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SUPREME COURT ACTION AMAZES Trust Busters Baffled by Steel Decision | | WASHINGTON, March 2 | ernment officials today were B Drink heartily and plexed as to what further “trust ‘ etten ae “Sevated busting” steps should be taken by ] “ the department of justice in light | erson's pure milk of the supreme court decistan hold and you wilt tind Ing that the Un teel cor it the best habit poration waa ny ation in violation of the anti-trust laws. | you can have. If ‘The belief of same of the leading lawyers of the department of justice | was that the decision virtually null fied the Sherman anti-trust law This was the view expressed by the Justices dissenting from the opine! ion your grocer can’t supply you just phone and we will start delivery at © anywhere. bt AY A statement as to the tu & <ON statement as to the future action > pp5m of the government is expected from Attorney General Palmer shortly Government attorneys were eappointed at the tieularty keenly (RIT sersene PasTeuRizeo| MILK ELUOTT 223 nment would b OW ave won and this Writer Sees Men and Women _ Working Side by Side for Humanity belief complicates the future action of the department McReynolds and Brandeis > part in th lecision because ious co tion with ¢ ro VINA. a i i have shared the views of the, WILCOX PUTMAN —, ’ minority yesterday and thus it was! BRIDGEPORT, Conn. March 2 POSLAM § BALM pointed out the court would have |The time will come when a pareee | decided for the government by a 5. the words will not be classified by 4 vote. | Ask for “HILL’S’ ENDS ITCHING SOOTHES SKIN mct of personal ability.” cox Putnam, writer fon of my than a few critics, are Por eczema you must have an ef. FIVE MILLION PEOPLE likely to play a largo part In the; etent re sco true USED IT LAST YEAR molding of opinion of her sex dur ing the coming years ¢ no min it first and for all |= Apply right on the places that burn, ues, “when the quality te each “ye will work for the manity alongside men equal mentally and physically MUST BALANCE INTERESTS equaled by p n ttehing feet Sold everywhere. For fr: Write to Emergegcy | 243 W. ATth st. New sample Laboratories, ork city. TRY STAR WANT ADS and the Bad A dentist can ad- vertise and be eth- ical. When all is said and done about den- tistry, the dentist who saves your teeth is the dentist who benefits hu- manity. I am a graduate and li- censed dentist with years of experience in Washington's largest practice. Advertising is not reducing my benefits to you; it is increasing my use- fulness. Ethics is based upon the retations be tween patient and dentist, and it is not affected by the fact that the den ad vertiaes When a dentist takes tage of the patient's Ignorance in dentistry it is a breach of ethics, and many canes of such breachés come under my pervor advan observation—the work of the ide m who are preaching against my ad The Demand of the Day Is Sanitation vertising There are good, honest dentists not advertising, and also honest dentists advertising Per fection has not been reached by the human race. spare he people of this state My office gives Free advice, which is worth thousands of dollars to ¢! : and f maintain I benefit humanity in greater degree than one who charges for this advice You say Free advice has not the value, as one who pays for it appreciates it more. I say those who measure intelligent advice by what they receive in dollars and cents are in the minority I have thousands of patients who appreciate my advice and it is saving their [] teeth and health. *. You are to judge ‘between the good anf the bad. Who ts educating the pubYe more s than the dentist who correctly advertises good dentistry? bs When I instal] the best equipment, complete in every detail, when I sterilize all instru a) nents, when my patients recetve the care of graduate and licensed dentists associated togeth s er, using the combined experience they have gained during their years of practice, I maintain Pil this combination is of such great value it cannot be measured to you in dollars and cents s But I can measure to you a reasonable cost for which dentistry can be performed and stil = nake @ profit in dollars and cents for myself. Because of my ability to handle volume of Pil susiness under one organization I can reduce the cost to you of your dentistry, . ‘That is one of the very important benefits of the Dr. Wilson organization ® The big majority of the people only have work done that is necessary to #ave some in s lvidual tooth, and not getting their teeth put in the proper condition because they can fT not afford to pay the price as charged by those that conduct their offices upon the P) «omethods brought up from the dark ages. In my office you cannot afford to let your PR teeth go. I will correctly place your teeth in a healthy condition for a known reasonable T] orice, and I guarantee my work to last with a very little effort upon your part—the LP] ame effort that would only be required by your high-priced dentist. Come in once a year “ ind have your tecth examined. This done ad your denfal troubles will be very small . : . ” We extract teeth free for plates and bridges. : 7 Ws wual Examination Free i Bs ', Extraction 50c rs Best Gold $5 00 a Crown ...... ° . . ‘dent $5.00 tridgework. Best Porcelain Crown Best Rubber Plate Obey That Ever-Insistent Impulse and Visit Dr. Wilson Today DR. J.T.WISON v 810% FIRST AVENUE ¥ Opp. Colman Bidg. Phone Elliott 1833 Lady Attendants an’ or ‘woman,’ but rather by the These are the words of Nina Wil whose literary | and rereen productions, in the opin “The time will come,” she contin women who phyateally progress of hu “Do you think women capable of real woman unless she can cook and | sure nd has had her baby’s arm: around her neck, But {t is just as wrong fi nf to devote herself ex unively to those things an it would be for her to refuse them.” Nina Wileox Putnam has decided Posiam Soap, medicated with Pos- | & career should devote themselves | views of the menace to women's) Jam, brightens, beautifies complex entirely to tha she was asked fevelopment contained in Bolshe tons. Decidedty not! No woman is a|¥iam. She believes the slow but development of women thru the ages haw been due entirely to ~|education and its results, bogh upon men and women, and that this de- velopment will not stop unless! ped by Bolshevism. | MENACE | TO PROGRESS | “Bolsheviam,.” she mays, “pute a [restraint upon education, upon |drama, upon literary production of | \any sort. It recognizes women as ical equals of men in a way, yet it does #0 only for the pur pose of using them for tools, It is my opinion that unless women re-| alize that Boisheviem is at heart secking to cut short their develop | |ment they are likely to find them-| |nelves going backward {natead of} Srons” | No mmall amount of attention has | Just been directed towards “Mins” | | Putnam when, after her marriage to! Robert J, Sanderson, district man-| Nina Wilcox Putnam a? work in her favorite costume. ager of the New England Telephone jcompany, she resumed her own resi dence, he returned to his, and she kept her name—Nina Wilcox Put nam. “It'n queer how much people make of such things,” says she, “I went back to my home after being mar ried because I had important work to finiah before I could play awhile So had my husband. And I kept my name because my lawyer. told me it would mean ruin for me to change my writing name.” COMMON SENSE ATTIRE But just now she and her t-year old son by a former marriage, and her husband, are living in his home at Pridgeport At home or in her studio, she may be found attired either in a tweed contume much resembling a riding habit. with puttees, or in black silk Pantaloons, a long Russian smock and with ber black hair drawn away from her face with a red-flowered, yellow silk handkerchief. I'm no allly,” she decrees, “for women to go about the house at tired in a house dress that's harder to keep clean, and more delicate, than an evening gown.” NOTED EDUCATOR MAY BE FIRST WOMAN IN CABINET Mra. Jonephine Corliss Pres ton, of Olympia, be the first woman member of the president's cabinet? It's not improbable if the next president is republican. Mra. Preston, besides being prest- dent of the National Education as fociation, is also superintendent of pubiie inetruction of the state, serv- ing her second term. During the war, Mra. Preston serv- ed on the national committee for emergency war training of soldiers and sailors, and now Chairman Will H. Hays, of the oO. P committee, has picked her an one of the nine women republican leaders for the women’s republican execu- tive committee. She is vice-chair man of that committee for the Weat. And, what's all this got to do with placing her in the president's cabi-| ASPIRIN FOR COLDS Name ‘‘Bayer’’ is on Genuine Aspirin—say Bayer national | of | Tablets Aspirin” in a “Bayer package,” con-| taining proper directions for Colds, |from the secretary of the interior | ing Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Lumbago |and establish the office of secretary | crown t Insist on “Rayer ind Rheumatism, Name “Bayer” neans genuine Aspirin prescribed by |the secretary of war, and the other | °°! physicians for nineteen years, Handy | tin boxes of 12 tableta cont few | ents. Axperin in trademark of} Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetic- widester of Salicylicactd, | oor mao 4 Just Yellow Mustard for Backache, Lumbago Grandmother's old musty mustard plaster or poultice generally brought relief all right, even in the severest cases, but it burned and biistered “Heat canes pain,” duces the in. | Clammation and scatters | congestion, | but you'll find | that while| made of true | Begy’s Mustarine, | yellow mustard an‘ other pain de. |stroyers, is just as hot as the old- fashioned plaster, it Is much quick: | jer. cleaner and more effective and cannot blister. It's a great external remedy—just rub it on whenever aches, pains, in- flammation, congestion or swelling exists and in a very few minutes the relief you have longed for surely arrives, because “Heat eases pain.” | 40 and 60 cents at all druggists or by . Leroy, N, ¥.| mail, 8. C. Wells & C like blazes, |° net? Here's how her friends say it may happen: Congress in considering a bill to take the education department away of education on equal footing with cabinet members, This bill has the backing of nearly all America's edu- cators. It is expected to pans. And if a republican president ts elected, Mra. Preston's backers say she is sure to be the first secretary of education, the first woman in the president's cabinet Mrs. Preston was born tn Minne: Apolis in 1873, She is a graduate of Whitman college, Walla Walla, Wash, She started teaching school in a little frame building in North field, Minn, In 1910 she wus super- intendent of Walla Walla county hools in Washington, a post she held for three terms, In 1912 she appointed by the governor to be a member of the state board of education, and was the same year elected by an overwhelming vote as superintendent of public in- ion. ise has been rapid since she entered po Today she not only he: tion of American educ as the National Education association, but is one of the trusted members of the inner circle of the republican national party ¢ Classes for less money. ue duplicate 8 Broken Lenses 4up! icon, shert notice at reduced pi Free Ruamisation SHE JUST DYES EVERYTHING NEW “Diamond Dyes” Save Shabby, Old, Faded Apparel don't worry 4 perfect results Une “Diamond Dye," guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadelens to any } | fabric, whether it be wool, slik, linen jeotton or mixed goods—d | blounes ings, skirts, children jcouts, feathers, draperies, coverings. | The Direction Book with each! package tells so plainly how to diw-| mond dye over ean not make To match an gint show you Card HAVE DARK AIR AND LOOK YOUNG Don't stay gray! Nobody can tell) when you darken gray, faded hair | with Sage Tea and Sulphur color that mintake material, have drug Diamond Dye” Color Grandmother kept her hair be: applied with wonderful effect. asking at any drug » uth |) fally darkened, glony and attrac-|f tive with a brew of Sage Tea andifl Bulpbur, Whenever her hair took |! on that dull, faded or streaked ap-|fi] pearance, this simple mixture was|f] | | “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound,” you will get a large bottle! of this old-time recipe, Iimproved| | by the addition of other ingredi enta, all ready (o use, at very little! cost. This simple mixture can be depended upon to restore natural d beauty to the hair ll-known downtown drug- gist mays everybody Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound now| because it darkens so naturally and |i} evenly that nobody can tell it has|[| been applied—it's so eany too, You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw it thru your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another applica- | Uon or two it fs restored to its nat | ural color, and looks glossy, soft and beautiful AUB AAEUMATIC, ACHING JOINTS IND STOP PAN Instant relief with a small trial bottle of old “St. Jacobs Oil” uses Rheumatiam is “pain” only. Not one cane in fifty requires inter nal tregment. Stop drugging! Rub soothing, penetrating “St, Jacobs Oil" right into your sore, stiff, aghing Jotnta, and relief co ingtantly. “St. Jacobs Ol" in a harmless rheu matiem lniment which never disap- points and cannot burn the skin. Limber up! Quit complaining! Get a small trial bottle of old, honest St. Jacobs Oil" at any drug store, and in just a moment you'll be free from rheumatic pain, soreness and stiffness. Don't suffer! Relief awaits you, “St. Jacobs Ot!" is just as good for sciatica, neuralgia, lumbago, back. |} ache, sprains. | Dr. Carter's K. & B. Tea. Makes Fine Laxative Syrup Make It at Home and Save About $1.50—Children Love to Take It. Fall Directions With Each 30-Cent Package For a real tonic and blood purifier, take a teaspoonful every night or every other night for at least three weeks == a ciimeieal To Make YourHair Look Naturally Curly If milady of the straight, lank hair will adopt the simple ' silmerine method, she will have as pretty wavy tresses as she could wish to own. The curline ill look so nat- ural, and the halr #0 tifully soft and glossy, quite different from the obviously artificial curls and the parched, dead appearance of the hair produced by the heated iron. can, of coutse, be at any drug store and a com Will keep the hair in curl veeka Being perfectly and neither sticky nor greasy, no one need have the le |hesitancy in using it. It is best | plied with a clean toothbrush, draw- thin through the hair from tip Just before doing it up. t will be all that any one ire. “Headache? ‘ For quick relief BAUME ANALGESIQUB BENGUE and it’s gone for good. Keep a tube in a handy place Theos. Leeming & Oo. MN. To \for m harm! he coul BITTERS DANDRUFF * or ITCHY SCALP Ask Your Hairdresser or Druggist Beriault Mig. Co. SEATTLE FRASER-PATERSON Co. UE AND UNIVERSITY 5) Novelty Sill Stockings —The demand of fashion for fancy Silk Stockings is now being strongly felt in all places where smart footwear is featured. Silke Stockings, Embroidered and Clocked —New shipments are just in of fine All-silk Hose in black with black embroidered fronts; in white, with white embroidered fronts; in cor- dovan, with cordovan embroidered fronts, and cordovan with mahogany embroidered front. With different styles of embroidery. Of heavy silk, full fashioned interlined lisle top, reinforced heel and toe. Sizes 814 to 10, at $4.50 and $5.00 a pair. —tThe same quality also in clockings; black with black clocking, silver with silver clocking, black with white clocking, white with white clocking, navy with white clocking, cordovan with ma- hogany clocking, cordovan with cordovan clock- ing. —All sizes, 814 to 10, at $3.75 and $5.00. . Silk Stockings mae — In Regular Weaves —Fine Silk Stockings, full fashioned, of silk, with lisle top and sole, in the leading cordovan, navy, white, black, tan, field mouse, and gray. At $2.00 and $2.50. —Silk Stockings of fine, full-fashioned all silk, but interlined with lisle at the top. In most of the popular colors for the season, cordovan, tan, field mouse, black, white, maize, navy, pinks and ye J id $3.50 a pair. eS: eee ee —Hostery, First Floer, For Those Who Delight in the Feminine Art of Hand Needlework —The field this season is unusually broad and fascinating. —The new patterns of this season’s show- ings are particularly appealing in the variety of original and clever ideas ex- pressed in different designs and color blendings. —Of attractive things for the personal adornment of women and juveniles, there are hundreds. —The tiny infants’ garments and nursery novelties are temptingly beautiful. —And the art needlework for house adorn- ment cannot but appeal to any woman who enjoys an intimacy with her home. —For those to whom hand embroidery is a hidden art we have an instructor who skilfully overcomes difficulties of begin- ners. —And her assistance is also ready for any more practiced needleworkers as well who may find difficulties in understanding cer- tain patterns or mastering certain stitches.