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STAR—MONDAY, “NO CASH DOWN!” “make your own terms!’ make your selections of homefurniahings up to $100 without a cash payer at Ume of purchase—we invite you, the Seattle homefurnisher, to “make y n terme rv well-k own lberal credit service wil! fit your Indtvidual your additional purchases added to your account! clearance sale of brass beds— —an interesting sale! —prices of brass beds have been soaring sky high, same as all manufactured metal products, and this Clearance sale of sample brass beds will be of special interest to you. —included in this clearance sale are only the salesroom samples of brass beds; one of a pattern; on each bed on sale is a tag giving number, regular price and sale price. if you have an a ditional purchases will without additional payment be added $22.50 brass bed for $15.25 number 1008 $34.50 brass bed for $23.50 0O— brass bed for $32.75 $49.50 brass bed for $36.75 mumber 2420 number 2334 —f bed; 4x6; square foll aise brass bed; 4x6; con singlo brass §x¢; con 6 spindles; Royal satin 16 spindles; Royal satin finish. 6 apindies, Royal satin finish 6 mpindles; Royal satin finiteh $28— brass bed for $22.50 $55— braes bed for $43.25 124 mber 2064 ed ax8; single ise bed: 2x6; eatakt e a thick bed; 4x¢: con aquare pillar IMars, 2 Inches thick, with net Royal inches thick with knobs 6 npindies; Royal al satin fintel satin finieh satin finish. $23.50 brass bed for $16.25 $23.50 brass bed for $15.75 $40— brass bed for $33— S134 ‘3000 number 674 ikiete ee trans bet: xt; wember —singie site bress bed: 8x6 sa pillars, 1% Inches | —full stre bed: 4x; con ntinuous pl straight pille: thick, with knobs; 6 spindles; | tinuous pillars, 2 Inches thick thick: 4 spindles; Royal eatin | with knobs; Royal satin finish. 6 spindles; Royal satir finish satin finieh, $14— brass bed for $10.95 $35— brass bed for $27.50 7 number 474 number 7424 beds acalaiine —full size brass bed: 4x6; con 2% tne strateht pilla tinuous pillars, 2 ea thick ; 8 spindles with knobe Royal satin finish. atin finish. 11 spindles; Royal satin finish $22— brase bed for $17.85 is bed for $13.75 sumber 0570 ies ber 2008 ass bra bed 4x6 —full site be ax singe oe bree ped; at ieonen thick with straight pillars, 2 Inches thick strateht pillars, 2 tne! thick 6 spindles; Royal satin with knobs; 6 spindles; Royal with kno! 6 spindles; Royal satin finis satin finish. $55— brass bed for $42.25 $21.50 brass bed for $18.50 2054 number number 7536 Bs mtu Tass + ea —single sine brass bed; —full ot brass bed; éxé: mares me cote oath Stealght pillars, 2 inet straight pillars, 2 inches thick, with knob satin tints ) 6 epindies; Royal with knobs; satin finish Royal satin 6 sping large record cab- inet: special— $10.85 regular price $14.50 —large talking machine rec- ord cabinet; —eractly like picture; +36 inches high; —top 20x18; —tlouble doors; -64 compartments for ree yegular price $+— Iding ueility or breakfast ao ords; ae picture —olden oak finish; foxe4 ini es; picture shows regular a $14.50; table open and closed; regu- —special for $ lar price #4 $2.90 the week... 10.85 special for the wi THE MOST UNUSUAL CREDIT OFFER EVER EXTENDED BY ANY STORE IN AMERICA! NO CASH DOWN ON VICTROLAS! “make your own terms!” no interest! —we invite you—the Seattle homefurnisher— to select any Victrola up to $100—. It will be sent to your home without a cash payment! Victrola X.—$75 mahogany or oak cabinet with record shelves; 41 15-16 inches high, 18% inches wide, 22% inches deep; 12-inch turntable; nickel plated exhibition sound box, Victor tapering tone arm and “gooseneck” sound- box tube; automatic brake and speed regu- lator; extra heavy double spring, spiral drive motor (can be wound while playing); all metal parts nickel plated. $29.50 regular price $37.50 | No Cash| si—| ho | Down! |AWeek! | Interest —enameled steel burners which can be as easily cleaned as a china dish; always sanitary; has almost double the cooking surface of any other range; has a warming plate on which you can keep your meals warm; just the same as on a coal range. | | —the EMPRESS New Method gas range saves 20 to 40 per cent on your gas bills and will pay for itself in a short time in the saving of gas. j —every range deliv- eted to your home, | set up and connected to gas free. STANDARD FURNITURE. CO. ADRIATIC MAY HAVE K AISER KNEW ae ce ae’ GERMANS WERE SAFE IN U.S. Adriatic, with one American aboard and loaded heavily with munitions, WASHINGTON, Feb. 12— The Swiss minister, now repre- ‘ " ik | H a persons whose departure ig being “delayed.” The action of Gerard in turning down the German proposal of a new treaty supplanting that of 1799 has the complete sanction of the state department, whose officials say Germany had no right to make such demands following the formal breaking of relations. MARSHALL MISTAKES GROCER FOR ROBBER C. HH. COX, @ machinist of Du ‘Pont, was perhaps fatally injured Sunday night when his car crashed ‘| head-on against a Rigney hill street ‘car at Tacoma. TELKS’ | MINSTRELS | was 24 hours overdue at Liverpool today and had not been reported at noon. 6he entered the danger zone Saturday, it was believed. The Baltic, about which there were grave fears, arrived in Liverpool 24 HE hours late, due to a longer course a silted N Officials of the White Star be-| senting Germany, has commun- Feb, 12.— METROPOLITA! lieve the Adriatic 1s delayed for a| icated to Berlin the exact po- & grocer, similar reason, shot to death by Assist sition taken by this country | hurt. FEB. 15 AND 16 FUN, DANCING AND MUSIC DON’T FORGET THE DANCE AT THE HIPPODROME FRIDAY NIGHT Free to Holders of Tickets to Big Show % 2 % fi ‘LITTLE FIGHTING IN PARIS, Feb. 1 theatres of raida in the war and Argonne jelal statement. Elsewhere it calm, the report said. ADRIATIC—18 FRNGH ZONE TODAY | Patrol activity |in the Champaign and Armonne successful | and near| Hill 204, where the only fighting | activities reported in today's offi was STAR WANT ADS |, BEST FOR RESULTS | Rosaetal lsh, ecto col | with regard to the treatment of German ships and their crews now held in American ports, In the light of this fact, state de partment officials today expressed resentment over Germany's re- ported efforts to force reaffirma- tion of the treaty of 1799 and of the reported delay in vising pass- ports of Americans desirous of leaving Germany at the earliest pos sible moment No word as yet has been receiv ed to the actual departure of Americans brought into Germany jon the Yarrowdale, follownig the jactivities of the German sea raid er off the South American coast The imimediate release of these Americans had been formally prom {sed Ambassador Gerard. It is pre- sumed that they are among those | the throat—whatever they are, ant City Marshal A, J. Bailey, who mistook him and was mis- taken by him for robber who had held up the grocer a short time before. Labounty was held up by two men and a robbed of $400 while going home from his grocery store with his wife. The man with the ship-siren voice who meanders down your al crooning “rit-aa-g-#, O-bd-Lr¢ or C-LOs--8" in a tone that scar reaches thyee blocks may ing in grafid opera in a few weeks. be sing-| FEB, 12, 1917. PAGE 2) PEACE PLEADERS' WORRY WILSON | WITH EFFORTS . WASHINGTON , Feb, 12.— Peace propaganda, largely fos tered by former Secretary of State Bryan and his friends, had grown to such an extent that it attracted the attention of gov- ernment heads today. As one feature of the concerted drive to enlarge the peace spirit, 200 women, representing the “Emergency Peace Federation,” were booked to surge into con- gress today to urge a broader pacifism. | Meantime, two big peace offices here, with heavy ps of stenoe raphers, were shooting out peace letters, while peace propoganda tel egrams poured into the White House and state department The whole situation distressed administration men. They felt it manufactured more peace spirit already larte |government’s hands tn case it re garded war against Germany as nec jossary for preservation of Amercan rights, honor and dignity Officials laid the German feeler of Saturday—euggestion of a Unit jed StatesGerman conference to avold war-—to peace propaganda, |while some authorities suggested |the hand of former Secretary Bryan waa ip the deal | Much os the government would like to keep at peace, it does not jwant to face an spirit; it does not want to appear| before the world, espectally, as either “too proud” or “too fat” to [fight MAY ABANDON BONDS OF BELT LINE FOR TIME ‘The plan to have the voters pass on the port commission's proposed $450,000 belt line bond issue March 6 may be abandoned Tuesday, when & resolution by President Robert | Bridges to call off the special elec tion will be voted upon. He introduced the resolution Sat urday, recommending that the plan be revoked. “The people of this country.” says ithe resolution, “should at this time of national peri! husband all their |resources, and should not enter upon new enterprises involving the expenditure of funds except in case of emergency, and in view of these ciroumstances, the port commis sioners have decided they should not submit to the electors any prop- osition calling upon the people for the issuing of bonds.” 'B ARE INJURED, 1 FATALLY, IN AUTO CRASHES TACOMA, Feb. 12.—Eight per sons are suffering today from tn- juries they received in a series of automobile accidents yesterday and last night during which three ma chines and a buggy were demol- ished One of the injured, C. H. Cox, a machinist, is believed to be fatally Cox, driving at high speed, in attempting to pass another car, sent his machine onto the car tracks in South Tacoma and collid- ed with a street oar, He was ter ribly injured and his young son, al- tho thrown clear of the wreckage, was badly hurt. In @ collision between a roadster and a milk truck, D, White, driver of the former, was badly in jured and taken to a hospital, while both cars were wrecked Two women and two boys were jhurt when the buggy in which they wore driving near Loveland way struck in the rear by a speeding automobile and demolished SHURT NEWS AT A special meeting of the naval consulting board it was re |ported that a method of detecting [the presence of submarines has been invented. FLAMES, BELIEVED to be |incendiary origin, destroyed the home of Mrs. Anna MacHachern, 7016 Sycamore place, about mid bight Sun ° STRICT ATCH by federal of- ficials is being maintained over tha crews, which have been permitted to return to their ships, of the in- terned German vessels at Eagle Harbor. MARRIED IN the funeral chapel of the Bonney-Watson undertaking parlors, but it didn’t phase Miss Margaret Huntley and Lester M. Mastorman, both of Tacoma, {in the slightest A SOCIAL reunion was held by the Concatenated Order of Hoo Hoo last night in the quarters of the Metropolitan club on the sey enth floor of the Stuart building NO FIRE in his house since Jan- uary 1st, and lack of food and wa- ter, is believed to have caused the death of J. B. Winter, 70, a recluse of Tacoma, Winter is said to have considerable money in a savings bank. GIRL SEES VISIONS OF ANOTHER WORLD FINDLAY, 0,, Feb, 12.—Physi clans and amateur physchologists are watching with interest the cata leptic condition of Miss Isabelle Myers, who has been asleep ev since eating her Christmas dinn Eugene Feuchtinger of Chicago. but recently of Berlin, has a theor of voice control which, he says, will | make a song bird out of the most | unmusieal person, His method is to control the hyo-gloss! muscles of From ti to time the girl talks about the won * of a world which she evidently believes herself to be Visiting. To Cure id in One Dai and helped tle the! artificial peace! of | IT WILL COST YOU MONEY IF YOU NEGLECT YOUR TEETH As a strictly financial proposition it’s the worst kind of bad business to neglect your teeth. Because you will really have to get them fixed | sooner or later. The pain and agony that you suffer from decayed teeth—the extremely bad ef- | fect they have on your personal appearance— their baneful effects on your digestion and, in | fact, your general health—all these things will literally force you to have those teeth put into | proper condition SOMETIME. And then it will probably cost you twice as much as it would if you came now before they | get too bad. And what reason can you possibly | give yourself for further delaying this supremely important matter? We guarantee to do your work for you with- out hurting you. OUR PRICES ARE THE VERY LOWEST This is made possible by the large amount of business which we do at this office. It stands to reason that we can afford to take a smaller profit on the individual case than an office which does only one-half to one-third of the volume that we do can possibly afford to take. YOUR WORK WILL BE DONE BY A GRADUATE REGISTERED DENTIST | We have no other kind at this office. We have gathered a staff of dental specialists here of which we and Seat- tle and, in fact, the whole Northwest, may well be proud. Every operator in | | this office has graduated from the best dental colleges and passed the examin- ation of the state dental board. Every operator has his certificate from the state dental board hanging right on the wall in front of his dental chair, in | plain sight of all. So you need not worry about whether or not your work will be done properly when you come to this office. WE USE THE VERY BEST OF MATERIALS This is merely a matter of good business on our part, not to speak of our own pride in turning out satisfac- tory work for our patients. We found out long ago that it does not pay to bother with cheap materials. They will not stand up and the result is a dissatisfied patient. So the best that can be bought is what you will get in the way of materials if you have your work done here. WE GIVE YOU AN IRONCLAD GUARANTEE This is a big feature of Regal Dental Service. With all work turned out of this office we give an ironclad guar- antee of satisfaction which is signed both by the operator who did the work and also by L. R. Clark, D. D. S., owner and manager of this office, who is thoroughly responsible. This guarantee means just what it | says, viz.—that if for any reason what- | | ever your work does not give perfect satisfaction, we will make it right. Thus, you see, you are protected from every angle. DR. L. R. CLARK YOU HAVE THE PROTECTION OF OUR REPUTATION This is by far the biggest asset this office has and we might say right here that we have many thousands of dollars invested in office equipment. But we place the value of our reputa- tion far above this. In the years that we have been doing business in Seat- | tle it has become known to thousands of people that the Regal Dentists turn out the very best of work at reasonable prices and that they give everybody & square deal. Do you think that we would take any chances on hurting this reputation? You can just bet | your last cent that we wouldn’t. We expect to do your work so well and please and satisfy you to such an extent that when your friends are in need of dental service you can and will recommend them to us. That is one of the biggest factors in our growth. So you can come here safe in the knowledge that you will get the very best dental work that human ingenui! and skill can give you and that the price will be absolutely the lowest. Don’t put it off another day. Coie in at once and let our experts give your teeth a thorough examination. This won’t cost you a cent, nor will it put you under any obligation. We will tell you just what it will cost to | put your teeth into perfect condition and you will probably be surprised to find just how little that cost is. One thing is very certain, it will be worth a whole lot more to you than it will cost. May we not have the pleasure of a call from you soon? Regal Dental Offices DR. L. R. CLARK, MANAGER 1405 Third Ave., N. W. Corner Third and Union—Diagonally Across Fro’ the Postoffice. Be Sure to Get to the Right Place. In Every Res Seattle’s Leading Dentists ‘LANE BOOSTED able and adroit counsel looking aft-) er its interests all of the time; the people have only the public serv- This Town to Have Only Bungalows ants, some of whom look after the interests of the public only a very! King county is soon to have a small part of the time |new town—Snoqualmie—with all | “Because I believe that Mr. Lane . . the houses, schools, and larger | will look after the interests of the puitdings conforming to one plan At a meeting in the Good Bats | Public = pea was coiat reed architecture, The buildings are me Re : : . C at the same time will ¢ njustice | ay designed by J r 5 cafeteria, at noon Monday, ©. A-/19 any interest, he has my Whole-|jow rete Jud Yoho, bungar Reynolds, former state chairman of the public ’ervice commission, and the man who won the tourist rate case for the Northwest, indorsed W D. Lane for councilman, Ole Han son like ® gave Lane a strong boost. “The ideal public servant is he who realizes that it is his business to serve the public first, and who at the same time has the ability and discernment to know the rights of the public, and to obtain those lrights,” said Reynolds While no one desire that any "| public utility shall not receive ju ltice at the hands of a public serv ant, yet it would be better, it would seem, to ha |the public servant to look after the interests of the public first, and the public utility afterwards, Lane Tried Out “The public utility has the most hearted support in his campaign for membership in the city council. He has been tried in public office and found courageous and energetic in the public service at all times.” HEMRICH PLANS BIG “STAFF” PRODUCTS Success of the Hemrich Bros } Brewing company has been so marked in the introduction of new produc Applestaff, Lifestaff and | other ut” beverages, that the |company has decided to enter more vigorously into this field. As aj the company is being changed to Hemrich’s Staff Products company. Glass is now made so as to be practically unbreakable, “Every bungalow will be differ ent in design,” said Yoho, “Already a score or more of bun- galows have been completed; the hotel is finished and being occu- pied by 100 workmen, and the Mil- waukee station is in.” o Craftsman Bungalows, a distinct- ly Seattle product, are being erect- ed on Mr. Yoho's plans in every State in the Union, THE TWO armored cruisers at Bremerton the Frederick and South Dakota, will sail April 7, Their destination has not been s - THOMAS A. EDISON, who was 70 years old yesterday, was given he point of view of/ step in this direction, the name of |® banquet Saturday night, attended by more than 2,000 of his employes and associates. : DUKE OF Norfolk, 70, ranking duke and earl of the English no bility, died in London Sunday, ws