The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 12, 1919, Page 2

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F | a special porchase: 50 velvet rugs: extra special — a Yextra special 2399 to each purchaser of a fo cart we will give with our compliments an attractive Jit tle celluloid: animal head rat Ue for the baby 5.-\wr aery Y xt ms mi un J ‘ 5 ) ) 5 5 HIOLIONIOE | ) $23.95 { regular price §30— ‘apecial purchase of 50 good quality velvet rugs in small allover ( @esigna in the wood shades; full room size, Onl) ft: reg price, |) Meter entre coscial tase _ $23.95 they last | oak refrigerator |; hardwood } _ with top ice ice chest: | chamber: special— — ¥ service: regular $9.50; specta’ price $14.95 for the week. 97.45 regular price $19.30 iecleas, / —ah excellent refrigerator pictured; pen we able dlack a t oak; top-opening ice compart- length jar price it lined with gal- for the steel; provi chamber white, wo-cart 21c dignified | credit this in one of the moat pr al and attractive of the 1 models, Light w nameled Viewable cart; vemular Price OX.50 adjustable ding lamp, n be adjuat- te lar price special or the week $6.75 ere: lined; acien- stor the wall construc- home assures perfect gardener; ition; drain sys- good condenses and etrone off all impur- pressed leaving re stoel, itor with cold long. ; } pure air circule- od handle ; ? hardw { Lined with steel: 2 vig te Cg om eno ama}! "Tarai Price $19. =~, price $12.50 1514.95 CMS | FEE.'Si0.45 | | STANDARD FURNIT Ave. and Pine St., Seattle L. SCHOENFELD & SONS mut’ \Seattle Is Away Over “Top” in Victory Loan Subscriptions ed at the request of J. A. Swalwell Continued From Page One || state chairman. Later, at the re-| | quest of the county chairman, the of the publicity committee and the publicity and advertiaing bureau members thereof which met almost | Diaced ite organization and member Gaily during the drive; R. P. Oldham, | ship at the disposal of the Victory | chairman, Miss B. Campbell, Loan committee, It waa selected tary of the speakers’ bureau the | director of publicity, and the serv-| corps of speakers; George W. Ade, ices of P. C. Beesley, recretary of . 1 for week U 101 to 11 a | Notes Are Sent to the by Hun Delegation ter R. Presiden’ tee; Miss Ruby R. Fall, L, Bussey in the office of the county chairman; C. W. Martin, commercial secretary of the state central com mittee; C. P. Burnett, chairman, and | valuable assistance. P..E. Mahoney, secretary state pubs | “Among the accountants, that im lieity; Mra. W. W. Brunson, Mrs. E.! portant cog which does its work | B. Daymude and force in charge of | quietly and well in the back«round sales counter, and Mrs. Bertha J. | are C. M. Williams. chairman of the Coliffr, in charge of the information | accountants’ division; George Ade, | the entente.” bureau and automobiles. | chief accountant; Frank Peterson, J. | 4 “ “Work of the women warrants|R. Fraser, Arthur Eeklund, John M. | was learned today that Prest| particular mention. In this hereto-|Slorah, H. Brum, H. J. Leime, P. C Wilson docs not plan to subi tore undeveloped field, mplendid| Davis, chiet of headquarters staff;| ap actual treaty of alliance, | work was done by A corps of loyal. R. D. White, chief of industrial di- the United States and Eng-| wining and energetic women. Under | vision; H. L, McCloy, chief of the lexander, chairman of the | active charge of the luncheons, which business district commit-| were held daily for the solicitors and nd Mrs, B.| their commanders, Carl Bush, as sistant secretary, and other mem. bers of the staff and of the organ fzation on numerous occasions gave enemy. this pr some fac: ‘of either side appear inclined) from the accepted attl-) regarding the treaty. The So federation of the Seine de- t, it was announced, passed ts today declaring the! worse than that of Brest-| According to the resolu-| the terms “violate self-determi- | and “show the tenperialiera | ind and France to the coming #¢# | the leadership of Mra. Uidgar Ames,| woman's committee, and the scores) RESPONSIRILITIES: Of congress. Instead, he mere-| county chairman, and Mrs. Fred-| of accountants, filing clerks and 4% | ‘The reaponsibilities section will tends to present the proposal) erick Bausman, city chairman; Mrs.|sistants at the headquarters and the carry the same provisions for a ‘Buch an alliance. David J. Grant, executive secretary;! various banks of the city. | | Mra. Raymond R. Frazier and Mrs.) «Division commanders, in addition |acta aa the German treaty, There! | H. M. Stryker, vice chairman, the/t 4, Band C, were W. Dwight) will be no provisions, however, for | you think of advertising | | results secured by thie division are| yiead, “Dy Rhodes, J.| trial on political charges, thus as-| think of The Star. deserving of the highest praise. Mra.| i gpangler, Pp. H. Watt, “G uring that former Emperor Karl| F. W. Bert, §r., chairman, and Mra. R. F. Wee’ jce chairman of the solicitation committee; Mra. Gunnar Lund, chairman of speakers’ bureau. Mrs. Clinton R. Douglas, Miss Ger- trude Hardenbergh, Miss Mary Dela- field and many others are deserving Of special mention in the woman committee work. Chamber Helped “Special thanks are due the Cham- ber of Commerce and Commercial Club. At an early stage, the or- ganization was taken over by the civic bureau, and the services of its director, Rt. Guerin, were tender. Peptiron Gives vigor and nerve tone to aged and infirm, and those worn-out from overwork, worry, excitement or close confinement in or shops. Made by C. 1. Hood Co, Lowell, Mass, Nathan Roberts, Money to Loan at || 54% ta 7% | No Commission Om any plan most desired. Straight mortgage plan for one, two or three years, Work “fer Twenty-Five Years Annual payment plan for one to ten years, Monthly payment plan, where you pay any amount at any time—with a minimum payment of only $1 a $100 borrowed—in- cluding the interest, Washington Mutual Savings Bank The Oldest and Largest Strictly Gavings Institution in ‘Washington DREAMING He drea that he'd been chasing ‘The Germans luis toe mi wi fow Had torn a good bed sheet. “ | for {Will Be Reduced to Third chairman of accounting department. | the advertising section, was loaned %——— a Clifton W. Wardall, chairman King |to act ax secretary of the publicity! | Continued From Page One | county outside of Beattie, and com- | committee. 8. Costello, gecretary | %———-——-——— % great vindictiveness to-| mander of divisions A, Band C; Wal. of the members’ council, was in slong the same line as those of the German treaty, save that the cond! tions will be infinitely easier, owing to the break-up of the empire. war debts Czecho- Slovaks, farians and Austrians in the propor | tions while they were a part of the empire. ernments, the remainder being ‘kstein, “Hi; Cheater 1.| will escape the fate of Wilhelm Ho E | wuperintended by a special commis |wion under the league of nations lany change in their position regard. ing Fiume and the Dalmatian coast | President Wilson also ‘® understood jt be standing firm on this question, tele for camp y satiefactory ‘$2.59 CO. 1 So. Eleventh St., Tacoma |AUSTRIA TERMS ARE OUTLINED Class Nation by Treaties Pre. be shared by the JugoSiave, Hun wil tion of their interest in the obliga REPARATIONS: A permanent financial comminsion Will be established to handle indem. | nities as in the German treaty. The! former parts of the empire will be| required to make any initial pay-| ment with the means of thelr gov. | lected by the comméasion. trial of thowe guilty of eriminai| Navigation of the Danube will be The Itallans have not indicated According to available information thia subject has not been taken up formally since the return of the Italian delegates to the peace confer: ence. Premier Clemenceau, For eign Secretary Balfour and Premier Venizelos met at Wilson's house yes terday, and it was rumored that they discussed Italy's claims in the light of the et of London, ‘The military terms will be largely & matter of the alli going on rec ord an to what their demands are, as Austria-Hungary's defeat was so complete it i# doubtful if any large number of guns or munitions can be found. Certainly no organtaation is left. The Hungarian fortifications also are practically useless Irishmen Say Erin Must Be Set Free DUBLIN, May 12.—(United Press.) ~—¥Frank P. Walsh, Irish-American delegate to the peace conference, de- clared in a speech before the Irish parliament here last night that world peace is impossible without Irish independence. Michael Ryan and Edward Dunne, other members of the delegation, also spoke. They were introduced by Wdward de Va- lera, head of the Irish government, PRESQUE ISL one who didn’ in the Methodist Episcopal church here placed a stick of’ dynamite in \caune if a man is a fool the beat | sear namaste re THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, MAY 12, 1919. President Explains U. S. Aims- SAYS NATION PROVES IDEALS Sent 2,000,000 Men to Aid in Cause of Liberty PARIS, May 12. — President Wilson, speaking before the French Society of Political Selence, of which he was eect ed an honorary member, subd the United States had sont | 2,000,000 men to Eurape to prove — its ideads, “L have been keenly aware that there have been times when the peo | ple of Burope have not understood the people of the United States,” he said, “We have been too often | supposed, in the common phrase, to worship the almighty dollar. have accumulated wealth, we have devoted ourselves to material enter prises with extraordinary success but there has underlain that all the time a common+sense of humanity and a common sympathy with the high prinety of justice which har r grown dim | “It has been my very great joy in these recent months to interpret the people of the United States to the plew of the world, I have ot done more. I have not utt a in my public apacity my private thoughts. IL have uttered what I have known to be the thoughts of | the great people whom I represent. Liberty Conseerated | “We came into the world conse crated to liberty and whenever we neo the cause of liberty imperiled we are ready to cast our lot with) those whone liberty is threatened’ | This ie the spirit of the people of | the United States and they have! been privileged to send 2,000,000 men over here to tell you no, It} has been thelr great privilege not! merely to tell you in #o many} words, but to tell you in men and material—the pouring out of their wealth and the offering of thetr| blood | “Bo, may I not take to mynelf the pleasant thought that in joining this company I am joining it in some sense as & representative of the United States? Because my duties in the field of political science have been hardly more than my efforts as a public man, they have consti tuted an attempt to put into words the thoughts of a nation, the atti tude of a people toward public af. faire German Thought Bad | “A great number of my colleagues nm American university life got their training in political science in Ger man veraition. i have been) obligated at various times to read a/ great deal of bad German, difficult German, awkward German and I have been aware that the thought was | as awkward as the phrase, that the thought was rooted in a fundamental misconception of the political life of & people. “And it has been a portion of my effort to disengage the thought of American universities’ teachers from the mixguided instruction they have received on this side of the sea. Their American spirit anticipates moat of them as a matter of course, tut the form of the thought sometimes missed them “They mpeak too often of the state asa thing which could ignore the In-| dividual, as a thing which was privi leged to dominate the fortuné of men by a sort of inherent and sacred authority. Now as an utter demo- erat, I have never been able to ac cept that view of the state. My view of the state is that it must stop and) listen to what the individual has to | say, no matter how humble and com. | mon the individual may be. I have always been among thore | who belleve the greatest freedom of | speech waa the greatest mfety, be- | thing to do ig to encourage him to/ advertine the fact by speaking. It cannot be #0 easily discovered if you allow him to remain silent and look wine, “So it ie by the exposure of fools that it Ix defeated; and in this free | alr of free epecch men get into that | sort of relationship with one another | which constitutes the basis of all common achievements.” SOLDIERS AND CONVICTS WIN Fight Battle With Gend- armes in Naples Streets PARIS, May 12.- (United Press.)— A battle occurred last night on the streets of Naples between liberated convicts and soldiers on one side and gendarmes on the other, a Rome dispatch to L'Information reported | today. The soldiers and convicts, defeat ing the gendarmes, captured the courthouse, The gendarmes took refuge in the carbineers’ barracks, opposite, where they were later re. inforeed by a battalion of loyal troops, the dispatch said. Order was ored after an houe's fighting. Three thousand shots changed, The casuaitie ported, were 14 wounded, 15,000,000 Buyers Took V Bond Issue WASHINGTON, May 12,—15,000,- 000 American citizens subscribed to the Victory Liberty Loan, according to unofficial estimates turned in to the treasury department, Sunday, by federal’ reserve banks. The amount subscribed will not be officially known until May 26, There were 4,000,000,000 purchas: ers in the first, 9,400,000 In the see ond, 17,000,000 in the third and 21, 000,000 purchasers in the Fourth Liberty Loan, LONDON, May 12.—Would y’ be- Neve it? Life in the army has driven the Britisher away from the cold bath habit. There were hot baths everywhere in the rest bil- lets, and mighty small chance for a cold plunge except when station- ed on a river, Now the mon who've come back complain that the instrument as a means of silence |the morning tub gives them colds ing it. The scheme worked Seaineaamideaete tia and rheumatism . by if it isn’t hot, \ Every one of them has chair, in plain sight of all. WE HAVE THE VERY BEST EQUIPMENT THAT MONEY CAN BUY Every modern facility for the performance of found in this offic VERY BEST. We have the best and most eftective methods proper sterilization of all instruments. first importance. All dressed in spotless white at all times while on duty. We use the very best of materials. These are the cheap- est in the long run and in fact it is the only way that the right kind of dental work can be turned out. We guarantee all our work. Our guarantee is ironclad and means jist what it says—if you have work done at this office and it does not give you entire satisfaction, come back to.us and we will make it right. TO PLEASE AND SATISFY OUR PATIENTS 18 OUR FIRST CONSIDERATION We aim to #0 please and satisfy you when you come to us for dental work that you will return to us at any time in the future that you need our services, Not only that, but we are depending on having you so well satisfied that you will feel justified In recommending us to your friends when they need firet class dental service. WHAT HAS BEEN THE RESULT OF DEALING WITH THE PUBLIC THUS? Wo started a few years ago with a very smal! office. Dr. Clark himself was about the whole force, Today we have one of the largest and best equipped offices in the United States, (ur business has grown like the proverbial snowball. Our satis: fied patients have sent their friends to us—these have in turn sent THEIR friends, and thus an endless chain has been formed which has resulted in our business growing wonderfully. Ae we have grown we have established @ repu- tation for square dealing. This reputation of ours we now hold to be easily the most valuable of all Regal Dental Offices. DR. L. R. CLARK, Manager 405 Third Avenue In Every Respect Seattle's Leading Dentists, Diagonally Across the Street From the Postoffice, Be Sure to Get to the Right Place, LADY ATTENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES ~ WILL HE SIGN IT? Bite yonvincing Reasons Why You Should Choose This Dental Office! WE HAVE A STAFF OF GRADU- ATE REGISTERED DENTISTS HERE TO SERVE YOU raduated from a good dental college and has then passed the examination of the state dental board. Every operator in this office has his cer- tificate from the state dental board hang- ing right on the wall in front of his dental inless dentistry will be . We have spared no expense to give the people of Seattle the This is a matter of our attendants and operators are el esiitainmenr Ll] we ‘um Z ae ‘ { 4 better for the DR. L. R. CLARK our possessions. While our office equipment is of the very best and represents an investment of thousands of dollars, if we should lose it, it could be quickly replaced and we could go right ahead doing business. But we realize thoroughly that should we lose our reputation and the confidences of the people, our plight would indeed be a sorry one. So you may be sure that we guard ou reputation with jealous care. We are not going to have @ single person go away from our office dissatisfied if it lies in our power to prevent it, FREE EXAMINATION We invite you to call at Sur office and let one | of our expert dentists give your teeth a thorough examination. He will tell you just what is needed | to put your teeth into perfect condition and alao just what the cost will be. You will be surprised to find how small this cost will be under our low price system: This examination and estimate won't cost you @ cent nor will it put you under any obligation to have work done unless you want it. | It is about time that you gave yourself the | advantage of @ good set of teeth, N. W. Corner Third and Union

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