. The American Legion Weekly [Volume 4, No. 50 (December 15, 1922)]. and cream. You are waiting to learnhow these tracts may be had, of course. The Washington State Legislature in1921 appropriated $300,000 for landsettlement purposes in the State, vet-erans of all wars to have State having made no American Legion, at its 1921 de-partment convention, authorized a com-mittee to investigate the several settle-ment projects in the State. This com-mittee recommended the White Bluffs-Hanford project, which was adopted bythe State on November 11, 1921. This project is loca


. The American Legion Weekly [Volume 4, No. 50 (December 15, 1922)]. and cream. You are waiting to learnhow these tracts may be had, of course. The Washington State Legislature in1921 appropriated $300,000 for landsettlement purposes in the State, vet-erans of all wars to have State having made no American Legion, at its 1921 de-partment convention, authorized a com-mittee to investigate the several settle-ment projects in the State. This com-mittee recommended the White Bluffs-Hanford project, which was adopted bythe State on November 11, 1921. This project is located on the Colum-bia, in the heart of the Priest Rapidsvalley, about midway between We-natchee on the north and Kennewickand Pasco on the south. Scatteredthrough the valley in units averaging20 acres each, the State is acquiringfifty-eight tracts. Twenty-five miles distant is PriestRapids, where Eastern capital is pro-posing a dam which, it claims, will benext to Niagara in the development ofindustrial power. A small power sta-tion operated by a wing dam at theRap


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