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Image provided by: Washington State Library; Olympia, WA
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Pa* Kl«ht Pipeless and Pipe FURNACES nPH --.v.v-7 _SB^K_H_Bi_SHHIHHBISSwIWHHHHNBrVHHBSIHMBMwRHHIHEHH^B A We have for your approval One Round Oak Pipeless Furnace One Round Oak Moist-Air Heater One Torid Zone Pipeless Furnace One Torid Zone Hot Air Furnace Heady to ! I".. .'HI .1! Special Prices Call ;M).I liook Them Over J. E. HAMMOND Plumbing and Heating Co. 1007 Grand Si. Telephone 42 sssssssssssssssssssssssssiasssHasaaaHsssHssssiasH^sasssssssssssssssssssssHSSsssssssss^ Farmers Cash Market Sells all kinds of Meat. Buys Cattle, Hogs, Sheep, and Poultry. A. L. JAMES Pullman, Wash. Telephone 21 COUGARS WIN FROM MONTANA (Continued from page five yard* line. Shields went in at guard and Walker at center. ichreck punted 40 yards to Roy Hanley, who returned 30 yards. Ko tula smashed center for four yards. Kotula made three more at the same place. Adams intercepted a pass and raced 60 yards for the second touchdown. Schreck kicked goal. Score, 42 to 14. Schreck kicked off 20 yards to Brooks, who tumbled but recovered. George made six yards on a trick play. Kotula made a yard at ceu ter, and five more at the same place for yardage. Kotula made two yards at right guard. Keely intercepted a pass and advanced the ball 15 yards, before being downed by Roy Hanley. Mot,tana made yard age on three plays. George inter cepted a pass from Clinch in the middle of the field. George speared a pass from Brooks, which netted 25 yards. Washington State again lost the ball on an intercepted pass, and the game cried wilL the hall 4 0-yard line. Pinal score, W. S. C. 42, Montana 14. Summary: W. S. C. Molilalia Brooks LB . .Cant. Schreck Hamilton LT ..... Dahlberg •'• King Hi Horsey Uunlap C . . Walterskirken R. King RG Harris Herreid RT Demers R. Hanley RE Daylis Mclvor Q Keel) Moran LH Adams Durrwachter. . . rh Adams G'llis F Sullivan Score by periods: W. B. C. 7 22 13 ■» 4'! Montana 7 a 0 7 14 Touchdowns scoring: Gillis, "; D. Hanley. Hamilton, Herreid. Ad ams, 2. Safety: Dahlberg Goals from touchdowns. D. Hanley, •'. ; Brooks, Schreck, 2. Substitutions: W. S. C —11. Han ley for Brooks, Tromanhausser for Hamilton, Brooks for Durrwachter, Walker for Dunlap, Qeoi ge for Mo ran, D. Hanley for Mclvor. BottanOD for R. Hanley, R. Hanley for I). Han ley, R. Schnebiy for Herreid. Kotula for Gillis, R. Schnebiy tor C. King. Montana — Lock wood for Horsey, [>orsey for Lock wood, Brown lot Sullivan. Sullivan for Brown, Busha for Sullivan, McKoin for Horsey. Yardage from scrimmage: W s C.—410. Montana—l24l EVERGRKKN ins 1.1; All members of Kvergreeri Circle No. 11, Neighbors of Wood. an requested i,, be present at the next regular meeting - >„. held in „ new Masonic hall, over the First Na tional bank, at 7:30 ©'els* p. in December 9. 1919. when and when business of importance will he con -islfred. MATILDA F. i.AN.voN. Clerk INSURE WITH McCLASKKY. FACULTY MEMBERS ORGANIZE TO FORM LUNCHEON .CLUB To Purchase Kitchen and Dining Ili son Suppl —Mem sh ip May Reach Hundred The faculty of Washington State has organized a luncheon club for the benefit of its members. Vice President Waller, chairman of the committee in charge, plans to have the organization completed ifc once, so that the first weekly lunch eon may be held soon. It is the plan of .the faculty to purchase suitable kitchen and din ing room material, and establish a luncheon room in the Y. M. C. A. building. The exact number of faculty members who will take part in such an association is not known, but judging by the number of favorable replies already received the number will reach the 100 mark. SHORT COURSES IN AGRICULTURE AND HOME EC. Short courses in agriculture and home economics for 1920 will be of fered by the State College from Jan uary 5 to February 28 inclusive. These short courses offered each year give an opportunity to secure a practical education along import ant lines to those who otherwise could not secure a college education. Two sets of courses are offered, an eight-weeks course and a two weeks course. The most popular of the courses in the past has been the gas tractor course, where operation and repair work is done on a large number of the different makes of tractors now on the market. Other courses that have proven themselves popular are creamery operation, grading and handling grain, and sheep shearing and wool grading. The eight-weeks courses offered are so numerous that it was necessary to issue a bul letin in catalogue form, listing and describing the different courses. Dean Johnson, with Mr. Westly, spent Monday arranging for rooms to take care of the incoming students who will he here to take advantage of the short course session. FEDERATED CHURCHES (First llapfhsl and Congregational) Service;; for December 7: Sunday school at if;BO a. m. Worship hour. 1 ' -°" ;»- in. Young people's -octal ; halt' hour at 6:00 p. m followed by Iprijtjj Meeting, c x. ."Cuftia, min ister. CHRISTIAN' CHURCH Sunday December 7: Sunday school Mbool at 9:°,u 1. m. Church service al 1!:00 a. m.: address by Prof. '' A Isaacs. Young people's meeting at 6:15 p. tn, WW 3ALF.--I.ight bob sled (So. 11. C.ood as new. Phone 3052. dec." •BOY ISCOUTS —tsr — i ' (Conducted by National Council of the Hey Scouts of America.) BOY SCOUTS AND BOMBS A circular printed in red and ; threatening him with "extermination" : for his part .a the boy scout mem • bership drive was received by Gavin j Mi N, l>, a prominent attorney of Sim i Francisco. Others were said to have been re- I ceived by Associate Justice W. W. j Morrow of the United States circuit j court, and Frank Sinners, an attor i ney, who also were Identified with the I campaign. The ilreular accused McNab of re ! cruittng the boys -is future soldiers "to protect the flag-flaunting finan- I ciers." One of the most effective ways to flghl holshevism and anarchism In ■ this country is the suggestion: "Boos! ' the boy scout mrivement." Everybody knows the wholesome Americanism ! taughl the hoys of this organization, : along with a general system of physi ! cal, mental and moral development. i One seldom hears of a hoy scout going i wrong and getting Into trouble with ! the law. It may also be said no one ever hears of a scout who is not a | patriot. Roys who belong to the scouts do not grow up to flaunt red flaps and plant bombs. And if they have any influence at home, their fathers and big brothers Imbibe something of their spirit of loyalty and understanding. Clearly enough, if all American boys were scouts, there would be mighty , few adult reds to make trouble. START OF SCOUT'S EDUCATION Scouting Is an educational proposi tion. Its intent is both to help the scout do the thing he likes to do and to do it better and to lead him out into fields of thought and action that its many divisions offer. Every applicant for membership must pass the following requirements before he can attain the rank of a tenderfoot scout: 1. Know the scout law, sign, salute and significance of the badge. 2. Know the composition and his tory of the national flag and the cus tomary forms of respect to it. 3. Tie the following knots: Square or reef, sheet-bend, bowline, fisher man's, sheepshank, halter, clove hitch, timber hitch, or two half-hitches. - SCOUTS IN THE EPIDEMIC. One scout in Morristown, N. J., served ns an interne at a local hos pital for two weeks. He did all the work which Is usually performed by a grown man. Another spent the bet ter part of a week at a children's home where the majority of sixty inmates were suffering from Influenza. Water had to be carried up four flights of stairs, meals prepared and served and "many other duties performed. Still another volunteered for work with the Red Cross and drove a supply truck three times a week between Ho boken and a soldiers' convalescent hos pital at Mendham. Four other scouts were on duty at a diet kitchen established during the epidemic in the high school building. BOY SCOUT FARM WORKERS. Over the field and down the road The day's toll done; A sons upon the lips of us To speed the setting sun; And 'peace within our laughing- hearts And pride to know that we Still carry on like true scouts— (We did our share In wartime. Our share and more in wartime). In time of Victory. Liberty bond and Victory bond. We did not fall; And love of country In our hearts Shall never die nor pale; And never call but that we heed For what tho gain If we Should mar the record that we hold— i We did our share In wartime Our share and more in wartime}, And fall the Victory? — Edmund I.e.,my m Roys' Life. SCOUTS AVOID OILSKIN BAGS About the worn) kind of a sleeping bug a seoul can choose, especially In : cold weather, is one made of rubber or i oil-skins. Major David A. Ahereromble tells of i a trip through the North in which one of stefansson's companions used hags made of oil-skin material. When he awoke in the morning he found that the moisture from hie body had ac cumulated on the Inside of the oil-skin and had frozen stiff. And what is more, they couldn't get the frost out of the thing for the rest ;of the Journey! An extreme case, to i be sure, but one that incuts a warning. CHINESE BOY SCOUTS ACTIVE The wave of progress! that has ; swept over -south China has given em phatic cms to the hoy scout move ment, which has taken root In other ! parts of the orient. Quite recently Pang Mue Chang, a j well-to-do merchant, formerly of Hono lulu, o*l aside a large part of his coun try residence near Canton, as a train ing school for scoutmasters, who are | needed badly In view at the enthusi ; astic approval the movement has been ! given [here. THE PULLMAN' HERALD WE SAY TO YOU Give Furniture tn^si^P^ ill |pL PHESENTinPRICES mm « r^-,v OIffISI^fASvDBUVERY JSP * Never before has the would-be give] beer confronted with so many useful and at the same time beautiful items in the home furnishing line. The styles for the past few years have developed vers rapidly along the line of combining beauty with utility and bringing both within the reach of the average home builder. The following list of suitable gifts selected at random from our stock will suggest some of the possibilities r - ■ For 11 Kit For KIM For the KIDDIES Table Lamp Foot Stool Doll Dresser Piano Lamp .Morris Chair Doll Bed Piano Bench ' Smoker's Stand •>, ,„ . , c •/-..- . , ... "lay Table Sewing Cabinet Leather Worker , . Rocker Reading Lamp (!ha,r Windsor Chair Book Case Rocker Tapestry Davenport Library Table Child's Desk Cedar Chest Andirons Pictures ' Jardinier Stand Fire Set Child's Dresser And for everyone—PICTURES Neill's Furniture Store VALVE-IN-HEAD /fe fjjfeis = _dldL^\JL moto* ca*s i^^^^^S- Buick Built Body iMM' ltl_---___^___~ZiiL~ZlZ — ***&' B.ootny «'"* Comfortable f^^^^^^^^^fflKiJ/l . Arc "*e Buick-Built Bodies TggWnS "^Pfeffipl^ For Three ' Four, Five and WIB XWSSS^MiSS^ |||[jH The frame work and sills are WJ^^^^^^^^'^J^Sy made entirely of selected oak U'fyili S8 8 mHM3MMj\*m / and as** w^ numerous wrought, IliiW'TOK^^iTl'lft 'Vllrn// iron and drop for&ed braces y^wMllfiii \™l(lil/ To this frame ' which flexes \W|!6iM/lß_| 11[[I Jl_lili|_^f/ slightly under strain, is secured ■ upLg^£_^__L___-__j--. .^P^i/ perfectly moulded sheet metal \«|u \t\Wll covering which binds all to- VHi j 1111// gether and forms a basis for the ra*^ -gy, -^ J»£l/ smooth, glossy finish. VlSsWtt " 111111111111/lffJ r ~* Each frame and body are built 1111 l ■lilw ml and finishecl in tne Buick \\\\\\m\\a\V factory . under the immense advantages afforded by a highly trained organization equipped with the most modern body* building machinery. WHEW BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BDILT buick will BUILD THEM KIMBALL-BURT AUTO COMPANY *••'•'<!«>•. l>cce» i 1),.- 5 f^jjj