2
THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN
INDUSTRIAL f NOTES
g BY PUPILS 1
lllllllOllilllllllllllllilllllllSIIIIIII!
David Penny returned to the black
smith shop.
Haines DeWitt is fixing door sills for
the sanitarium.
The detail has been changed but will
not go into effect until Monday the 1st.
The small sewing room girls are
making new sheets fcr Brewer Hall.
The blacksmiths decorated the auditor
ium for their oyster supper Monday.
Fred Lewis and John Brown ,pui a
new flange in the steam lines to the boys'
gymnasium.
Joaquin Meadows and David Penny
are ironing off a light farm wagon to be
used on our school farm.
The carpenters have just finished a
number of posts for the lawn railing and
they are on their way to the paint shop
where Eugene Williams will put tbe
finishing touches on them.
Metals get tired as well as human
beings. Telegraph wires are better con
ductors on Monday than on Saturday, on
account of their Sunday rest, and a rest
of three weeks adds 10 per cent, to the
conducting power of a wire.
A.-Y -P. EXPOSITION NOTES.
The Alaska-Yukon Pacific exposition
is called "The Fair That Will Be Ready."
The Washington state live game exhib
it at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition
will show all the wild game of the region.
The mining exhibit at the Alaska-
Yukon-Pacific exposition in 1909 will be
the most complete mineral display ever
shown at a world's fair.
The Alaska-Yukon Pacific Exposition
has appropriated $100,000 for premiums
in the live stock show to be held in con
nection with the 1909 exposition.
Grains, fruits and vegetables grown in
Alaska will be a feature of the exhibit
from the Northland at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
exposition next summer.
Flowers never before grown in the
United States will form a part of the
decorative features at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
exposition at Seattle next summer.
Visitors to the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
exposition next summer will find
ideal weather during the entire time of
the fair. Seattle never suffers from ex
tremes in heat or cold.
The perpetual snow fields of four
mountain ranges and Mt. Rainier, one of
the highest peaks in the United States,
offer an unsurpassed view from the cen
tral court on the grounds of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
exposition.
The A. A. U. track meets this year will
-be held under the auspices of the Expo
sition and many attractive prizes will be
offered to the contestants. The Exposi
tion will be opened on June 1st and a
schedule of meets will be arranged
starting from that time. There will be a
wide quarter mile track and grounds
for baseball, tennis and all field events
for track meets within the stadium and
an active summer is expected hy the
University students.
In order to secure a change of ad
dress, subscribers to The Chemawa
American must give old as well as new
address to insure prompt attention
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