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'Friday, February 17, 1022 BATTERY SERVICE For All Makes Charging • • * * 1*23 Winter Storage, per mo .. . .75 I Distilled '-Water and Inspection Free Call 86 PULLMAN * ENGINEERING COMPANY Automotive Specialists Seasonable Articles Radiator Covers Denatured Alcohol Tire Chains We have them Pullman Tire Shop Phone 255 TH F MILK HOUSE We buy cream —... — Pay Every Saturday _*_ Cansjwashed while you wait The Milk House v<» ARE ALWAYS WELCOME at this restaurant. You'll find us ready at all times to serve you with the daintiest cooked foods, whether you want a light lunch, a full course dinner or an aft er theatre supper. Come when you like. You'll surely find on, service more than satis factory. , Robinson's Bakery Phone 40 MRS G-ALLEN WATEftNITr HOME* *Uto9 k**y . ___2_W_S 99 uw Hr / —-» _tfc*aa___y_ __f i\™ SjJF i J*J MMn lliil4 ■J!_H cKENfIESt -'^•^— • - II ■■' ' m I' •JOCK SALES i i ■•■ •-.,.; . ! SALESMANSHIP COUItSB | Job leaner Elucidates on Qualities of Studebaker Car —<■(„«! and Fool Salesmanship Are Exemplified In 75 per cent of the cases it's im •ossible to sell a prospective purchas ■r an automobile unless his wife has! daced the stamp of approval on that j Jarttcular make of car, was one of he points brought out at the; .sales nnnship class conducted Tuesday light under the auspices of tho flood fellowship club. •.''Bob'i Jenner, nanager"; of Martin's garage, was lied upon to conduct a mock sale )f a Studebaker automobile asfone )f the features of the practical work iarried on by the class, and the fact hut Friend Wife has a 10l to say -bout ihe purchase of a.new pleasure :ar was one of the many salient feat? ires brought out. Jenner put up a ;reat line of talk to dispose of the •Special Six" despite the fact that he other members of the class pre sented as many obstacles to the 'sale" as possible. A mock sale of dry goods was con lucted by Lou Curtis, William live Mrs. Hattie Irwin nd Mrs. Pairley, both good and poor sales nanshlp being exemplified] Nearly 10 business men and •lerks, attended| the class Tuesday "venlngi It was the second of a .cries of 10 classes, to be given each ruesday evening in Emerson hall. >r. M. .1. Beistel was elected presl lent of the organization, with Lou Curtis secretary. An advisory board ncludes D. C. Downen, .1. X. Scott mil F. C. Forrest. .1. L. Houston, of Spokane, who las charge of the work undertaken a Iked Tuesday evening on the sub ject of salesmanship from the stand point of lack of ambition, fear, tact, self-confidence, personal appearance •ourtesy, personality, overconfidence md gloom. Mr. Huston has offered a special >rize of $10 to the lady who. at the ■lose of the course, can convince the uembers of the class that she has profited to a greater extent through I .he work than any of the other ladies. Dr. Beistel offers another jrize for the best mock sale conduct -"d by Pullman salesmen during the 'Ollrse. At the session next Tuesday even- Or. A. K. Hudson will talk on dental salesmanship. Representatives of 'he Standard Oil company will at empt to sell Zerolene lubricating oil :o Mart Garage, despite the fact that the garage has never handled he product. Enrollments in the class may still lie made upon application to Lou Curtis. The cost of the series of lessons is $5.00. IXTKItSCHOLASTIC TOURNEY AT COLLEGE MARCH 10-1 l Under the auspices of the W. S. C. alumni of Pullman an inter scholastic basketball tournament is to be played off in the State College gymnasium March 10 and 11, ac cording to the announcement of R. W. Moss, '20, chairman of the com mittee in charge of arrangements. Eight champion high school teams will participate, invitations being now on (heir way to the winners in Whitman and Lincoln counties, and the districts of Spokane, Walla Wal la. Wenatchee. Pasco, Upper Yakima Valley, and Lower Yakima Valley. i This the alumni plan to make an annual affair, as well as the inter scholastic track meet. Dr. E. E. Wegner made a business rip to Spokane yesterday, __ .. MRS. DEAN SECURED DIVORCE Mr. and Mrs. William W. Dean, who formerly resided in Pullman while Mr. Dean was employed at the Acme barber shop, aired their do mestic difficulties in court at Oak land, Calif., recently and Mrs. Dean was granted a divorce. The couple had more or less trouble while in. Pullman and separated, but later be came reconciled and left for Cali fornia. Concerning the divorce ac tion, the San Francisco Chronicle said: Although he had brought suit for divorce on the grounds of desertion. William W. Dean, former barber at the Hotel Oakland, lost his action against Mrs. Mildred L. Dean today when his wife produced a packet, of "Honej Boy' 1 letters from Mrs. Mar garet. Mitchell who had been nurse to his daughter for several months. After reading the letters Superior Judge Joseph S. Kol'ord gave Mrs. Dean the decree, fid a month all- - mony and the custody of the daugh ter. Thelma. TOM THUMB WEDDING About 75 children will appear in ii Tom Thumb wedding at the United Presbyterian . church March 3. Further announcements will be made later. *. The potato's eyes were full of tears, The cabbage hung its head, There was much grief In the cellar that night. The vinegar's mother % was dead. THE PI I.I.MAX HERALD VYPTAIX LEE C, LEWIS POSTHUMOUSLY CITED \.i: lit p.o 'tiuent lt<M o_ni/<> Bravery of Pullman Man in Action When He Received Fatal Wounds Captain Lee C. Lewis, State Col- ege nan, who was killed In action lear Sergy. France, July 30, 191S, | las been posthumously cited for' iravery by the war department, and its widow, Mrs. Dora Lewis, a 1920 i A*. S. C. graduate, hhs been author- I zed to place a silver star in her Vic-j ory medal. Mrs. Lewis, who is now I eachiim at Cheney Normal School. j ecolved the following letter con-j erntng the citation from the adju ant genefal'B office at Washington: j H sar Madam: The records of this offica show ! hat your husband, the late Captain] .cc C; Lewis, has been cited in War, idpaT.th.eht general orders, which 'Ration authorizes you to place a; Bed to place a silver star on bor Vie- j oi medal. The citation tc.uls as ollows: "For gallantry in action near Sergy; France, .Inly'3o, !!)18. Whet) contact with adjoining units had been lost, and several attempts to secure contact bad failed. Captain Lewis, then bat talion adjutant, volunteered to lead a patrol In an endeavor to locate units on the left, i.i Ihe performance of which minion he received a fatal wound." The quartermaster supply officer las this day been directed to forward! Audi a l:!.'v to you Very respectfully, I. C, HARP The Adjutant. Ceneral. dl PHI F.PSILOX VESPER MAT SUNDAY 'an out and Members of Musical Or ganization Will Give Annual Vesper Program Sunday Afternoon The patrons and members of Mv Phi Fpsilon will give their annual '< sper pro-ram at the college audi orium Sunday, February 19, at 4:00 | ). m. The following program will ie presented. Sonata in A for violin md piano Handel I, Miss Doris Mcßey nolds and Miss Claire Mojonnier Romance" from "Faust" (Gounod Miss lads Lingenfelter. Piece Heroique (Franc), Miss Adele Schumaker. Paraphrase from "Rlgoietto" (Verdi- Liszt). Miss Hazel Gray. Aye Marie Schubert Mr. 11. D, Nasmyth, baritone Mrs. A. H. Meyer, violin Mrs. Louise Nasmyth, piano Mr. A. H. Meyer, organ. "Finale" from "First Symphony' i Vierne I, Miss Mildred'Allen. GOSSIP ABOUT COLLEGE POET "The Gossip Shop" section of the current issue of The Bookman has i humorous and appreciative review »i •' book of poems by Elliot C. Lin coln, associate professor of English it the State College of Washington. His ".Rhymes of a Homesteader," is sued last fall, the reviewer says: 'ranging from a Kiplingesque swing to Robert Frost's low-ebbed fusions, still have a unique flavor of their awn, the tang of Montana; tor It's to the mounting hills across the Pan handle that Mr. Lincoln's heart dings. (We believe thai there, too, lie found his wife, "Mr. Lincoln can be seen any morning stalking amiably to College nail; or early Saturday, if you idle through the two main streets of this • -even-hilled city, you may observe a I tall, dim figure, tanned of face,! "dear-eyed, breaking into smile, draw ing after him a child's wagon where in sits his son and heir." MRS. CHARLES B. MILLER Airs. Charles 11. Miller was born at Albany, Berk county,' Perm., March 1, 1868, and died at her home in Pullman, February A, 1922, at the age of 53 years and 11 months. She -•aine to Whitman county in 1888 .nd located on a farm southwest of Pullman, where she lived 25 years. Dn February 16, 1892, she was mar- j ried to Charles I',. Miller, who died, November 21, 1918, as the result of in accident. Deceased is survived by i two sisters, Mrs. John Miller of i Kaniiah, Idaho, and .Mrs. _. A. Mc- Millan of Winchester, Idaho. Two brothers, W. B. and Daniel Kriebel, both of Winchester, Idaho, also sur vive. Hood RIVER MAN IS EXTENSION HORTICULTURIST M. D. Armstrong of Hood River, Oregon, ibis week became assistant ixtension horticulturist lor the State College Of Washington. lie is a 1011 graduate of the college and has been superintendent and manager of a large fruit and berry plantation near .Minville, in the Willamette valley, for six years and since then has served two years In the World war with a captaincy, and has been coun- j ty fruit inspector at Hood River. He will devote most of his efforts to the -mall fruit Industry In Western Washington. For better and brighter pupils in the rural" schools, arrange one hot dish a day. LOOK WHO'S HERE! '• : ..ljf<v( ' [_!—rtJßfi-(HtT^-li £*•♦* '__mi^_\_T^K—mmmm*W WATCH TIMS SPACE IN-NEXT WEEK'S ISSUE FOB "GOOD THINGS TO EAT" SPECIALS FOR SALES DAY. CHURCH leaders to Visit pullman With the purpose of explaining world needs for Christian leadership a team of five representing various boards of the Methodist church will visit Pullman next week. The rep resentatives will be from the board of home missions, the deaconess board, the women's home missionary society, the board of foreign mis sions and the women's foreign mis sionary society. Dr. C. M. McCon nell, known through national Meth odism as a rural community expert, and Dr. M. li Ruder, for years in the Philippines, will be of the num ber. Among their public addresses will be daily meetings with students at the college Y. M. c. A., meetings with organizations of the local church, a great banquet on Satur day evening, the 25th, and Sunday addresses. Over 10,000 young peo ple have offered themselves for Christian leadrship in the church. While the team is here primarily for the purpose of getting such leaders they will be of interest to all inter ested In the general advance of Christianity, and hence will give the keynote for the enlistment meetings that are to follow in (he church the next week. TAXES ONE-FOURTH OF CASH The Newport Miner mils attention to the fact that at the time of mak ing the last bank statement the banks of Whitman county contained deposits totaling $9,869,673, and that it would take one-fourth of the total bank deposits of the county to pay its taxes for 1922, the total levy in Whitman county for all purposes being $2,411,900. Practically the same condition exists in Pend Oreille county, with bank deposits of about $850,000 and the taxes totaling $207,000. TALKS TO FRUIT MEN On Tuesday evening of this week Prof. O. M. Morris of the State Col lege addressed the Chelan County Horticultural society on "Orchard I'olinization Work. ' At the meeting of the Western Washington Horti cultural society on Thursday at Alt- Vernon, Professor Morris also gave a .ilk on "Orchard Cultivation and Improvement." EDUCATION AND DEMOCRACY ' "Education and Democracy" Is the subject on which President E. O. Holland of the State College spoke Sunday afternoon at the Spokane Y. M. C. A. PRUDENT EGPLE AY PREMIUMS To ROTECT ROPERTY Anything Insured- . Against Everything By M. J. Chapman Phone 1091 What's Your Hobby? John Wise, like most men, bad a hobby. John's hobby was raising fine cucumbers. One morning he wen) out Into the garden to look them over. He soon discovered that most of the plants were dead, and upon investigation found a big cutworm to be responsible for the damage. Instead of sitting down and crying over bis loss, he took the worm down to the river and caught a line fish worth many times the value of the cu cumbers. MORAL SOME MEN USE THEIR OBSTACLES AS STEPPING STONES UPON WHICH THEY CLIMB TO SUCCESS. Be An Isser! It's ihe word he says nd the deeds he does That makes him an is Instead of a WAS. HE NEED FEARLESS .MEN When the sun bides its face and the cloud- hang low Is Hie time so many of us want to know When th<» clouds will be gone, the sky clear again. Then we Jove to bfar the voice of fearless men. Don't Worry! Worry kills more men than work, and besides most of the things that people worry about never happen anyway. INSURANCE IS THE GREATEST WORRY KILLER EVER INVENTED We love to read of battles fought and won, This battle royal's over —a prosperous era just begun. D. G. DOWNEN Insurance Specialist Page Eleven | Rame^s Chocolates Direct from the Factory They will Please You THORPE'S ~ SMOKE HOUSE (Incorporated) ■, Phone 28 Where Everybody Goes