6 THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN in:,: ;iai: 1:211; .iisi :!2i, :iai; ::iri!' liizi;; .:,izi;, INDUSTRIAL NOTES j g BY PUPILS g i;, iiixiii' in :in: tsi tar izr iei nil! iisn iixjr iisn: ;jf?f Louis Towner is getting to be a good little tailor. The farmers are plowing at the lower farm this week. , The blacksmiths are remodeling all of the old bedsteads. Louis Picard is getting along nicely in the harness shop. Ernest David and Abe Wheeler have entered the bakery. New oiicloth has been placed on all the dining room tables - . Corbett Underwood entered the har ness department Monday. The laundry girls are busy doing the dining hall curtains this week. The la undry has a supply of chip soap and like it much better than the bars. The plumbers are remodeling some. of the radiators for the. new gymnasium. The- gardeners are digging potatoes. The potatoe crop is very good this year. Joaquin Meadows spends a great deal of his time pointing the gardener's plows. The winter clothing at the McBride Hall is being marked and issued to the girls. Anna Oleson was taken from Miss Skipton's detail and is missed very much. Albert Rainville and McKinley John son are the morning laundry boys, and attend to their work. Gilbert Conner and Willie Lee are working in the laundry in the afternoon. . They are good workers. Nelse Charles works in the kitchen in the afternoon and in the bakery in the forenoon. Wm, Burke does a great deal of work in the shoe shop. His principal work is calking football shoes. , Ella Flemming is taking down the window curtains in the dining room for the laundry girls to wash. Mary Campbell and Eva Klutche are on the afternoon detail jxi the Domestic .Science Department. John LaCourse is doing excellent work in the harness shop, considering the short time he lias been there. Haines Bateman is always kept busy half-soleing, sewing, and patching shoes which come into the shoe shop for re pairs. Loulin Brewer, Carl Ftone, James Benjamin and Joe Charles are hauling potatoes from the garden. They haul about three hundred bushels a day. The year's supply of coal has arrived at the blacksmith shop. New wagons are being ironed off and every body has an iron in the fire or on the anvil ham mering it out. A few sets of old harness from the farm are in the harness shop for repairs. The students have a great deal of re pairing to do as well as che manufacture of new harness. The plumbers are installing radiators in the new gym. The steam pipe is laid and as soon as the pipes are con nected with the radiators the build ing will be well supplied with steam.