The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 5, 1921, Page 6

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ANK ANDERSON, Mrs. Anderson and five little Andersons live on a artially wooded little farm 4 on the first bench above the valley that runs thru from Seattle to Tacoma. ! Gradually they are clearing away the stumps in the woods and Suilding a farm home. The clearing isn’t big yet, and every foot of the land must work, ami all of the Andersons may eat and | live. | Much of the Anderson livelihood comes right off the little farm. They raise their own vegetables and have milk and eggs. But there are many other things that must come from the grocery store, and | then there must be money for clothes and shoes, and perhaps a little money for something to read. That means there must be a money crop on the Anderson place. The mon- ey crop to which they have naturally jturned, because it best fits the Ander- son land, is the raising of berries and |cherries and plums. eins They can’t sell the berries and fruits . Lasker finally quit the chees in the city, because going from house to ene at avast wea House on city streets is a business in it- pionship, We feared we'd a Rot live tong enovieh to gee the finish Self, If Anderson spends the day doing : aa but old age got the that, he hasn’t the time to do his work : eee ; —n — Pe npanban og he a to pea hibition has broken me of one sell on the public market, but that, too, Bias Volstead act Bent tate et | 18 a business in itself, and the Japanese fect have I left My umbrelia on the contro] most of it. ° The Anderson family has only one ‘Tall of a ter” nie _ Some figure shark says the Indem- de dable 1 tow. i which to t Wr Gamane wows Gependable place toward whic’ urn Fie. ie paid tn-00 gota piece eC the money that must be available uy the products of the city. That Enterprise Presa Bervice Pebien- oe by The mer Phone Main ‘A WoRD F Ser | who lost his appetite we t' find it if he just make, if paid in-@5 gold pieces, a rib-/ tO Ben of gold six Inches wide and *'to Jong as the equator. Accoriting to our own figures, the paper used by Germany in writing notes to dodge indemnity would make a roll six thick and 4,283 miles long, | “Auburn Girl Suicide,” says head Blondes and brunets sometimes | hari-kari, too, Dring Vice President Coolidge to | 7 VE and we're with you down cee Mra tw the nature of menmges|Under the draft, but who are not shown on the List TE war department is now sending over | “We're glad to see your efforts try, including Renton June turns him over to the military authorities, Newspay with n ago, the department's persistent inquiry has publicity. Any person whose name is printed ‘will have the opportunity of clearing himself, In our most unf: tar bring out these possibilities: a led for duty. out leaving word with the local draft board. 8. That he may have been killed in France. Lodge to Move 10th Brings Indigestion Meet Headlines in Wooster (O.) Rec 5. reasons of his own. The publication of this list be given to his 9-year-old boy. there no humane societies in ? | Anyway, Stillman ts getting 9 a. ‘ from a big wad of his money’ if not impossible in many cases, for them to eee _ ALL THE NEWS FROM f HICKSVILLE HICKSVILLE, May 6—An old oned barn dance was given at reenb Robinson's last Friday ‘Right Mr. Robinson's barn is the * one in this neighborhood lighted by electric lights and une of these ‘Was made In decorating. Joe Stanley furnished the music on his accor iu Quite generally by our citizens, old ‘800 young. One prank played by a Bilschievous youhgster caused the “@ehool some inconvience. He called @@ the janitor Thursday night and told bim the teacher has asked him tell him (the janitor) that he (the } need not open up the school y morning, as there was to be & holiday, and the consequence was that school did not begin till 10 @'clock, which gladdened the hearts )@f the children, who are much dis- ) @runtied that they have to go to | school in Easter week, which is a holiday week in city schools. - _ Humphrey Haynes, the porter at Ogden Inn, formerly the American House, has a piece of Russian paper Money, sent to him by a friend liv- fing in New York city. It is a 100 Tuble bill. 3 Holly offered him stands. Injured couple get $10,000 verdict becagise blew up. Now watch the county officials blow | don’t forget Wall st. Another thing that needs not the protection or trade mark is the Einstein theory. }and gasoline’s a bit cheaper. Gime for it, which in 20 times as h as tt worth in Russia, phrey is thinking of putting in supply to sell to traveling men. . Dotty of Cleveland is slated mpeak at the schoolhouse Tuesday Right on the single tax question if he can find an audience, which is Improbable, this being a farming ) @ommunity that already pays more Sethan ts just proportion of taxes and Nobody is anxious to pay any more. A 00d orator, however, could draw @ large audience if he would deliver @ talk on the subject, “How to Dodge Your Taxes.” The warm weather having set in and the automobile season being Practically open, Constable Dubey wore his uniform yesterday, follow-| ing his custom of wearing it on Sun- @ay during the auto season. Proprietor Mott Ogden of Ogden Tan has ordered from a Seattle house one dozen fancy candlesticks, one for @ach dining table and the rest for the hotel office. Real candies will be! sed in therm and will be lighted dur. ‘ne the evening, the idea not being much for the illumination but tor tion, as they will give what ‘Mott terms the atmosphere of an old-time tavern. Rev. Dunmore preached Sunday, his mubject being, “The Remarkable Career of Babe Ruth and Lessons to Be Drawn Vrom His Standing in the, ules, Averages, or Every Man Should Try railroads to Koock the Ball Over the Fence,” bear te, soon be upon us, BY DR. WILLIAM FE BARTON M: TRAIN pulled into Baltimore just as another train | I saw on the platform on the side next the ticket in a wheeled chair. alighted and that which she was to take. to go, An official approached the wheeled chatr and had a “Hold Bighty-Three for an invalid!’ I heard him call, “Don't let Elghty-Three out till I call you againf* “Hey, Bill! he called, be got on” ad hearts control many enterprives, Put the Berry on the Map The So-Called Deserters’ names of 150,000 to 175,000 men who were registered | ‘editor of Home Brew is rejrecords as having reported for service when called. from every part of theimen are now listed as deserters. Fifty dollars reward is to) be paid to any civil officer who arrests one of them and} are asked to publish these names. Starting list of “deserters” down to the lesser number given above. inion this action of the department is one of the acts in America’s history.’ Talks with the very officials who framed this course by representatives of man now listed as a deserter may have died time he registered for the draft and the time 2. That he may have gone elsewhere and enlisted with- 4. That the mail notice may never have reached him. That he may have enlisted under another name for of Os to be guilty until ed inn: f This is fa direct conflict guilty until prov jocen’ is is in conflic yng Panne yom 9,9 the underlying principles of American law, and it is certain to work injustice upon many innocent men, to damn them with infamy, to disgrace them, for it will be difficult, ‘a good standing after once being officially be For ‘that reason, The Star will not publish the list as it Observations | a spring‘’s come. Circus press agent has just hit Seattle. Now it’s a battle between Poles and Britons. And only yesterday they were both fighting the war to. end all war. In considering famous watering places, for your vacation, Numismatist says modern paper money: originated in China in the year 806. Some of it looks like it. Of course, the office is more alluring than ever since the baseball season has started, the golf links are in trim The open season for the valedictory and salutatory will | “HOLD 83!” . | 4 man with a red cap was wheeling the chair, She was to be taken aboard another train on the farther aide of the| station, and our train had run in between the train from which she had Just then a second train ran in beside ours, making two trains between her and where she wanted |occupant and the red cap, and then ran—yea, ran—to a telephone, which 1 suppose was connected with the office of the traindispatcher, | Then he ran to another box, which I conjectured communteated with \the bridge where the signals were displayed, and again he shouted, Then he ran up the steps of a car on our train, and opened the venti bule on the other side, and entered the vestibule on the second train and opened that on the farther side and #houted to the conductor of the train farthest over, the one that bore the number, Elghty-Three, “Hold your train! There's an invalid here must ‘They actualy cut one train in two, and waited for the other to pull out, in order that that woman in the wheeled chair might get on board And everybody waa interested in the accomplishment of it Kailroads are managed by corporations, and trains are run on ached and those take no account ‘of invalids and wheeled chairs, 4nd corporations and train schedules are managed by men with THE SEATTLE STAR THE DELUGE } is—-to the cannery. He delivers his ber- ries and fruits every night, and at the end of each week receives his money— money that flows from the thousands of Eastern families. Soon there will be more acres of ber- ries onthe Anderson place, and, per- haps, some more berries. That means more money to spend at the store. But there will be more acres and more money only if the money contin- ues to come regularly from the cannery. That money from the cannery must be gathered in the big Eastern cities, where the people cannot raise wonder- ful berries and cherries. The cannery organization must reach out and brin that money back from every corner 0 the country. That means big kusiness organization. Out of the story of Frank Anderson —and it is a story that could be repeat-| ed 12,000 times in Western Washing- ton+there is made plain the necessity for the bringing together of the Ore- gon-Washington Canning and Preserv- ing Company. To make possible dependable pros- erity among the farmers of Western Washington, there must be big business organizations to manufacture and dis- tribute their products, and that big business organization can do its full) duty to the community only if it is| brought together on a co-operative ba-| sis, with a public purpose to serve, To put the Washington berry on the map is more than a private business un- detaking. It is a community affair. Each of us should do his part. i | | j@ my life The tme York builder, meres, do, America $2,360,000,000 dent, | Philadelphia, BY ALFRED ARNOLD We both was close on seventy; We talked the long.ago: About the old-time weddings, | And The Bixty—something snow; | About the big barn raisings, Great crops, and ague-chifls; About the gira, te deer licks, } And the logroads up the hile But stin there wag one matter: We both were scart to axk— We jem kept talking, talking; | Like fools behind @ maak, | At length both on aa dared ft: | We looked each other thru Hie burt out, “Don't I know you?” Bays |, “The same to you.” The tears came tn our both eyes, Bo thick we couldn’ see; For I said, “Joe,” to him then, Prohibition Officer—There are hun dreds and hundreds of empty whisky botties in your cellar. How did they get there? Householder—Plest if I know. 1 never bought an empty whisky bottle Detroit Free Preas. the land the department's These Leakage of the Heart I received many letters asking jabout leakage of the heart. Some three hundred thousand such names two years |*T'te™ seem to think that there is |an actual leakage of blood from the heart. Thin, of course, is a mistake. brought the as a deserter, IF HE CAN, * iH Special attention should be paid to avoidance of overexertion restore their county road up. of copyright pated ont, and office a woman word with tft» H a delicious flavor t 4 j and better still | it satisfies But Sy i\ ’ If you can get the purest, whitest soap made for a small soap price—will you pay ten, fifteen or twenty-five eents for an inferior soap? No, why should you? Even at five fimes the price of FAIRY SOAP you cannot find a soap made of purer, richer ingredients. Not a trace of artificial coloring is used. It is the whitest, purest of soaps— admit its superiority. Then why pay more than the FAIRY SOAP even other soap price? . Gs Not only does FAIRY SOAP float, so that it cannot sink inthe waterand waste, but its pleas- ing oval shape fits the hand snugly—there are no jagged edges or sharp corners to crunch off and be wasted. You can use it to the last thin It is all soap to use—none to waste, wafer. There is further economy in knowing that you can use FAIRY SOAP safely for any pur- pose—for anything and everything about your home. For the fine texture of your skin, there is no purer, safer soap made! It keeps the com- plexion soft, delicate, fresh-looking! finest undergarments, silk stockings, laces, tap- Not a thread is weakened by FAIRY SOAP. There are no mys- terious ingredients to “bite” into the materials. The longer life that you get from your fabrics, in itself makes FAIRY SOAP a great house- estries, give better wear. hold economy! } FAIRY SOAP PURE & WHITE & FLOATING REMARKABLE REMARKS when individuals and concerns which contemplate building need delay no longer—Noble Foster Hoggson, New Under our present divorce lawn all of our marriages amount to nothing |more than trial marriages. Brough, Toledo, see Uniontzation of the mteel indantry | ln necensary because mills there tn no freedom for the workers.—-Matthew Woll, vice prowl dont, A. F. of Le eee | Pasenge of the emergency tariff bit would be a poll &n economic blunder—William C Redfield, former secretary of com eee | No matter what other nations may bulld an instrument for war and de etruetion—John H. Commercial Trum Company, GUARANTY BANK AND TRUST CO. 4% ON SAVINGS HENRY KLEINBER Chairman of the HENKY PICKARD, President, @ fald, “BN,” to me now’ W gicen, P. . PINAUD How DID THEY GET THERE? gies -spammag FRAN ie Assistant Caanier. GEO. L. WILTON, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1921. ma to have come Judge | CHILDREN [the have at home in the steel) should be taught to use ED. PINAUD’S HAIR TONIC to insure fine abundant hair in their mature years. Encouraging the care of the physical ap- pearance is almost as important as training of the child mind. Children love to use this fine French hair dressing. It stimulatés the scalp, keeps the hair looking youthful, improves its growth and imparts refined fragrance. Keep your hair and your children’s alive by faithful use of ED. PINAUD’S coal mistake and nnot afford to mpend year to malntatn and Mason, preal- American Offices ED, PINAUD BLDG. OWN, NEW YORK Why is it the most economical At the price for which FAIRY SOAP sells, you * can use this purest and whitest of soaps for any purpose that requires soap. Will not your bric-a-brac, your oil paintings, your woolens, your draperies welcome it? The family laundry emerges sweeter, fresher! Fine woodwork takes on a happier newness! You get FAIRY SOAP in two sizes—hand- size for toilet and bath and the larger size for fine laundry and all-around-the-house uses. Both oval. FAIRY SOAP is so popular that you can buy it everywhere. Ask your grocer to send up a few cakes with your grocery order today! COCEKCFAIRBANK2EEEd Your

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