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WOMEN'S SHOES AGAIN REDUCED ‘crnon: OR MORE ON TUESDAY I RECEIVED SOME NEW ORDERS They ran something like this: “Counting from this com- ing Saturday, you have only 7 days more to close out the remainder of that stock—and it must be closed out. We -want it sold. Go through it and reduce prices again! Price every shoe so you know it will sell.’ HERE’S WHAT I DID Began with the Women’s $12.00 to $18.00 Shoes that had been selling at $9.40, and made the price $7.80. Took the $10.00 to $12.50 Shoes that were $8.40 and made them $6.40. The $7.40 and $6.40 groups I combined into one great group at $5.40. These range as high as $12.00 in value. The $5.80 lot is now $4.80; the $4.80 group $3.80; the $3.80 group $2.80 and the $1.80 group are all now $1.00, making by far the greater Dollar selection we have yet shown. Naturally the lines are very much broken now as to sizes, many of them _ containing no sizes above a 4; others 5’s and up in narrow widths only. Small feet and narrow feet never hadsuch an opportunity as this. Instead of waiting a few weeks and paying $10.00 to $18.00, buy now and pay but $1.00 to $7.80—they’re even better Shoes! .. If you realized, as I do, the wonderful values here there would be no ' shoes left at closing time Saturday. Every Seattle woman with small feet _ owes herself several pairs of these splendid shoes. ONLY 7 DAYS MORE | Women’s Shoes $1 to $7.80)" t $18.00 Men's Shoes $2.80 to $8.40: } $12.50 Boys’, Girls’ and Children’s at Big Savings TURRELL’S = oe 80s Second Ave. C. W. SHIVELY SAN FRANCISCO, May 8—Lo,|and sent to Camp Lewis, On March the poor red man. 26th he was demobi Charles Ow! Walk-in-theFouse, cris. aye hn eat the Pree Sioux chief, is stranded with his | “4! ” m given enough lbride in San Francisco without a|™oney to take him back to the Rose | sou. bud reservation, his native haunt. ‘And this after he had left his home | But his bride, hoping to surprixe him, jand fireside to defend his native) sold the family furniture and came land. ~ |to meet her soldier husband. Owl “Huh! What good bein’ dough-|was overjoyed, and because there boy?” he asked sententiousty as he| was not enough money to thke thefh sat this morning at the placement) both back home they went out and bureau of the state committee on re-| had a regular time on the $60 their adjustment, awaiting some transpor-|Uncle Sam gave them. When that jtation from Uncle Sam to take him|was gone the chief pad to go to and Mrs. Walk‘in-the-House back to| work, and ever since the celebration Bonestall, 8. D., where he has 160| fe has been pushing a wheelbarrow acres of perfectly good land and | in a shipyard. friends aplenty. | But Mr. and Mra, Walk-inthe. Chief Owl Walk-in-the House was|House are homesick. They have drafted into Company B of the 38th'had enough of the white lights for battalion of the United States guards the rest of their lives, Ouch: Sore, Touchy Corns! Lift Corns Out! Doesn't Hurt! Don’t let corns ache twice! Lift any corn on callus off with fingers—Here’s magic$ No humbug! Any corn,{ Put a few di directly whether hard, soft or between| upon any ‘asin ine core ‘the toes, will loosen right ap] or callas. Instantly the sore- and lift out, without pain. |ness disappears and shortly ‘This ether drug is called) the corn or callus will loosen freezone and was discovered] and lift off with the fingers. by @ Cincinnati chemist, Freezone doesn’t eat out the Ask at any drug store for a} corns or calluses but shrivel mall bottle of freezone, which] them without any irritation. will cost but a trifle, but is} Woment Keep freezone on sufficient to rid one’s feet of] your dresser and apply a few corn Or callus. It is the whenever a corn begina Marvelous drug kaowa. Pain stops, corm govet See White Lights—Stranded || TOURIST RATE. | GASE DROPPED |Northwest May Have to Fight Battle Again Altho reduced westbound touri#t rates for the coming summer have been announced, there will be no special rates for Westerners going | Bast, according to announcement of | the United States Rafiroad adminia- tration, Kaatern tourists will get 10 per cent reduction from the regu: |lar rates when coming West. The Interstate Commerce commis sion Thursday disminsed the action, pending for several years, to abolish the special rate, which permitted Kastern tourints to come Weat by | the Southern route $17 cheaper than | by way of Northern points. The rate was the cause of a bitter fight made by Northwest interests several years ago to do away with [special favoritiam shown the South ern routes, Since the ‘ernment’ has taken over the railroads they |e a abolished all touriat rates, so the decision has no effect at the pres: ent time, When the roads are re- turned to private ownership it may be necessary to wage the fight all over again, according to Charles | Reynolds, who represented this state |when the fight was made tn Wash- ington two years ago. WOMEN SEEKING "POST IN LEAGUE | Demand Part in Handling of | Labor Problems BY HAROLD EF. BECHTOL | (Bure ean Manager of N. B. A.) | PARIS, May %—At least one American woman on the perma. nent labor bureau of the league of nations— Two American women advisors to the Amertcan delegate at the first International labor convention in Washington next October— These are the high spots of the program belng preased upon the peace conference by the National Women's Trade Union League of America, The delegation from this league, representing the thousands of or- ganized women workers in Amert- ca, arrived in Paris just after the completion of the labor report drawn up by Samuel Gompers’ | committee. They hare since been meeting Pence officials In an endeavor to get broader representation § for women in the new scheme of things. Rose Schneiderman, one of the delegates, told me that the two demands stated above are the con- crete proposals of the immediate broader representation of women which they are pressing, but that thelr program is by no means con- fined to this, “By the terms of thé labor re- port before the peace conference the labor delegate from each of the big nations to the annual tn- ternational convention are to have four advisors,” she explained. “Naturally if there is to be but one labor delegate it should be a man. Tho I do not mean by this to give any endorsement to the one-labor-delegate-out-of-four plan. “But jf this plan goes thru, women workers afe certainty en- [titled to have two of the four ad- visors provided for each labor delegate. “And we certainty feel that the women of each nation, but at least the workingg women of America, |must be represented on the per- manent labor bureau. In that way we may keep in touch with the |progresn of women workers in other nations, We may be in a position to know what is going on, and to be ever on the lookout for means to advance women workers’ interests.” : ngage RRO Leads Plays for | | Yanks Overseas | | SHERRY - Laura Sherry will be heard from often “over there.” She's director of the Over There Theatre league, which is staging. plays thru France and the German districts occupied by the Amerieans, She formerly played with Richard Mansfield, and her husband is a big paper mill owner in Wisconsin, RADICAL INFLUENCE GROWS IN DENMARK (N. E. A. Special to The Star) COPENHAGEN, May 9.--Work- men’s, Fisherman's and Boldier’s councils are being formed in Den- mark and are agitating for a general strike in favor of radical govern- mental changes, Communistic gov- THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1919. 4 | | fades ‘ODD TROUSERS Large, new addition to our stock of odd Trousers. You save money if you buy them here. upstairs. We keep right on telling it be- cause we believe quality pays, for you and for us. We have quality clothes to back up our talk, and we believe that our clothes are the best you can get. If we knew of better clothes to buy we’d buy them. You can readily see, once you try on a LUNDQUIST - LILLY Suit, that for style; for good looks, for easy, perfect fit, it is as near to perfection as it is possible to i ~ attain. Suits and Overcoats $15.00 It pays to buy your clothes You positively save money, whether it be a suit, or a hat, or an odd pair of trousers. stylish, HATS $2.50—$5.50 These Hats, in many shades and_ shapes, striking. These prices mean money saved to you. are LUNDQUIST-LILLY Upstairs Clothes Shop Joshua Green Building ——— Are the School Teachers Valuable as Scrub-Women? BY MARGUERITE EDWARDS ‘What is @ school teacher worth to the community? ‘Worth as much as 4 scrub woman, a laundress, a ditch digger? ‘ Money talks, they say—and If it’s true, money says the teacher is NOT. School teachers haope bis been ing mildly, and sadly, for yearn, that they were underpaid, that they could barely live on their salar- ies. But they kept on living and teaching, and guiding and loving our children—#o nobody paid any atten- ton. Now, suddenly, a great many per- sons are beginning to pay attention, for echool teachers are QUITTING WORK. They aro turning to other professions. The normal achools, ‘which train teachers, have few to train. Those now in the profession who can leave it are leaving, and to now teachers take thelr places. To meet the war emergency, the govern- ment Itself issued pleas for more teachers, accepted part time teachers, even urged married women to give pb of their time to teaching. All to no avail. A sane womangwill not accept an ill-paid job when she can get a better job at more salary. the reports of the United States bureau of education itself, an unques- tioned authority. The average salary Paid school teachers in the United States during the year 1918 was $243 a year LESS than the average wago of scrub women in the United States navy yards! A recent study of teachers’ salaries in New York city showed that during the last five years, while teachers’ salaries remained practically un- changed, the cost of living Jumped 75 per cent, In two years the wages of industrial workers increased 60 per cent. It required 19 years for the teachers’ salaries to advance 11 per cent, ‘There are 600,000 teachers in Amor- loa, Of thes 100,000 are less than 20 years old. Thirty thousand have had no education beyond the eighth grade, and 200,000 have bad less than @ completo high school training, At the very time when the greatest, demands are put upon the public schools to train children as true Americans, to give them technical training for self-support and cultural training for happiness, to guard their morals, perfect their manners and make normal and useful their minds and bodies—at this time the wages 4th and Pike fession, and inferior workers put in charge. The problem of living wages for teachers is not a “class problem.” It is the question of whether school boards and public shall decide that for American children “nothing ts too good” or that “anything is good enough.” Combing Won't Rid Hair of Dandruff The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it; then you destroy it entirely, To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night, when retir- ing; use enough to moisten the acalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips, Do this tonight, and by morning most, is not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more appli- cations will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all {tching and digging of the scalp will stop at onee, and your hair will be flufty, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any |f drug store. It,is inexpensive and never fails to do the work.—Adver- tsement. i 1 | } 4% %. Signed by 110,000,000 People That ts what the Vic | tory Liberty Loan really | is. One Hundred and Ten Million American people solemnly pledged to pay | the bill. The rate. of interest, Can you find « better investment for the money you have saved?. ‘We trow not.