The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 4, 1921, Page 19

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Cheese is not “just Cheese” when it’s Tillamook! At once you'll notice a vast fmprovement tn flavor when you use Tillamook Cheese. The simplest dishes become delicious. Serve macaroni and cheese tin using jamao! You'll find a new dalicioeione-a tices Sree They Ae: roe fic for am epicure. wy Or, try this: Toast sfices of bread brown: generous pieces of Tillamook Cheese on them oot ys adh eh for two minutes. Eat while hot. Simple, but how tasty! Thesves Sin ml go ine the malingot erry ond Th Five quarts cream milk go ec ind. Th careful, scientific supervision is in force in the 24 Tulamook Kitchens Look for, Tillamook on the tind if you want cheese that is always un} formly good. Ad grocer for TWiawwok Cheese—eold b ‘aor rh i pre 14-pound nea serene Look for TILLAMOOK on the Rind ! SAME PRICE For over 30 years Baking y Powder 5 Ounces for BFF USE LESS than of higher priced brands MILLIONS OF POUNDS BOUGHT BY THE GOVERNMENT Designed for You —to meet your desire for a real dainty, tasty cracker wafer. These delicate creations—Snow Flakes — will appeal to your most fastidious friends. You will find them invaluable in your home to serve on all occasions. Don’t ask for Crackers—~ say SNOW FLAKES ‘Ask your grocer fot ‘ , PACIFIC COAST BISCUIT CO., Seattle, Wash, Fight for But a Single Ally HEINZ 57 BY ROBERT BASTIEN BERMANN You thrilled, no doubt, wh you read “Turzan of the Ape Maybe you fel a bit appointed that ness such @ pt in cold reality, instead of thra the eyes of a writer of fiction, Yet right here in Washington almost in struggle is be dix only it bs a mn lentless struggl facile pen of roughs was able to conceive, Almost within a stone throw of your home, a primitive race is bat ting heroically for its very exist at a battle it ia! Un by myriad foes, the} seems to be cer tain extin . And yet, with the ald of only a single ally, the be leaguered race is making steady progress aguinst its enemies, LONE ALLY 18S DARWIN lone ally ts TL. H. Dar nh commiysioner—and, | ret'll have to out, the heroic clan is none other than the succulent and familiar Olympia oyster. That may sound tacetious—but ft isn't. ‘The oyster has more enemice to the square inch and fewer means ptecting itself than any other can find in your And the Olym e the term to apply all native Washington bivalves just a little more unfortunate than any of its cousina, As the late Mr, Gilbert might apt ly have remarked—“The Olympia oyster’s lot is not a happy one.” Commissioner Darwin, who has the role of a sort of Pershing in the oyster war, in that he arrived late in the struggle, but in time to turn the tide, discussed his campaign to- day. His communique, tn addition to furnishing material that ts quite a bit liver than any of the commu. niques that used to be lasued in the A. E. F., brings out a number of facts about the oyster that seem to have been suppressed tn the past. Did you ever know, for instance, that— The Olympia oyrter te the Gaddy of all oysters—that {t ts probably, of the very «aime specie as those that the dinosauras used to feast on in prehistoric times (taking ft for granted that the dinosauras was an epicure)? MANY OTHER BITS OF INFORMATION And that's only one of the odd bits of inforamtion that Darwin has| picked up In the course of his battle | for the oysters. “1.” he explained, “and the mem. bers of my staff are about the only friends that the Washington oyster | has, I don’t my that the general public fs hard-hearted and unsym pathetio—it's just that the people/ don't know; that they always think | of the oyster simply as something to eat, and not as an actor in a thrilling melodrama, “No form of animal life In all the world has quite as tough » time as the Washington oyster, It's greatest enemies are the heat and cold. “The oyster, aa everyone knows, | attaches iteelf to some hard sub stance under water as soon as ft starte to mature, and spends the rest of its life there—uniem tt is torn away to be converted into a cocktail or a try. “If the oyster gete 9 shallow water—an tt always does tn the Pu get sound country—it in in constant danger of being either frozen to death or burned up. The tide re codes, you see, leaving ft exposed on the beach—and it elther burns or freezes, according to whether it is winter or summer, “We are now combatting this con- dition by building dykes—eight to 10-inch walle~in the oyster re serves, which assures the oysters of The Coal of No Regrets! LUMP THE SEATTLE STAR Olympia Oyster in | which, Life; Has at least a shallow covering of wa ter at all times, COUNTLESS OTTTER FOES TO FIGHT “Thus we can say that we have the oyster’s worst enemy on the run—but there are countless other foes to be overcome before the oys-| ter will have anything like an tidy! Me existence, it, 1s as immobile as a turnip; but in tte in y it swims freely, altho! feebly, before it settles down | it may wander far from the parental | locality, | “The embryo oyster ts #0 small as to be just visible to the naked eye. | This embryo soon becomes covered with microscopic fieshy bristles, beating in unison, give it some power of locomotion, tho they | are nerviceable chiefly in suspend ing it in the water and bringing it within reach of the tidal currents | on which it travels, | “After a brief career of travel, a tiny shell begins to form, and, as the burden of this increases, a| change of hablt comes, The little port and settle down to the sedent- | ary life of the adult, and this neces. sity bring» one of the gravest crises | of its life, “It is hardly vistble without a lense, and the thinnest film of sedi ment will cover and stifle it, and| most of the bottom over which it has been swimming.is muddy, Only | oyster beds, gravel and shells, pil-| ing and similar bodies in the water present a urface sufficiently firm and clean to serve the little oyster's purpose, “The more fortunate ones cement their shells to such objects, grow and henceforth remain where they fell—unlens displaced by some ex ternal force, But for each one which becomes so attached there are unknown byriads which fafl on unsuitable surfaces and perish, NEVER SAFE FROM ENEMIES “But even after the oyster has found a home, its troubles are not over. It is never safe from other enemies until it falls into the hands of its arch foo— man, Schools of drumfish may grind the oysters into fragments between teeth arranged like a» cobblestone pavement: starfish may appear in great hosts, and, by the muscular force of their arms furnished with rows of suckers, tear open the shells and, turning thelr own stom- achs inside out, absorb the oys- ter while it still lies within the armor designed to protect it. “The drill, a little marine snaf, uses its rough tongue like a rasp. and, boring a smooth, round hole serts its snout and licks up the) meat within—and no it goes. “Posnlbly it is fut such an attack from which the Willapa oysters are suffering at present. “But these latter foes are com. mon to all oynters—while the cold in almost exclusively the enemy of | the Washington oyster. “It is thie condition which has kept the Washington oyster in a primitive e#tate, while the Eastern oyster has been going thru a process of evolution which makes ft as dif ferent as man is from the missing link “The waters of the Northwest, you ses, are so cold that only the spawn of the primitive, or bisexed oyster, can live in the Washington Boils and Pimples They Denote with Unfailing Certainty a Weakened and Impure State of The Blood For Absolute Relief You Must Clear Your Blood of Waste Products Modern fife, with tts rich foods land lack of exercise, often adver. | tives its effects by disfiguring the skin. COAL $10.50 Per Ton EGG NUT $9.50 Per Ton LARGE LUMP $11.00 Per Ton Just the coal for furnace, stove and fireplace, Lowest in ash, Delivered anywhere in Seattle, Extra for carrying. Brier Hill Coal Co. Bunkers at 533 Terry Ave. N. Phone Capitol 4315. You Have Known the Splendid Quality of Chatterton Bread for the past three years—always the best. The fine flavor, uniform baking and high food value make it worth while to carry home, 13c a Large Loaf Two f Tasty Pumpkin, Apple and Mince Pies Fresh, Hot Doughnuts, Fruit Cake now ready—and it’s good old-fashioned pound for pound. Fruit Cake, 80c lb. Main Store: 151 Branches: 112 James Street 3408 Fremont Ave. Acne, small abscesses and bofls are all too common, |__To correct the basic trouble— waste products—the blood must be | purified. But don't clog your blood. | Just clean it out. Nature will do the jrest. Pure, rich, red blood nour- ishes the body and fights off dix ease, | 8. S. &., the standard blood purt- fier and system builder, is the ideal |remedy for skin eruptions, The et- | fect of 8. 8. S. ts to rid the system of the waste products which are causing the trouble. For over 50 years S. S. S. has proven to be of | unusual merit. Begin taking S. 8. 8. |today and write for 56 page illus-|- j trated booklet, “Facts About the | Blood" —tree, | Personal medical advice, without | charge, may also be had by sending }a complete description of your case. | Address Chief Medical Director, Swift Specific Co, 140 8 & 8. Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. AN drug stores sell 8. S. 8. ‘or 25c Cakes and Sweet Rolls 4 Third Avenue Leschi Park “The oyster, as most people know ||| oyster must attach ttself to a sup: |}! thru the helpless oyster’s shell, {n-|L- Pine St. Market Why you can buy ] at new low prices When war increased costs all along the line we made the “57 Varieties” for current needs only—the grocer’s and yours, Now that costs are reduced we are able to put new prices into effect at once—no accu- mulation of high priced stocks to be sold first. | Our patrons get the benefit immediately. Grocers everywhere are pleased to list the “57” in the economic spirit of the times, Nearly all grocers in Seattle are announcing the following prices on Heinz goods: | SMALL MEDIUM LARGE | Oven Baked Beans lloz—12c. 180z—17c. 30 0z.—28e, Peanut Butter 3% oz—l4c. 6% oz-—2le. 10 oz—33e, Tomato Ketchup 8 oz.—23c. . 14 oz—40c. Cooked Spaghetti 10 0z—15e. 160z-—2le. 30 0z—35c Tomato Soup 10 oz—15e. 16 0z.—20c. 30 oz—38c. | Apple Butter 7oz—20c. 160z.—35c. 32 oz.—60c. Prepared Mustard 6 oz.—14c. PINTS 27. QUARTS HALF GALLONS Vinegar oyster has never nad a femin- | ist movement, “We have found that, when trans planted, the Eastern oyster grows! more succulent in Washington wa- ters than it does in its native ‘home but it won't.geproduce on gecount of the lesser resistance of its spawn.” Chink I Manufacturer Doesn’t Want Money| TIENTSIN, China, Nov. 4.— Chao Pinching bought a lottery tick et and won $100,000. He used the money to establish schools for boys and girls, to build a knitting factory | and to aid his own knitting factory | employes. \" IT HAS BEEN SAID “The EYES are the gateway to_the mind; the expression of tie soul; the inspiration ef the! heart.” a Ours ts the sacred éuty of com serving this precious gift: yours is the solemn obligation of keep ing at its best this priceless her ‘ftage, Columbian Optical Co. | | | ‘ Six rules for making good coffee he I. Keep your coffee air tight 2. Measure carefully 3. Use grounds only once . Use boiling water Serve at once Scour the coffee pot COFFEE —_-_ —< ———— ——K— LT Mn me cea ae ee es Se rate Sine fa setae wrth Oe plantar ofthe Beaty of Be es SY eee imited States 1: peration the of the Sao Paul |, which produces more ee ted eete8 He eothall of all the COVFEE used le the United Stater of america JOINT COFFEE TRADE PUBLICITY COMMITTEE, 74 Wall Street, New York When You Think of Advertising Think of The 14

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