Weekly Chemawa American. (Chemawa, Or.) 189?-198?, May 08, 1908, Page 8, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN
INDUSTRIAL NOTES
Mike Olsen is doing some fine plow
ing on the farm.
The wagon makers are busy repairing
old chairs this week.
Ernest David is doing fine work
trimming the hedges.
James Smith is getting along fine in
the carpenter shop.
The gardeners are through hoeing the
young onions back of the school building.
The plumbers are hard at work now
adays, laying the sewer pipe to the new
gymnasium.
The harnessmakers mowed their lawn
Monday morning. It looks very nice in
the front of the shops.
Thos. Spedis, an apprentice of the
blacksmith shop, is doing excellent
work ironing the wagons.
Mrs. Doherty and detail of boys have
just finished mending a big pile of coats
and trousers for the occupants of Brewer
Hall.
Robert Cameron takes delight in level
ing the baseball ground and the track,
which shows that he is an athlete on
and off the field.
The blacksmiths cut threads on the
iron rods for the gym and also made
lots of iron washers for them and put
them in place in the gym.
The sewing room girls have finished
the McBride Hall girls' summer uniforms
and have made the uniforms for the
first company of . small girls.
The wagon makers are busy repairing
chairs. Philip Talbot is quite a hand at
tlie business, while John Mason is a
specialist on scools.
The blacksmiths finished ironing off a
small farm wagon last week, and they
will soon have several others finished
and ready for the painters.
caaemtc
We now have recess at 10:30 and 2:45
for 15 minutes.
The Juniors and Seniors are looking
forward to a hard final examination.
Lizzie Reaver is teaching Spelling
and Reading in the 5th Normal this week.
The Progessive Literary Society is go
ing to give an entertainment in the
near future.
The Nonpareil Literary Society has
disbanded for the year and will give their
reception Friday evening.
Boys and girls must be more prompt
in returning to the school building after
recess. Be ready when the recall bell
rings.
Boys and girls who ask to be excused
from school on every possible occason
can not expect to pass the final test
next month.
The flower seeds which the seventh
grade planted some time ago are begin
ning to show themselves since the
warm weather has come.
The yard around the academic build
ing is looking very clean and neat.
The flower beds are well cared for and
there are no scraps of paper to he seen
Frank Madison picks up everv scrap
around the building and takes pndi'in
the ood appearance of the grounds.
The Normal room is doing fine work.
Vernie Cliffe, Margaret Lowry, Loulin
Brewer and Calvin Darnell have been
very successful in the 5th Normal and
Belle Dillstrom, Louise Murray, Tillie
Souvenir and Katie Brewer have been
just as successful in the 6th Normal.