor dye. Directions in package guarantee perfect results. Lift Any Corn Right Off. Buy only “Diamond Dyes.” Drbggist bas Color Card. | FOR CORNS It Doesn’t Hurt a Bit! |of Freezone for a few cents, suf. ficient to rid your “feet of every hard corn, soft corn, or corn be tween the toes, and painful foot calluses, without the least soreness lor irritation, No humbug! Better Service for You Much enlarged Graphaphone Department with every possible new equipment conducive to better service has been opened and we ufge that you make a visit and see for yourself how, well and how very satistactority we can serve your every musical requirement. CREDIT EXTENDED TO YOU “GLADLY” As a part of our service we offer you a CHARGE ACCOUNT. You may buy your instrument on the easy payment plan oF use your account to keep your record library The splendid model shown in the illustration is one that finds im stant favor—the tonal qualities are superb and the cabinet is beyond criticism. Price exceedingly low; only $120—“easy payment.” Ask to. see the portable table machine—all models and finishes. 1332-34 Second Avenue Gro 211 Union st. Better Than | For Liver Ill Get a: Ne = TABLETS =|

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