Professional Documents
Culture Documents
~ A. S. S. C. W. MEETING
ROW-CHAPEL
L
VOL.
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY
TOMOR-l
"I
I:
HOUR
..:...
I .A
ON 12 DAY TOUR
-
COLLEGE
I Radio Program
at A.S.S.C.W. MeetI
ing Tomorrow
fRIDAY
15
IS PLANNED
OF
WASHINGTON,
PULLMAN,
WASfI., WEDNESDAY,
TOMORROW
CAOfT OfflCfRS
14, 1923
No. 38
Installation
of Columbian Literary
society as Epsilon chapter of National
Eurodelphian
Literary fraternity will
be the first part of March. Miss Mustard, national treasurer, will install the
local society.
Plans for a formal reception are being made.
FEB.
cO~7:~~~~~:~:ianIEXENDlNE,
CARLISLE '09, SIGNED
STEVENS
RfCflVf
GAME
........................................................................................
STATE
THE
XXIX.
TO lfAVf
r:;:':'~~:;'::::;
~.~~~
.~~
+
;
THROUGHOUT
Addresses
HALL
HEARS
PREXY
PROMOTIONS
.L
CHARTfR
MONTANA
fVfN I N G MARCH
U. O[BATE'
GRANTtO
H[AOS TELEGRAM
WAS BROAOCASTfO
24
I E~:::7g~(!~1:~a;~
SHOW
HOMf CON~[RT
OATf
Page
THE
Two
OFFICIAL
MONDAY
PUBLICATION
OF THE
WEDNESDA Y
Editor
Editor
Editors
Friday Editor
Thad Byrne
Wednesday Editor
Zena Rothrock
Monday Editor
ErIe Hannum
'Assistant
Associate
FRIDA Y
N elson R. Wilson
_.......................................... Helen Stackhouse
Edward Batwell
George Dunning
Business 'Manager
Businss Manager
__
Theodore Muncaster
George Staples
Departmental
Editors
Campus Editor. Emma F. Howard
Sports Editor
Walt Horan
Society Editor
Ann Briggs
'Feature
Editor ..Catherine McIntyre
Intercollegiate
Editor-Don
Merrin
Cartoonist
N orman Blackburn
Jake Dunkin
Fred Weller
News Editors
Daniel McClain
Claire Graves
Louis Ashlock
Ruth Frame
Copy Readers
Mary Large
Harvey Brassard
Ethel Bogardus
Theodore Muncaster
Information
Entered
Batwell,
at
the
Walt Irvine
Robert Prescott
Staff
post
office
Subscription
at Pullman,
Washington.
rate, $2.UO per year; $1.00
as second
class
per semester.
HERE'S
Walker,
Every
You can tell that flunks don't bother the profs by the way they handle
them now.
to
It was rumored in junior class meeting that by the end of the year the
'Chinook staff would probably retire
with a small fortune.
Chances would
be a lot better if the Chinook had not
cut the cost of junior pictures from
$2.50 to 35 cents.
Vera Greene
Henry Larson
Clarence Cannon
Charlotte
Writers
Editor
As time went by a prof with a doctor's degree could gradually be reduced to a bachelor through the pro'cess of unexcused absences.
Ruby Marble
James Lowry
Reporters
Jeanne Smith
Rose Reilly
Eleanor Springer
Angeline Lockhart
Kathleen Hallahan
Estelle Erickson
H. H. McCurdy
Lenna Baird
Edward
Julian Rosenhaupt
Wallace Buchanan
Assistant
mail
matter.
day, including
TO EXENDINE
"He looks like a good coach to me and I believe all the fellows
will be satisfied with him. As he is an older man he should be particularly fitted for the job. He appears to me like the best man obtainable in the country, owing to Georgetown's
late season defeat
of Lafayette."
QUALITY
ICE CREAM
YOU WILL BE SURPRISED
The University
of California has
maintained its standing as the largest
The disadvantage in that direction university in the United States. It has
would probably be the difficulty in an enrollment of 17,909 students.
finding the honor.
THE
LOST-At
U. of W. basket ball
That's Hickey's opinion of Exendine!
That will be the opinion of all
But, as Simon said before, "there's
game, a ring of keys. Return to Pullthe football men and that must be the opinion of the student body.
one born every minute."
man Herald office; reward.
Petty squabbles, minor grudges, whispered
prejudices
and campaigned
partialities have wrecked the Cougar football team before-let's
end them Basket
ball games make Cookies'
now! Let's start Exendine and the '23 Cougars out with a clean slate and
motto a proverb:
keep it clean!
Let's support them as they never dreamed of being sup"BRING
YOUR
LUNCH."
ported before and supress all those discordant factions that are too maliInsure Before You Burn
ciously effective in wrecking football hopes.
Let's win in '23.
Hereafter
knitting,
pinochle
and
See
------0
light lunches will be perfectly proper
before the game and during
the
IF STUDENTS JUDGED TEACHERS
Enterprising
frosh will sell
A writer in the East who has been making a series of investigations
of halves.
leading colleges suggests that a system should be worked out for the grad- sandwiches.
ing of professors and instructors by their pupils. A possible method might
Simon says we'll have to remember,
require each student at the end of a term or course to grade the instructor
though, and when someone hollers
904 Alder St. .
and his work in a scale from A to E on such qualifications as these:
"A HAM," it is a call for food and
Scholarship-Knows
his subject; has a background
of adequate
not an insult.
knowledge, with special knowledge in his particular field.
WHICH-BRAINS
OR BRAWN?
"Lets have a "varsity" showing at the Montana boys' grave digging scene,"
says an article in The Evergreen just before the Montana debate Friday
night.
One would have thought it was a funeral from the looks of the auditorium. In fact, no grave digging scene has ever been so poorly attended as
was this debate. The middle section of the auditorium was barely filled.
When our "Cougar 'Ieven" goes out to show their strength of body we
are there with all cheers and encouragement,
but when our debaters endeavor to uphold W. S. C. in a debate we do not appearl
Is it coming to the point where we refuse to back our college unless we
can see her men arrayed in a football or basket ball suit? Are we at the
place where we fail to support a team because they use "brains" and no
"brawn"?
If we are going to place ourselves in first rank as a college that supports
her teams, we must turn out "full force" at debates.
Congratulations
are in order
worked and won. That is the
national group,-the
knowledge
W. s. C. is glad to welcome Chi
and strongest fraternities in the
having a chapter located here.
C. R. SANDERS CO.
Congratulations,
Omega Theta. All
you have to do now is to be installed
and add the national dues to the house
bill.
And now that that terrible Women's
League election is over, the talk of the
day can again be turned to recipes and
receipts.
To the Editor:
I wish to say that you wrote an
article in your paper several days back
concerning
a broadcasting
receiving
set. Through experiments carried on
lately they find me with that set. But
none of them will listen to me or
come to look at my set. It is Reinholtz with a secondary
of a Ford
spark coil to cut down wave length.
It will only work on 200 meters.
I
have not heard any 360 meter for a
long time over my set.
Saturday
night when they took hearings with
a compass and found my set in the
zone of all the racket it was put up
with a discharged battery (A). Any"
body that wants to look my set over
for any evidence of re-broadcasting
can do so but will be sadly disappointed at the looks of the arrangement.
Yours truly,
Charles Melander.
.......................
...
in
Marie Corelli's Greatest Romantic Love Story-told
unforgettable scenes of beauty, splendor and dramatic
punch.
Wherein
JANE NOVAK
triumphs as never before in a career of transcending
brilliance
-- .,e.
MILK HOUSE
Orange Special!
D. F. Staley
Teaching ability-Common
sense, gumption,
alertness
of mind,
imagination, ability to grasp a situation.
(Not to be identified or
confused with scholarship.)
Reliability-Evidence
of solid character;
native honesty, truthfulness, sense of justice and fair play; dependability,
persistence,
punctuality.
Forcefulness-Personal
force, quality of leadership and command;
power of discipline, decisiveness, initiative.
Personality-Bearing,
tact, good-temper and self-control, courtesy,
manners generally, neatness.
In support of his suggestion the writer urges that president, faculty or
trustees cannot see the college teacher 'as his pupils see him. They learn of
his work in the class room only slowly from the results he obtains with his
students, and from the popularity or boycotting of his courses.
That spitework or personal grudges would appear in such a grading of teachers, he
doubts, because "young people, in the test of real responsibility, are terribly
just and amazingly wise."
The same reasoning may apply to high schools, he says, and in less degree to grammar school.
It would certainly be an interesting
experiment.
Eventually
it might
even help to eliminate the "old fogies" and encourage greater appreciation
of the truly fine men and women in the teaching profession.-Tacoma
Tribune.
1923
of the audience, both students and Iaculty. In rebuttal especially the Montanans seemed to have floundered, failing to answer their opponents' strongest propositions entirely. At both Missoula and Pullman the W. S. C. men
excelled in delivery, but this was apparently given little consideration by
the pudges.
A college student's mother was arUnfortunately
the "point system" of rested .at Washington, D. c., for supLOST-Pair
of horn rimmed, horn
judging had been left out of the con- plying
liquor
to students
at the bow glasses; lost during registration.
tract. Due to this oversight, delivery, Georgetown University.
Finder call 278; reward.
-expression, logic and rebuttal points
were seemingly forgotten by all but
the audiences, at both ends of the
debate.
The line of argument varied but littie in the two debates.
The erstwhile
"Kansas
Court of Industrial
Relation" proved to be the main bone of
contention.
The affirmative
teams
centered their attack upon the arguments that the public needed protecton, that strikes are destructive and
should be done away with, and that
such a court would secure justice for
labor, capital, and the public.
The
outstanding
contentions of the negative were that the strike had proven
FREE CONCERT
a benefit and must not be denied, that
AT THE S',TORE
the compulsory court was wrong in
principle, and that such a court as the
one in Kansas was not workable.
Clark Robinson and Delmar Gray
Opposite Post Office
returned from Missoula, where they
upheld the affirmative of the question.
They stated that they had been entertained most courteously while at the
Montana institution.
The W. S. C. negative team, debating at home, consisted of Rex Turner
and Fred Weller.
By Walt
w.
ELLISON E. MUNDY
Manager
ROBT. W. BUCKLIN
Editor
Managing
Associate
Assistant
A. S. S. C.
14,
STARTS
SUNDAY
CHAPEL
+++++++++++++++++
The University
of Washington
is +
+
starting a Sunday chapel similar to +
All senior girls who wish to +
that of Washington
State College. -.'+ buy or rent collars for their +
There will be inspirational music and + senior gown from Omicron Nu +
a brief talk and Scripture
reading. + please notify Lucile Chapman
+
The service will begin about 3 p. m. {~ at 127 immediately.
+
and has the support of both students + + + + +,+ + + + + + + + + + + +
and faculty.
Sunday chapel is an
LOST-Small
hand engraved wrist
established custom at W. S. c., Stanwatch. Finder please notify Inez Gilford, Oregon and U. S. C.
bert, phone 89.
U. DEBATE
WAS BROADCASTED
(Continued from first page)
SHOTS
Press Association
February
U.
MONTANA
THE EVERGREEN
Member Pacl1ic Intercollegiate
'Wednesday,
EVERGREEN
From the bleak coast of Norway she came to the frozenfaced scoffers of British Society.
Her heart was chilled but her courage flamed with seething fury-and
she brought them all to her gold-slippered
feet, grovelling and scraping beneath her.
See Marie Corelli's classic spring into life on the screen.
Friday-Saturday, Feb.16-17
W.
s. c. AUDITORIUM
Townspeople
3S cents
Wednesday,
February
14,
THE
1923
Page Three
EVERGREEN
EXENDINE
SIGNED
AS COUGAR COACH
(Continued from first page)
ever undertaken.
A gentleman at all
times and one who we will always remember.
In regard to his ability as
a coach the record of the Georgetown
team speaks for that, but I will say
you will not find many men with such
a football brain as this man.
e
"Our regret IS that we were not able
to have him with us again on account
of the change in policy of having year
round coaching staff, which he could
not do on account of his law practice."
Of Exendine's
character our most
appreciable
authority
comes
from
Father Vincent L. McDonough, faculty director of athletics at Georgetown:
"Perhaps
the best indication
of our opinion of Mr. Exendine is our
offer of the position of coach here.
Mr. Exendine is a man of most agreeable and engaging personality and has
always been extremely popular with
the men under his direction.
General
testimony of the men who have played
under him as often expressed to me is
that 'he knows more football than any
other man in the country.'"
Warner Lauds Character
"Pop" Warner speaks very highly
of Exendine, especially noting his stay
of nine years at one place with his
last year there his best. Warner also
lauds his character and his ability to
build a winning football team. Bezdek
of Penn. State and Al Sharp (formerly of Cornell and Yale) both recommended Exendine very highly to Doc
Bohler, 'when the latter was on his
souting trip this winter.
From the unbiased viewpoint of a
noted eastern referee, Ed Thorpe, now
coach at Columbia University, comes
this sterling compliment to Exendine:
"N 0 mistake' wuold be made in securing Exendine as a coach.
Exendine
has certainly turned out very favorable teams at Georgetown.
"I have officiated
in numerous
Georgetown
games.
His teams are
always well drilled in fundamentals.
Their tackling and blocking is particularly hard.
Their interference is
as good as any team in the east. His
record at Georgetown has been splendid. He closed his season this year
by defeating Lafayette, probably one
of the biggest and strongest teams in
the east."
Exendine is 39 years old, six feet
tall and weighs 195 pounds.
He is
married and has one child. At present he is practicing law at his home
in Tulsa.
Doc Bohler spent a day
with Exendine
at Tulsa during his
recent trip.
He was well impressed
with the former Carlisle star and found
him to' have a good, strong, likeable
personality.
"Doc" recalls that it was during
Exendine's days that the Carlisle team
defeated Harvard in the fading light
and last few minutes of the game by
pushing
the pigskin up under the
sweater of the Indian quarter, who
scurried across the goal line for a
toucls-.own.
_......,...- Exendine is expected to ar.rive in
time for spring football practice but
his plans have not been divulged as
yet. His contract calls for the coach~ng of football and stipulates one year.
Sunday's
The
A 50c SET
FOR
SALE
OF
BY
country
TAXI 70
to
trip.
Evergreen
and
15-16-17
Campus
newshounds,
from
the
printer's devil to the august editor-inchief himself, desported
themselves
with unreserved gaiety at the Ever"
green Bust held Saturday evening at
the K. P. hall.
The hall itself was fectively arrayed
in proper attire for such a journalistic
event, with strmings of Evcr greens-eno, not the kind that grow on the festive Christmas trees-but
the variety
that is turned out three times a week
at the Herald office for the edification
of a news-hungry
public.
The only
feature in which the hall differed from
the average newspaper office was in
the fact that the papers strewed the
ceiling instead of the floor.
The programs were miniature newspapers containing
feature stories of
the dance-written
from the standpoint of the sweet girl reporter and
the cub himself.
The feature of the
evening was the distribution of favors
consisting of the conventional green
eveyshade of the harassed copy desk
man. They were worn the rest of the
evening by the dancers to protect their
eyes from the brilliancy of the assembled company
of campus
literary
lights.
Clayton Bernhard voiced the usual
tone in which he was wont to "call
for clear copy" in singing two delightful solos, "Until" and "The Banjo
Song."
Mr. and Mrs. V. VV. Clarkson and
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cunningham
served as official censors for the affair-which
was attended by 120 students.
Mr. E. T. Dum~eier wa.s a Sunday
dinner guest of PSI Nu Sigma.
"EBB TIDE"
ALSO-"HAZEL
Nationally
-'-
Sunday
F.
Nalder
dinner
guests
and
family
of Alpha
Advanced
Advertised
Prices
OLICY
ROVIDES
ERFECT
ROTECTION
INSURE
88
1;"1
Dry Cleaninz
Fur Cleaning
I
~i
+
l'"t
t.
ii
it
it.
;+ t
Tau
t ,
It I
Geo. W. Ewing
.t
PULLMAN LAUNDRY
t+
STORAGE
MCCLASKEY
WITH
BAGGAGE
were
Work
Called
For
and
Delivered
Work
tl+
Guaranteed
PHONE 38
_
"
..~
' -
_.H
0-
.._._.
- ..
,.
February Is
Waffle Month
On February
16 there will be a
Methodist
and Presbyterian
young
people's roller skating party at the
armory.
The American College Quill club
announces
the pledging of Frances
Sibley and Bess Hanscom.
from a number of names of the opposite sex, put in a commodious receptacle for that purpose.
Each gentleman drew a lady's name, sent her a
valentine and swore as her valentine
to remain true to her for a year. The
very first valentine on record was sent
by a tiny boy to a married woman,
Mrs. Pepys, February 14, 1667, a matter of some 250 years ago. It was 'l
frivolous little thing done in alice
blue with gold lettering ..
Quite some time later, when grandpa courted grandma, he sent her a
delicate, lacy token, intricately designed, very dainty, with sentimental lines
written by himself in a flourishing
"This is a sample of my best writing"
style.
However, with the passing of candies, horses and buggies, white wigs,
satin breeches, buckled pumps, bustles, six-hour
sermons,
Indian battles and hand laundries and the advent of jazz, marcels, peon pants, airplanes and radio, the valentine, oldfashioned,
delicate, infinitely dainty,
truly sweet, can scarcely hold its own,
but most of us, even though we lacked "
the sagacity to save the ones we received, are at least able to cherish
fond memories of "Will you be my
Valentine?"
HOLLYWOOD"
What
Life Insurance
Does
No gift of genius has ever helped so many people in distress, no
human ingenuity has ever directed so many men to the right road,
as life insurance.
~~.
'0"
TRANSFER
Omega.
Caroll Cookingham,
Grace Pegan
and Janet Chalmers were Sunday dinner guests of Kappa Alpha Theta.
Logan
THE
CHANCES
OF LIFE
Consider what the real chances in life are:
Family,;_,2 out of 5 men die between ages of 25 and 65.
Only 3 out of 100 men leave over $10,000 at death.
Only lout
of 5 men leave any estate at death.
Four out of 5 widows have to work for a living.
One out of 25 men become permanently Incapacitated between age
of 20 and death.
Nine out of 20 business men fail at least once in 20 years.
Five out of 6 men living at age of 65 are absolutely dependent.
;~:::'
t:l'
Phone
F.
Jacqueline
HEALTH
ACCIDENT
--: t,.,.,
AND
Raymond Hatton
George Fawcett
Noah Beery
LIFE
Auto Transfer
MOVING
J ames Kirkwood
,!
Mr. and
and H.
Mrs.
C. Brewster,
Thomas
Beals
Staves
were Sunday
dinner guests of Delta Tau Alpha.
FROM
Lila Lee
I:--
With
111
N. Y.
BONCILLA
GO ON SPREE
FRIDAY
ANI) SATURDAY,
FEBRUARY
Matinee Friday and Saturday
second
The establishment
of a permanent
sophomore organization to enforce and
uphold the traditions of the State College was begun by the class of '25 in
its meeting yesterday in Science hall.
A committee will be appointed by the
president, Al Loren, to look into the
matter and to work in co-operation
with the members of the freshman
class.
A prize of $5 will be awarded to the
member of the class who submits the
best class yell to a committee composed of Frank Martin, Vincent Hiden
and Al Loren, not later than one day
before the next meeting.
The committee will select the five best ye lls
and present them to the class for final
selection.
John Peddycord,
Ted Muncaster
and Hazel La Lone were named members of a committee to take charge
of the class section in the Chinook of
'24. It was decided that one member
of each couple attending the sophomore informal at the White Owl on
March 3 must be of the class of '25.
THURSDAY,
of
TRY
One
GRAND THEATRE
by
of a series of sonata
iven at vespers Sunprograms was g
day afternoon by Mrs. Ruth Bradley
Keiser and Mr. Karl Havlicek. This
is the first sonata program
of the
year offered by the faculty.
The first number on the program
was a sonata for violin and piano by
Richard Strauss.
This is one of the
most difficult, complex and beautiful
sonatas in muscial literature, and Mrs.
Keiser and Mr. Havlicek displayed almost perfect ensemble and the ease
with which they overcame all difficulties of the piece showed them to be
artists of the highest type.
New York,
to Be Given
Faculty
"NEWSHOUNDS"
Broadway,
Entertainment
Series
Public Sales
296
SONATA PROGRAM
GIYfN AT VfSPfRS
$10.85
The Washington
Water Power Co.
Pullman, Wash.
COOK BY
WIRE
INSTEAD
OF FIRE
Pullman, Wash.
Page
THE
Four
Wednesday,
EVERGREEN
1923
II
,
qruorJNn'"
Well-developed film
A perfect print.
Nature supplies the
First.
The rest:
GRAVES
HUSKlfS' VICTORY
OVfR COUGAR SijUAD
IS BY SMAll lfAD
Fastest Game of Year Is a Battle
to Final Gun-U. of W. Winners by Two Points
Photographer
Next to Post Qfflce
Phone 3234
Special Saturday
Peanut
Brittle
Peanut
Candy
Peanut
and Cocoanut
Brittle
muttnu's
Chocolates
IT PAYS TO INSURE
See
Dan Downen
Insurance
Specialist
SHOP
WOOD
and
BUILDING MATERIAL
Potlatch
Lumber-~.---~.
Co.~
~.
Phone 1
81
aXI
25c
Since Feb. 1
Cit y Market
QUALITY
-0-
II
AND SERVICE
-l
I
II'"
----~-II
Men's
Spring Caps
Our
SENIORS
MAKE
Central
Wash-
Yakima
Valley.
PLANS
Reg. Trade
$1.69
EARLY
"Let
Appoint
Committees
and
Class Officers
V'
Styles
Latest pattern.
Tailored from' allwool materials.
Richly satin lined.
Full real leather sweats.
New colors.
ing tori.
Dist. No.7-South
ington.
Dist. No.8-Lower
Waverly
Mark
$1.98
Us Be Your
Hatter"
Discuss
Although
"there is many a slip
'twixt the cup and the lip," the senior
class began making very definite plans
'toward graduation at its regular meeting this morning in Science hall.
The senior memorial was discussed
at length and the matter was left over
for consideration.
Caps and gowns
were discussed as well as plans for
senior sneak day. The social committee was instructed to begin plans immediately for the sneak.
Waverly Lindsay was appointed to
make arrangements for the senior play
and the following committee was appointed to look into the matter of
graduation
announcement
cards for
class: Cecil Compau, Ruth Inkster and
Catherine Mathews.
Made - to - Measure'
Clothes
are the real kind to wear.
I~dividual seryice is the ideal way to buy ar~J-. )
smce the cost 1,S no more, it dispenses with all
arguments.
U. S. GOVERNMENT UNDERWEAR
2,500,00
pc. New
Government
Wool Underwear
purchased
by us
to sell to the public direct at 75c
each.
Actual
retail
value
$'2.50
each.
All sizes: shirts, 34 to 46;
drawers,
30 to 44.
Send correct
sizes.
Pay postman on delivery or
send us money order.
If underwear
is not satisfactory,
we will refund
money promptly upon request. Dept.
24. The Pilgrim Woolen oo., 1476
Broadway, New York, N. Y.
tf
Tailor Zalesky
Have
Your
Sunday
Suit
Hand-Pressed-It's
Better
~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==::=::::::::::::=::::=~
Tell it to "BUDDY"-He
LEE ALLEN
Has a Memo
Hardware and
Crockery
BUY
DRESS MAKING
E~ I?ABETH
I. )
.,
r--------------------------------------------~
TUDEf'~TS:
Phone 24
!'
never forgets
STUDENT
I
I
I
JOHANSON
Phone 3404
215 Fairbanks
St.
DEPOSIT
CHECKS
'
~_I
First National
THEHEIlY
SAVING
YOURSELVI'JS
EXOH.A.NGE
CJLt\.ROES ON YOUR FOn..
EIGN CIJECJiS.
WI<J SELL THElVI IN BOOKS
CONTAINING TWENTY-FIVE,
J'U'TY,
SJWRNTY-I<'IVE AND
ONE HUNDRED nOLLAUS.
ooOtto
All students not attending the Military Ball are cordially invited to attend the
(Scheduled)
.'"
Bank of Pullman
..
I WHI~AS~ERFn~a~t~:b.161
:......................
Sorenson (6)
C.
(12) Hesketh
Whitman
defeated
them 30 to 13.
Schroder (12)
G...................... Bryan "Doc" will probably
start his subs
Hen:ington
G
(I)) Crawford against them here.
Sulistitutions:
\V. S. C.-Kelso
Logan, captain of the Willamette
(2), for Roberts, Chandler for Kelso, team, is an outstanding player and his
Successor to Sanitary B~ths
Burke for Chandler, Burke for Soren- work has featured
every game the
I son, Sorenson for Burke, Lo;_0=1l=1=is==(=3)==B=c=a=rc=ats
have p~la~y~c~cl~.
============~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~;;:;~~~.--~---------._-._:::::-.-------------
c... ..
............ .e
Dubert
Barber Shop
to
at Olson
Phone 1
old battle
-+-
COAL
II
GENERAL
WOOD-WORKING
Grand
A snappy
young men's suit
made of the
famous double
service whipcord.
The Hudson model
(as illustrated)
Semi-formfitting
three-button single
breasted models
with four patch
pockets with fla ps,
three-quarter
belt
and yoke back
Different shades
Lewis
30cLb.
The
OUT
All Wool
Whipcord
Suits
WASHINGTON
II
-0-
"
14,
II
A snowy scene,
A Kodak,
February
Good
mUSIC