Newspaper Page Text
March 18, g -^„ BOHLHH NAMES £°* ALL-COAST QUIXTKT By J- I"** Bohler ' „tor of athletics at the State Col- BsUl* of Washington and advisory Member of the Basket Ball Rules Committee of the National Col _ folate Athletic Association, rep resenting the Western District. All-Pacific Coast Team Forward— Durno, U. of O. 'forward— Righter, Stanford U. j 5 Center—Slelk, U. of W. i Guard- Eggleston, U. of C. Guard— Adams, Stanford U. All-Northwest Team j Forward— Durno, U. of 0. | Forward— Rich, Whitman. I center— H. Latham. | Guard— Hunter, U. of 1. « GuanU-Mdver, W. S. C. In picking these teams, consider able consideration has been given the judgment of the other coaches of the two conferences, and their choice^ were collected and compiled before he final selections were made. j In the Coast conference, Durno of Oregon is the unanimous choice of ,11 the coaches for the first forward position. He is small, but makes up for this handicap with his speed and c i e ver dodging and dribbling. He makes long shots as well as short ones from any angle on the floor, be sides converting a high percentage of his free throws. This is his third year on the all-Coast team. . The second forward choice must go to Righter of Stanford. Although he cannot come up to Durno in clever ness, he has been a big factor 111 the strength of the Stanford team through his ability to locate the bas ket. He is large and rangy and has the knack of breaking through his guards and scoring when anywhere near the basket. Righter was an other unanimous choice of the con ference coaches. This is his second year on the all-Coast team. For the center position, first choice must be accorded to Sielk of Washington.. Although he has been a member of the Sun Dodger squad (or several years, he did not reach his stride until this season. He is an exceptionally large man, standing over six feet six, which gives him a decided advantage over the other centers in the conference, enabling him to get the tipoff consistently. He is an excellent shot, especially from close under the basket, and with the forwards feeding the ball to him, he scores consistently despite the closest guarding. Mills of Stanford deserves mention at the center position, with his weight and height in addition to his scoring skill. However, Lis work slumped somewhat In mldseason. At guard, the first call must go to Eggleston of California. He is a brilliant and aggressive player, and is especially strong on long shots. Ho is a fast man, a good dodger, and a clever dribbler, and is on the ball at all times. He uses good judgment in breaking up opponents' plays and is hard to score on. This is his second year on the all-Coast team. The second choice at guard goes to Adams of Stanford, although this is his first year on the Cardinal team. He is an exceptionally large and heavy man, but is remarkably fast and shifty on his feet. Stan ford's opponents found him a hard Kan to break through. Adams, as defensive guard, and Eggleston, as offensive guard, make a combination that would be hard to beat anywhere. Bryan of Washington deserves mention as a defensive guard. He was handicapped throughout the sea son with a badly sprained knee that required a heavy iron guard. This slowed him up considerably. At that, ke gives Adams a close' run for the Position. Durno is the first choice forward of the Northwest conference coaches 18 well as those of the Coast confer en <*. He stands out in a class by himself. For second place, there is little to thoose from between Rich of Whit an, Stinson of O. A. C, Moe of Ida tt, and Wapato of Willamette. Rich ,ha a slight edge because of his ver satility, and he is a clever floor work er, and a good dodger and dribbler. I At center, H. Latham is in a class "y himself in the Northwest confer eDce- He is tall and rangy, aggres "Te and an accurate shot, particu arlv from close under the basket. a<*son of Willamette deserves men "on for the center position. Hunter of Idaho is named for the o tensive guard position. Although ■ Played forward in previous sea, --»», he was shifted to guard this 2**' where he has done very effect _e work, easily outscoring his op lS nis' His ability to make long ,v, makes him a valuable man for l Ws Position. 0 f Washington State is aen second guard position on ,OUDt °f his general all-around bJ' ng ability- He is a clever drib pi rand a good man at breaking up _» 38 well as at working the ball dOWn the floor. Mont 11** °f <>regon and Ba,rd of tana deserve special mention for g Ward positions. HARD TO ANALYZE FRIENDS Wife Unable to Understand Choice Made by Her Husband, and He Is Equally at Sea. My husband's friends are a source' of never-failing psychological Interest to me. i am always trying to discover why he chose them and what constl-j tutes the secret of their enduring charm for him. says r writer In the Conti nental Edition of the London Mail. Not one of them really resembles; him and some possess little traits that: would irritate him In anybody else, Take, for Instance, George, who Is' always restless; In the garden flinging 1 about like a boy. with the children: trailing after him; in the. house, when they are In bed, gamboling Incessantly "''"' the kitten, setting the phono graph going, whistling, humming or vamping on the piano. He does n.it know what repose mentis, yet he appeals to my husband, whose most obvious characteristic is 1 serenity and culm. Then there is Ed- i word with his absurd laugh, a kind of shrill cackle thai reduces me to Icy j pessimism. My husband rarely smiles ; and only really laughs once In a month of Sundays. Nevertheless, there must be some fundamental basis of solid sympathy between the two men, for Edward is always welcomed heartily.; My husband goes fishing with an-i other friend whom I privately call it grumbler. lie must be most depress ing. Then he never has a dull mo ment when Stephen is at hand ready to prattle about science, though my husband's sympathies are completely classical. Tidy to metlculousness himself, he does not appear to see how most of his friends scatter tilings about when they Stay with us, borrow his books and either put them bin In the wrong : places or never return them at all; ! leave pipes here and pouches there,! and break again and again the unwrit ten laws that rule our household. At times I gee ray husband look re flectlngly at my friends, and the ; thought Hits across my mind that they provide him with the food for specu lotion thai bis friends give me. ' Then I realize that I have never analyzed my devotion to Mary, or spec- 1 ulated how It is that Rose's compan ionship is a perennial pleasure. I suppose we are friends now he cause we were children together, or went to the same school, or met when happily holiday making. Anyway, there it is, and I expect! if truth were sifted from speculation causes of the same kind or others as j primitive, rule my husband's choice I also. Famous Rosetta Stone. Rosetta Is a town In Egypt, on the old Bolbltic arm of the Nile. In the time of the Crusades it was a place of great strength, but was later oat stripped in growth by Alexandria, and today is a small town of less than 20, --000 inhabitants. The Arabs called it "Uasbid." believing that Haroun-al- Rashld founded the old city. A few miles north of the town a French en gineer In 1798 discovered the Rosetta stone, a tablet of basalt, with an In scription of the year 138 B. C.. dur ing the reign of Ptolemy Eplphanes The inscription is in hieroglyphic, In demotic and In Greek. It was finally deciphered by Dr. Thomas Young, the celebrated English scholar, and formed the key to the reading of the hiero glyphic characters that have revealed * so much of the history of the ancient j world. The Rosetta stone was captur ed by the English on the defeat of the French forces In Egypt, and Is now kept in the British museum. In its broken condition the tablet measures 3 feet 9 inches in height, 2 feet 4% inches In width and 11 inches in thick ness. Canada's Coat of Arms. Canada's new coat of arms, which ls now In the hands of tlie College of Her alds in London, with its motto. "A Marl usque ad Mare," naturally gives an op portunity to the incorrigible punmaker to declare it is "admirable," and that we "shall see what we shall see." It brings out a point that has often puz- j zled those who speak of the Dominion without knowing why It should* be so j designated. It is said that, when it was being decided what the various clonics that compose the present Canada should be called one of the councilors suggested "dominion." and quoted from the seventy-second Psalm. "He shall have dominion from sea to sea." The motto "A Marl ptque ad Mare" Is not a canting motto, but echoes the freedom of thought that Is carried, not only from sea to sea. but across the sen to the mother country. [ —Christian Science Monitor. Red Indians in Pageants. "Indians have a great deal of dra- l matic ability and express themselves with unusual ease In pageant acting." says- Miss Delorla, a young Dakota In dian woman who has written and di rected a pageant for her people called "The Fifty Years' Trail." The pageant was given recently before a convoca tion of the Episcopal church In the West. Pantomimic pageants prove the best because the Indians know how to net better than they know how to use their voices. Mis-) Delorla. who has charge of the activities for Indian girls of the Y. \V. ('. A.. Is planning other pageants of Indian setting with prologues in both English and Indian. Five English Monarchs "Georges." Of the English monarchs n-...ea George, the first lived 07 >. if! the iecbnd seventy-seven ye:-- -. the third eighty-two years, and -! •.- fourth sixty eight* years. King George Vls now tifty-five. g LESLIE'S DRIVER 8 Kg By KITTY PARSONS. Q i(EY. 192(i bl Mri'lure Newnpno't Svn<llrme I Leslie groaned. Right In the middle of the traffic on Tremont street she had stalled her engine. Nobody knew how she hated getting out and crank* Ing In Mich ii frightfully public place— with machines thicker than tiles on ev er) side of her. There was a large track standing beside Leslie's flivver, and the blond young man In overalls who was driv ing it looked down and saw thai some thing was the mutter. "Want any help?" he asked her cheerfully. "oh. can you crank _ Ford?" she Implored, in the most woebegone tone Imaginable. "Nothing easier." he laughed, and Immediately Jumped down and milted the action to the word. Leslie's spir it- rose rapidly when she heard the reassuring chug of the engine. "I'm so grateful to you she cried, ami wondered if she should pay bin. for his kindness. Finally she decided In favor of it and produced a shining quarter from the depths of her purse. "Flense take It." she begged, "it's been worth ten times that to me." The man In overalls drew hack involuntarily, and then laughingly held out his hand. "Thank you, miss." Then he climb ed back on bis truck and leaned over the edge. "I'll always carry it for luck if you don't mind," he told her. "Cood-by." "What an odd fellow." mii-v.l Leslie, ns site turned down the first quiet [ street to avoid another chance of stal ; ling her engine In the middle of traf fic. "He didn't seem a bit fresh and what wonderful eyes he bad, too." The next week there was a big drive ' to raise money for a charitable organ ization and Leslie and Betty were giv ! en the job of soliciting funds at the I Square theater tit the evening per* | formances. "This man looks prosperous—let's • tackle him,',' suggested Betty, as a good-looking young man, with a stun ; ning girl on his arm, came towards ' them. Leslie gasped us her eye fell upon him. There, all dressed up in • the most Irreproachable evening ; clothes in the world, stood her beau tiful voting truck driver masquerad ; ing with an equally beautiful compan- I ion. j "Please help the babies," Betty sang ! cheerfully, in her sweetest tone. "Tommy." cried the girl on the truck ; driver's arm. as lie pulled a $10 bill ' from his pocket, "if you give any more ! you'll be absolutely bankrupt." He bad not really seen Leslie at all. and just then the girl on bis arm pulled him back to their seats. Les lie noticed that the hand of the girl was sparkling with gems, including a diamond wedding ring. It certainly was a queer business. "How quiet you are, dear," said her aunt, as they drove out Beacon street In the direction of the Newtons. "Are you very tired?" "Just thinking of frenzied finance," reassured her niece, and continued si lent. When they were out in the country they met fewer machines, and just beyond Hammond street Uncle Joe slowed down for a minute. There was a car standing at the side of the road, and a man and a girl looking rather forlornly at It. Uncle Joe spoke to them, and a moment later they came over and climbed in with Leslie and her aunt. "The front axle's broken," he ex plained, "and I told Mr. and Mrs. Cor day we would give them a liftthey live rather near us it seems. Won't you sit here in front with me, Mrs. Corday—there is less wind In the front." She did, and the young man settled himself between Leslie and her aunt. "You are certainly showing us that 'one good turn' —of the engine de serves a reward," he whispered to the girl beside him. "It's most awfully kind of you." "Not me," she contradicted him— "my uncle is the kind one." "I see you are driving a new style car tonight," she ventured, a moment later. "Have you been promoted?" "No such luck," he laughed. "I'd been trying out trucks that I'm think ing of buying for my business, and I kept on my working clothe, to do it." "Is your wife pleased wi i it out here?" "She hasn't had a chance. I'm not married yet —are you?" "(if course not; but do you like It?" "Yes, I'm very pleased with It, thank you. I've lived here for twenty years. Is the lady with you your step mother?" "No, sister-in-law; my brother has mumps." "Would you go for a ride with me tomorrow — about four?" lie asked Ir relevantly. "In one of your new trucks?" "In anything you'll ride In —as long as you'll go." Aunt Minnie was quiet* ly sleeping. "I get off here—please don't get out — good night, everybody," she called. But he took her to the door and held iter hand in his a little longer than "politeness demanded when he ■aid good-night "You will go with me, won't you?" "Oh. yes— I will," she told him quickly, half afraid that she would soon be willing to promise him any thing in the world If In- looked at her like that. He leaned over quickly ami kissed her hand; then hurried down the path to the waiting machine. THK PULLMAN HERALD MAKE CITY MONUMENT SHINE Newcastle (Pa.) Legionnaires Quickly Respond When Newspaper "Call" la Sounded. An evening newspaper in Newcastle, Pa., published a "story" commenting on the dirty condition of the monument on the public square. The newspaper went to press about four o'clock. That same evening there was a meet- Ing of Pert") s. Gaston post of the J — .•■•'*■' __.____:_:: .': '''\..':. ■■•*>*; ■.:*.■: :'■ _*_''':___ Newcastle (Pa.) Legionnaires Cleaning Monument on Public Square. American Legion where it was decided to give the old monument a much needed bath. After the meeting Le gionnaires armed themselves with mops and scrub brushes, soap and wa ter and scoured the stones of the monument until they shone. NAMES TWO NEW COMMITTEES Legion Members Are Appointed by Na- tional Commander on Oriental and Memorial Affairs. National Commander r. VV. Gal braith of the American Legion has an nounced the appointment of two new standing committees, George E. Koose velt of New York is named chairman of the Oriental committee .and the members are: Paul Edwards of Wash ington, Orville K. Cain of New* Hamp shire. J. M. liiman of California Churchill B. Mehard of Pennsylvania, William A. Percy of Mississippi and Al ton T. Roberts of Michigan, The chairman of the committee on memorials in the United States Is T. Semmes Walmsley of New Orleans. Members are: Asa W. Candler of Geor gia, Joe S. Harris of Arkansas. Vin cent J. Jaeger Of New Mexico. Miss Mary Price of West Virginia and Mrs. Julia W. Wheelock of New York. NOTICE OP APPOINTMENT AND NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Barbara *. Sanders, He ceased. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed execu tor of the estate of Barbara C. San ders, deceased, and has qualified as such executor. Notice is hereby given to all per sons holding claims against said de ceased, to serve the same on me or on Neill & Sanger, my attorneys of record, at Pullman, Washington, and file the same, together with proof of such service, with the clerk of the superior court at Colfax, Washington, within six months after the date of the first publication of this notice. All claims against deceased not served and filed as aforesaid slmll be forever barred. Date of first publication, March 18, 1921. J. J. MURRAY. Executor of Estate of Barbara C. Sanders, Deceased. Neill & Sanger, attorneys for the Estate, Pullman, Wash. mar!Baprß Buy your Goodyep.r Tires at Mar tin's Garage. marl 1-25 I Positively Guarantee to stop those Headaches if Classes properly fitted will do it. Most headaches are caused by BYE STRAIN Come today and have a test. I'll guarantee to do the rest. DR. F. L. BALL Graduate McCormiek Medical College l_^_BkV^ ■ _P^_^__l_' tK _^_. * * JMmKm|^VN^L->J^-A^^C^B>J^>^_j_--^^ T^nTrUa^JffK f *>f * f ■^B _^_r^_i _Hl^_.*i^^^_____ll^^^^^^B __hh__^ * ■ __r I _B __B_r_l _w > fll _^_hX3_^_L. _H_^_^_^BM_ri_l P^_*h___l_^VMflH_■__^_ Ww B_» __^__^H _P^_______^ ■ ___ _V____l __■i __T^__i _____ ___ K,^^3 _■ *" IK Do You Like to Make Garden? RECENT YEARS HAVE BROUGHT MAW IM PROVEMENTS IN GARDEN TOOLS OUR LINE IS NOW COMPLETE, Bulk Seeds Garden, Lawn and Field Seeds lpJ-a--[ll___-_____---_L^[ GOOD GOODS ONLY B NO DOUBT YOU WILL BUILD ■ =■ Something Sometime! -- —:a : i MOST EVERYBODY ItOES __=_=__ 3 It may be that you are going to build gg ; 5 | | WHEN READY COME IN ||| '~^r | and tell us all about it — the dimensions, •__ " — 5 materials, etc., etc., and we will be pleased I — A . 5 you whal ii will cost ■ " A j ~*™~~~_Jk' _rl I I A*y* Am __> WaljjgaSß^^^^ - 'jj****^ %fe |L% ,Aw^*Tt'S.i? ?-'"-TN.'^^*-iLt_/li'_?^_Bfc_Bg^*.-IBIB™*»^^ —-—---—-- I Watch this space for Sunday School Announcements WANTED! One Thousand Pullman People to Attend Sunday School Somewhere Next Sunday GET IN LINE! The Best School on Earth THE PULLMAN CHURCHES ARE BOOSTING FOR / BIGGER AND BETTER BIBLE SCHOOLS. THE CHRISTIAN BIBLE SCHOOL IS IN THE RACE. IN ORDER TO GET GOING PROPERLY A BIG ATTEND ANCE IS NEEDED ON MARCH 20111 AND 27TH. LEND is A HAND AND BE A REGULAR BOOSTER FOR THE BEST SCHOOL ON EARTH. "THE BIBLE SCHOOL" THERE is A CLASS FOB YOU, "SEE YOU SUNDAY." THE HERALD PRINTS IHE NEWS Page Seven