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Fraser-Paterson Co. Two Importamt Sales of Women’s Tailored Swits $17.50 |$25.00 AT $17.50 are offered exceptional values in tailored and semi-tailored suits of poplin, serge, gabardine and tweeds and mixtures. Correct styles, velvet and braid trimmed, notched and convertible collars. In navy blue, black, brown and two-tone mixtures ts that regularly sold at $25.00, 0, Special on Wednesday $17.50 are ad $4 AT & he suits are splendid high grade tailored models in fine serges, tricotines, gabar dines, velours, ete. Sizes 40 to 48 only. Medium length coats, some braid and embroider? trim- med. Navy blue, bright blue, brown, green, plum - and Oxford. $65.00 and $75.00 values, F New Jewelry New Bland Bags — Sprig Styles B HE Handbag Section, first floor, is Arrived Novelties That Are ring Called for Daily . - ed showing a number of Novelty ~ $1.00 w 8 Spring Bags, among which those + Beauty Pins, gold tops.. . B5¢ to 50e of silk, moire and satin, these being or Spot Pins, extra quality ‘ 50¢ shown in all colors to match or harmon- Santoirs, black grosgrain ribbon, gold filled ize with the approved shades for “ siides The spring. —Ribbon Ws Bands, solid gold stides.. $2.00 Frames are of silver and self-cov- b- @ —Ekeglass ¢ gold filled soldered chains ered, linings are rich colored silks. o 50¢ ‘They are designed with drop mir- sa all gold filled wires rors, many with inside frame pocket. " 50¢ to $2.00 Priced .. $5.00 to $17.56 4 50¢, 75¢, $1.00 Fraser-Paterson Co. Firat Floor “" 4 —Coro Veil Pins, sterling silver set with bril - | Mantes ioe . B5¢ 2 ie aterson Co. First Floor. Photo Frames = - | Special 35c Another splendid special in photo frames for Wednesday. Posteard sizes up to 8x10 inches. Brown and gold, green and gold and pretty tones of gray all new in perfect at each \ New Shipment of Patent Leather Belts —New black patent leather Belts, 2,3 | and 4-inch widths. All sizes. Priced from ...50¢ to $1.00 raser-Paterson Co, First Floor. 1 for one day only BSe a, A Special Price Basement Clearance of Women's Coats, Suits fi and Dresses ze at a Remarkably Low Price $7.50 —A price that in many instances is just about half their former Special Price Basement prices, and you know that everything in the Special Price Basement is bought and sold at a special price. —The Coats are splendid models in seasonable fabrics, in sizes 14 to 46. —The Suits are of navy and black serge in tailored models with kit coney trimmings. —The Dresses are serges in navy blue, brown, green and wine and a few Silk Dresses in several colorings. Every garment a big snap at Wednesday’s special price................$7.50 COCOCOOOOO OOOO OOO OOOO OOOO OOSOOOO OOO OO OOOO OO OOOOOOOOOOOOEEEOD08 | “HARRIMAN OF THE AIR” PLANS | AMERICAN-CANADIAN AIR SERVICE 4 BY FREDERICK M. KERBY =| We will get all the pilots we need | United States.” N. E. A, Staff Correspondent. (from the 2,500 Canadian aviators! ‘The new air king's purchase in NEW YORK, F 11.—Roy U. hoe are pigerie aed from Prerseas.| cludes 350 Curtiss JN-4 training apes * We expect such success from the : ‘ onge: a. man of the planes, 1,000 Curtiss OX engines o cy, t hecaune |{itial Canadian operations that the | 99 hors arate of ‘his purchase of ten million is] en is bili tothe | quantit rs, spare parts lars’ worth of Canadian government extra fuselages, etc. The price paid aircraft equipment, st aerial r the material, which cost the lines for carrying freight, passen adian = government, originally gers, express and mail +4 }sorme ten million dollars, Mr. Con Starting in Canada, these commer 0 Ing lu ger refused to reveal. He expressed €ial air lines are to be extended into the opinion, however, that he “got the United States a bargain.” At the offices of the United Air entire purchase was financed Rogers’ will craft Engineering corporation, at 52 by the United Aircraft Engineering Vanderbilt ave. the new air mag corporation, of which F. Db. Ditfin for crias-crossing the ky with Conger is the controlling interest assenger lines There will be no stock for sale to 1 lines cannot be given i his air service entirely “on his out as yet," he said, “for the deal t ll own." I have not yet had time to work out { plang fully ; STOCKS BONDS Orv first big job, of course, | Siren Ge peice sa8' ocher LIBERTY BONDS equipment which we h. purchas ANY AMOUNT—ANY ISSUE ed, It is mcattered over Canada ir BOUGHT—SOLD—QUOTED MACFARLANE & HALL Elliott 1324 605 Lowman Bldg. GRAIN COTTON assembly will just outside of I have former six flying fields. The be made at Leaside, Toronto, Aquarters. appointed Erteson, our he F. G f engineer for Canadian Air. “ eg eee nen, Ltd,, ae general manager. | ASK FOR and GET Aw soon as assembly of the} es 9 the establishment of air lines, la ing out landing fields and’ air The Original routes and starting to carry light Malted Milk express matter er on we will| For Infants and Invalides take passengers, and may carry OTHERS are IMITATIONS (® mail for the Dominion government. THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1919 A FEW THOUGHTS ON DEMOCRACY, FREEDOM, THE GENERAL STRIKE, BOLSHEVIK RULE AND THE U, S. BY AUSTIN K. GRIF |referendum, or the direct power to The other da 1 heard a labor lead. | pass or veto laws Our govern rtray the pertl of the “clade war."| and direct: democracy St Shire fgeyte Dy tabteccel aig Ph: Look to Evolution | I would expect the agreement kept All sensible people are ready for| for business cannot sucgeed untews | Political evolution—for peaceful re-| table, But if living conditions are| construction by majority rule. In vitally changed, 1 would not object to| the words of Lloyd George, they 1—-not a commodity. Historically | "9d practical equitable equality naidered, la unions of Britain ut our people will not tolerate ast hundred year the st/allembracing democracy for chaos, hele factor for human betterment.| nor for the dictatorship of a class This I have often sald before oligarchy, Violent’ upheavals are While hearing this ad: » I won| followed by reactions nis in an red how this country, a man of open lesson of history, Hut lessons and Intelligenc uld approve | Of history and warnings of prudence inne and “clasn| are alike wasted on conceited radi wa | cals A Free ¢ y | These men clamor for economic This is a free country, If a man| equality, They want it quick, thru wants to be “class Q jou he can | Violence, They would throw away If & man is too small to be an| Our progress that has put us cen Amerian, he is free to size up in ary | turfes abead of their idolized Russia ole he wishes Ifa man wants to would throw away a friendly break the tide of resol robust ventiment and common sym. fty, fourequare Americanism h y for a thorogoing program of tu t for, he in free to| reconstruction. For what? For a 1 then to hide in any class of all people? No. for thelr own class autocracy free. If a man! To this end they foster a general war,” he can, If| strike. I say noth wgainet a di h tolerance in one | fect strike for suffictent cause. But nd clus hatred in the next,|@ general atrike lets loose forces and We revel in f passions before which the original ago I heard labor lenders | Cause ten. y compare the murder al trike over a ningle upheaval with our war | C@use in one industry is camouflage | to wreck the country, It is 1 W W. theory put into immediate prac tice It is nabotage upen society no of Ameri It is civil war ral strike #0 openty plan 1 is nothing less yt to paralyze the fe ivities of gov ernment and to prostrate society. It in, in effect, a civil and eriminal conspiracy against our city, state and nation. It ought to be stopped aracter of this country by the injunctive power of the state and nation. I wondered how men could be so reereant their trust as public Prusslanized Scheme rm responsibility f truth telling multintied (OF) Rut what is the philosophy of the number of hearers. But this country | ders who commit this crime of a sigs tae yy gr Pry eee |Keneral strike? It is the Prumsian | tule x veligious auacks, medical | Palosophy of “frightfulness* applied to what these red leaders are pleased d to call war y bring ruthless war on elvilian on women and babies They aspire chil en. The worst of titem would not even spare hospitals filled with nick Like the Prussianized Germans, these Hunnish leaders of labor be lieve that if they can spread chaos, | ary ror among ina of innocent quacks and all other quacks to prac We riot in|, tice and make vic ma. ‘eodom. population False to Labor There in a fixed fe nervers of these nchool againat 1g among ob 1 radica wd - to] by their cou would. * strike and tr It in believed they they will mucceed. “We shall place people Said one of them this city in much @ position that the H Thus the morale | ike will last but a fow ¢ count on breaking of t thousands of our pe not in thelr wo-called class I the Huns, they are doomed, for our peo- cowards in civil | ple are no more strike than they are in tual war Labor must purge itself of Bol # ballot may can-|sheviern in order to regain public professor out} If an college confidence mince workers in this covert attack upon our | 7 ed capitalivta a thou-| country and institutions to establish | xand to one, they can outvote them | class tyra on our generous | if they want to, a thousand to one. | ¢ racy, nociety ja to be dissolv The al equality. If] « its elements and many of us t have perfect |into thin mist, then those people | snatruct their | who are loyal to their country, who and inetitu-|are loyal to orderly progress, in-| a Having | cluding all le workingmen, must stand t her for inflexit or and security for all lawful bus and for the exercine by every o] of level, thru the ballot. We vote as|his common rights we please are also getting| This in a free country. Free also and more the and'for us ts protect it | x | | DEAD COME BACK | | BY E. C, RODGERS [has come to many an American | WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—Can you| home recently, for boys who have snagine bew Bb you wo rted dead “over there” are you had been told that somebody |* up alive | uu loved had died, and then learned | y weren't killed at all, Merely | that it was not true | akon tity, Wrong identifi that he was|r imbers cabled across, or # horrible in the | | other mistake made report Well, that is the happiness which while I was comb: | The other day ° ing the war department to find out Liberty Bonds if a man reported “dead of wounds received in action” r way dead Rought and Sold John E. Price & Co. 206 Moge Bide. Telephone Main 2364, BLANKETS$1-20 Kirk’s Military Shop 1209 FIRST AVE. nd heard of I ran across in Pn Ree ar ended. imilar reports which had saddened lives of loved ones and had proven untrue | Phone Brings News for he had t Private August Heusser went over from Some Kensington, Pa, last June weeks ago Mra Heusser rr Sa munication from the departinent which told her her | husband been killed in action September 26. Last week the telephone rang in the Heusser home. Mrs. Heusser | ] took down the receiver, It was a . long-distance call Is that you, Audria?”’ asked a voloe wh h thrilled her and startled her. “It's 1, August.” ‘Oh, I'm so glad, for I was notified that you had been killed.” Private Heusser was speaking from Camp Dix, where he had just arrived from France Private Wilbur Pestel , Walter Reed hospital, 1 getting over wounds. The happiest | | person in the world was his mother 1 she came to his cot. She had | been notified by the war department | that her son had been killed in ac tion, And she came to the hospital her which she isn't| wearing now! | “I thought he was dead,” the hap. came to is rapidly | SAVE YOUR EYES FAILING ESIGHT RESTORED BY OUR SYSTEM It In the Something Hesides « Our Glasses Don’t Pay Exorbitant Prices in nourning, OUR OFFER INCLUDES: Ex py mother said, unable to hide the | mination of the eyes, a pair of || tears of Joy and now I find him| hur crystal epherical lenses in a alive Why, 1 can’t say another Bele ses ape word!” five centa, | Sergt. George Schifferer, martne surprised his friends in Baltimore last week by walking in on them He had just returned from France and had been reported killed in ac-| ’ dened home folks. I was told in the adjutant gener als office that wounded men have been Known to cable home to rela tives saying they were well, and Prices Jand that some of them had friends | write home telling that they were|how many Tommies really, they lay at the | identification disks with pals, This is | the same in the French army. Why well, tion nt of death in hospitals. 1 ; why, in some instances, reports of | War Department Not to Blame | «ood health” came from the loved mistakes were made in cabling iden tification tag numbers or in tracing | and French, many a reported them to the right name and address, | soldier will show up, and many a/ saying but points to a recent report of Gen.|man not reported dead now sleeps |leave Russia alone, Hitehcock of the British army FREDERICK & NELSON ~PINE STREET FIFTH AVENUE Tinting a Blouse Rose Pink and at the same time cleansing it, is a simple matter with Sunset Soap Dye, whether the blouse is of silk, wool, cotton, or linen. The colors ob. tainable are quite as varied as the sunset. Price 15¢ cake. “RIT” DYE SOAP washes and dyes in one operation and requires no boiling. In many pastel shades, at 10¢ cake. “ALADDIN” DYE “SOAP colors while it cleans, and is made in a wide assortment of colors. Price 10¢ cake. First Floor. SIXTH AVENUE Full and Flowing Lines Govern The New Coats | | | many, as exampled in the two sketched, having long, soft cape- like folds in back. of wool velour, with of the back gathered to a The Coat at right i the fullne yoke, i vent t side allowing for full belting if desired. To be had in Liberty-blue, Navy or Reindeer shade, with full lining of soft satin. Price $50.00. The Coat at left i silvertone in Vie- tory-blue, cut the smart 38-inch length, with collar paneled in sand- color wool velour, and full-length lining of novelty silk in blue and sand com- bination. Price $65.00. f of in —Second Floor. | A New Tailleur Blouse (As Pictwred) fashioned from heavy La Jerz silk in assorted cok ored-stripe combinations, A model of | smart simplie- ity, with two- in-one collar; carefully fin- ished to the last detail. i Price $11.50. jf —Second Floor, ff is HE DASEMENT TORE | Women’s Silk-and-fiber Stockings, $1.00 Pair Fenner og mixture of silk and fiber-silk is woven into these Stockings, and they are reinforced with double heel and toe and strength- ened with lisle garter top. In Gray, African-brown and White, $1.00 pair. —THE BASEMENT STORE. Women’s Stockings “Seconds” 25c Pair OTTON STOCKINGS in black, white, tan, gray and African- brown, reinforced at heel and toe and finished with wide hemmed top. Sizes 814 to 10, Subject to slight imperfections, hence low-priced at 25¢ pair. ‘THE BASEMENT STORE. Children’s Patent Leather Belts in black, white and red, for wear with Russian-blouse Suits, 25¢ and 50¢ each. -THE BASEMENT STORE. Women’s Knitted Gloves 35c Pair Medium - weight Knitted Gloves in Gray, Beaver, Black, White and Tan, desirable for driving and outing wear, or aj 35¢ pair. THE BASEMENT STORE. lthat some of them afterward died; | said “You would be surprised to know when | American | they do it is beyond understanding. We are always burying the wrong | | army as in the who | forever in France, | Embroideries 10c Yard eo Embroidery Flouncings of | strong cambric, with well-worked edges, 2 to 4 inches wide—especially desirable for trimming women’s and children’s undergarments, 10¢ yard. Beadings and fine Seamings of muslin, cambric and lawn, 5¢, 1 12%¢ and 15¢ yard. babes Baby Flouncings of sheer lawn, with daintily embroidered edge in small pattern, 24 inches wide, 75¢ yard. Allover Embroidery in 22-inch width, embroidered in small pattern, desir- able for nightgown yokes and baby dresses, 50¢ yard. | Venise-pattern Lace Edges for trim- ming neckwear and _ blouses, 10¢, 15¢ and 20¢ yard. Cotton Cluny-pattern Laces in 10-yard bolts, unusually low-priced at 10¢ bolt. —THE BASEMENT STORE. Strap-back Purses ] | —very smart with the tailored suit, | also Envelope Purses with strap at top, lined with silk moire and fitted | with mirror—$1.25. THE Bs MENT STORE Castile Soap, 10c Cake Convenient-size ally-satisfactory $1.00 dozen. kes of this gener- Pp, 10¢ each; or ~—THE BASEMENT STORE Children’s Underwaists, 35c HESE Knitted Underwaists are taped securely, in order to hold small undergarments firmly in place, sizes 2 to 12 years, 35 THE I EMENT STORE. | PLAN LUTHERAN DRIVE Seattle Lutheran leaders are plan- ning their drive for $3,000 for recon- struction work, Lutherans thruout the country will raise $500,000 for |this purpose from February 16 to }26, according to plans. change their It's | The war department doesn’t|one “over there” almost at the time man,” ‘SS RUSSIAN AID OPTICAL CO know how these mistakes were| when report of death came officially | K, Feb. 11.—Mme, Cath- uf 4 made, nor does it know how other | from the war department If the practice of changing identi: /erine Breshkovsks the “grand. lve Optical Spectalints 7 . | | ‘ Phy the brat similar mistakes unnecessarily sad-| The war department doesn't think | fication tags was as common in the |mother of the Russian revolution,” tish ead” in an address bere last night, made an ap to Ami@rica to aid Russia, It would be a great sin to bleeding {wounds unattended,”