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MOVES TO BASEMENT d Out of Old Location, Rogers Moves Entire Stock to Basement at 1413 First Ave., Across the Street From Central Public Market. Entire $60,000 Stock | to Be Sacrificed Saturday. President Suspenders, | at 68e; $2.00 and 15e Can- | its | Men's 0c $2.00 Dress Shirts Underwear at 9c Gloves at %. $8.00 Boys’ § to $3.45, f The above are just a few of the i that go tnto effect tomorrow, y. Having been forced out hia old location into the street, has moved his entire stock @ basement at 1413 First Avenue, South of Pike Street—and it is ‘thia basement that Rogers’ great | Front Stock will be sold Satur Bo don't delay—erasp this oppor. | ¥ and come to this basement, for | ‘will save money on every pur Every dollar you spend at Red Front tomorrow will do t! of two or three—and the rea- 5 for this is obvious. | Over $60,000 stock thrown on sale in & Basernent—practically no rent— | fixtures whatsoever, and absolute: | fancy display show windows. a few steps lead to this bargain | it, but it is here in this base- that Rogers’ great Red Front} | Down In a basement, but still on the job. H. M. ROGERS ‘will go on sale tomorrow, Sat ‘This entire stock has been Fe| which we have not room to mention. assorted and arranged on/ for quick disposal—and it will | he sold, both wholesale and retail, s0| B all sold tomorrow at absolutely | take advantage of these low prices come; get your share. fice prices. ire Shoe Stock Included | great Shoe Stock goes to- | at absolutely == ee unheard-of | morrow, and 3 This entire Red Front Stock will Pay Checks Cashed Come to this | wsement to- adly cash ue Front | more of them, | ber of the Boys’ $3.00 Shoes go at $1.48. | your pay R Dress Shoes, valued at $4.00, | Store is st! nion Store, $1.98. Men’s heavy Union-ma Shoes, worth to $5.00, go Over 2,000 pairs Ladies’ High-| > Dreas Shoes, worth to $12.00, Men's Finest Dress and | attention or favor asked, for Rogers Shoes, values from $7.00 cut to $3.85. Suits and Overcoats $15.00 to $13.00 Suits will out at $6.55. Bo at $9.85. Suits, worth to $30.00, at $11.85, Men's $4 $20.00 to $25. Men's finest | made Saturday. de land Mr. R 8tito the Union w to accommodate them, not only with 5° | lowest sale prices, but in any small s particularly to appreciates the valued patronage of | his host of Union friends. | Liberty Bonds Cashed Yes; Rogers will also cash your Literty Bonds on any purchase We are also prepar ed to give mail orders prompt atten- jtion. So take Rogers’ advice—join | be} 00 go 0° kmen and is glad) Khaki and blue uniforms are co spicuous on the University campus demobilization has released many of the 1,217 students who, two years ago, respended to the arms al men who have seen rvice overseas have already regis vg them two marines and who bh returned as since a doughboy ve }easuals to this country “The prominent doughboya were just as at jeau Woods as the is heard about there were remarked Corporal Spaulding, who, as a mem: famous Second division marines, fought in the battle of the Bois de Belleau. In the early part of the drive, his com pany, the 79th of the Sixth regiment, was ordered to attack the town of Bouresches under a heavy ines David L. of the U. & platoon. Ho re wound in the knee, eived & severe but kept on go ed the Hun missiles, 4 small chureh, sistance of two automatic French rifles, they held the position until reinforcements arrived. How He Got PD. 8. C. “There was nothing to do but to go on, I didn’t want to stay bac there in that open wheat field with the German bullets flying,” explain: ed Corporal Spaulding, when at least he was perwuaded to tell why he wears the Distinguished Service Cross. “And when the general jeame a few days later to the bh | pital and gave me this decoration, I was too sick to care about it any way Spaulding River, Oregon They reached | enlisted from Hood rly in the war, and took part in trench warfare on the Verdun front from March, 1918, un tl June, wh he was sent up with the other pic the hole In the French lines at Cha | teau-Thierry He im registered student in the sch of business ad ministration at the iversity. Wears French Cross Jack Dand, also sour in a as a first year nowned Sixth U. 8, marines, which Fecelved more citations than jother overseas regiment. |the French unit dec Fouragere, a red and green cord, which denotes four citations. go at $1.45 and Men's All-wool | the crowd of money savers and come |The French Legion @’Honneur was > regular price $12.50, Basement Prices $4.00 Sweaters have been re to $1.23, and $1.50 Work Shirts been cut to 65c. Handkerchiefs Men’s $3.50 Union Suits go Saturday and, last but not least, $2.50 Union-made Overalls will } Saturday at exactly one-half of other items on sale, ! £0 | down to Rogers’ basement tomorrow, also conferred on this group of | where the great Red Front Stock is temporarily stored. Sale Starts Saturday, 9 A. M. Sharp RedFrontClothingCo. 1413 First Avenue, in Basement Directly Below Flag Theatre—Just South of Pike Street —Opposite Frye’s Central Public Market eo Park Natatorium 29th.— Advertisement. opens peg ed or — | Northwest Be eas tar ¥ Star W: Ship Yard Men! | OLDS Nene ' Here are just the shoes for which you are looking. Heavy soles, stout uppers, comfortable shapes— good looking shoes, fit to wear anywhere. And the prices have been greatly reduced in our Removal Sale at 903 Second Ave. Both tan and black shoes, ....$6.85 and $7.85 At $2.95 we have several hundred pairs of Ladies’ Shoes sizes up to 4%. in In- cluded are blacks and tans and combination effects. Other shoes with more complete runs of sizes are priced HOe oc vcccs sre OO up 85 We are also offering big bargains in dependable shoes for children. You Can Save DOLLARS By Trading at TURRELL SHOE CO. 903 Second Avenue Burke Bldg. American sea-and-land Dand's home ts in Seattle. Dwight Hawley, a doughboy of the old Second Washington, fighters, call to} boche | fire, which almost mowed down his | ing with the six soldiers who eacap-| member of the fe where, with the as | THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH T RED FRONT STOCK |Many War Heroes Now Register’ for Classes at the University Schumacher Studio Jack Dand, American marine, nous “Sixth,” who has returned to more gencetul fields of pursuit.at the “C a t , | t weer devil dogs to plug | | —sacobe Htudio Corporal David L. has become a student at the uni versity after pioneering with the | ® student in the | marines on French battleficide for department, spent two weeks | several tion on the Champaign front.| gynting at Belleau Woods, was likewise a member of the re-| awarded the Cross. months, For participated In the battle of Chateau Thierry and received wounds which nent hi back to € lewie as 4 convalescent, has taken work at the University of Washing | ton, who! Davies, More Register Two other overseas men, Myron Where Can I Find Relief From Itching, Terrifying Eczema? This Question Is Ever on the Lips of the Afflicted Eesema, Tetter, Erysipelas, and other terrifying conditions of the akin, are deep-seated blood dineases, and applications of salves, lotions and washes can only afford tempo- rary relief, without reaching the real seat of the trouble. But just because local treatment has done 0 ZOU Be good, there f¥ no reason to ir. You simply have not of pos the proper treatment that is within your reach. You have the experience of others who have suffered as you have to guide you to a prompt riddance of blood and skin diseases. No matter how terrifying the irritation, no matter how unbearable the itching | and burning of the skin, & 8. 8. will Promptly reach the seat of the trouble blood every trace of wuffered as you have. This grand blood remedy has been used for more than fifty years, and you have only to give it a fair trial to be re stored to perfect health. Our chief medical adviser in an authority on blood and skin disor ders, and he will take pleasure in giving you such advice as your in-| dividual case may need, absolutely without cost. Write today, de seribing your case, to Medical partment, Swift Specific Co. Switt Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. DENTISTRY . Leok into your mouth and {¢ your gums are sloughin #0, you hat Disadis, 5 S80-CALLED— ‘once to prevent com- such as rheumatism, our office you will find all li- cenaed operators and masters of the dental profession. Special care taken ef children’s teeth. Examinations and _ estimates free. Ironclad rantee for 15 years on all work. A le. discount given to all union men and their families. United Painless Dentists 08 Third Av. Phone Klleitt 3632. Bank of California National Association Satablished 1864. Kesources Over $100,000,000.00 Foreign Departmert Our position in the Foreign Ranking Field for over half « century has enabled us to firm. ly establish wide relations among the largest and strong- est institutions of the world. We gladly offer you the fa cilities gained by our experi ence for the extension of the foreign end of your business, The Bank of California National Association SEATTLE BRA GEO. T. 8. WHITE Manager GODFRE WAKEMAN Fr. MACKLEM J.C. GLASS Assistant Managers, Eat Less Meat If Back Hurts Take a glass of Salts to flush Kidneys if bladder bothers you Rating meat regularly eventually produces kidney trouble in some form or other, says @ well-known au- thority, because the uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they be- come overworked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress particularly backache and misery in the kidney region; rheumatic twinges, severe bac ches, acid stomach, constipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness, bladd nd urinary ir ritation, The moment your back hurts or kidneys aren't acting right, or “4 | flush ele a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to ged kidneys and stimulate al activity; also to new vclds in the urine so it irritates, thus ending bladder alte cannot injure anye makes a delightful . effervescent lithia-water drink which millions of if} men and women take now and then bladder bothers you, get about four| to keep the kidneys and urinary or. ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy, take @ tablespoonful in Bind te rent \ fans clean, kidney Spaulding, who conspicuous he was Distinguished Service up a chief petty officer in the| and forever rout from the! the disease, | just aw it has for others who havel 1 thus avoiding serious navy aviation detachment at Ror. deaux for 15 months, and Leroy Ar- mond, Who spent #ix months at an American aviation camp in England, have also returned to the more peaceful environs of the campus. | Bince the arrival of the 6rd Coast tillery and ite quota of former * boya, it te wcted that the new quarter will tntroduce more | overseas cape on the greenaward, MUST ABSORB LABOR SLACK Public Works Must Aid Con-| | ditions, Senator Says } BY ROBERT L. OWEN | 8. Senator From Oklahoma, ‘Chairman Senate Banking and Currency Committers, ‘The immediate great problem in| America is the full activity of all tts | | productive forces. Men must be employed at fair liv. | ing wages in order to be fed, clothed | and sheltered | This is the task | ‘The government of the nation and latates can cooperate in many tm }| portant ways | The employment agencies of the states should be vigorously stimulat ed now to cooperate with the gov: | ernment employment agencies. | Concrete steps should be taken to} assist the returning soldiers to find| immediate employment | Britixh Are Busy | ductive output, and king goods plen men dear should) | | increase thelr pr | the principles of tiful and makir be recognized | In London, 809 representatives, | representing 11,000,000 members of | the labor unions, are in conference with 300 representatives, represent ing organized employers, with a view to co-operation industrially that labor and capital shall, by mu tual ¢ eanion, bring the man pow er of England to the highest produc tion. In America the same policy should be observed. End Industrial War The time has forever passed when | industrial autoeracy ean impose with | safety the conditions of human life. | Industrial democracy is the new! order, and must be extablished. | Brain and capital employing labor must unite with brain and brawn, delivering labor in a program in which the laboring men should be Invited to co-operation. | re should b end to war be tween labor and capital. The old | Program "do an 1 tell you or get out” ought to be abandoned for the sake of capital and labor alike. The Siamese Twins cannot profitably | fight each other think the government of the United States and the governments of the states whould take steps to absorb by public works any labor left unemployed im our industrial Ute And a very large means of em: ployment could be provided by stim }ulating cities to improve thelr mu nicipal conditions; by stimulating counties to build hard-surfaced | roads, connecting the cities and the j counties with each other; by having the states build highways for state | purposes, and by having the nation | build hard-wurfaced roads, connect ing the states with each other by na- tonal highways. The system of roads should be de | veloped along the lines of the | Fremch system, with trunk nes con | nected up with provincial and local lines, tying every community to the |aystem, with the highest class en | gineering system available for all, thru a central government inatitu: | tion | I think the United States and the | wtates could profitably erect plants for making Portland cement to be | used exclusively in these public work’, #0 that road-building should not be retarded by artificial prices | being placed upon the materials es- | sential for this purpose. It is pos. | sible to co-ordinate the statutes of the states with the statutes of the national government in euch a way | complete co-opera las to work out tion. Concrete results can only be ob- | tained by well formulated plans a quate to produce the results, for things do not happen themselves. | They must be made to happen | SPOKANE GIRL GETS | LEGACY OF SOLDIER} SPOKANE, March 28.—A legacy of $10,000 has been left Miss Laura | Critzer, of this city, under the will | of her fiance, James Wallace White, | | British war veteran, who died recent lly in Exeter war hospital, England | White, disabled by wounds, met Miss Critzer here last summer, while | touring the United States, and their was announced Miss Critver notified that papers pertaining to her bequest were being forwarded White waa the son of the late Wm, White and Mra. White, of Rusheen, Ireland. He contracted influenza during his voyage from America to his home, and died from pneumonia, which followed. Frisco Gets Busy on Russian Trade Advices from San Francisco indi cate that an organized movement is launched to snatch Siberian trade the Southern city utilizing shipping board vessels and Russian ships of the former volunteer fleet. T advices have been received by shipping men and the Chamber of Commerce. WEST AFRICA BOOZE TRAFFIC IS CURTAILED) LONDON, March 28—-The gov- | ernment has prohibited the impor- tation of all spirits into the British West African colonies except under license, which will not be granted for the importation of so-called “trade spirits,” This decision was taken as @ preliminary measure [Pending a decision on the question | of the permanent prohibition of the Spyit trade in West Africa, Business men should be urged to | i Seattle’s Largest Upstairs Clothes Shop For Spring Suits and Overcoats That break away from war-time somber- ness and suggest fresh breezes of Spring. Clothes of Quality For our returned soldiers and sailors, and for the men who did their bit here at home. UPSTAIRS We save you money on the finest of clothing “Ready to Wear.” *15 24 A Great Variety of Overcoats Light, Medium and Heavy Weights Tailored Ready Co. 401-403 Pike Street Featuring Waist Seam Models for Young Men See Our Windows on Fourth Ave. | Save Your Body Sa The vital things of life are foods and how you eat them. What is the use of paying high prices for good foods when you cannot properly eat and enjoy them. Give yourself a chance. Do not try to eat good food without a good, reliable set of teeth. Save yourself a world of pain and trouble by making uge of our Free Clinic Open to Everyone—Free to Everyone. Hours— ~*] 4to7 P. M. SEATTLE BELLINGHAM Painless Johnson Dentists Have Opened a Free Clinic and Extracting Room the Ground Floor Right at the Entrance to Their Offices at 1619 Westlake A’ Dr. Johnson Says: The need of better Hygiene is most important, Seventy per cent of our and women are digging their » graves with their teeth, Neglect of the mouth and teeth starts most of the ail ments that tear down and de stroy life. We have ts lished a Free Dental Clini¢ to help the cause of better health through better teeth, s 1619 WESTLAKE AVE, FLATIRON BLDG,’ If your teeth are so bad they cannot be saved, come to our FREE CLINIC and have them pulled out without pain or price. FREE FOR THE ASKING—You will re- ceive expert, up-to-the-minute? licensed and college graduate advice on the proper care of your teeth. PAINLESS JOHNSON DENTISTS. have hundreds of satisfied clients throughout the Sound country who have proved that Pain- less Johnson Dentists really do painless dentistry. AINLESS sOHRSON TISTS