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*«** >* 4- 7- I Your Rag-Bag | I Tells of Wash- 1 I Day Wastes! I If; So many things have I been worn out before - II their time—and it is | I a shame—a waste— to even think of letting j 11 wash-day wear cloth- j H ing out faster than | use would wear it! j H»M^^«pßa*W7-*pY''2PTf'7'_r*?_*_r'_*__r^ J I does not rob clothes .-of j il 'their goodness! Do you I I know why this is true? | il I Simply because the Spiral | ill: Cut Gears keep 320 gal- I "i 1§ lons of hot suds racing 1 1 through the clothes each I ii minute, as the Four- | :■ winged Wooden Dolly | fl i drives out the dirt and | jß.V'odors without wear! \ i M fiXA little child can operate ' ■l it when it is loaded full! jf jßfe An iron-clad Guarantee ij «B^' protects you. : ■ *.',- But no rill ion can give U *»B ''■■' you the facts half so well a* j ■ ss a call would—soon! " * 'i --•..- LEE ALLEN * \ S_MJ yiAvrr buttq-. l!^ satisfies a national need for a button to wear with soft cutis. You will like its convenience. * You'll be grateful for h-iving 1 (truck out of a busy day that I - little irritation of an ill fitting § cuff button. - * Splendid assortments of pearl, j enamel, engine turned ami en- i ' paved effects. Colors to liarmon- it ux with any shirt. 53* 1 to $5 per || ■"pair.*,' , * V MBBfJi _S_^__k__^__^/_^^^^^^S___i_. f/^mm/Q (71_ /) /) o\\li li IHI WASH. Ramer's ji Chocolates j! Direct from the Factory ]! they will Please You !; ~HORPE*S POKE HOUSE j. . (Incorporated) !| V Phone 28 i[ [ Where Everybody Goes <[ _-. __ "--"■-.-.■■■■* 4 Automobile Owners Don't, neglect your batteries. Re i|y ember you have only to stop in !' 'onl of Peterson's Battery Station s,nayou i- bait.Tic; will be tested free 11 I. chary... -.„,., test, repair and re |"Jk arge torage batteries and always jit^ 7 a full supply of battery parts. *'v batteries and rental batteries. ;; Jb i_there is any kind of electrical If* orl- ".required on your machine it Dbe d°ne right there as Mr. Peter •-•Sand doc all kinds of auto electrlcal I^J ' battery work, including generat- S«- starters, etc. • .^Remember the place— ' __%*^^' *■'■-...-"'* PETERSON BATTERY STATION H',^ Grand st. Phone O.", J3|||D » AXXOUNCEMKXT ' tore . Ruth Coffman and Miss Le tlhiS Elnerßoa announce that- they R s-^.?,opened a dressmaking parlor In ooni on the second floor of the s©"!° a. building. YANKS SALVAGE . IMMENSE BOOTY German Guns Worth Many Mil lions Are Found in Ar gonne Forest. WEAPONS ABANDONED BY FIE Teutons Left Artillery and Sheila In Mad Flight When Americans Ad vanced—Forest Cleaned by ) Doughboys. Paris.-War booty valued at more than $5,000,000. left by the Germans In their flight from the Argonne for est. the scene of America's greatest battle in the world war, has been col lected by a fore- of negro soldiers who have been cleaning up the famous bat tlefield. Machine guns, rifles, muni tions and war supplies of all kinds have been collected In every wooded ravine, dugout and trench In the Ar gonne-Meuse sector, comprising 480 square miles. The American engineers moved up to the battlefield soon after the armis tice was signed. For miles around there was not a village or farm that was occupied. Orders were Issued to squads of American salvage engineers to pick up every gun they found, broken or In serviceable condition, as well as all war material, anil place the supplies along the nearest road for collection in army trucks. The colored fighters received Instructions that whenever they came ncross'an unexploded shell they were not to touch it, but to put up a little stick beside It with a note so that the munition salvagers could find it later. The doughboys soon made the dis covery that the Germans In their flight abandoned hundreds of machine guns and even large pieces of artillery which the Yankees, in their hurry to advance, had failed to see. Loaded in Box Cars. One of the discoveries made by the Americans who have completed the task of cleaning up the battlefield was the unusually large number of ma chine guns the Germans had Installed In the Argonne forest. No Information was secured as to the number the enemy was able to save in his flight toward the Rhine, but thousands of these weapons were left behind. In one small sector of the battlefield sev eral hundred ears were loaded with machine guns. In one town located In the rear of the battlefield there is a pile of brass shell cases, abandoned by the Ger mans, that would more than fill the hold of a large ocean freighter. It was estimated that nearly 1,000,000 shell cases had been piled In that vil lage, These have been purchased by the French government. Salvage Work Expensive. Experts with the American expedi tionary forces have estimated that the Yankees had captured 200 per cent more war booty In the Argonne forest than their records will show. This was due, It is said, to the rapidity of the American advance and to the hurry of the Germans to leave their dugouts and weapons and surrender to their conquerors. The work of cleaning up the Ar gonne battlefield, however, has been an expensive one, although vast quanti ties of copper, brass and steel have been salvaged. It bus cost more than 12,000,000 to complete the task, but the work has been a success financial ly, as the booty la worth more than twice that sum. SOLDIERS LAUGH AT DEATH Pair Stricken With Influenza on Board Ship Use Prize Ring Count. San Francisco.A tragic story of how two British soldiers laughed at death is told in a letter received by Harry Annan, assistant manager of the Palace hotel, from a friend In Auckland, New /..'aland. An extract ".villi the letter rends: "The transport I came home on carried two soldier pals, both of whom had Influenza. After the doc tor bad given them up as hopeless they entertained themselves and their neighbors by counting one another out. It would have been humorous hut for the awful tragedy of it; al ternately, 'One-two p .-'. eight-nine —out—you dead yet?' till one of them failed to answer. I don't know quite how I felt about It ; pity and admiration were strangely mixed." Soldier Beats Train. Junction City, Kan.— Trains were too slow for a certain Kansas soldier who has been away from Ids home at Sallna for two years. When he re turned to Camp Funston the other day he received a pass to spend Sunday nt Salina. Instead of waiting several hours for the next train to his home town, he hit the highway and was for tunate in catching an automobile ride to Abilene. His good luck did not foresnke him there, for he again took to the road and another motorcar picked him up and landed him In Sa lina about the time the train «'.:■ leaving Junction City. They Didn't Stay. Clinton, lll.—Robbers forced an en trance Into Gowdy's grocery. They didn't stay to look around. The Gow.lv' bulldog has bis sleeping quar tori in tli*-' store. 'Ml PULLMAN* HERALD SUMMONS '*' the Superior Court 0 the State '"' \yashlngton in and for Whit man County, J. K. Bmawley and Dovey Smawley, husband and wife. Plaintiffs, vs. •lames R. Parks. Olive McKen '"'■ the Unknown Heirs of Roy Parks, deceased; also all other persons or parties unknown, claiming any right, title, inter '•■■*' estate or Men in the prop erty described In the complaint herein, defendants. The State of Washington, to the Unknown Heirs of Roy Parks, de ceased; also all other persons or par ties unknown claiming any right, title. Interest, estate or Hen in the land described in the complaint here in, defendants: Yon are hereby summoned to ap pear within 60 days after the date of the first publication of this sum mons, to-wit. within GO days after the 27th day of June, 1919, and de fend the above entitled action in the above entitled court, and answer the Complain) of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer on the under signed attorneys for the plaintiffs, at their office below stated, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you accord ing to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. i The object of said action is to par tition lots one to sixteen inclusive in block seven, and lots one and two of block eight, of Farr's Third addition to Pullman, Washington, and in case that said lands can not be parti tioned without injury to the parties interested,' that the property be sold and the proceeds divided among the partic. according to their respective interests. Dated June 26, 191!'. XEILL & SANGER, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Pullman, Wash. June27Augß NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Superior Court of the State of Washington, in and for the County of Whitman. In the Matter of the Estate of Eliza beth Campbell, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that I, the undersigned, have been appointed and confirmed by the above named ccurt as the executor of the last will and testament of Elizabeth Camp bell, deceased, and that I have quail fied as such executor; that the cred itors of said deceased, and all per sons having claims against the de ceased, are required to serve their said claims, supported by affidavit as required by law, on the under signed executor, or on D. C. Dow, my attorney of record, at his law office In Pullman, Whitman County, Wash ington, and file tho same with the clerk of the above named court, to gether with proof of such service, within six months after the date of the first publication of this notice. to-wit: within six months after the I3tb day of June, 1919; and that all claims not served and filed with in the time aforesaid shall be for ever barred. Dated June 3rd, A. D. 1919. .- WILEY CAMPBELL. Executor of the Will of Elizabeth Campbell, Deceased. I). C. Dow, Attorney for the Estate, June!3July4 Pullman, Wash. FOR BALE —Having purchased a tractor, I have several A No. 1 horses for sale; also some good hay. Prices right. Harry Haynes. jn2otf ALL WE ASK IS THAT YOU Come in and See for YourselfWe Know what the Result will be Minneapolis 19 h.p. Engine, 82 --inch separator, run two seasons'; is overhauled and ready for th- field. Wild, TRADE FOR AN AIT. > or sell for $800. -Look ii over. Several J. I: Case machines at $450 up to $700, one 32-inch; $50; another 32 --in.-li at $100. One 22 h.p,. Trac tion Engine at $325. one 30 h.p. Busaell at $2000, One comlnne, $700. Better let us demonstrate them to you. They, will stand investi gation. W,. have two Fords; Will sell them by the pound. Also one ol those tough Case 255.. Two full grown ears that will make real farm wagons, or BUGS. * ■ (in,, two-ton internal gear drive Truck, i!" Model, $600. Fallquist Bros. ■ %M mm 1. • "■" _I I I A><-^iv_aarßODT BWWS id! I / jf^ ■«U»l-'l_S^H__A»MIA_«DUiat v I HE Buick Valve- \ in-Head motor is, I A if __J-, first of all, a clean tSs|aiMw^/pfi. cut motor. It acts (t||||//" ~__^-____---i 'iSP' cleanly, it concentrates, it becomes more efficient—be cause the cylinders of this * motor are true cylinders— r?=-----J^ they have no side-pockets " fe^?^-^--J._-~^..--^^^ no by-ways through which to The full force of the explosion acts on the piston-head, where it conserves 4 power. After each piston stroke the l n -^^ ra^*ikr^M cylinders clear themselves of dead gas, 4^slHgj i J 1 i^^M so that they are filled with all fresh gas f^p^ift -^PMMJ-^^W^j^y for «-ich succeeding- explosion. - , _, , .--.,'---• ■• ' nri-hfrrnri j - * The Kimball-Burt Auto Company PULLMAN, WASH. SIMMONS In the Superior Court of the State of Washington, in and for the County of Whitman. Philip M. Price, Trustee, Plaintiff, vs. Lowell L. Rogers, Fred. B. Rogers. Frank 0. v Rogers, E. Chance Rogers, Linna A. Sauze, .Tared L. Rogers, and Laura A. McDonald, and all other per sons or parties unknown claim ing ■ ny right, title, interest, es tate or lien in the property de scribed in the Complaint, De fendants. The State of Washington to Lowell L. Rogers, Frank O. Rogers, E. chance Rogers and Jared L. Rogers, and also all other per sons or parties unknown claim ing any right, title, interest, es tate or lien in the property de scribed in the Complaint herein, Defendants: You are hereby''summoned to ap pear within sixty days after the date of ho first publication of this Sum mons, to-wit: Within sixty days af ter the Sth day of June, 1919, and defend the above entitled action In the above entitled court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorneys for plain tiff at their office below stated, and in case of your failure so to do. judg ment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the com plaint, which has been filed with the clerk of said court. ■ 'li: object of said action IS to quiet title in the plaintiff to the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter, and west half of the north west quarter of section 21, and the east half of the southeast, quarter, and lie east half of the northeast quarter of section 20, all La.town ship 15 north, range 44, E. W. M.. also lots 5, 6, 7 and 8 in block 29,0f College Hill r.ddltlon to Pullman, Whitman county, Washington, and to forever bar you from asserting any claim to said real estate or any part, thereof adverse to the plaintiff. Dated-June sth, 1919. - NEILL & SANGER. Attorneys for. Plaintiff. P. O. Address: Pullman. Wash. June6Julyl S Grain Insurance. Yeo & Emert. iniltt Geo. x. Henry can save you money on your grain Insurance. . Jn_7JH Binding twine. Wo & Emert. _..__ — -7 / _______/u_ljß__l •__!__-lt-___t_______r / \\ For All Outdoors M II A package of Snow Flakes is a friend in need. p|l l\ Always fresh, crisp, easy to pack and satisfy- \ V \\ in?. They taste good with everything else. \ ,'.\ j:\ Your grocer can supply you. ]: 7 \yV. Don't ask for Crackers .I j \^ r yS\ _ sa y Snow Flakes / / ', V^r^S ..J^"**-^ y^ y/ Pacific Coast Jjaz-c-tai.l tgagkmnnnnnna^lAmadS ■d.'ammmmjiimrnmwmefnxrsmumjmArvnßma iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu Call 59 | 9 for Cars to Moscow 1 or Coeur d Alene. 1 Fare to Moscow $1.00 § per passenger each way. | TV 11 _0 1 Pullman Garage ] • '■-"?;, a-? ; = Pago Three