THE CHE MAW the "industrial habit" you will never regret it. All sorts of trades may be taken up and mastered. For the "considering boy" we offer instruction in various agricultural pur suits. Our large farm and orchard af ford every opportunity for advance ment along these lines. There is dairying, too, and carpentering, wagon making, cabinet making, harness-mak-jns, blackemithing, painting, steam and electrical engineering, plumbing, tailor ing, printing, and there is the baker's trade in addition. For the "considering girl" there is a splendidly equipped launcfry, sewing and dressmaking rooms, fine course in domestic science, nursing, general house keeping,etc. All of these courses are overseen by competent women. Think of these matters. All is yours for the asking Even your tickets will be provided for your transportation. Just write "Supfc. Edwin L. Chalcraft, Chemawa, Ore.," that you wish to come to Chemawa and he will see that you are afforded an opportuntiy to do so. TREES From my bedroom window I look out upon a little forest of trees and they are never the same, it is one forest in the morning, another in the afternoon and at night yet another and still more beautiful one filled with strange magic and mystery. Very early all through the singing months I am wakened with the songs of the birds first the robin, as he is the lat at night save for the night ingale and hooting owl and I often wonder whether I love my trees best in spring or in the winter. A row of houses is the same ail the year round, it knows no changes, and is the most monotonous f outlooks; but the trees have always AMERICAN ' 5 something new to say, it is impossible ever to tire of the trees. If one morn ing 1 were to wake and fine my forest with its colony of friendly rooks and wise owls gone, I should not want to look out my of window any more; it is a very little wood, but it holds as many pleasures for me as ever Adam found in Eden EX. EDISON'S LATEST MARVEL Mr. Edisi n has been given a practical demonstration of his kinetophone, by means of which motion pictures are made to talk. A picture was thrown on the screen, and invention, which synch ronizes the automatic movements of phot ograph and phonograph records, spoke for itself. The kinetophone is not yet perfect, the Telegraph says, but in a few weeks it will be so far perfect, according to friends of the great inventor, that music halls everywhere will be clamoring for its possession. The lips of poeple in the picture move in unison with the words of the phonograph. A picture of a man thrown on the screen dropped a cricket ball, and its impact sounded in stantly from the floor. The man pound ed the table with a hammer, and every blow was perfect. He dropped a plate, and as the pieces flew the crack resound ed. Finally, a motor car horn tooted, and the demonstration ended. Electric wires control the mechanism of the pho tograph and phonograph, and the records for eye and ear are made simultaneously. Mr. Edison proposes to make the person alities and .voices of the world's great people familiar to everybody. Theatri cal and operatic productions will be popularized in the remoter parts of the earth. London Standard. Subscribe for the Chemawa American. On lv 25 cents a year.