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Star mall, evi 4340, By The Seattle shed Daily by Th Pub paper & ty, Be pe farrier, ity tahing Co. * Matn »: San Fran t New York office, Old Judge Gary and His Bible When old Judge Gary of the Steel trust refused abandon the slave-making 12-hour day in his mills and then changed the subject to a discussion of the Bible, he did not pull the wool over the church folks of America The Federal Council of Churches, which comprises Protestants, Catholics and Jews to the number of almost half the people of the country, has just “called” Judge Gary for his ruse. Replying to the Steel trust chieftain in a public statement, the council says: “The test ny of competent investigators, includ f been an injury or morally This st ment is made in face of the fh the holders of the United States Steel Corporat to investigate this matter, expressed the opinion ‘that a Tt of labor, followed continuously by any group of men for siderably number of years means a decreasing of th ciency and lessening of the vigor and virility of such men. e plea that of labor males impracticable the change from shifts of workmen, ‘ds but ker defense, { labor axon for failure to al y two years ago when the pub ited expectantly for such a salutary ste the part of the At that time there was appal in large measure re K the three we diffi nquency lie y United States Steet Corporation. ling unemployment which could have bee lieved in steel manufacturing distriets by int shift system in the steel industry. ‘The task cult now than it would hay affords no release from a p “The Steel Institut tions of high’ importa’ . involved in this whole matter which or social features, “They are economic rs; ‘they affect the pecuntary interest of the great public, whieh includes, but is not confined, to employ ers and employes. This divorce between the ‘moral’ or ‘social’ elements of a problem and its economic aspects runs counter to the teaching of religion, It exalts a misconceived ‘law of sup ply and demand’ to a position of eq Justice, It excuses inh ity, Furthermore, it ¢ tions within the stecl industry and elsewhere, of the pra ity and superior advantages of the threeshift system. These demonstrations confirm in practice what no honest mind ean question in principle—that bad morals can never be economics.” And that strikes us as something worth while for old Judge Gary, the merry old soul, to think about, the next time he looks up from his Bible. say the steel 1 mportant series of demonstra: leabil Watch your love letters in June. The female of the species is more seadly with the mail. Our idea of looking out for posterity is taking care of the part which already has arrived, Organized gang of auto tire bandits was found in Chicago. It was a regular rubber band. Beating up a burglar is safe compared to cussing a walter. This new Greek offensive is very offensive to the Turks Stay on the right side while dri autos or bargains. Never threw rocks at the jail windows nor sell fake oil stock Coca-Cola’s First $25 The first batch of Coca-Cola was put on the market back in 1886—only 25 gallons of syrup, which sold for $25. The Wall Street Journal comments that “the present company paid the original owners $20,000,000 for Coca- Cola good will.” “Good will” is another word for reputation. Reputation, in modern, business, is the direct result of three things—merit of product, methods of doing busi- ness, and advertising. Coca-Cola, of course, has been about as thoroly adver- tised as is humanly possible. The $25, realized from the first Coca-Cola sale, was immediately invested in advertising, for which the first bill was $46. From that small seed grew $20,000,000 worth of “good will.” Most of the big advertisers started in a small way. Venturing cautiously into the water, they soon struck out for tho deep spots. They found that it pays to advertise. The William Wrigley company’s first advertising ap- propriation was $32—its entire capital—writes John Allen Murphy in Printer’s Ink. The L. E. Waterman com- pany’s first ad bill was only $62.50. Hupp Motor cor- poration started with $100.65 of publicity. The Borden company started with an advertising appropriation of $513.75, back in 1890; today it spends for advertising nearly a million dollars a year. So on, a long list. Murphy tells the story of Royal baking powder. The company started in a small drug store in Ft. Wayne, Ind., as a side line. “Its first advertisement appeared in local papers. The campaign then gradually spread thruout the state until the company was able to move’ to New York. Soon after that, it became the largest national advertiser of its day. The Mennen company started sim- ilarly—as a druggist’s side line. What fertilizer is to farm soil, advertising is to busi- ness. It makes the seed grow, the acorn into a giant oak. “Tt pays to advertise” is the best slogan to hang over the sales manager’s desk. Gov. Al Smith sail to the prohibition day d “Lam going to knock you cold, but I'll provide a nice, soft pillow on which you may lie in state.” Word comes that Clemenceau is laughing at Poincare, Wonder what Lloyd George is doing? heise Let’s have something a little more breezy: “Who are the seven most unpopular men in the country?” Canada wants reciprocity with Uncle Sam. That ought to make the explosive Kipling hiss again. Building Prices Higher Building prices, averaged the nation over, a third higher than a year ago. ment of labor’s price index. in this field. Meantime in the steel industry, weather-vane of gen- eral conditions, prices “soften”—-slip, It has been a cold spring the country, over, be a very cold winter, : are nearly According to the depart- A buyers’ strike under way and it may When the poet wrote, “Oh, for a Lodge in some vast wilderness,” he undoubtedly had the Massachusetts senator in his mind, and desired to Jocate him out there, A fool laughs when his wife gets m takes in a movie. while « wise man runs out and The middle of this month is when we borrow enough money to pay our income tax again, Our Inter-Linking Lives It's queer how our lives mysteriously are linked to oth- ers, paths criss-crossing time and again. Spiritualists be- lieve we travel thru eternity in “circles” or groups. Near Rochester, N, Y., a farmer saves a drunken man from drowning. An hour. later, homeward bound, the farmer's auto hits and fractures the skull of the drunk as he unexpectedly staggers out onto the road from the darkness. That is fate’s criss-crossing, with a vengeance, What makes a cat madder than se nig the dog catcher loafing? This school of experience you about is a high school, Two wrongs never make a right, but usually get one left rt New Who the Sam Hill f- , V RIDGE PANN To Our High How I ¢n with Kchool Graduates @ high school yraduati When the nigi rife with exolteme AU the future roads are ro. not a thing is dull or Life ia fu f pang or pain, endures back at brightest sings! a of ate way Keep its Faith of High School doys! & *y, and glows with an adult vi | Editor The Star When it comes to being misted, it does not by whom,. wh rl by Justice Ta or Star’ editor It is not good for the public to b misled in If it does its} own thinking and does it honestly and fairly, it will not be misled. But the way the phrases, clvil liberty, | constitutional liberty, personal lib-} erty and individual — liberty, | bandied about shows more or loss} slovenliness of thought. The public} is much safer with the private cit. | any case. with the public which is accustomed to think in a private way Mr. Taft's thinking on the: jects. has more of a public trend, | while too much of the public's think ing is merely a symposium of pri vate thoughts, Civil society would never get anywhere if each man's private thoughts were the only eri terion, Not until individus learns to think in a public way can a safe and sane consensus be reached. After more than half a century's thinking, America reached such @ consensus, whether safe and jsano or not, on the Bighteenth lamendment, ‘The reformer may bore jyou, but he thinks in a public wity. | ‘The ono saving quality of the church | jis that it thinks in a public way. It} |is the altruistic way. It is the one | |thinking of the other. When the| | public really thinks for the public it} will attain its highest level. } | After reading ‘The Star editorials on a number of recent occasic > contempt of court ca: and Taft's defense of his court, | I have ¢ to the conclusion that the editor's viewpoint is more or less private, You may not go so far as} |some, but it is none the less falla-| cious. ARE It is the kind of a viewpoint which stretches indiyidual right | Hege to the utmost limit of tresp jagainst the public weal and then |some in order to make che most of jits own egoistic aims. It is the nu- jcleus of the doctrine of state rights which has put New York state out of the Union so far as the Big! nth amendment Is concerned. It is Up: ton Sinclairism gone to seed in the |soil of statehood. If I had his idea of a free press you would have to give me your editorial prerogative and a whole page of The Star to alr my ideas. As it is, 1 must launch on a mighty big sea in a very small craft Perhaps you are one of those who fear the group spirit will wipe out individualism, Of course it will ‘wipe out, if it ean, that phase of individ. ualism which works injury to the group, Individualism has no bust ness in the group if it lacks the group spirit. That is sound, 100° per cent Americanism, One hundred millions of people constitute a large group. Its democracy depends on how much it can allow to the individual and how much the individual must eon: tribute to the whole, It cannot be 4 democracy of privilege Jong if it Is not also u democracy of obligation, | it de not make any difference | whether the unit is an individual ¢ a state, the principle of democra in the same, Constitutions are written and rat fied for the group, They are written zen who thinks in a public way than | a }parts of a central {n the plural, in terms of democracy Gives Opinion on Courts for y fous) copie, for individuals gregar ndividuals in which need defi fon regulation which goes with government The Amer constitution ix no eption. In its very nature and ph sy it isa p strument requiring a coll pretation | TESTING CONSTITUTION IS | LIKE TESTING THIN ICE It is an acknowledged definition of tights and privileges; it is equally | n knowledged int on the exerciye of those righta and priyil: | eges. Under it population has be-| come multi-millionaire, welded to a happy, prosperous solidarity; terri-| tories have grown to hood an | Rovernment to which all are amen for which | all are sponsors. Ce * a democratization have in our national growth . ive more and gain more under its operation without unnecessary revo. lution, Perhaps the Almighty made o mis-| in not giving our Upton Sin. | nd jn its making, but the| y-is not going to make the mistake in giving them a hand in its unmaki We have no objection to his being a Robinson Crusoe on his own little island and being a con-| stitution unto himself, but we do ob: intent »ple’s in inter. | ANeol LE STAR rag » for bull-b which none al trouble from GET EN PUBLIOS WAY AND YOU GET UNDER SKIN H on gets under and is sure to be abated, All the constitution guarantees to the indivi the press is civil liberty In speech ny other pa ticular, And civil Hberty within civil limitatons and for unmstakable civil ends. No man can possibly get into trouble over it un lews he mintakea {t for the bes of his own prit s akin, who gets oft in the pul the pt ut nut wd that document with mind—I am only more than 100,000,000 people and give not himself but all the rest the benefit of the doubt, Yours truly c, L. one PERCY. RIEDA’S OLLIES She was all ready for her trip, Ocean travel is such a bore. refer socing America first. All sho want as a chance to show her clothes. She had dozens of trunks ‘There is so much to be done, At the last moment, Looking after luggage is a trial, 1 offered to do it for her. She was sailing from New York. I sent her trunks to San Fran- cleo, 3 ! 1 | | Officials whose bus causes them to remain overn sing Sing are entitled to demand aceom: modation in the prison, The Secret of Having Beautiful Hair Beautiful hair—hair that is soft and sil adds more than anything else to your attractiveness and charm, Beautiful hair is uot a matter of luck, it is simply a matter of care, You can have beautiful hair if you shampoo it properly. Proper shampooing is what brings out all the real life and lustre, the natural 1 color, and makes it soft, sh and luxuriant, Your hair simply needs frequent and regular washing to keep it beautiful, bue it cannot stand the of ordinary This is why le on picture stars and millions of rywhere, use Mulsified anut Oil Shampoo. This clear, pure, and entirely greascless product cannot possibly injure, and does not dry the sealp or make the hair brittle, no matter how often you use it, Two or three teaspoonfuls of Mulsified will cleanse the hair and scalp thoroughly, Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in, It makes ait abundance of rich, creamy lather, which <inses out casily, removing every partigle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excess oil. ‘The hair dries quickly and evenly, and has the appearance of being much thicker and heavier than it really is. It leaves the scalp soft and the hair fine and silky, bright fresh-looking and fluffy, wavy, and easy to manage, You can get Mulsified Cocoanut Oil Shampoo at any drug store. It is inexpensive and a four ounce bottle lasts for months, Mulsified Cocoanut Oil Shampoo Russia _ and Bolshephobia BY HERBERT QUICK t rid of phobs keeps OUGHT TO BE BIG MEN ‘FESSED UP on womer ¢ in the Brown IN THE MIDST OF HOME m: th de & schol rt Heakett—Some te 6 thing n caught from kb Leslie You « GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH FRECKLES! on Cre Make this Lemon Cream and just see Tan, Freckles Disappear eee) | Six the Juice of two lemons with ounces of Orchard Whit h any druggist will | a few cents, shake well in a bottl jand you t arter-pint jof the most. wonderful freckle and three | whic & whole q rty Is individual | tan cream, and complexion beauti-/™ean cleaner, purer, richer blood. | fier. | Massage thin sweetly fragrant |lemon cream into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes natur- ch right out and how youth and rosy-white the s ertisement, upply for BY HERBERT QUICK 1 the matty On thi have not Nobody me that the Leni TmMent Will requ 1 the tyranny of gy and the enaleyg ¢ below, Hut tiey ently uy, can mn all thay can tell me of the péctury hop Blake tay ed Himself witty tig ne 10 ehed a ly Weighed Only 82 Ibs, _ Gained 28 on Tanlac some two gained but I have years ago, ang twenty-elght Mrs. Markham Declares enjoyed splendid at Celebrated Medicine Ended Stomach Trou- |; ble Two Years Ago, Re- « storing Perfect Health. Has Felt Fine Since. ly by the help of tas, able to overcome trouble and ep at had almost complet ly wrecked my health. 1 never my Ever |« and had fallen off tp on' pounds, Besites | having ful time with r was sluggish, 1 way constipated, and my, cog, | plexion was sallow and ‘unbealthy looking. Words just can't tell how miserable I felt al! the time, “Tanilac helped me almost the very day I began taking it, My appetite picked right up, my stom ach felt better, and in a few ing good health for the e in fifteen years, I now ES and sleep like @ child and fe ot usness th we ighty-two alwa 1 medicine proves no effec 1 in the restoration of heal p the system, strengthening itution 0 take it can say, aft passed, “I am. still must be conced porating have ed th of e of purity and to accompli strong and well all the time 1 couldn't say too much in praise of Tanilac.” Tanlac is for sale by al; goad drug. gists, Accept no substitute, Over 37 million botties sold, © proved such a wonderful} ‘Tanlac Vegetable Pills are na ng to me that I will praise it|ture’s own remedy for constipation ax I live. I took the. treat- | For sal here, immediate and last- lished by Tanlac in| Rose Markhart 174T 14th Oakland, Cal., that prompted her to make the following days ago It js both the Did Winter leave you with that tired feeling? INTER'S|always wins! It builds confine-|er,—thinking power. It builds sp ment, with its)rundown, tired men and women, lack of pure|beautifes complexions, and makes air and sun-|the flesh firmer. Stronger and) shine, shows|Usefal nerves depend on 1 its effect in'power. S. S. 8, will im appetite and give you ey, strength and a more listless, and | x5 Veh have a poor ap-| petite, indicates a weakened condi- tion of the blood. Nature must} have help—your blood is minus |fighting strength! More red-cells) |S. 8. S. buflds red-blood-cells. It) | builds blood-power! That is what| Try it yourself. §. jmakes fighting blood. Fighting/at all good drug stores, | blood destroys impurities. It fights|size is more econ jbdoils. It fights skin eruptions! It'bottle today! f S.S.S. makes you feel like yourself. again MM TT TTT TT TTT MTT Will want to battery of Will want “Flowing Will want to Simply fill out The rate by m Cre SEATTLE S | Inclosed find $.. lowing for ...... Name | Town bedava waves ate HHUUITHUNI SUM HAUANUUACAEU CUAL When You Go on Your Vacation HAVE THE STAR FOLLOW YOU YOU— Will want to know what is going on back home. keep in touch with The Star’s great funmakers. to continue reading Rex Beach’s Gold.” follow the news of sports, amateur and professional. ALL RIGHT, YOU CAN F the coupon below and mail it to the cireu- lation department with remittance to cover same. ail is only 50¢ per month, including post- i age. Why pay more? me ee TAR, Seattle, Washington. ceveeesey for which send The Star to the fol- Tons pice NOME : ee THE SEATTLE STAR | The Paper With the Strong Features IU MONDA FIVE 6 2FR Invaders Killing porTMt a a were ‘ch troops fon vyiolat a. for eision's go tne gee ee ination 4 fy thee OTF ay. a ighe acting the head of en arrested unt i jn an 4 French. ent last 1 were xil fe command FRANC pigee One False May T WASHING’ ‘The fate of fg now in the n showdow pot @ questi’ to smash, but will surv! give may fall. x tecome 07 years. fie, $8,000,000 id rapidl doomed forever with only 44 arts, and q poll on where One false ste atesmen, and over to touri trautiful ruins Premier Poi makes bi iternatior frong enten ghother alli rally to hel might She mi, tempo: wriggle rend. And would channel to Rhine. many's ni Rot be to E should be iting her of her allig her friend mun, hope hat is the onlj made to ce obtain r future