The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 10, 1921, Page 4

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BENTON CO. OFFERS LAND FOR SOLDIER Mild Climate, Rich Soil and Economy in Establishing Settler Cited ‘Baitor The Star: | Beveral of your subscribers here Dave put it up to me to = enclosed sto: you in the ua pes All of tt te Deine. Drowe ht et al, we we will have at to turn on th light of ] rand The Star can help out Tot in that respe | Walter B Greene Mey Fruit department to an- and brought under cultivation. ‘of the other districts have some te eel. ‘Hope yeu can use this, . OLARET, i — White nivers Wash, Spokes: BY E. J. O'LAREY White Bluffs “Spokesman.” HITE BLUFFS, Wash., Oct. 10 ded by farms being suc: irrigated from wells at « reasonable cost, there lies be- White Bluffs and Hanford in county several hundred acres (state tand that the citizens of communities would like to see under cultivation by actual im preference to being sold c tors. announcement was made spring that the state was going j select a project for settlement by men under the Land Set- act, for the carrying out of ose provisions $300,000 was appro lated by the legislature, the merits x district were presented to A. Scott, director of conserva- it, who is au by law to make the selec- gn and also to the Land Settlement in the state with a view of to Mr. Scott the best place from the standpoint ex-service man. PUT SOLDIER LAND CHEAPLY compiled by experienced | here prove that the lands in valley can be furnished to the settler complete with a first aes irrigation plant for about one ‘sthe price of the land offered Mder various other irrigation proj- for the soldier settlement. addition this valley is one of earliest. fruit districts in the has a mild climate, « growing season and is noted highly productive soit. u small community, White ord has all the modern ts and conveniences, such as rie light and power, telephones, free Seren: railroad and riv- t facilities, a weekly . moving pictures, and good schools; it proved per cent Americanism during and possesses the distinction +. it, the executive committee of je Ar ean Legion, which is made 16 representative men in the has recommended this valley choice and the Manson proj- influence and little articles un flaged as news items, appear- r Fecently in some of the dally pa. Indicate that backers of some the less meritorious projects who ato unload something on the te; are already at work in an at- pt to discredit the American Le- committee and to swerve Mr. from its recommendations. local committee in charge of thering the data for Mr. Scott and American Legion committee, th is composed of representative) men and farmers, reseht unfair and unjust attacks and wired their protest to some of; papers in which the articles have _ And the citizens as a whole here that their project is the most ‘Meritorious offered and that since ‘the American Legion, which is Mal ‘tally interested, because its mem. ‘Ders will settle upon and must event. wally pay for the land in the project thosen—has, after a careful investi- of all projects, selected this one, their recommendations shoul. Ihave most serious consideration an, “Be beyond the reach of political or other influences. : NOTE. Nee Jarticles, setting te fos tnnd cottioqnens plan be printed in The Star this week.— Cafe Safe Blown; Robbers Get $2,500 LOS ANGELES, Oct. 10.—Using ‘wet clothing and rubber mats to led wax, obtainable at the door of a 500-pound safe at fashionable Victor Hugo cafe on! Hill st. and obtained in excess $2,600 cash. - A list of 150 jurors for the Novem- ber jury geo was drawn Basurdey County Clerk George will report at the County-City the first Monday » mate . Bumpy Flivver Sings to Him He’s Cashing, in On the s Song) PAVIA + eating Y CAUSE I love you—yes, dear, I do-——" You've probably heard the line; there's hardly a cabaret or dance hall in Seattle that hasn't used the song in recent months. Tt's a lasy, pleasant little fong, strongly suggestive of moonlit bowers, the fragrance of honeysuckle—and the pres ence of an infinitely desirable bit of femininity. All of which simply goes te show that you never can tell Because that song—"I Love You So” is Its official title—was conceived of the pungent fumes of gasoline, born on the front seat of a flivver and nursed to a lustry childrood ‘tween bumps on @ country road. eee Mark Miner, 931 14th ave, an itinerant teacher of music is the author of the song. Much of his work ts In the rural schools of the county, which employ him to teach the violin and the piano—so he makes long jumps every few days, riding in his Mivver from country school to country school. Miner enjoys thene rides; Partly because of the fresh air and sunshine; partly because of the lure of the open road—but Principally because of the music of his fivver. Some musicians might not Ike a flivver; they think they’re dirty and common, and that their clatter ts the very antithesis of real music, But Miner isn’t that kind of a musician. He loves his Mivver, and treats it just as if * were an intelligent horse. In return for which the flivver sings to him—such songs! The buzz of the motor, the pounding of the loose bearing: the clank of the cracked pan; the flap of the loose curtains— everyone of these has a meaning for Miner. And, as the @rives over the lonely country roads, he amuses himself by translating the fitv- vers song tnto readable notes and sharps and flats. He id thts tor years, without making any use of the musio— he considered himself a teacher, not a composer, and so never bothered to send the songs to a publisher. But last summer an act at a local theatre offered a prize for the best song written ~ an amateur here. More in a spirit of \dlenesn than anything else, Miner sub mitted one of his fliivver songs— and, to his intense surprise, it won first prize. After thinking It over he de cided it was just a fluke of luck but later he found that it was gaining a genuine hold every. where. One dance hall used it for a solid month; cabaret after cabaret turned to it; it even spread to the steamship orches- tras, and was played in Europe and the Orient. Finally Miner came to the con- clusion that his flivver songs ‘were worth actual money to him —s#o now he’s planning to invade New York with some of 'em. Auburn Cat Is Some Grandma Mrs. George Ware, of Auburn, has a cat that is the great-great- great-great-great-grandmother of half the cats in Western Wash- ington. Her name is Spark. She ts 16 years old, deaf as a post, and wholly without teeth. Two years ago she was shot and wounded severely. Every year Spark has had sev- |] eral families of kittens. These have grown up, gone thelr way and prospered. Some four years ago Mrs. Ware began saving one kitten out of every family to preserve the race in her own household, anticipat- ing the demise of Spark. But Spark did not demise. Last week she brought into the world three more offspring. And Mrs. Ware is wondering whether to save one kit or not. How Many Men Ke Youthful Looking It 1s well known that within re- cent years the men have become ex- tensive patrons of beauty specialists and masseurs. he fastidi- ous, but men rally who have a gare for personal appearance. This has also led to the employment by f home methods calculated to fubance on precerre Physical attrac- tiveness. Of these, perhaps the mi widely used is the mercolized wi treatment, which explains the myn- tery of the silver-haired gentleman with the boyish The mercoliz- y drug store, cold cream, radually ad cuti- revealing the ja applied the s# entry not rubbe absorbs the de cle in tiny particle fresher, heatthler secure best results man tno wex $ night, washing {¢ of th rning. “Women not co husbands in th the ¢ To ay it off in only en- but use THE Suggests Ways to Better Sand Point A whler runway and « supply of [high test gasoline should be ar | ranged at the Sand Point aviation field, according to Maj. Hl. CG. K | Muhlenberg, U. 8 A, who Saturday Camp Lewis to Sand Point. The trip was accomplished in 60 minutes Will Show Alaska Wares at Chicago Five tons of Alaskan exhibits will be shown in Chicago during the week of October 17-22 at the Amert can Mining congress, J. L. McPher- aun, secretary-manager of the Alas |ka bureau of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, will attend the exhibit, | 'Revelle to Appelst Only War Veterans All his deputies will be exservice | men, according to the announcement | lof Thomas P. Reyelle, newly nomt: | nated United States district attor- ney for Western Washington, SEATTLE afternoon made a test flight trom | _ STAR Stute and Are Shy WASHINGTON, Oct. 10-—Tho state of Washington has $42,228 families and only me hdl dwell- z 4 whe as ard | “Pape’s Cold Compound” Breaks Any Cold in a Few Hours Instant refief! Don’ stay stuffed up! Quit blowing and mnuffiing! A dose of “Pape's Cold Compound” tak en every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks any cold| o right up. Tho first dose opens clogged-up nostrils end alr passages of head; ZUM Fh MONDAY, OCTOBER 1 The United States as a whole in r’ rhort 5,664, 472 ibe There were | Park Board Sta to Save Green 4 24,351,476 families in the United 3 20,697,004 | ceri gp Bn go ligg Park board engineers will 9 mence this week a survey of condi N t ] dwellings when the census figures n Oo 71 es were compiled The United States very likely 1*| tions at Green lake for the purpose jctermining the available sources oO nate u be ot ings, according to figures made Saessie veclbineea, we th "ee oJ rn. vad public today by the U. 8. census m | of water supply Unless new sources of fresh water 4 ment by of the term “dwe — urea dow not ecenmarily mean & use ecco og dy Usual mense of the word. A|¢an be secured, Dr. H. M. Read be tent, a freight or an aban-| health commissioner, has stated that street car, or room. in a|he will clove the lake to b ra suse if it serves as a sleeping | place for one or more persons, ts treated as a dwelling To balance this, however, the gov: ernment also regards apartment |houses where several families lve an tingle dwellings. dwellings; Kentucky, 646,206 fam ilies and 610,981 dwellings; Tenn- 619,108 families and 488,392 | dwellings; Alabama, 608,769 families and 480,392 dwellings; Oklahoma, 444,524 families and 418,557 dwell rding to the census figures nb| ing; Colorado, 230,843 tamilies and scapes the housing shortage. 211,103 dwellings; Oregon, 202,890 Ihio, with 1,414,068 families, has)families and 145,081 dwellings, and only 1,216,542 dwellings, Texas, with California, 900,232 families and 778, 1,017,413 families, has only 946,629, |861 dwellings. stops nose running; relieves head Here are some other examples: The average numbers of per- ew York, 2441125 families and| sons in a family has decreased 5,114 dwellings; Indiana, 737,707| from 5 in 1880 to 4.3 in 1920. Im ‘s Cold Compound” fs the |familier and 696,466 dwellings; Min-| general families are largest in surest relief known, and |/nesota, 626,026 families and 469,662| the Southern states and smallest y a few cents at drug storen. | dwellings; Iowa, 686,070 families and| in the Western states, Tantes | 559,188 dwellings; Nebraska, 303,436 | ~~ Insist |families and 288,390 dwellings; Vir- Mother, Dring nome some of ginia, 483,363 families and 450,229Boldt’s Milk Bread!—Advertisemen' emer, It acts without assistance, nice, Contains no quinine. upon Pape's, failures in Goking —and the Way out by Fairco An announcement for all women whose cooking efforts are sometimes marred by disappointment O woman welcomes the thought that her cooking efforts are not always crowned with success. "Yet isn’t it a fact. that the best of cooks, like leaders in other lines, must occasionally admit failure? One woman bakes the tenderest pie crust, yet has poor success with doughnuts. Another makes the most tempting biscuits, yet fails when it comes to fried potatoes. Another is queen of waffles, fritters, pan- cakes, croquettes, but approaches with misgiving the baking of cake. Many a woman has her own partic- ular cooking problem, for which, so far, she has sought the solution in vain. The Way Out There is a way out, as will be'shown in a series of articles to appear in this newspaper on “Failures in Cooking”. to avoid failures which naturally Women who read these articles will learn annoy and dis- courage. Not only that, but the woman who prides herself on her consistent cooking successes will find many a suggestion whereby even her best recipes are improved. These helpful talks are based on the actual experi- ence of women who have failed in some department of cookery. A well-known cooking expert tells how, by following the simple FAIRCO method, success is assured every time. FAIRCO is a glistening white fat of creamy consistency. Wholly vegetable, it has no odor or flavor of its own, but how it does bring out and develop the flavor of everything for which it is used! It does not absorb food flavors or odors,‘and so may be strained and used over and over again. The kitchen remains free from smoke, because FAIRCO does not smoke at the usual frying temperatures. ’ Success from Failure Even the can in which FAIRCO comes is different—a sanitary container with a clean friction cover which can be removed and replaced at will without using a can opener. Naturally, we want every woman who cooks to use FAIRCO; but we want her to learn of its superiority not merely in her successful recipes, but in the recipes with which she does not always have success. For FAIRCO brings success out of failure as you will learn by following the FAIRCO talks. Talk Number 1 will deal with the problem of “The Pie Failure— and the way out”. Every woman with a pie crust dread ‘should read it. rco ~ (HEEE FAIRBANK ZSaEsnY)

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