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Ea = Weather Mil Rain tonight and Friday; gale Temperature Last M4 Maximum, 43. Minin Today noon, 4 Untered as Second Class Matter May 3, 1899, at the Postoftice at Mattie, moderate southwesterly OLUME 23 <a Wash, under the Act of Congress March 2, ICH WOMAN FOUND IN RAGS! On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star 1879. Per Year, by Mail, $5 to $9 "ie EDITION DAY, JANUARY 1 , 1921. TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Must Find Markets, Dr. Matthews’ Views. Keep Labor Occupied. 92] |MINISTE SPEEDS TO sl Bankers Need Vision. R. MARK A. MATTHEWS led the interviewer into a room six | feet wide by eight fect long, sat him | self down in « corner and stretch. @d his lees inte the and asked. “Well, now, what is it? ‘Your outlook for 1921." “Yes. The first thing for us to do # to find a market for the product of the country, We are over wenn ed Bnd under-sold. To illustrate Dave 10,000,000 cases of canned wa Mon; we can consume only 5,000 000 | @ases; we must find a market for the pther 5,000,000 UST FIND A WAY OCCUPY LABOR “Second, we must absorb labor. We Must find a way to oceupy labor. La. Der cannot be occupied in manufac turing unti) we have consumed our | Products now in the warehouses. | opposite corner, MEN READ T0 BATTLE Gigantic Struggle Expected to Open Between Bol- sheviki and Foes We must absorb labor in construc BY EDWIN HULLINGER tion of buildings, roads, highways} PARIS, Jan. 13.—More than 3,000, and in providing other means of / 990 men will be thrown into fighting ‘wrban transportation. Russian’ boundary early along the “Tt is folly to talk of reducing | this spring, according to informa taxes. That's socialistic. It is not - high taxes that is hurting the peo-| tn given out by French military ple, but the thing that is injuring us/experts here today. Thetr advices fs that we are not gutting full vatue| indicate the fighting front will ex for our taxes. We are getting Only | tend from 200 to 260 miles. Sdowt 60 or 60 cents value on the| ss eviki are “expected ‘dollar. It doesn't make any differ | ae: peenere pee @nce how high taxes are. If we are| launch several major spring drives, Betting 100 per cent value for our|the French authorities sald. Meet ions, we will have & prosperous | ing them will be troops from several e. | | Balkan states rallying in support of “This state can well afford to bond Pel Poland and h Rus i to Rumania, Czechoslovakia, perhaps the border states wh. Mtself for $300,000.000 or $400,000,000 for irrigation and the same for road | Projects. We can afford to sia, wishes to reciaim Many millions more for building « UMBERS OF houses and other buildings. We bee ‘ARE WAITING rel llpany aber any roads or | ‘The military strength of the coun oy pnt neem Se cted to enter the fightin, Bast four or five years. The rofing | !** O° — @tock of our railroads, and our roads highways are all at the lowest|, sim Possible standard 6f maintenance. COUNTRY NEEDS BANKERS spend Poland. 500,000; 1,000,000 men; men; Rumania, Baltic states, 200,000. Military experts agree that the OF LARGER CALIBER 1,000,000 men expected from Poland “Another thing—the bankers of|would be her maxima strength, this country must learn to be feal | while the million ascribed to Russia world bankers. The banker of today,|was a mere beginning. That num- If you want to déscribe him, can be| ber, however, in view of her ability written in terms of 30, 60 and 99/to train and equip an army, is re days. That's his caliber. America | garded as her maximum for the has the gold of the world; she is the | spring campaign. world’s banker. Therefore, Ameri-| They also added to the forces of an bankers must learn to write 9,|the nations marked for attack by 32 and 15 months’ credit to foreign |the bolsheviki, men who might purchasers. This ought to be in|Be expected from Jugoslavia and some way underwritten by the gov- | Czechoslovakia. ernment. In that way we would) France and Italy had not discussed ereate a market for our product. their attitude, Dut it is expected they “America must learn she is not | Will do so at the coming conference only a world power, but a factor in| ot premiers here. the world’s problems. Regardiess of | Meanwhil@y Politicians and the narrow-minded, | War is p ling at selfish policies of partisan politicians, | tered poln' Europe. America will have to go into the; One of the significant things was Jeague of nations and take her place | the speed with which Italy and @s one of the world’s essential, con | eaeetevia arranged to ratify the structive factors. | Rapallo treaty, composing all differ “And now from the standpoint of|ences between the two countries. the church—the church must return | Statesmen regarded the activity as to the fundamental principles of the | part of a program to rid themselveq Bible, a deep conviction in the re-|of all encumbrances, so the little en gion of Jesus Christ and a firm be-|tente can act united’y in behalf of lief in the evangelization of the| Rumania when the expected bolshe arid. vik attack occurs, “Every man, to be a real man and| BESSARABIA EXCUSE ive preparation for @ dozen scat play his part as he ought to play it.| FOR ATTACK ought to be a membervof some Chris- Rumania is said to be negotiating | tian church and present to the world| with the soviets on the matter of | @ real, vital Christianity. altering the Bessarabian boundary “We are coming out of this year, jiine, with Russia rejecting all pro 1921, successfully, but it will be @| Koais, In many European capitals year of hard work, and ft will need sanity, sobriety and real Christianity to get thru it.” SAYS BUSINESS | this is regarded as an effort by Rus sia to leave the Besmrabian province as an excuse for attack in the spring. While the northern states see in the projected Russian attack an at- tempt to spread soviet power over Europe, the southern nations look HERE IS IN GOOD SHAPE way. to Constantinople, Corabining Business conditions in Seattle are|the drive thru Rumania with an at far better than in the majority of|tack on the eastern side of the Black Cities in the United States. | sea, they believed, the soviets would ‘This statement wax made before|be carrying out a plan to link Tur the Chamber of Commerce Wednes-| key and Russia and make Constanti day by Paul Whitham, general man-|nople an outpost of bolshevism. At ager in China for the Foundation|the same time, the Mohammedan company, one of the largest develop- | countries will be thrown open to the| ment and engineering concerns in| Russians the world. The southern states looked upon | “Seattle, if it shows the right spir-| “red” concentrations along the Polish it, must benefit materially and very|and Paltic lines largely as measures while the real } Bm con from the large investments fof defense, shock | SA which big eastern corporations are | troops and heavy artillery were be- | SM cing to make in trans-Pacific coun-|ing piled on the Rumanian and| tries,” said Whitham. “Your Pactfic | Azerbaijan Cronts. Northwest products campaign is fine | BOLSHEVIKI CLAIM and it should be supplemented by |IMMENSE STRENGTH building up industries which can go| ‘The strength of the army was a after the rich field in Asia. Likewise| matter of much speculation in mili you should prepare to manufacture |tary circles of all Hurope today. The where you have water power, | bolaheviki themselves claimed ability climate and the shortest |to put 5,000,000 men in the field by the Pacific, the raw|next summer, French experts said transshipped thru| French observers did not doubt the| ly tremendous resources of the soviet country, but were skeptical as to | their ability to train and equip that number. Fteliable advices showed | 500,000 now are under arms, while numbers of reserves are sta-| here, an equable route across products now here to the Kast. Dorothy’s Diary j S a wonderful coincident, equal f iy thusik My new job in tioned near Moscow, Petrograd and | q . Reval. ' handling all the real advertising my firm the papers. | cludes q runs tate in Of course, the different men the ads, 1 copy them machine and keep the records of all the ads #0 that we can check the monthly bills. write the on the uses our fam The Star remark job writ- After all \ fly had found for Want Ads, wer able that my find myself still i Daa HOUSEWIFE in the Unite | | nutritious, economical and convenient - pret : Canned salmon hould | that Miss H | liked to ke arried Despite Dad “Bill” Fools “Weary” While W. A. ("Weary") Wilkins. war fund campaigner, noted thrift advocate arid father of W. A. ("Bill") Wilkina, wag hot-footing from one clergyman'’s study to another's, a week ago, warning them not to per form his son's intended wedding cer emony, “Bill” outgueaned and out distanced his Qlustrious father and got married in spite of the parental precautions, “Bil” and Miss Alice Held, ‘his fiancee, went to the only minister his father didn't know about, the Rev. E. A. Greene, who maintaing a suite acroas the street from the coun. ty-clty building, in the Holland ho- tel, and there the ceremony was gone thru with without hindrance, “BILL” LETS FATHER THINK WEDDING'S OFF But “Hill,” being somewhat of a Prankster, allowed hia father to be lieve, with satisfaction, that the mar riage had been foiled. “What busin ave you got get ting married?” the elder Mr, Wilkins asked. “Have you got money “Sure,” declared “Bill.” “Want to borrow some ” Whereupon, according to “Bill,” pater flew into a tremendous rage demanding that his son try to look upon the matter seriously Until yesterday the marriage was kept secret At that time relativ of the young bridegroom, who employed by the Pliny Allen Co ond av and Columbia st., found out id had taken a trip to Olympia a week ago. They recalled | also that i" had gone to Olymp the same day “on business for the company.” SORRY HE COULDN'T KEEP ON “KIDDING” An uncle rushed to the eapital city and discovered to his amazement that “Bill” Wilkins and wife had stopped there over night. That let the cat out of the bag.” said “Rill” this morning. p on kidding poor old dad for a while, but when they found out about our honeymoon, of course, there wag nothing to do but confess | that we had slipped it over on him. It's kind of*tough on to learn that he was) Poor old guy. him, T suppose, only fooling himeelf ali this time, He | didn’t really have any objection to our-getting married, only wanted to show his authority. He can't get it thru his head that I'm 21 and my) own boss, T'll say | got a sweet little bride, Oh, boy!” The Wilkinses are not telling where their bungalow is at present “We're going to let dad hunt for us,” the bridegroom said. 4 States will be requested presently , of all food products u of fisheries is asking for a special appropriation to carry on “T'd have | , TH — STARVING WOMAN The | hae do care pioneer graven ¥ men spent NEGLECT OF GRAVES TO BE STOPPED $1000 Raised to Start Fund ‘Preacher for Care of Pioneers’ Resting Place of Seattle's pioneers will no longer be neglected. will now come in. appreciate the work The Star fn helping on ter c J |been dolig what we could to take of the graven, junable to look after lare seeking to raine a $260,000 for perpetual care of ail graves in | the cemetery.” Swenson maid the following plo rere puried in Lake: | become at evangeliat of thé CHuren Might be others: | of God after her fast of 46 days, rags. ler, Princess Angeline | burst forth in tears today and prayed|base ut Hawall has been done by | TOTTERS WEAKLY INTO of Chief Seattie), Ph: Lewis, Dr. Maynard, Thomas Mercer, | save big soul. Prof. L. J. Powell, Pike, James Osborne Calvert, M. Guye and H. §, Algar.” While this announcement was be ing made by Swenson, green Cemetery Co. with an offer to provide burial lots and perpetual care for pioneers. “We have been much interested in The Star’a discussion of a plan for the perpetual care of the graves of Hackett, of the company, declared. their lives in developing the Great West to the splendid state of civilization to which thiy genera. but ther Fr. Danw Samuel F came FRENCH MASTERS OF DANCING ORDER BAN ON “SAVAGE” SHIMMY Pr shaken PARIS, Jan ing masters shimmy It's one of the age and exotic dance Saint Vitus dance will refuse to t they announced tod OFFICIAL PROBE 13. have rch danc the “decadent, mv embling " which they hereafter, re BY FASTIN Is ” Expected to End Hunger Strike of Sadie Harringt ‘on ELDORADO, It, 13 8. Payne, minister of the Church ” Jan Tev Vladivostok informed that Mra. Harrington said transfer to it immediately for the she needed him. “I will pray with trip to Viadiventek, We have| her and urge her tu give up her) fast. The Chyrch of God does not been | *enction such fasts to obtain con We | versions.” have m all, JAPS GARRISON fund} spite Mins DANVILLE, ML, Jan. 13- m Sadie Harrington, dinconsolate be- | cause her husband, Ernie, has not +" Pode a Jan. “13. — Garrl- Japanese, recruited Jean national guard, tip HI into the Amert- that she be told what eise to do to Coombs,| “Ernie still holds out in his sinful Ephraim | way. Ob, Lord, tell me what else’ I Francis | may do to make him see the light,” | was her tearful prayer, according to | Sister Ada Peercy, nurse and worker | in the Chuch of God. “I've fasted 46 days, and Ernie ts still as bad as ever,” Mrs. Harrington | told Sister da. “I amt going to con. | tinue my fast until Ernie gives in or} until I get another meseage from | God. The Lord has fed me on spirit ual manna this far, and I know He wil! continue to take care of m iy MG FRRVION long trains of wounded wound @heir | In the meanwhile, Ernie Harring. | W4Y back to the Greek base day, OD, strength of the army at 175,000. GREEKS, TURKS the Ever: forward CONSTANTINOPL Jan. secretary “Thene | | hills surrounding Brusa toda: OFFICER MURDER Admiral Gleaves on Way to soning of the United States naval! of Senator Phelan, | California, declared in the senate to-| Judge Dykeman, tl during a discussion of the New resolution to fix the Mmit of the! qepartmént weak from IN HOT BATTLE | he rol f till echoed thr he Teeren ee : a the during the year last past, ARRESTED IN SHACK HERE AS” IMPOSTER Posed as Object of Charity With $4,000 in Bank, Is Charge heritfe went last’ evening to the bare and cheerless shack of Mrs, Yera Hurst, a Supposed pow lerty-stricken widow, at 4014 Latouat! 4 ave, and arrested her as an alleged — impostor, For months Mrs. Hurst is said to Deputy s PS "4 This was assured today when the! of God, will ge to Danville, Il. have been living in feigned abject Lake View Cemetery association vot | immediately and plead with Mrs.| SHANGHAI 12.—(Delayed.)— | destitution, dressing herself and her ed to appropriate $1,000 a8 the | sasie Harrington, now in the 46th Admiral Gieaves, mmanding the twin girls, Iris and Lirts, in tatters Rucleus of a fund to be spent for per | gay of her hunger fast to force | American Asiatic squadron, is sched- and feeding them crusts of bread and | | petual care of these graves. Jher husband to join the church, | Uled to arrive here tomorrow aboard hot water to keep up her alleged de It is in Lake View cemetery thatito give up the fast and take food,| the destroyer Hust from Manilla, en ception in order to draw from King: | mont of the pioneers are buried. The! Armngementa for the trip to| Toute to Viadivostok to investigate county a widow's pension of $20 ® Star several days ago called attention | Hanvilie were made by the United the killing of a lieutenant, W. H.| month. to the fact that the grave of Henry| pres, today after locating Payne, | Langdon. HAS $4,000 CASH ON L. Yesler waa in a shameful state of| wren « nation-wide search by, Langdon was killed Sunday while DEPOSIT IN BANK : neglect. lerienda and relatives of Mrs. Har. Teturning to bis ship from a visit Judge King Dykeman, head of the A. B. Swensson, manager of the) io cton's failed. ashore. He was said to have been juvenile and mother’s pension @& ae cemetery association, wald be felt as. | TOU” ene ton had Indicated "Bot in the back by a Japanese sol-| partments of the superior court, nured that the $1,000 fund would rap-| 10. would give up the fant | Wer. today he had only recently idly multip Gap tiie Gann vedietand. bee. eports reaching here indicaté/ered that Mrs. Hurst was not “People aye been calling me UP! io ‘ho and hae been pleading for "8% feeling among the members of | able financially to support ever since The Star first told of the | jon ee” abe picrted ‘the hanger the cruiser Albany, of which Lang-/and family but is actpally a wom ondition of Yesler's grave, and have | VN), “°F don was chief engineer, and fears of of no small wealth, with $4,000 ¢ offered to help, providing some con-|"KY oT sume.| oUuble Were expressed on deposit in a local bank and certed effort ia made, reg oo am The cruiser New Orleans is Wait-| property of value. said, “I feel sure that these people! diately.” Payne said today when) ing gor Admiral ( * and he will| She is charged with perjury following her arrest on @ | made out by Deputy Prosecutor |D. Carmody and sworn to by | Dykeman, was lodged in the | jail in default qf $1,500 bail. Deputy Sheriffs William 8 | Napoleon Loveal, who ‘served warrant and arrested Mrs. E | said today they found her | masterpiece of poverty and her @ | and her children’s wardrobe a I { ows % OFFICE; TELLS PITIFUL STO% On September 13, according “te! ye supposed the mother’s tottered into genuine lack of nourishment told a pitiful story that wrung hearts of department heads and 1 taches, * She was speedily provided for. She left after swearing she was em | titled to a pension for herself and — ber twin daughters, making affidawit _.| ander oath that she had no bein in bank and had sold no It was understood by the {ment that her husband was not Iv. ing, When arrested, it is said, tion has fallen heir, As a memorial! ton, who ix now hailed as the new| The Turkish nationalists were the admitted she bad a living’ hu to the Seattle pioneers, we will sup | “white hope” of Danville, since he Ported resisting vigorously 71 years of age, residing in the ply lots and provide for their perjiaid a camera man and a reporter | Greek advanc without mucceae. Soldiers’ home at Port Orchard, petual care.” jiow with his trusty right, is “fed | record of such a man could be f Lyman W. Ronney, himself one of ip» with the whole affair. ‘The at the -homne today. a the early pioneers of Seattle and @/ burly and recalcitrant husband let he 38. founder of the Bonney-Watsop Un ighty squawk sutnnt dertaking company, deciared that a| forth) ® mighty ea oevige ‘The Complaint Sime: Sy 20 fund shauld be raised here to ade|‘tings in general this morning as tae attorney's office charges tely care for the “graves of the|2¢ Was trimming fat from a leg of Mrs. Hurst's account at the Union an aie nuek Genet N° | mutton in his butcher shop. | Savings & Loan bank, at 316 Pike , “pip? Ah drs a “Las 7 as the first time) Mayor Hugh C. Caldwell vetoed | st, shows $4,000 cash on deposit, and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. (“Bill”) | “No provision was made by the| “last night was 1 Wilk slywed 1d | *xecutors of the Yesler estate for the | “nee I have Leen married that I| Thursday the council ordinance call-| that in June, 1920, she sold a piece uring, Newlywed sOn ANG) rrr of the burial lot.” Bonney said, |4id not go home to sleep,” he said.|ing for a tr 000 from of property to ® buyer named C. daughter-in-law of W. A. \“geattio citizens should raise a fund| “There's no rest for the wicked,|the police relief and pension fund) Pinckney. The consideration is (“Weary”) Wilkins, who tor the care of pioneer graves, for{I mue They are always singing | to hgh igs re fund prligs mea be 0 ‘ whose upkeep no provision has been|and praying around my house, so|based his veto upon the opinion never saw a more decrepit, pitt dodged paternal obstructions here hs rae fi |they won't let a hard working | rendered by Corporation Counsel| able looking woman,” said Judge and were married and honey-\ roy oftered a generous contri.|man sleep. I got tired of it last| Walter F. Meler that the bill was i+|Dykeman, “On Christmas it is the: mooned secretly a week 490. | »ution to aid #ich a fund. night and I had a good eight |/esal | custom of the juvenile and =the Mrs. Wilkins was formerly hours’ sleep on two nice, soft meat or amas |pension departments to see Miss Alice Held blocks I shoved together in the OLD TOKENS |every poor family, especially ne ? ct “opeap back of the store. | |there are children, is provided 7 —Photo of Bill” by Price| “We got so much praying com-| |® basket of food. and ( arter, 9 pany at the housé that there's no | ASKS FOR BASKET OF — | bed ft for me For instance: jFoee FOR HER GIRLS it 1 > ‘ “LOST IN GULF? There is Sister Myrtle Baker, who “Many well-to-do women take @ HE PINES FOR rays the Lord called her from sav: Practically all of ‘the old bronze [hand in this welfare work at Christe STEILACOOM! GALVESTON, Texas, Jan. 13.——|ing souls at Vincennes, Ind., to| street car tokens have been ex-|mas time, Mrs. Flora A. Bixby, @f [The United States government tug-| come and pray with Sadie. he's a | 2631 Harvard ave. N., volunteered to c Moore, “ x . adie, She's al changed for new ones, according to |? .N., | Judge ober Hickman Moore,| boat “Captain Talfor with @ crew] nice enough woman and all that, lrailway officials Thursday. Approx-|See that Mrs, Hurst and her daugh+ who has been dividing his time be-| of seven men, which left Sabine Pass | tye it's awfully inconvenient for|imately 1,600,000 of the old metal|ters ‘were provided with Christmas tween sessions of the city council | for Galveston Sunday, ix believed tol ner to get such a call when all-we/|fares have been turned in at the | dinner, and when Mrs. Hurst hobbled and the state legislature, has decided | 8¥¢ been lost off the Texas coast.) have is a bed and a davenport in| public utilities office in the county-|into the mothers’ pension depart: |to split the difference. mee Sa Oe, Cee See | Cie: bones.” jcity building. Hardly more than | ment a fow days after Christmag and | Tt as re ‘ heer, announced her@ ‘Qlay. “The| Harrington said he ts now get-|200,000 of the bronze disks are still| complained that her litde girl had he next time ave to run! boat's pilot house, bearing its name.|ting hie meals jn the back of the | Outstanding. | had no Christmas dinner, we loaded down to Olympia,” Moore declared, |has been ound on the beach and) store as the cooking of food hate ——_——_——____ jher down with a basket of goodies, |“I am going to stop off halfway and | other wreckage has been picked up,” | ateg his wife. His attitude is plain. | gave her some street car tokens and) | spend a few days at Stellacoom in a| Adams said. ty ‘changed. from a day or 80 ago,| ent her on her way. ‘ | nice, quiet asylum, 4 poersp oe a when he was concerned over the “She got on a street car, paid her 4 | condition of his wife. Now his sole |fare with one of the tokens we had \Joy and Gloom 3 in thought is about the time when jSiven her and. rode down tvgaaas B d dB things get badk to. ‘norsmléy?’ tn bank, where she drew out $194 of read an utter! ¢ §] the house of ‘Harrington on Collett) BERLIN, Jan. 13.—“Karpott,” | Nterest accrued from her depositay Wholesale flour, A three cr street. |member of the ‘supreme economic | make y rallied nedren om | Prices wer post- | drop in wh “4 “The! Lord will bless the United | council, is dead, a Moscow message | pram, ee e wa = ot ed 40 cents on | ale butter prices,| WASHINGTON, Jan, Press for sending my pastor to me,” | announced today. j thing: Sbous Ser deen oe oe |the local market | effective Thurs-|der gang” of British Piast " Mrs. Harrington said today, when| ‘“Karpoff” was a nom de plumo| Vent © See Mrs. Bixby. Thursday. A| day, brings#|Treland, terrorizing its inhabitants,/informed that the Rev. G. 8. Payne|formerly used by Niko! © WERE VEXED BECAUSE yne| f rly used Nikolai Lenine, } barrel of flour | bricks down to | De al O'Callaghan, lord mayor of|would visit her soon. “I need Rev.| whose serious {liness was announced | SHB HAD BEEN OVERLOOKED: costs retail mer-| 47 and cubes to! Cork, said today. - He was a witness|Payne now aa never before. I think |early this week. Germans familiar | “We Were quite put out because hants $10.36 | forty-six cents a before the unofficial Villard commis-|God directed the United Press tol with Russian affairs said they knew| Mrs. Bixby had not fulfilled) Rep now | pound. sion on conditions in Lreland. find him for me.” of no other man by that name. promise to furnish a Christmas |basket to the Hursts, We asked her casually if she had overlooked the matter. : The Seattle housewife who serves pink best of muscle 4 bon | fy with the The bur ; ing want ada, an educational campaign in behalf of “pinks” and “chums,” the leas expen-| 1921 the big year for Seattle i . tut these home discoveries should be p \atve grades of salmon. But t i Kc Par A pac d | Beattie in the distributing center for Alaskan canned walmon, the best| The Star will award, for each of the best ' edd tats trtoen produced in the world, ‘The normal turnover in this city from the salmon |by housewives, a case of 48 one-pound cans submit them to the bo Jasbsontanapigh ayer ty Papo 7 ny building lactive part in the promotion of Northwest prosperity and helping make fe 10 , and ix also taking an | Also include “And If for Fish You Chance to Wish, With Appetite Terrific, Just Drop a Line Into the Briny, Turbulent Pacific” and chum salmon tn an espe-, wed around, shouldn't they? almon recipes, of high grade pink or chum Send in your recipe to The Star Salmon Haitor, Remember, ask your to make use of what government experts proclaim to be the most | clally toothsome dish is helping the home budget while supplying her fam. | grocer for pink or chum salmon, and state which ts used in your recipe, the cost of the various ingredients used, ‘The recipes will be | the Chamber of Commerce for national distribution in connection with the |salmon campaign. A selected number of recipes will also be published in ee Star from day to turned over to the Northwest Products committee of riginated Recipes will be tested by the Home Economics departmént of the Uni versity of Wayhington, no,’, she said, ‘Tt didn’t ‘That woman has lots of | “Why, | overlook it. | money.’ “It was not until then that we |began checking up on Mrs. Hurst, Jor even suspected her. I have been. aware for some time that imposters occasionally fleece the mothers’ pen jsion department out of small sume, jbut usually we merely reprimand them and cut off their pension. irs, Hurst's case seemed to be so absolutely genuine ‘that perhaps it n't investigated as thoroly as it should have been until after Mra. Bixby found her out. Her case is so flagrant that 1 flecided we mugt prosecute,”