THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN .X :i: ;si irr 121:. usri . ill1 'isi1 .121: .isi:' - : :mii: :13 ' I INDUSTRIAL NOTES I I BY PUPILS : 'iBi .isr I2i!. 'iisi1 ,:ni: . .!2r: 1:1: :;i2ir, jii; ;isi;; nfrl Wm.Bane is working in the tailor shop. Mr. Westley has just finished pruning the orchard. Mr. Bowen is busy with the roses on the Avenue. The electricians have put new lamps in the laundry. John Robinson is now working in the blacksmith shop. Hugh Jackson has entered the harness making department. . Haines Batemen is kept busy in the shoe shop, repairing. The dairy boys are getting their ox team ready for work. The painters are busy painting the i.ew Open Air Sanitarium. The girls are kept very busy Mondays doing up the boy's light shirts. .The carpenters have completed re pairing the roof on the new gym. Caroline Joseph is. now working in the dining hall and she is doing fine. The girls in Mrs. Fickle's sewing room are making towels for Brewer Hall. Henry Shaw is working on the farm. He pays, that he likps to work there. Paul Queahpalma is again working in the hlacksmiih shop after an absence of several months. The sewing room girls have been do ing nicely on the uniforms. They have only about a half dozen more to make for the McBride Hall girls.. The plumbers have been busy the past week covering the steam pipes under the ' gymnasium The gym will be kept very comfortable this winter. CUTTING TABLE CLIPPINGS. The Tailor Shop is in good spirits, as is usual, for the following reasons: First, every one is very busy, conse quently every one is happy. Second, every one present is in perfect health in duced by a healthful mind, which in turn is the result of a mind filled with thoughts of the good and useful. Third, that our department is filled with young mechanics who promise wonderful re sults in the future as is evidenced Ty the results of their handicraft each day, here and now. And last but not least, is that we in the tailor shop are optimis tic in as much as we hope for the best, think the best, and obtain the best re sults possible by a combined effort of thought and act We are pleased to report the return of Leon Reinkin to the tailor shop, and from now until he graduates next year he will be found in the tailor shop dur ing business hours. Leon reports that his short experience in the farming de partment did him a great deal of good physically as well as learning a great deal about the care of a horse and the use of farm tools, etc., so we find by experience that in each step we take in life some good may come from that ex perience, providing we seek the best by using our best effort. The Tailor Shop is pleased to report the selection of our 'Senior and Junior basketball tams, and as usual we hereby challenge any shop team to a game of basketball for the Seniors and the Juniors; conditions concerning the game to be published in next week's Chemawa American. The Tailor Shop. Subscribe for the Chemawa American. Twenty-five cents per year.