Montana State University Bozeman - Montanan Yearbook (Bozeman, MT)
- Class of 1923
Page 1 of 298
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 298 of the 1923 volume:
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STATE COLLEGE MONTANAN o Being the annual publication of the Associated Students of Montana State College X x A record by picture and word of the memorable events of the year ending April, 1923 VOLUME SIXTEEN it I I fox COPYRIGHT Charles Schurch Editor. in • Chitj Leslie Gilbert Business Manager 1923 I DEDICATION TO OTT ROMNEY to whom we are indebted for the creation of a student body consciousness of our college traditions and for giving to Bobcat Spirit a new and greater significance by a correct interpretation of these traditions this book is dedicated In Memory militant Sakrr, Sir. Born July 11, 1902 Died March 19, 1923 THE COLLEGE Vivid, ever-changing with glorious leaping life. As water falls from jagged chasms; Strong, austere as Rockies’ mountain peaks— Montana’s sons are sent to us, A constant inspiration. mmc SS SSML cm The College MO NTANAN When memory stamps her pictures for future reveries Glimpses of old Main Hall remain strongest and most dear. a 10 —■■AatSterfn.. 77 c College THE MO NTANAN Background of stony barrenness in sharp relief projects In emblem engendering loyalty by constant lasting strength THE The College M O NTANAN Sifted silvery moonlight, gentle breezes from quiet cli ff's Most delightful playground! Dridger is remembered. iSS 12 THE The College |0 M O NTANAN Much of joy, some of sadness, within the busy halls Secrets of past happiness are buried in these nails. iemnaz -£3 a IS Into every life must enter some of shade and some of light: On the future’s winding pathway there must be a share of shadow. Else the unrelenting sunshine blind us with its constant glare. II hen burdens grow too heavy, when weary shoulders droop, A nook with quiet water, a tree with drooping boughs, Afford a welconw respite from the clang of everyday. In the misty way before as (dl. what lies to lure us onY We build the road alone—yet not alone for lo! M. S. C. has started us, will ever carry through. ■ the 77 f College montanan THE zumms mohm The College M O NTANAN v rwiimx Ha K C- ' IS THE The College MONTANAN THE CHANCELLOR’S MESSAGE A College year book contains very particular material for persons who compose the student body during the time covered by the year book. This material is a delightful, entertaining, composite, picture of College life as the editors see it evolving in their day and generation. It is a pleasure to join in the greetings of the 1923 Montanan. -lust now in the new day in Education we are all agreed, probably. that correct attitudes toward our changing economic, social, and political world represent the most important products of education. If the students of our State College develop correct attitudes toward life, toward its opportunities, and toward society within, and without the Greater University of Montana, they will have demonstrated that our educational program is correct, and that they are forward-looking representatives of that program. May one be permitted to suggest that the most important factor in this development of correct attitudes toward society and toward self is the old. old wish of Christmas time. -Good will toward men.” It is sincerely hoped in the Chancellor's office that this little message may carry cheer and abiding stimulation to the lovers of the Good Will Society, which we trust includes every member of the faculty and student body of the State College. m THE mmsmaenum The College M O NTANAN . PRESIDENT ATKINSON 2 0 M O NTANAN A WORD FROM THE PRESIDENT (Jreet ings:— Ii is a pleasure to express greetings to ilie students of Montana State College and the High School students of the State. Those very large groups of young people, who are fitting themselves for the leadership of tomorrow, are the hope of a safe and developed Montana. Modern industrial and commercial demands require the greatest possible use of human power. This can only come through the applications of Science under the direction of the trained engineer. chemist, agriculturist, and others fitted to direct great forces. If Montana and the other States are to reach their best possible productiveness, the number of persons trained to direct this development must be greatly increased. The College is now enjoying the use of the splendid new facilities for instruction, made possible through the generosity of the people of the State. The new buildings erected and the modern equipment installed provide for the youth of Montana opportunities for training along Applied Science lines that are unsurpassed in any of the other western States. The young people of the State should make the most of these educational facilities. THE ;Cr; T,e Co M O NTANAN J. M. Hamilton Dean of Men THE DEAN OF MEN Every business enterprise has a “repair department and a “trouble man. At Montana State College, the Dean of Men is in charge of such work for the college Men Students. He checks up shortcomings and undertakes to correct just grievances. Sometimes he resorts to an oil can and sometimes he advises the use of sand. lie keeps watch over attendance on classes and investigates the causes of absences. He talks over “D, E and F grades with students and tries to find a way to improve them. Sometimes a student is “broke and must be helped to a loan. Some students select their courses without much thought and a wrong choice must be remedied before it is too late. Any or all of such matters may come up in the day’s work. THE DEAN OF WOMEN Greetings to all College Women and High School Girls of Montana: This year marks a distinct advancement in all lines of activities for women in Montana State College. Whether seeking a training to go out into the social, professional or commercial world, the Faculty Women of Montana State College have this one aim in mind for all Montana girls: To develop each girl to the highest economic value as a unit of society, to the end that when she finishes her training she may carry forth into life a sane, well balanced, logical mind, high moral character, and a strong, symmetrical, properly functioning body, capable of assuming and performing cheerfully and well the duties of cultured womanhood. This is my vision for a perfect womanhood. A rbk J Una B. Herrick Dean of Women THE mw a a The College MONTANAN F. B. Linfield Dean of Agriculture DEAN OF AGRICULTURE The College of Agriculture of the Montana State College appeals to young men.to become skilled workers in the fundamental industry of agriculture. The great need of our country is for men of training, of judgment, and of vision as leaders in the rural communities. To the College we must look for those whether they are farmers, teachers, research workers, or active in any other agricultural field. The development and progress of the College of Agriculture and of the agriculture of the state will to a large extent be dependent on the intelligence and vision that the men of the immediate future, who are the students of today, can bring to the working out of a profitable and progressive agriculture in all parts of this wide, extended state. DEAN OF ENGINEERING As the 1923 Montanan goes to press the hopes of the College of Engineering are centered in the new engineering buildings which the citizens of Montana have, under most discouraging financial conditions, erected as a symbol of their belief in higher technical education as one of the essentials to the progress of our State. With pride in these new facilities and with deep appreciation of the generosity of the people of Montana, the College of Engineering would be ungrateful and undeserving of the larger opportunity afforded it, did it not dedicate the best efforts of its alumni, students and faculty to the task of repaying the State by the fullest possible measure of service. By the response to this obligation, by the engineers’ contribution to the progress and development of the State will the public judze the wisdom of its confidence in the engineering profession. E. B. Norris Dean o Engineering JMBWKJMWW a 23 TH E £X7Z7 ('ollcgc M O NTANAN THE MONTANA EXTENSION SERVICE F. S. Cooley Director Extension Service Extension work in agriculture and home economics, nationalized by act of Congress in 1914, is organized to take out to men and women living on farms the best scientific information and the best experience that the country affords. The object of the extension service is to promote better farming, improve farm business, and enrich the lives of people living in rural communities. To carry on extension work a staff of trained leaders has been organized, who have charge of county extension agents, both in agriculture, home demonstrations and junior clubs, and subject specialists who represent the departments of the State College at Bozeman in the kind of subject matter taught. There are seventy people on the rolls of the Montana Extension Service. EXECUTIVE BOARD Alfred Atkinson (ex-officio), Chairman......................Bozeman J. H. Baker (term expires April, 11(23) ..... Bozeman W. S. Davidson ( term expires April. 1925)..................Bozeman Allen Cameron, Secretary-Treasurer..........................Bozeman Roy Orvis Wilson. B. S....................................Registrar THE CLASSES SENIORS THE SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer . Chari.es Lyndon Chloe Cox Harry McCann Robert Walter Charles Lyndon - - - Lyndon, Alta. Animal Husbandry Sigma Chi. Alpha Zeta: Phi Alpha Tau: Pi Kappa Delta: Sep-temviri: Les Bouffons: Intercollegiate Knights: Looters: Agricultural Club. President (4): Cross Country ili 12 : Editor-in-Chief Montanan (3): Montanan 2 i): Exponent «1 «2i i3 4 : Class President 14 ► : Stock Judging Team (4); Debate ill 21 (4); Winter Sports Club. Chloe Cox.........................................Ballantine Home Economics Alpha Omicron Pi. Alpha Epsilon Theta: Woman’s Council (4): Inter-fraternity Council (4): Home Economics Council (3 : Woman's Caucus i4 ; Home Economics Club: Y. W. C. A.: C. G. A.; Exponent (3): Looters: Class Vice-President 141 : Girl’s Vocational Congress Staff (4); Freshman Girl's Advisor (4). Robert Walter........................................Huntley Agricultural Education Beta Epsilon. Les Bouffons; Intercollegiate Knights: M Club: Inter-fraternity Council 4i; Agricultural Club: Football 12► (31 (4): Track 2i: Class Treasurer i4l THE MONTANAN Arno Albrecht .... Great Falls Irrigation Engineering The Order of the Barb. Glee Club (2); Scribblers (3) 4: A. S. C. E.: Engineering Council (1); Debate 3 : Rifle Team (2). William Alderson .... Bozeman Industrial Chemistry Beta Epsilon. Alpha Pi; Chemistry Society. Frank Barnum...................................Kalispell Animal Husbandry H. O. M. Club. Agricultural Club; Stags; Intercollegiate Knights: Stock Judging Team (4); Entered from Iowa State College (2). William Bennett .... Anaconda Chemical Engineering Alpha Pi; Chemical Society: Stags. Arthur Bergstrom - - Minneapolis, Minn. Electrical Engineering Omega Beta. Septemviri: Phi Alpha Tau; Pi Kappa Delta: Sigma Epsilon: Winter Sports Club; Coffee Club: Electric Club; A. I. E. E. : Stags: Debate i2i 3 (4 : Exponent 3 (4); Bobcat (2); Commissioner of Forensics (4) : U. S. Army. Two Years. Alva Brown........................................Moccasin Electrical Engineering H. O. M. Club. Phi Kappa Phi. Loot: Electric Club: A. I. E. E. « 2 7 THE 4-. iJr K flfc gXBK The Classes M O NTANAN ftnx rrm.mm na Earl Buckingham - Ekalaka Civil Engineering The Order of the Barb. Winter Sports Club: Coffee Club: A. S. C. E.: Class Debate (I (2): Cross Country (11 (2 i3). Dorothy Burgess .... Bozeman Botany and Bacteriology- Chi Omega. Cap and Gov.-n: Alpha Epsilon Theta: Y. W. C. A. President Ml : Cabinet (31 : Inter-Fraternity Council (81: Woman’s Caucus 31: Scribblers: Staff Co-ed Exponent (21: Staff Girl’s Vocational Congress ($): Treasurer Student Friendship Fund (31. Walter Carter - - - Calgary, Alta. En tomology Zoology The Order of the Barb. Glee Club: Coffee Club: Debate (31: Poem in College Anthology 1921. Canadian Army Two Years. Edward Cates..................................Victor Horticulture Sigma Chi. Septemviri: Les Bouffons: Alpha Zeta: Stags: M Club: Band (1) (2); Montanan i3 : Inter-Fraternity Council (4); Agricultural Club. Vice-President (31; Class President (3 : Student Senate (31: Student Council (8): Class Track. Captain 11 (21; Track ill (2) (31 4i. Captain (3• (4 : Football (3); Class Football (21: Class Basketball (It (2 : Basketball r : Chairman Men’s Caucus (41. Clark Cheney .... Twin Bridges AgriculturaI Education The Order of the Barb. Agricultural Club. Ben Chestnut - - - . - - Anaconda Civil Engineering Sigma Chi. Stags: A. S. C. E.: Trowel Club: Cross Country ill: Class Basketball (11; Class Football (21; Class Baseball (li (2); Baseball (3) (4); Exponent (11 (21; Band (1) (2 . THE M2 3S KI' M O NTANAN !K Zt Laura Dahlstrom..........................Fromberg Home Economics Home Economics Club: Y. W. C. A.: Staff Girl's Vocational Congress « 4 . Dorothy Dean ...................................Bozeman Home Economics Phi Upsilon Omicron: Phi Kappa Phi: Treble Clef (2) 444 : Y. W. C. A.. Cabinet t31 (4); Women's Council i I ► : Home Economics Club: Does: C. G. A. : Staff Girl’s Vocational Congress 4i. Carroll Donohoe .... Whitehall Industrial Chemistry Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Septemviri: Alpha Pi: Les Bouffons: Phi Alpha Tau: Tormentors : Looters : Stags : Chemical Society : Exponent il • 2 : Inter-Fraternity Council 4 : Class President (1): Class Treasurer 3). Roma Elmer......................................Bozeman Industrial Chemistry Cap and Gown; Phi Kappa Phi: Does: Chemical Society: Treble Clef 11 (2l $); C. G. A. Wilson Erdman........................................Libby Electrical Engineering Beta Epsilon. Trowel Club: A. I. E. E.: Electric Club: Stags; Inter-Fraternity Council l2). Herbert Felt ... Detroit, Michigan Electrical Engineering Omega Beta. Intercollegiate Knight: Stags; Winter Sports Club: Electric Club. THE The Classes M O NTA NAN ... «i is Adam Fiscus................................Bozeman .1 lech anical Engin eeri ng Kenneth Fitzgerald - - Sioux City, Iowa Animal Husbandry Sigma Phi Epsilon (Ames. Iowa . Alpha Zeta: Agricultural Club: Stock Judging Team 41. Entered from Iowa State College 31. Bernice Flook.......................................Lewistown Secretarial Iota Delta. Aplha Epsilon Theta: Woman’s Caucus ($ (41 : Y. W. C. A., Secretary .3 : Cabinet 4 : Treble Clef (2) (3i; Inter-Fraternity Council (3 i4t: Scribblers: Piff Paff Pouf: Class Vice-President $). Walter Fi.ook .... Lewistown Electrical Engineering H. O. M. Club. Intercollegiate Knights. A. I. E. E.: Electric Club. Ethan Fori).....................................Bozeman Animal Husbandry The Order of the Harb. Alpha Zeta : Agricultural Club. Oscar Forswall...............................Belgrade Electrical Engineering The Order of the Barb. Trowel Club: Electric Club: A. I. E. E.: Stags: Montanan 41: D. A. V. of W. W. U. S. Army. Two Years. kaSbtiaL THE M O NTANAN Wayne Getchell...................................Bozeman Chemical Engineering Beta Epsilon. Alpha Pi. Chemistry Society. U. S. Marine Corps. One Year. Leslie Gilbert.........................................Perma Mechanical Engineering Beta Epsilon. Intercollegiate Knights: Looters: A. S. M. E. Exponent (3) (4): Montanan (4). Lloyd Graham.........................................Kalispell Agricultural Education Beta Epsilon. Agricultural Club: Stags. Francis Haines....................................Clancy Mechanical Engineering The Order of the Barb. Sigma Epsilon : A. S. M. E U. S. Army. Two Years. Stanford Hannah - Bozeman Agricultural Education Omega Beta. Alpha Zeta : Phi Alpha Tau : Pi Kappa Delta : Debate 141 ; Agricultural Club. Carl Hoffman....................................Helena Chemical Engineering The Order of the Barb. Phi Kappa Phi. Sigma Epsilon: Alpha Pi: Engineering Council: Stags: Chemistry Society. President (4); Football (2) (3); Class Football (1) 2). THE The Classes 'JSSittvan.aw 'M :Mx?jew 3KM '2Z7£. Kx -«Msxrv AW - MO NTANAN %m0Ssm sZrai aowaw Bruce Hollister .... Manhattan Applied Science Sigma Chi. Les Bouffons: Intercollegiate Knights: Septemviri: M. Club: Stags: Class Football «1 : Class Basketball «H: Track • I : Football 13• (4i: Baseball i3): Basketball (21 (3i • I : Debate (41 : Class President (2 : Freshman Advisor t4i. Arthur Jorgenson .... Wisdom Electrical Engineering Omega Beta. M. Club: Football i4 : Basket ball til (2) (3) (4); Baseball tl t2i 'It: Electric Club. Earl Kelley.............................Bozeman Electrical Engineering Omega Beta. Electric Club: Commissioner of Finance (4 • : Student Senate 141. Walter Kennedy .... Missoula Electrical Engineering Beta Epsilon. Inter-Fraternity' Council t3 : Electric Club: Stags: Class Basketball (II : Montanan 141 : Exponent (li ill; Football Manager (3): Basketball Manager (3); Tennis Manager (2) t3i. Frank Knight.........................................Bozeman Agricultural Education Sigma Alpha Epsilon. M. Club: Stags: Class Football tli t2i : Track ill (2): Football (2) (3) (41: Class President 111. U. S. Marines. Herbert Lange - - - Minneapolis, Minn. Electrical Engineering Beta Epsilon. Sigma Epsilon: Trowel Club: Electric Club: Stags: Glee Club (11 (2): D. A. V. of W. W„ State Adjutant. U. S. Army. One Year. THE The Classes montanan Paul LeCornu - - - Olympia, Wash. Agronomy The Order of the Barb. Agricultural Club. TJ. S. Army. Two Years. Manila Leckliter .... Salesville Applied Art Art Club: Y. W. C. A.; Treble Clef. Buford Low man [Electrical Engineering Stags. Darby Merrill Luther..............................Bozeman Animal Husbandry-Agricultural Education Omega Beta. Alpha Zeta : Winter Sports Club: Class Basketball i2i: Class Track 2i «3 : Track (3); Exponent «2t: Stags. Eleanor Marston .... Great Falls Applied Art Pi Beta Phi. Alpha Epsilon Theta: Y. W. C. A.: Treble Clef: Art Club; Inter-Fraternity Council 13 41 : Campus Pan Hellenic (•! : Tormentors: Does: Women's Athletics (2) t3) (4) ; C. C. Club. Hollis Matthew .... Bozeman Animal Husbandry Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Agricultural Club: Stags- Cla s Track «21 : Track Manager (2); Assistant Football Manager «2•. THE mmJamLrnrn The Classes M O NTANAN Harry McCann.......................................Helena Mechanical Engineering Omega Beta. Sigma Epsilon: Les Bouffons: Intercollegiate Knights: Winter Sports Club: Exponent (8) 141 : Football Manager tit; Class Secretary 14 . Ray McCarren............................Anaconda Electrical Engineering Omega Beta. Les Bouffons: Intercollegiate Knights: M Club: Electric Club: Student Senate 8) (4); Stags: Baseball lit (2) (3): Basketball 2i (3); Football (2) (3 (4): Commissioner of Athletics (3) (4). Fergus Mitchell - - - Great Falls Animal Husbandry Sigma Chi. Alpha Zeta: Tormentors: Scribblers: Agricultural Club: Class Football ill (2t : Class Track ill 2): Tennis 2i 3 : Exponent d) i2i $) ; Montanan (3i; Stock Judging Team (It. Marie Moebus.........................................Butte Home Economics Alpha Omicron Pi. Heme Economics Club: Women's Caucus (31 (4l; Inter-Fraternity Council. President i4 : Women's League. President (4): Treble Clef: Women’s Council (3t 14 t: Looters: Y. W. C. A.. Cabinet (3): Class Secretary i3t : Business Manager. Y. W. C. A. Stunt Night 13). Alice Moody.......................................Butte Home Economics Pi Beta Phi. Phi Upsilon Omicron: Cap and Gown: Home Economics Club. Vice- President (31: Treble Clef: Y. W. C. A. Vice-President (3i : Montanan (3): Woman's Council ll) (21 : Women’s League: Does. Raymond Mountjoy - - - Kalispell Agricultural Education Omega Beta. Phi Kappa Phi: Alpha Zeta: Les Bouffons: Sep-temviri: Intercollegiate Knights: Glee Club: Agricultural Club: Stags: Montanan (8): President Associated Students (4); Student Council (4): Student Senate (4). THE s oeswweww .s!! M O NTANAN Leonard Neuman - Libby Electrical Engineering The Order of the Bari). Kappa Kappa Psi; Electric Club: Band (1) (2) (3) «4 : Orchestra (2 I (3l: A. I. E. E. : Class Athletics (1) (2). Xoneeta Noble .... Great Falls Secretarial Alpha Omicron Pi. Alpha Epsilon Theta: Tormentors: Treble Clef: Exponent (21 i3i (4): Class Secretary (21: Chairman Woman's Vocational Congress (41: Woman's Council. President 3): Woman's League. Treasurer (4). Nicholas Oberle .... Bozeman Electrical Engineering Beta Epsilon. Electric Club: A. I. E. E.: Stags: Trowel Club. Manford Oliphant ... Pullman, Wash. Agricultural Education Alpha Zeta : Agricultural Club. Entered from Washington State College 3i. Paul Orcutt - - - Slim Buttes, S. D. Animal Husbandry Phi Delta Theta (Ames. Iowa). Phi Kappa Phi: Alpha Zeta: Agricultural Club: Stock Judging Team (41. Entered from Iowa State College (3). Millard Peterson .... Culbertson Botany and Bacteriology Beta Epsilon. Stags: Glee Club: Inter-Fraternity Council 4 : Men's Caucus (4). 35 VSCV M, THE ®4Waw Kz«aM6K28W8szy( mmmmJMaSbsdm The Classes M O NTANAN Lee Popham........................................Bozeman Agricu I turn I Educa lion Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Agricultural Club: Stags: Baseball «3t: Football (4 : U. S. Marine Corps. Edward Poulsex................................Laurel - Mechanical Engineering Beta Epsilon. Phi Kappa Phi: Septemviri: Sigma Epsilon: Pi Kappa Delta: A. S. M. E.: Engineering Council: Debate 3). George Rassley...............................Bozeman Agricultural Education Agricultural Club; M Club: Football (1) 13 • : Baseball !• i2 3 : Stags. Alf Rivenes....................................Glendive Electrical Engineering Beta Epsilon. Phi Alpha Tau: Intercollegiate Knights: Tormentors: Trowel Club: Electric Club: A. I. E. E. : Stags: Student Senate 31 (It; Commissioner of Demonstrations 3• (4). Juan Rodriquez - - Balincaguin, Pangasin, Philippine Islands Agronomy The Order of the Barb. Trowel Club. U. S. Army. Two Years. Entered from the College of Agriculture. University cf the Philippines (2). Robley Rouse................................Libby Mechanical Engineering The Order of the Barb. Kappa Kappa Psi: A. S M. E.: Band (2t t3 (4). THE 3ft 0B A32MK 2MI Si ML The Classes MONTANAN ■ -t-.v? • zaxrvitme - urww « Olive Schreiner .... Townsend Bio-Chemistry Iota Delta. Chemical Society: Y. W. C. A.: C. G. A.: Skating and Skiing Club: Chairman Attendance Committee. Girl’s Vocational Congress (4) : Inter-Class Tennis Championship (2). Arthur Sears........................................Bozeman Agricultural Education Beta Epsilon. Winter Sports Club: Agricultural Club: Treasurer Montana Union Memorial Fund. Thomas Shoebotham - - - Huntley Industrial Chemistry Beta Epsilon. Alpha Pi; Chemistry Society: Rod Ramblers: Stags: Track i2i «3 (4i ; Football (4); Class Track (1) (2.1; Class Football (2). Wilbur Smith......................................Bozeman Agricultural Education Agricultural Club. Clarence Stacy .... Bozeman A rch itectural Engineering Architect's Club: Stags: Winter Sports Club. Malcom Stanton......................................Plains Electrical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. A. I. E. E.: Electric Club: Stags. U. S. Army. One Year. 37 TH E The Classes montanan ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■MMMHMMBiBMMKMBWRHKBMBMVBSnKVarSMaraKaflMWV Howard Tenney .... Great Falls Mechanical Engineering H. O. M. Club. Intercollegiate Knights; A. S. M. E.: Athletic Manager’s Association: Track li (2i; Exponent «2 (3 -Si. Editor-in-Chief (4): Montanan 13 : Track Manager 4 4 : Student Senate (4); Winter Sports Club. Richard Thomas .... Anaconda Electrical Engineering Omega Beta. Sigma Epsilon: Phi Kappa Phi: Intercollegiate Knights: Trowel Club; Electric Club: A. I. E. E.: Engineering Council (I). Katherine Towne .... Livingston Home Economics Zeta Kappa. Home Economics Club: Treble Clef: Y. W. C. A.: Woman's Council: Inter-Fraternity Council: Woman's League. Secretary (3). George Van Fleet .... Bozeman Applied Science Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Phi Alpha Tau: Septemviri: Tormentors: Stags: Winter Sports Club; Class Track t.l i 4 2 : Football Manager (4). Hallam Williams .... Anaconda Electrical Engineering Sigma Chi. Intercollegiate Knights: Class Football (1) (2): Class Treasurer (St. Ruby Walker.......................................Bridget Home Economics Home Economics Club: Chairman Housing Committee for Girl's Vocational Congress 4t. WXiZtZWVam 38 mom attowKSssa a 3iz 3hOS 77 r Classes Mk MO NTANAN Harold White........................................Bozeman .1 ecA anical Engin eering Beta Epsilon. Stags: Trowel Club: A. S. M. E. Wallace Whitney ... Pioche, Nevada Mech a n ica I Engineeri ng Sigma Chi. M Club: A. S. M. E. : Class Basketball (1 (2); Basketball (21 i4 . Vernon Zacher - - - Jamestown, N. D. Mechanical Engi n eeri ng Sigma Chi. Glee Club (11 • 21 : D. A. V. of W. W.; Exponent (41: Stags. U. S. Army. Two Years. Merlin Zuck - Minneapolis, Minn. Electrical Engineering Omega Beta. Electric Club: M Club: Baseball (1) (2) (3) (4). THE The Classes montanan JUNIORS THE C2 M O NTANAN WHaHSUUK’CMDi 9 JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS President 1ice-Presit lent See ret tin Treasurer . Charles King Hi tii Davidson Mary Baldwin Edward Wilson Charles King................................Forsyth .1 tech a n ica I Engi neeri ng The Order of the Barb. A. S. M. E.: Class President 13 : Student Council t$): Student Senate 13 : Stass. Ruth Davidson - - - Townsend Home Economics Pi Beta Phi. Phi Upsilon Omicron: Alpha Epsilon Theta: Spurs: Heme Economics Club: Y. W. C. A.: Montanan i3(: Class Secretary (II; Class Vice-President $) : Staff Girl's Vocational Congress (3 . Mary Baldwin........................................Butte Home Economics Alpha Omicron Pi. Spurs: Home Economics Club: Y. W. C. A.: Cabinet 31 : Exponent 3 : C. G. A.: Business Manager. Y. W. C. A. Stunt Night: Class Secretary c3 . Edward Wilson .... Lewistown I cell an ica I Engineering The Order of the Barb. A. S. M. E. : Class Treasurer 3 •. THE K sflfel 6 M O NTANAN Leola Adams - Bozeman Applied Art Spurs: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3i : C. G. A. Leonard Atchison .... Salesville Mechanical Engineering The Order of the Barb. A. S. M. E. Stewart Avery .... Three Forks Civil Engineering Omejra Beta. Intercollegiate Knij?hts: Glee Club: Band: A. S. C. E.: Montanan (3). Lester Bachman .... Missoula Electrical Engineering Beta Epsilon. M Club: Electric Club: Cross Country. Winner (11; Class Track (1) (2) (3): Track (1) ($) ; Class Baseball (1) (2). Curtis Baldwin.................................Glendive Electrical Engineering Trowel Club. Albert Beck Sijrma Chi. Agriculture Basin THE M. A. Bell - Wibaux Agronomy Beta Epsilon. Alpha Zeta : Trowel Club: Agricultural Club: Secretary (3): Class Football ill: Baseball ill : U. S. Navy, Two Years. Seth Bohart..........................................Wilsall Secretarial The Order of the Barb. Tormentors. Robert Bowen .................................Buffalo Electrical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Stags; Trowel Club: Student Senate (3): Commissioner of Affairs Social i3.i ; Engineering Council. Marie Brandenburg .... Bozeman Home Economics Chi Omega. Y. W. C. A.: Treble Clef: Home Economics Club: Woman's League. Council i3 ; Staff Girl's Vocational Congress. Harry Brentford .... Hamilton Electrical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. D. A. V. of W. W.: Trowel Club: Electric Club: Baseball (1) (2); Stags: U. S. Marines. Two Years. •John Brittain.....................................Billings Civil Engineering Omega Beta. Intercollegiate Knights: M Club: Inter-Fraternity Council «3 : Football (I) i2i (3). a « 44 James Brockway .... Missoula Civil Engineering Richard Buckby .... Bozeman Electrical Engineering Sigma Chi. Exponent 2i 3i: Electric Club. Edward Buxney.................................Belfry Chemical Engineering Sigma Chi. Intercollegiate Knights: Tormentors: Looters: Glee Club: College Quartet: Chemistry Society: Cross Country. Winner 2 : Track «li (21 : Exponent 2) ; Montanan 181 : M Club. Ormsby Burgess .... Bozeman Meek an ical Engineering The Order of the Barb. Paul Carnes ... Kansas City. Mo. 1)airy Manu act u ring Omega Beta. Alpha Zeta: Agricultural Club. Vice-President (3 : Montanan l3). Dewey Cash more..........................................Dillon Bio-Chemistry Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Kappa Kappa Psi: Alpha Pi: Intercollegiate Knights: Chemical Society: Band : Orchestra : Stags: Commissioner of Music (41 : Student Senate rl i ; Football til 12) l3 : U. S. Army. Two Years. THE m mammmmmm -Jtidkwu,-. 'The Classes MO NTANAN Margaret Chrystal .... Anaconda Home Economics Alpha Omicron PI. Alpha Epsilon Theta: Treble Clef: Home Economics Club: C. G. A.: Y. W. C. A.: Tennis (1) (2) ; Girl’s Tennis Manager i3 . Ei.la Clark................................Bozeman Home Ei o tomics Pi Beta Phi. Home Economics Club: Y. W. C. A.: Woman’s League: Secretary (81: C. G. A.: Class Vice-President (2). Margaret Conk ling .... Bozeman Home Economics Alpha Omicron Pi. Alpha Epsilon Theta: Spurs: Tormentors: Home Economics Club: C. G. A.: Montanan «3 : Exponent (2) 1.8). Gordon Cottier .. - - - - Great Falls A rcli iteel uraI Engi neering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Pi Kappa Delta : Band : Engineering Council: Stags : Montanan • 21 «3 : Basketball Manager lAssistanti (8 : Debate (1). Ray Coulter...................................Helena Chcm ica I Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Alpha Pi: Chemistry Society: Stags: Exponent (I1: Class Treasurer (2). Franklin Cowan....................................Victor Entomology and 7.oology Sigma Chi. Intercollegiate Knights: Band: Glee Club: College Quartet i8 ; Stags; Football «1 .2 (8). THE mmvwxKm MiurnmvftM immmm The Classes MONTANAN Jack Cowan....................................Bozeman Electrical Engineering The Order of the Barb. A. I. E. E.: Winter Sports Club. Joseph DeHart............................................Helena ArchitectaraI Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Intercollegiate Knights: Montanan i3) : Commissioner of Demonstrations 2i : Student Senate i2t: Stags: U. S. Navy. Two Years. Lewis Erwin................................Bozeman Agrica It a ral Educat ion Sigma Chi. Exponent (1 2 : Assistant Baseball Manager ($); Stags: Agricultural Club. Anita Ewalt........................................Ekalaka Home Economics Y. W. C. A. : Home Economics Club. Lewis Ferrel.......................................Bozeman Chemistry Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Alpha Pi: Intercollegiate Knights: Chemistry Society: Class Track U) 21 : Class Treasurer • 1 : Stags. Carl Finch............................................Bozeman Elect rica I En gin eering Beta Epsilon. Intercollegiate Knights: Winter Sports Club: Electric Club. as MmtMifca 47 THE vt xesaaeaaewBSfcCieessesiis afU The Classes MONTANAN Charles Fiscus.............................Bozeman Electrical Engineering The Order of the Barb. William Flood .... Park City Animal Husbandry The Order of the Barb. Agricultural Club: Disabled Vet’s Club. U. S. Navy, One Year. Henry Fortin........................................Fortin Civil Engineering Omega Beta. Intercollegiate Knights: A. S. C. E. Glen Fox..........................................Livingston Electrical Engineering Sigma Chi. Intercollegiate Knights: Baseball «1 • : Football (1) (2) (3). Perry Gage........................................Bozeman Architectural Engineering Beta Epsilon. pRUDA IIall..................................Bozeman Botany and Bacteriology THE itmmmmamt tom M O NTANAN Lloyd Hansen.................................Choteau Elect rical Engin eering The Order of the Barb. William Hay...................................Hamilton Agronomy The Order of the Barb. Agricultural Club: Class Football ill. Stella Hollier.....................................Bozeman Secretarial Orchestra (2) (3). John Holloway - Washington.. Ind. Electrical Engineering The Order of the Barb. D. A. V. of W. W. Josephine Howard - - - Bozeman Home Economics Chi Omega. Spurs: Orchestra: Tennis til (21. Ivan Isaacs - - - - Bozeman Agricult a ral Educat ion THE The Classes MO NTANAN £S Henry Jacques......................................Bozeman Electrical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Electric Club : Stags : Baseball i1). U. S. Army. John Jensen.....................................Bozeman Agriculture The Order of the Barb. D. A. V. of W. W. U. S. Army. Arthur Johnson - - - Staples, Minn. Agriculture Paul Johnson .... Silver Bow Electrical Engineeri ng Theodore Johnson .... Deer Lodge Industrial Chemistry Beta Epsilon. Pi Kappa Delta: Phi Alpha Tau: Alpha Pi: Debate 2i t3). Bert Julio.....................................Red Lodge Civil Engineering Beta Epsilon. Kappa Kappa Psi: Phi Alpha Tau: Tormentors: A. S. C. E.: Winter Sports Club: Class Track 1 ; Exponent (3): Montanan 3 : Band • 1 • (2) 3 . 50 Ralph Kenck .... 'East Helena Agriculture Beta Epsilon. Agricultural Club. Jessica Kremer Elk Basin, Wyo. Home Economics Iota Delta. Spurs: Y. V. C. A.: Home Economics Club: Woman's League. Council (2) (3). Wilfred Leary.....................................Butte Elec trie a I Engi n eeri ng Omega Beta. Stags: A. I. E. E.: Basketball Manager (3i. Donald LeCornu ... Olympia, Wash. .• nimal Husbandry Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Stags: Football • 3 . Laurence Lyndon - - - Lyndon, Alta. Elect rica I Engi n eeri ng Sigma Chi. Electric Club: Track 2. : Band 2) : Glee Club (2): Exponent (2) : Tormentors. Lillian Mares.................................Helena Home Economics Iota Delta. Phi Ups i Ion Omicron: Alpha Epsilon Theta: Y. W. C. A.. Vice-President 3 : Home Economics Club: Woman's League: Montanan 2t; Staff Girl's Vocational Congress (3). 51 THE J3vt The Classes M O NTANAN Florence Markin .... Bozeman Botany and Bacteriology Iota Delta. Spurs: C. G. A.: Y. W. C. A. John Mashin - - - Hollywood, Calif. AgriculturaI Educalion Omega Beta. M Club: Winter Sports Club: Class Football li: Varsity Football tl) (2) 13). Lewis Matthew..............................Augusta Electrical Engineering The Order of the Barb. Margaret Maxey .... Bozeman Applied Art Pi Beta Phi. Alpha Epsilon Theta: Art Club: Y. W. C. A.: Women's League Council 3 ; C. G. A. Mary Maxey........................................Bozeman Industrial Chemistry Alpha Omicron Pi. Alpha Epsilon Theta: Treble Clef. Girl's Sextette (3): Chemistry Society: Y. W. C. A. John Mikkelson .... Bozeman Agriculture 52 a THE - 9f «U86aSe -™ The Classes MO NTANAN Louis Mitten Agriculture Bozeman Emmett Moore Civil Engineering - Bozeman Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Sigma Epsilon; Los Bouffons; Student Council (2); Student Senate (2) : A. S. C. E. : Inter-Fraternity Council (3); Exponent t3i; Class President (2) ; Intercollegiate Knights. William Moore..................................Bozeman Secretarial Sigma Chi. Pi Kappa Delta ; Phi Alpha Tau ; Coffee Club: Debate 11 • : Oratory (2). Mildred Morse c. G. A. Secretarial Bozeman Arthur MacDonald - - Spokane, Wash. Agricultural Education Sigma Chi. Football (1) (2) (3). Alice McClintock .... .Joliet Agricultural Education Zeta Kappa. Alpha Epsilon Theta: Spurs; Agricultural Club. 53 THE sU m .nmm The Classes MONTANAN Velma McConnell .... Lewistown Applied Science Treble Clef: C. G. A. Entered from Montana University (2). William McCune .... Stevensville Chemical Engineering The Order of the Barb. Coffee Club: Chemistry Society; Winter Sports Club: R. O. T. C. Officers Club. Edward McGandy .... Bozeman Civil Engineering Omega Beta. Wendell McLean ... Harlowton Electrical Engineering Beta Epsilon. Electric Club. Hazel McNall..............................Bozeman Home Economics Iota Delta. Phi Upsilon Omicron: Alpha Epsilon Theta: Home Economics Club; Home Economics Council (3): Y. W. C. A.: Inter-Fraternity Council: Woman's Caucus: Women’s League. Robert Newell .... Stevensville Agricultural Education The Order of the Barb. Agricultural Club. THE m K ® WV ■ifrxBfarf. The Classes MO NTANAN Floyd Newkirk....................................Bozeman C ie zitea Engineering Alpha Pi: Dramatic Club. Thelma Newkirk .... Bozeman Home Economics Alpha Omicrcn Pi. Heme Economics Club: Y. W. C. A.: Treble Clef. Harriet Nordstrom - - - Big Timber Applied Art Alpha Omicron Pi. Woman's League: Art Club: Does: Y. W. C. A.: Exponent (3). Edwin Osness.......................................Shepherd Architectural Engineering The Order of the Barb. Glee Club (3 . Entered from Wisconsin University i3 . Otto Otterson .... Kellogg, Idaho Mecha n ica I Engin eering Joseph Patterson, Jr. - - - - Dillon Electrica! Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Intercollegiate Knights: Electric Club: D. A. V. of W. W.: Baseball (1) 2 : U. S. Marine Corps. 5 3 w The Classes M O NTANAN Maurine Plew......................................Bozeman Applied Art Alpha Delta Pi i University of Illinois). Entered from University of Illinois 21. LeRoy Powers......................................Ballantine Agricultural Education The Order of the Barb. Alpha Zeta: Agricultural Club: Baseball (2). Xellie Refnes.............................Anaconda Home Economics Jennie Roberts................................Bozeman Applied Art Art Club: Y. W. C. A. James Rouse..................................Libby Dairy Husbandry The Order of the Barb. Kappa Kappa Psi: Agricultural Club: Band (1) i.2 (8). David Savage.........................................Worden Agricultural Education The Order of the Barb. Alpha Zeta: Agricultural Club: Baseball (2). THE m mm X2Sbimm mmmm The Classes M O NTANAN Charles Schanck - • Roberts Ciiil Engineering H. 0. M. Club. Intercollcjriate Knights: Stags: A. S. C. E. : Engineering Council «3 : Looters: Exponent 181. Charles Schurch .... Deer Lodge Indust ria I Ch em istry Beta Epsilon. Phi Alpha Tau: Pi Kappa Delta: Alpha Pi: Engineering Council 3 : Exponent • 2 : Montanan «2 : Eclitor-in-Chief Montanan a3 : Class Debate all; Debate (1) 2 a ; Looters 121. Leonard Searle ..................................Valier A n i m al H us bandry The Order of the Barb. Agricultural Club: Stags: Exponent a 2 a a 3 a : Montanan t3 . Madeline Shaw Chi Omega. Secretarial Bozeman George Spaulding .... Bozeman Architect u ra I Eng i n eeri ng Architect’s Club. U. S. Army. Eighteen Months. Raymond Squier...................................Bozeman Electrical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Electric Club. 57 THE mmxaemaw. The Classes MONTANAN S3 Lucille Staebler..................................Butte Applied Art Alpha Omicron Pi. Woman’s League; Y. W. C. A.; Dramatic Club; Treble Clef: Looters; Art Club. President (3 . William Steinbach . . . Wolf Creek Animal Husbandry The Order of the Barb. Agricultural Club; Stags: Band (2) (8L A. G. Stephens.....................................Waterloo Agricultural Education Beta Epsilon. Agricultural Club: Trowel Club. Andrew Storrar.................................Butte Electrical Engineering Alice Stranahan .... Fort Benton Home Economics Alpha Omicron Pi. Home Economics Club: Home Economics Cabinet (3); Treble Clef; Y. W. C. A. James Supple . . . Pacific Junction, Iowa Agricultural Education Beta Epsilon. Montanan 3). Entered from Iowa State College (S . 58 THE tmmm The Classes MO NTANAN Leonard Swan...............................Livingston Agricultural Education Sigma Chi. Agricultural Club: Stags: Trowel Club: Exponent (1) (2) (3). Charles Taylor...................................Forsyth Industrial Chemistry The Order of the Barb. Class Track (1) (2); Chemistry Society: Stags. Robert Thompson..........................Bozeman Chemical Engineering Chemistry Society. Edgar Udine...............................Great Falls Entomology-Zoology The Order of the Barb. Helen Waite....................................Bozeman Home Economics Alpha Omicron Pi. Home Economics Club. President (3). Y. W. C. A.. Cabinet 3.1 ; Treble Clef (2). Harry Wallace...................................Anaconda Electrical Engineering The Order of the Barb. Trowel Club: Electric Club: Stags. 59 THE The Classes m . MONTANAN James Whitacre...............................Bozeman Civil Engineering Omejra Beta. A. S. C. E. Hattie Williams .... Townsend Secretarial Spurs: Y. W C. A.: Montanan (8). Virgil Willson...................................Yirgelle Chemical Engineering The Order of the Barb. Pi Kappa Delta: Alpha Pi: Chemistry Society. THE S MMMMMMMM The Classes MONTANAN SOPHOMORE CLASS Hatfield Rivenes Briscoe Bawden sophomore: class officers President.....................................Frank Hatfield Vice-President .... Soi.veig Rivenes Secretary.............................Andy Briscoe Treasurer .... William Bawden John Adams Herman Almquist Marion Arnold Eunice Axtell William Baker John Barto Edyyard Bell Alice Bevans William Bawden Glenn Boyer William Boyer CLASS ROLL Iris Brown Clarence Bryan Marguerite Bryan Andy Briscoe Donald Cameron Elizabeth Campbell Jackson Carter Walter Chamberlin Lyle Cheney Alvin Cleveland Winifred Cobi.eigh Peter Cok Walter Columbus John Conway Genevieve Cooley I.. R. Dagnall Carl Davis Hans Dehler Norman Dekay Lloyd Dyer Walter Ellison Lillian Evers ft •MMMMMU 62 Ralph Erath Eunice Farnum Josephine Flanagan Glenn Forbes Jacob Forbes Agnes Friel Karl Gallagher Clarence Guillot Alice Graham Clement Griffith John Griffith Sascha Guiglia William Haley Herbert Haugland Robert Hannah Champ Hannon Victor Hanson Rudolph Hartig Frank Hatfield Barbour Herington Carl Hirsch Philip IIolgren Donald Jackson John Jensen Lester Johnson Leonard Joubert Louise Kellams Robert Keyes Elsbeth King Esther King Thomas Kirk Harry Kligora Edith Kuhns The Classes M O NTANAN Fred La Bonte Harold Lang Dorothy Langston McQueen Lawton Donald Le Cornu Frank Logan Arthur MacDonald Octavia Marquis Lewis Matthew Jane Mathews Marcellus Maylor Gertrude Meier John Mikkelson Mrs. Ameda Mitchell Yeri. McCoy Veronica McCune Jean McCay Kenneth McIver Ella McKenzie Donald McMillan Margaret Nelson Louis Newman Harold Nicholson Helen Noble John Pasha Margaret Patten Soloman Peterson Doris Phillips Edith Potter Elizabeth Powers Francis Ralston Carlie Rf.ddout Charles Reagan Svend Refer Irene Richardson Winifred Robinson Merril Robocker Richard Ross Helen Ryan Walter Sales Glenn Sands Hollis Sanford Virginia Schneider George Scotten Bradford Shaw Theodore Sletten George Smith Harlan Smith Mildred Snedecor Ethel Spargo George Spaulding Myrtle Stewart Hazel Tali.man Victor Thayer Keturah Tibbles Gale Tidland Margaret Tobin Henry Ware Olga Weydemeyer Winton Weydemeyer Verna Willis Rosebud Winter Louis Witchie Lyle Wood Miriam Woodard Elaska Zimdar 63 THE 2 The Classes M O NTANAN a South Court ?. Su tef jTg LooT ny South Wes; FRESHMAN CLASS Bennf.tt Craven Briscoe Romney FKKSHMAX CLASS OFFICERS President..........................Don Bennett Vice-President ..... Ray Craven Secretary........................Allen Briscoe Treasurer.......................Reuben Romney John Algie Leroy Anderson Myrtle Anderson Oi.af Anderson Kathryn Andrews Warren Andrews Maurice Andries Paul Arndt Alta’Atkinson Ronald Axtei.l Elva Ayler Evelyn Ayler ('LASS ROLL Madolyn Ballantyne Kenneth Banks Norman Banta William Barrett William Barwick Lillian Barry George Baxter Bernice Beach Dorothy Beatty Mable Bell Paul Bender Don Bennett Jules Benton Thelma Berryman Mildred Bigelow Mildred Blankenship Elizabeth Border Albert Blumenthal Harold Bourett Fred Box IIerrick Brasfield Delbert Brentnall Elbert Brentnall Harry Bridgeman 6 ! Elmo Briggs Allen Briscoe Don Brittain Myrl Brown George Bryan Cliff Bullock Maurice Beuning June Burke George Burns Edgar Brooks Margaret Byrne Laurence Bryan Mabel Caldwell Maxine Cameron Nellie Cecil Ivan Christensen Gladys Clark Fred Colver Margaret Connors Hugh Cottam Ray Craven Theodore Cuffe Robert Curry Ralph Cushing Oscar Cutting Earl Davidson Melvin Davies William Davis Clem Davison Arnold DeWald Vander Dobeus Herman Dokken Harold Donohoe Paul Doran Emma Dreyer Grove Dutton Eunice Eagle Ralph Eariiart Warren Eariiart Mary Easton Oscar Eggen William Ennis Joseph Enrico Walter Erickson Robert Esgar Cleveland Estes Bernice Evans Lucy Evans Marguerite Evans Russell Findley Gail Fiske Mary Foley Theodore Fosse Rodney Foster Ruth Foust Paul Forrest Virginia Freeman Robert Funk Ronald Gary Joe Gay Ole Gallis Wilfred Genty Ruth Gerstner Gabrif.li.a Gibson Virgil Gibson Thomas Good Dorothy Groeber William Graham Jesse Green Elsie Graves Burdell Gray Helen Griffin Alvina Gruhl Archie Harma Samuel Harris Rhoda Harris Edna Hart Adolph Hart wig Lola Hays Terry Hatveldt Edward Heilman John Helmer Steven Henault Harold Heyer Kenneth Hill Dorothy Hilliard Helen Hoadley Stanley Hodgson Julia Hoem Charles Hoffman Harold Hogeland Bernard Hollensteiner Carroll Holloway Milford Holt Phil Hughes Alfred Hunsinger Lea Hornbeck Jacob Jacobson Paul Jackson Irene Jacobs Glen Jacobs Con James Dorothy Jo'hnson-grace Johnson Karl Johnson Paul Johnson Valens Jones Clarence Kerlee George Kelley Oliver Kent Grace Kenyon Russell Kerr Sherman Keyser Christine Kirk Eleanor Kirk John Kistler Lillian Knapp Verne Kuhl Lon Kump Lebretcht Klebe George Lamb Chester Lantz Willard Lamphere Minnie Larson Omer Larson John Le Cornu Oliver Lee-Max Legge Jack Linke Lyle Lindsey Joseph Livers Marion Lobdei.l Eugene Lowall John Loy Norwald Lund Marshall Massuere Freeman Matheson Mildred Mattison Francis Meyer Robert Meyer Edward Milds Eleanor Moore Paul Mortenson Robert Milne Wallace Morgan George McAllister Bertrand McCarthy 67 Mary McDonald Lyle Roesler Cecil Thomas Louis McDonough Ivan Rogers Jean Thompson William McDonnell Lucile Rohrer Richard Thompson Harley McFerran Reuben Romney Chester Trescott Esther McLaughlin Alice Rorvik Eulalia Tweed Kdgar McLeod John Rostad Arline Utley Thelma McXai.i. Doris Rundell Arthur Van Noy Maude McNett Lolo Ryan Fred Walker Albert McVey Frank Ryburn Ruth Walker Grace McVicker Ethel Sanford Roy Waller Francis Neal Robert Scott Alice Walsh Mary Neil Clarence Seborg Ben Walton Frank Neill Gerrit Seeman Eula Walton Dorothy Nelson Glen Seitz Charles Waterman Floyd Nelson Ward Shanahan Adena Watson Paul Nelson Bradford Shaw Andrew Watson Meredith Norman Margaret Shaw Jack Weaver Joy Noble Thelma Siiaw Frederick Weldon Janet Northy Chad Shaffer Henry Wendeln Violet Nye Renald Shoemaker Joseph Wester Roberto Oliver Harold Shorthili. Fern Wheeler Hans Olson Alfred Showalter Frankie White Bruce Orcutt Frank Simonfy Helen White John Otness George Smith Harold Wiles Mary Patten Wyman Smith Bernhard Williams Helen Patterson Minot Snell Louis Williams Howard Peters Julia Snyder Margaret Williams Elvera Peterson Roy Somerland Twilla Williams Thornley Pitt Rudolph Sokolick Harold Willis Virginia Pollard Samuel Souders Bryan Wilson Otis Puatt Louise Spa in- Frank Wilson Carl Quist William Stanley Laurence Wilson Christ Raaen Maynard Stapleton Mrs. Marie Wilson Arthur Raunig Mary Stockton Harry Winslow George Redpath Robert Stockton Orval Woods Myrtle Refnes Felix St. Jean George Wright William Riddle Lillian Stone Florence Yates Frank Rickard Joe Sutherland Harley Yeager Edwin Rickman Walter Sutherland Joseph Yedlicka Burton Rivers Margery Swenson Mii.licent Young Mildred Roberts Rutii Swingle Harry Van Winkle VOCATIONAL THE nM The Classes MONTANAN VETERANS’ BUREAU The men taking training under the Veteran's Bureau constitute one of the largest classes of students at Montana State College. During the present school year a total of about 250 were enrolled. While most of these men are taking work in the school of agriculture, about 05 are of collegiate rank and are active in college affairs. Two organizations exist among the Veteran’s Bureau trainees. The Disabled American Veterans of the World War, a national organization, maintains the Bobcat Chapter. The Disabled Veteran's Club is a local organization of a somewhat similar nature. McKixsey Fiscus King St. Jean Steensland Barta Holloway Dipple Semence Beard Ridcher Sensabaugh Klippelid Dagget Holgar Staples Davenport McLeary Woods Evans Huff Ceily Goman Bottler Cox Glstaffeson Evans (Coordinator) Wheeler Flood Lkgge Banks 70 mJkSDltdmmm The Classes MONTANAN ’rf MMWimi'rvMi.jjsaansiMneMi 0 Young Fairbanks Kenck Mayo Nelson Wroble YanVoast Reagan Williams House Curtis Newell Peters Miles Bayer Peterson Blomgren Yackey Ellis Witchie Amundsen McFerran Campbell Winkler Givens Siegel Forswall Lange Manary O’Hara Sabados Bergman MacLachlan Pedlar Myers Fox Dutton Grotness Kennedy Rickard Loy Neuman Squier Barwick St. Jean Brentford Dokken O’Farrel Barnes Wade ■ tenSr ___ The Classes THE viJ MONTANAN wiotm o Caplis Jacobson Lee Kirlee Rudd Weaver Erickson White Osgood Matteson Swanson Hoppe Schirlie McGandy Herbkick Connors Miller Smith Resek Johnson Rammelhart Peterson Smith Loehding Feagins Hought Garcia Ennis Young Peterson Gilkis Adams Harlan Ellison Sutton Chatfield Gaffke Leard Johnson Harrison Reynolds Jacob Higgins Cattile Zacher Spaulding Barnes SCHOOL or fflCDLim THE The Classes M O NTANAN SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE GRADUATING CLASS OF 11)23 Loehding Mayo White Gruel Peters Ron an Bergstedt Members not in picture: Merritt Slocum, Johannes Peterson, Frank Kennedy, Francis Boyer, Rinse Vander Veen. Holman Leedum Roman Warsinske Smith Anderson Mart i nell Senty TeSelle Bergstedt ATHLETICS «uead8tot Athletics MONTANAN THE BOBCAT SPIRIT To prepare to understand fully the true meaning of the Bobcat Spirit one should shuffle off the coil of conventionality, throw petty cares in the discard and lose one's self in the inspiration of one of the West's open spaces. The wintry fastness of one of Oallatin Valiev's canyons in a setting of brilliantly bediamonded mountains, and a deep drink of the air washed clean by a million snows and scented with the fragrance of water-soaked shrubbery should aid one to understand. A drive through autumn's haze across the generous distances of Montana, with unphmghed fields, unharnessed waterfalls and undeveloped resources of all varieties hurling their challenge, should enable one to think big. Then the hearty handclasp, the genial smile, the generous heart, the big, aggressive spirit of the West should appear its the natural product of a blood-warming environment. And one should begin to feel and know the Bobcat Spirit. For the Bobcat Spirit is a big spirit, like the big distances of the country in which it thrives: and it is a splendid, fiery spirit, like the sunsets which light the western skies. It is a spirit of rugged endurance like the mountains which inspire it. and a spirit of unselfishness like tin mood of Nature when she blessed the West. With an aggressiveness, born of the challenge to the strength of manhood, an optimism bred by the storied progress of Montana, and a strength developed by the strenuous demands of pioneering, the Bobcat Spirit is a spirit of conquest, of fighting conquest, of honorable conquest. The piercing fangs of the Bobcat and its sharp claws—its weapons of fight—must always be used with discretion and a regard for the rights of its Opponents. For though the Bobcat fights a relentless fight and a fight to conquer, still the Bobcat fights with a sympathy, an understanding and a fellow-feeling which makes his fight always victorious. Just as Montana is a growing Commonwealth and Montana State College a growing institution in the service of that commonwealth, so is the Bobcat Spirit a growing spirit, firing the youth of that state to a loyalty to that institution. to that commonwealth and to the ideals of genuine manhood, real sportsmanship, good citizenship and true service. 75 THE ji Sk u . Uhl dies M O NTANAN THE “M” CLUB William Bawden John Brittain Clarence Bryan Edward Cates Frank Cowan Champ Hannon Frank Beckley Laurence Bryan Arnold DeWald Archie II arm a Lester Bachman Edward Bunney George Finley Glen Fox FOOTBALL Frank Hatfield Bruce Hollister Carl Husemeyer Arthur Jorgenson Frank Knight John Mash in BASKETBALL Adolph Hartwig Frank Hatfield Bruce Hollister Arthur Jorgenson Thomas Kirk TRACK BASEBALL Arthur Jorgenson Marc Maylor Ray McCarren Ray McCarren Verl McCoy Arthur McDonald Kenneth McIver Robert Walter Ray McCarren Tracy McGuin Albert Richards Wallace Whitney Edward Cates George Finley George Rassley Merlin Zuck 7 6 THE Athletics M o NTANAN ATHLETIC COACHES Ott Romney Football Coach and Director of Physical Education Doc Jones A. D. “Doc.” Jones appeared at Montana State last fall to take the position of assistant physical director. He is a graduate of the Chicago Y. M. C. A. Physical Training School, and has had special work at the University of Illinois in coaching. Doc came to us from Greeley, Colorado, where he made a remarkable rcord with the Greeley High School. His basketball team won the championship of Colorado the last two years. Coach Jones has direct charge of basketball and track, and coaches freshman football. Already he has developed a championship basketball team, and produced an undefeated frosh football eleven. Ott Romney Ott Romney came to Montana State in the fall of 1922 to take charge of the Department of Athletics with an enviable record as an athlete and coach. He is a graduate of Montana State and his return to take charge of athletics means much to the institution. lie has a wonderful personality, and has made a friend of every candidate for a berth on his athletic teams. Romney attended the University of Utah for three years before coming to Montana State to graduate. While in college, he participated in every form of athletics,winning his letter in every sport. He has coached at Billings for two years, and at Salt Lake for three years, turning out championship teams at both schools. His high school football team won the Inter-Mountain championship in 1921. A. D. Jones Coach of Basketball and Track THE Athletics mmmim jmKMtaam M O NTANAN ATHLETIC MANAGERS George Van Fleet Football Manager Wilfred Leary Basketball Manager Hollis Mathews Track Manager '22 A SSI ST A XT M A XA i EKS Track. 1922 Football. 1922 Basketball. 1922 Track. 1923 . Football. 1922 Howard Tenney Harry McCann Gordon Cottier Frank Cowan Andy Briscoe ATHLETIC MANAGERS ASSOCIATION The Athletic Managers Association was organized in the spring of 1023 for ilie purpose of providing financial aid for the Athletic Association, and to stimulate interest in athletic managerships. Membership is limited to those men who have been awarded a letter for an athletic managership, and t« those who have been elected managers and assistant managers. All athletic managerships are elective positions, upon recommendation of the Athletic Council from a competitive tryout. In order to get efficient managers the association is trying to arouse interest in these competitive tryouts. The Athletic Managers Association has undertaken the task of raising sufficient money to buy -M“ sweaters for the letter men this year. Co-ordination between the different sports has been brought about through the efforts of this body. Efficiency, economy, and service are the watchwords of the Athletic Managers Association. 7 S Athletics MMSNM FOOTBALL, 1922 A championship is not always essential to a successful football season. Armistice Day closed one of the most successful seasons that the Blue and Gold has enjoyed in many years. With the final curtain in Missoula against the Bruins, the Bobcats closed the year in a blaze of glory. Clean cut victories over the Mines. St. Charles, and the Billings Poly paved the way to the championship battle at Missoula against the State ITiiversity. The rather doubtful victory of the Bruins over the Bobcats placed the Blue and Gold team second in the race for the state collegiate honors. Games were also played against the Utah Aggies, Gonzaga and the North Dakota Aggies, each resulting in victories for the opponents. The lone conference game played, and its result. placed Montana State at the tail end of the conference rating. Coach Romney arrived early during the summer and began getting affairs in shape for the prospective season. His official call for football candidates was issued the 15th of September and about thirty Varsity prospects reported at Karst’s Camp. The material was more in quantity than in quality, but the ten days training left no doubt in the mind of any Bobcat supporter that the season would be a success. Intensive training at the camp rapidly put the men into the best of condition, and their efforts to get the unconquerable Bobcat Spirit, all combined to give the season the proper start. Five regulars lost from the 1921 squad by graduation had left great holes to be filled. Captain “Pat Morphey, All Conference tackle, had graduated. “Gob Robertson, for three years all state guard, had completed his days of college football. “Fat” Asbury, regular center, and Jorgenson, end. were also gone. All State '22 i Ray McCarren, Captain Quarterback All State '21, ’22 80 Frank Hatfield End AW State ’22 The failure of Slawson and Colwell to rernrn r school lef large gaps in the backfield. Captain McCavren reported at Karst s in fine shape, and with him were Knight. Hannon. Hollister. Mashin. McDonald. Bryan and Walter, all letter men from over ions seasons. Muse- 4 meyer. Fox. Cowan and Brittain, second string men from 1! 21 were hack for another season. Mclvor. McGuin. McCoy and Bawden were some of the most promising men from t lie last year's Freshman team to report. After the ten flays camp the Hob-cats returned to school, ami the intensive training showed them to he in excellent condition. The teamwork was improving and a resemblance of a real team could he seen any night at prac- tice. Bobcats. )6; Billings Independents. 6 The Hillings Independents were the first opponents of a rather questionable Bobcat team in Bozeman, on the 3rd of October. When the dust of the fray had settled the Bobcat team had thrilled the fans with their remarkable showing and had put the champion- Arthlr McDonald Halfback Captain-elect 81 « THE Athletics MONTANAN it. and ship fever into The heart of every student on the Hill. The Bobcats started with a rush and scored their first touchdown in the first quarter. Smashing line bucks by Bawden were largely responsible for the Bobcat gains. The Blue and Gold line resisted the attempts of the Billings backs to penetrate opened up some big holes on the offensive. The backs got their plays off in good shape, and worked well on the defensive. McCarren played a splendid game at quarterback, running the ream in excellent style. Hannon, at guard, played the best game on the line, being a tower of strength on offense and defense. Bawden. Hatfield and Cowan played their first college game like veterans. Bobcats. 26: Mt. St. Charles. 3 Mt. St. Charles proved to be the victims of the next Bobcat attack on the 7th of October in Bozeman. The Bobcats started off in good style, and registered a touchdown in the first quarter. Then the Bobcats slumped and let the Saints play them on Frank Cowan even terms for half a game. The third quarter opened Tackle Kenneth McIvor Center with a rush, but the punch was lacking, so both sides resorted to the punting game with an occasional forward pass. The superior conditioning of the Blue and Gold warriors told its own story in the final frame. Big Bill Bawden smashed through ihe Saints line for a touchdown to start the fireworks. A couple of pretty passes put the ball within striking distance again, but the Saints held and the ball changed hands. Hatfield intercepted a pass and then Mcf'arren took the egg over the line for the third counter. A series of line smashes took the heart out of the Saints and then Scotty romped over the line for the final score. Keane, for the Saints, showed up John Mashix 'veI1' IIis P,in,in£ was of a high eali-£ml her. and his pretty place kick in the All State ’20, 21 second quarter counted all their points. McCarren starred at quarter for the Bobcats, while Bawden made great gains through the Saints line. Hatfield. Hannon and Cowan were the outstanding C7 men in the Blue and Gold line. Hatfield showed up especially well in his handling of forward passes, while Verl McCoy Guard Hannon went through the Saints line to nail the runner time after time. Bobcats. 6: t tali Aggies. SO Friday the l-'ltli was indeed a Jonah for the Bobcats. Playing their lone conference game against the title holders, the Blue and Gold defense cracked, and the Trail Aggies emerged victorious from a JO to ! fray. The game started with a bang, and the Bobcat forward line was impregnable, so that both teams had to resort to the punting game. Then the Hoodoo started to perch on the Bobcats' shoulders. Muslim went out with an injured knee; McCarreu was knocked cold, and Hollister had his shoulder injured. These injuries had a depressing effect upon John Brittain the entire team, and, especially after Center McCarren left the game, the team blew up. There was no one there to steady them and to give the men the necessary confidence to hold the powerful Utah team. Scotty McDonald played a wonderful game at defensive full back. lie spoiled many a Utah play after Frank K.xisht Tackle 84 THE MONTANAN •• I firm,. I Bo beats. 0: Xorth Dakota Affairs, o) On the 21st of October the Blue and gold journeyed into North Dakota with disastrous results, as the score of r 4 to 0 showed. Owing to injuries to Mashin. McCarren and Walter, the Bobcats started the game with several substitutions. The first quarter was practically even, then tin Bobcats blew up and allowed the Dakota team to score eight touchdowns. Bass ley and Knight deserve honor- Carl Husemeyer able n,ention fol‘ '.'f1' in tl,is £n(l game. The less said about the rest the better. Bobcats. ■ ' : Billings Bohj. 6 The team stopped in Billings on their way back from Dakota and defeated the Poly 24 to b. Ibis game was slow and uninteresting, with the second String the man had crept through the forward lines. Besides, his punting was superb, and saved the Bobcats many times. Hannon, at guard, again demonstrated that he was one of the best linesmen ever developed in the school, while Hatfield played a real game at end. Brlxe Hollister End b 85 THE Athletics NTANAN v tt mMK wametauwmtM a men erring a good practice. Bawden was the princi-pal ground gainer with his smashing line plays. Hatfield gave a wonderful exhibition at end and his catching of forward passes was marvelous. liobcots. 10: Montana Mines. 0 ()n the 2Sth of October, the Bobcats went to Butte and outplayed the School of Mines to the tune of lit to 0. The Mines were rather of an unknown quantity, with a new coach and an untried team. The game was played on an icy. slippery field, and fumbles were frequent on both sides. Hatfield made the lone touchdown of the game, when he ran forty yards after catching a forward pass. Scotty McDonald helped to swell the score, by placing a neat place kick over the bar from the twenty yard line. The work of the Bobcats in this game was not as good as had been expected, partly due to the condition of the field, and also to the condition of the men after the long Dakota trip. The two lines were about even, but the Bobcats' backfield easily outdid that of the Clarkxce Bryan Mines. Hannon and Hatfield were the stars of the William Bawden Fullback m S6 yamtm ■ a THE QPj I thirties -WiCTOTaW MONTANAN Bobcat line, while McDonald. McCarren and Ba vdc n were the shining lights in the backfield. Big Bill Bawden was able to tear great holes in the Miners’ line, and made yardage almost at will. Scotty Mc- Donald aided materially with liis punting, as he made yardage on every exchange of punts. liobeats. 0: (lonzaya. 12 (ionzaga came to Bozeman on the 41 li of November, and took away a 12 to o victory after a hard fought game on a muddy field. The Bobcat lineup, consisting mostly of second siring men. held the powerful (ion-zaga team to two touchdowns, and outplayed the Bulldogs in part of the game. The field was very muddy and heavy after a slight fall of snow, and this was a slight disadvantage to the heavier Gon-zaga team. The Bulldogs took the offensive at the start, and with some pretty passes, coupled with terrific line smashes, made their first touchdown within four minuies after the starting whistle. Then the Bob- - ________ ,T , , , , Tracy McGuin cats held and put up such a stubborn defense that the Fullback Robert Walter Halfback 87 THE MO NTANAN Bulldogs were forced to the punting game. Twice the Bulldogs carried the ball within the five yard line only to lose it on downs. In the third quarter the Bulldogs carried the ball to the Bobcats four yard line, then lost it on downs. Then the Blue and Gold fumbled and Gonzaga put it across for the second touchdown. Cowan. McCoy and Knight played stellar football on the Bobcat line. McCoy, the lightest man on the team, was through the line time after time to nail the man with the ball, while Cowan and Knight played the star Gouzaga tackles off their feet. Scotty McDonald played a good game at fullback. and outpunted the Bulldogs for an average of ten yards to the kick. Walter, at halfback, played the best offensive game until be was taken out by injuries during the second half. Stockton, of the Bulldogs, was their star, his end runs through a muddy field being a feature of the game. Donald LeCornu Guard Bobcats, 6: State University, 7 The final score of 7 to in favor of the State University in Missoula on Armistice Day seems an injus- George Rassley Quarterback THE Athletics MO NTANAN rice to every Bobcat that placed in i he frame. The Bobcats outfought, out gamed, and outplayed the Grizzles on their home field, in one of The greatest contests ever staged between these two ancient rivals. The Bobcats opened the game with a bewildering aerial attack that took the Bruins off their feet. Completing three passes for a total of 42 yards, the Bobcats took the ball over the line for the first counter five minutes after the game started. From then on it was a battle royal with the University hurling their I owerful backs at the Blue and Gold line for slight gains. Four times the Grizzlies worked the ball into the shadow of the Bobcat goal, only to lose it when the Blue and Gold held. The fourth time, the Bobcats rook the ball and by strategy almost eluded the Bruins for another counter. MeCarren saw Mashin acting as a sleeper on the sidelines and passed him the ball, for the longest completed pass ever worked in Montana. It was good for 47 yards, but Mashin was so battered from the gruelling contest that . ' uI.ENN oANDS he could not elude the Brum safety man. Then, with Guard Dewey Cash more Guard THE Athletics M O NTANAN McCarren, Masliin and Hatfield on the sidelines suffering grievous injuries, the Bruins slowly marched down the field. With the Grizzlies within the Bobcat five yard line, time was supposedly up. But the gun failed to stop the play and the ball went over to tie the score. Then, to cap it all. Captain Elliott of the Bruins kicked goal for a 7 to 0 victory. Captain McCarren closed his football career in a blaze of glory. Playing for three quarters this gritty little quarterback directed the work of the Bobcat team, until it was physically impossible to do more. His keen generalship was responsible for the Bobcat showing, as he tossed the ball into a waiting pair of arms for great gains Glenn Fox on the forward pass, or carried the ball Halfback through the Grizzly line for a gain. Hannon and McCoy were the stars on the Bobcat line, if it is possible to pick stars out of the eleven men who played against the Grizzlies. The line was a veritable stone wall on the defense, holding the powerful Grizzlv backs time after time. The ends, Hatfield, Donald MacDonald Husemever and Masliin, caught forward passes in a Tackle x 90 MONTANAN manner little less than miraculous. Scotty McDonald gave a wonderful exhibition of punting until an injury to his ankle made it a torture to kick. Every Bobcat that played in the game was a star, and each one added to the glory of Montana State in this great game against the Bruins. This game closed the season for 1022. Captain McCarren will wear the Blue and Gold uniform no more, as he graduates in June. TI is place will be a hard one to fill, as I Toss' has been one of the best quarterbacks that ever wore a Bobcat uniform. Walter and Hollister are other letter men who have fulfilled their days of college football. Norman DeKay End The prospects for 1023 seem unusually bright. With the exception of the men named, all of the 1922 squad should be back for another season. The freshmen team should send some good material to the Varsity squad next year, and with Coach Romney at the helm, we can expect a banner season. Tom Shoebotham Quarterback 91 THE a ithletics MONTANAN Zi i -a Alvin Cleveland Guard All State guard, for the season. Scotty McDonald has been elected to the captaincy next year and will pilot the Bobcats. Scotty has played regular in the Bobcat back field for three years, and his coolness and punting have been a big factor in many games. McCarron, Hannon, and Hatfield were picked for the All State Eleven for the season of 1922. McCarren was selected as quarterback, and anyone who has ever seen IIoss“ play knows that he deserved the honor. This was his second year on the All State team, as he was picked for the same position in 1921. Hatfield was chosen All State end, this being his first year of collegiate football. Hannon made and was nientionel as the outstanding Leonard Joubert Tackle guard in tin state THE ■ .kjSterf. Athletics MONTANAN FOOTBALL SEASON 1!)22 Oct. 3 Bobcats 46 Billings Independents - 6 Bozeman Oct. 7 Bobcats 26 Mt. St. Charles - - - 3 Bozeman Oct. 13 Bobcats 6 Utah Aggies - - - - 39 Bozeman Oct. 21 Bobcats 0 North Dakota Aggies - 54 Fargo Oct. 23 Bobcats 34 Billings Poly - - - - 6 Billings Oct. 28 Bobcats 10 Montana Mines - . . 0 Butte Nov. 4 Bobcats 0 Gonzaga - - - - - - 12 Bozeman Xov. 11 Bobcats 6 University of Montana - 7 Missoula Bobcats 128 Opponents 127 FOOTBALL , SCHEDULE 1923 (Tentative) Sept. , 29 Brigham Young University Provo, Utah Oct. 6 Idaho Tech Pocatello, Idaho Oct. 13 Mt. St. Charles Helena Oct. 18 Denver University Billings or Bozeman Oct. 24 Colorado Normal Greeley, Colo. Oct. 27 Montana Mines Bozeman Xov. 10 State University Bozeman Nov. 29 University of New Mexico Albuquerque, N. M. £288. ftS THE s 2L Athletics “Y3 M O NTANAN THE TWELFTH ANNUAL INTERSCHOLASTIC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT March 7. S. 9, 10, 1923 A new chapter in the history of basketball tournaments was created with the opening of the new gymnasium. Larger crowds and greatly improved playing conditions made the twelfth annual tournament one of the most successful ever held. The sixteen teams entered were the pick of the state, each being the best in its district. The teams were more evenly matched this year, and all showed an improvement over former years. Fast play and close scores featured the tournament. The elimination games played early in the session were some of the host contests, with each team putting up a plucky fight to stay in the race As a result of this, many upsets in the dope kept interest at a high pitch. Darby, Anaconda and Gallatin, all favorites for first place, were eliminated in exciting games before record crowds. Custer County won the state championship by defeating Missoula, champions from the previous season. Custer had a well balanced team, featuring a fast passing game. Their guarding was weak in spots, but their ability to run up a large score kept them well in the lead at all times. Missoula had an entirely new team that showed well. First Second Third Fourth Fifth Sixth Seventh Eighth Custer Missoula Chouteau Anaconda Helena Billings Great Falls Darby 94 BASKETBALL THE -JmBML Athletics MONTANAN mmammmmmmmgfxstrmmmmrn BASKETBALL, 1923 State Champions by virtue of fifteen victories in sixteen state games, and a season's record of eighteen victories in twenty-one games: this is tlie enviable record set by the 1023 Bobcats. All of the state schools were defeated at least twice, while Idaho Tech and Denver University were also victims of the Bobcats attack. Utah Agricultural College handed the Blue and Gold two of the three defeats administered this season while the State University won one out of a four game series. The schedule was one of the hardest that the Bobcats have ever attempted, in the number of games played and in the teams encountered during the season. Every team in the state had a chance to play for the title, while all the conference games were scheduled that could be arranged. The basketball season started the second week in November. when Coach Jones called the men together for preliminary practice. Albert Richards, ' Captain Five letter men reported for practice Guard the first week and served as a nucleus for the squad. Captain Richards. Hollister. Hatfield, Beckley, and Whitney were the men who had earned their letters during a previous season. Mc-(iuin had had experience on the freshman team in 1022. Hartwig. De Wald. Curry. Bryan. Ilarma. and Smith were some of the most promising freshmen to report. Intramural games gave the Coach his first opportunity to look the material over, and some twenty candidates were picked for the squad from these games. Workouts started immediately, with the men learning a new style of play. By Christmas time the men had mastered the idea of the triangle system of play, and were ready to put into execution some of the theory. Bobcats, J 3; State Xonnal, 1 The State Normal team gave the Bobcats a good practice workout iu the first game of the season on the r th of Bruce Hoi.i.ister Guard All State ’23 THE A til!Ct icS W M O N T A NAN January. The new system of play was tried out with marked success, the Bobcats featuring: their passing game, as well as the five man defense. Acting Captain Hollister played a wonderful guarding game and scored two field goals as well. Whitney was the high point man for the Bobcats, scoring five baskets from the field. All of the squad were given a chance to play in this game, and every man played well for the first game under the new style of basketball introduced. Bobcats. 31: Billings Poly, 17 The Billings Poly were the next victims before a crowded house of Vocational Conference boys of the 10th of January. The Poly men put tip a much better game than the Normal, and kept the Bobcats fighting all the way. Beck ley was the high point man with four field goals to his credit. Bobcats. Mt. St. Charles. 19 The Bobcats continued their good work by trimming the Saints the next night in a fast game of basketball. The Bobcats started fast and swept the Saints off their feet in the first few minutes of play, continuing to pile up the score as the game progressed. Bryan counted five field goals, while Whitney and Beckley contributed four each. Hollister and Hatfield played splendid defensive ball, the Saints getting few close shots at the basket. Bobcats. 27: ft ah Aggies. 1 2 30: 1 0 A long trip into foreign territory marked the next week. The Utah Aggies were victorious in two fast games played in Logan, Utah, on the loth and 10th of January. The former Conference Champions were too fast for the Bobcats and managed to pile up a commanding lead in each game before the Bobcats got started. The passing of the Bobcats was a feature of these games, the Utah papers giving considerable publicity to this. Whitney was the high score man in these games, making a total of six field goals, five in one game. Bobcats, 22: Idaho Tech, 16 The Bobcats took the measure of the Idaho Tech in Adolph Hartwic Center All State ’23 Frank Hatfield Guard Captain-elect THE Two games were played in Butte against the School of Mines at the end of the week's trip, both resulting in victories for the Bobcats. Although the Bobcats were tired front their long trip, they showed better form than ihe Miners. The passing of the Bobcats was a mystery to the Ore-diggers, while they in turn could not pierce the defense of the Blue and Gold. 1 e Wald was the star of these games, winning the second one with four long shots in rapid succession after the Miners had staged a rallv to tie the score late in the game. Arnold DeWald Forward All State ’23 Frank Beckley Forward the next game played on the trip, in a slow game featuring football tactics. The game was rough from the start, with the Idaho men playing football in a vain endeavor to win. The Bobcats took a flying start and were never headed. Bobcats. State Xonnal. 6 The State Normal team were victims the next night, with Bryan, Hanna and Hatfield starring for the Bobcats. Ilarma made eight field goals in this game, while Hatfield played a wonderful guarding game for the nome Town Folks. Bobcats. If): Montana Mines, 1' 21 11 Bobcats. 27: State University. 2 23; 30 After a short week's rest the Bruins came to Bozeman to engage in two games of the title series. These were the best games of the season, both going into extra periods before the winner was declared. The Bobcats took the first game after staging a wonderful rally in the second half, tying the score at the end of the regular playing time at 23 to 23. They continued their great work into the extra period, scoring two field baskets while the University made one point on a free throw. The Bruins took the second game after the Bobcats had tied the score at the end of the regular session at 23 to 23. However, the Bruins came back strong in the extra period, making three baskets and one free throw, besides holding their own basket safe from all attacks. Do Wald, Hollister me-'.-.:-- mu III—II 9$ Athletics THE vi« MO NTANAN ■■■ Z2 nttirsMm V:Ut!UiiU'U,VM m The Bobcats defeated ilie Wesleyan in Helena on the 9th of February in a fast game. I-Iartwig had become eligible, and was played at center, Whitney going to forward. This combination worked in fine shape, passing through the Wesleyan team in bewildering style for many counters. De Wald made six field goals while Hollister played a great guarding game. Wallace Whitney Center Forward Bobcats. 32: 311. St. Charles. ? Sr. Charles bowed in defeat the next evening in a fast, though rough game. The Bobcats took the lead from the start, and worked in excellent shape on the big floor. Hartwig and Beckley were the outstanding men. while Brown did the most of the scoring for the Saints. Bobcats. 20: state University. 13 26: 10 By defeating the Bruins in both of the title games in Missoula on the 10th and 17th, the Bobcats brought the state championship back to its rightful home after a couple of years temporary sojourn in Missoula. These were both hard. fast, games, with every minute full of thrills for the spectators. Hartwig was the principal factor in the first game, making six of the seven field goals scored by the Bobcats. Hollister played a great Thomas Kirk Guard and Hatfield were the outstanding men in these games. T)e Wald was the high point man. while Hatfield and Hollister forced the Bruins to long shots for the majority of their points. Bobcats. 20: Billings Poly. 11 The Bobcats went to Billings on the 3rd of February to defeat the Poly for the second time this season. Whitney, Hatfield and Kirk were all on the sick list, but the remainder of the team put up a scrappy battle against the much improved Poly team. As an interesting feature of this game, one of the Poly men got rattled and dropped the ball into the Bobcats’ basket for a counter in the second half. Bobcats. 3): Wesleyan. 10 THE 9 MMMMMMM ...jaSksA Athletics MONTANAN Tracy McGuin Center Forward The School of Mines came over to Bozeman on the 23rd and 24th of February to get revenge for the two defeats administered in Butte, but went home again sadly disappointed. Playing without Hatfield, who was lying sick in the hospital, the Bobcats staged a pretty comeback in the second half of the first game to defeat the Miners. The game started slow with the Miners playing the Bobcats on even terms for over half of the game. Hartwig and l e Wald were the high point men for the Blue and Gold. The second game was a miserable exhibition of basketball from the spectators viewpoint. The game was slow, with the Bobcats way off in their shooting, the ball repeatedly rolling off the rim after what looked like a sure counter. The Miners outplayed the Bobcats in part of this game, but the Blue and Gold fight came back strong to win the game. Laurence Bryan Forward guarding game, and added a nice field goal, as well as six j oints from the foul line. The Bobcats took the final and deciding game from the Bruins the next night in one of the hottest battles ever played. Although the Bruins rode Hartwig hard in an effort to stop the scoring of the Bobcats, the big center merely took the Bruin guards out of the play, so that the Blue and Gold forwards could count from the field. L)e Wald scored three field goals, while Whitney and Hollister added two apiece, and Hartwig one. The game was featured by long shots, each team playing a tight guarding game. Bobcats. 28: Montana Mines, 12 12: 10 Bobcats. 33: Wesleyan. 1.) Wesleyan went down in defeat before the Bobcats in the last game played in the old Drill Hall on the 27th of February. The Bobcats seemed to have all the bad shots out of their systems and were hitting the basket from any point on the floor. Although the Panthers were clearly outclassed, they never gave lip. hut played a good clean game to the end. Uartwig was the high point man. scoring ten points, before the second String men went in to relieve the Varsity. Bobcats. 3' ; Denver University. 17 38: 30 Denver University proved to he the victims of the Bobcats’ attack in the first games to he played in the new gymnasium. The Bobcats clearly outclassed the highly touted visitors in the first game, doubling the score on them. The Bobcat passing game was a puzzle to the Denver men. the Blue and Gold taking the ball through the Denver defense for a counter whenever they pleased. Hollister held the famed Bowman scoreless Archie Harma while Ilartwig scored five field goals in this game. Center The second game was fast and hard fought, with both teams scoring often. Ilartwig led the Bobcat attack with eight field goals while the Bobcat guards, Hollister and Kirk, played good defensive hall. Long shots featured this game, both teams resorting to the long tries for a counter. After the game had been tied twice in the second half, the Bobcats started a scoring rally that netted five baskets in a couple of minutes to sew up the game. This game ended one of the most successful seasons the Bobcats have ever had. Next year should be a banner year for Montana State College in basketball. Hollister and Whitney are the only regulars to graduate, and with the squad already broken in to the new style of basketball introduced by Coach Jones, the season should be a success from the start. Ted Cogswell For uard ...teaifiterf. Athletics THE M O NTANAN BASKETBALL SEASON 1023 Jan. 6 Bobcats 43 State Normal - 1 Bozeman Jan. 10 Bobcats 31 Billings Poly - - - 17 Bozeman Jan. 11 Bobcats 44 St. Charles - - - 19 Bozeman Jan. 15 Bobcats 27 Utah Aggies - - - - 42 Logan Jan. 16 Bobcats 30 Utah Aggies - - - - 40 Logan Jan. 17 Bobcats 22 Idaho Tech - - - - 16 Pocatello Jan. 18 Bobcats 44 State Normal - - - 6 Dillon Jan. 19 Bobcats 19 Montana Mines - 14 Butte Jan. 20 Bobcats 21 Montana Mines - 11 Butte Jan. 25 Bobcats 27 University - - - 24 Bozeman Jan. 26 Bobcats 23 University - - - - 30 Bozeman Feb. 3 Bobcats 20 Billings Poly - - - - 11 Billings Feb. 9 Bobcats 34 Wesleyan - - - 19 Helena Feb. 10 Bobcats 32 St. Charles - - - 17 Helena Feb. 16 Bobcats 20 University - - - 15 Missoula Feb. 17 Bobcats 25 University - - - - 19 Missoula Feb. 23 Bobcats 28 Montana Mines — - - 12 Bozeman Feb. 24 Bobcats 12 Montana Mines - 10 Bozeman Feb. 27 Bobcats 33 Wesleyan - - - 14 Bozeman Mar. 2 Bobcats 34 Denver U - - - 17 Bozeman Mar. 3 Bobcats 38 Denver U - - - 30 Bozeman Bobcats 607 Opponents 386 BOBCATS Garvin Williams Hollister Hatfield Jones Leary Curry DeWald Craven Cogswell McGuin Harma Richards Whitney Bryan Beckley Smith Kirk TRACE. THE TRACK, 1922 Inclement weather and a lack of material were ihe chief handicaps in the way of a successful track season. Had weather forced the men to work out indoors all spring, while the tearing up of the old track removed their only practice grounds. Cates was the only letter man in school and was chosen captain of the squad. Because of the lack of a coach to work with the men, Cates had to take charge of the squad. About twenty men turned out for track work, and from these some excellent material was picked to represent the college in the spring meets. Wesleyan forfeited their meet with us. and deprived the squad of any preliminary experience before meeting the Cuiversity in Missoula. A very green and inexperienced track team journeyed over to Missoula to do battle with the Bruins on the thirteenth of May. The crack team from the Cuiversity easily walked away with the meet by a score of 89 to 28. Captain Ted Cates was the high score man for the Blue and Gold with eleven points to his credit. He won first in the high jump, second in the shot put and second in the broad jump. Bunney won the mile run. and also captured second place in the two mile. McCarren came in second in the low hurdles, his Ted Cates, Captain seconds, which was only four seconds behind that of first High Jump, Broad Jump place tripping over the last hurdle preventing him from winning the event. Hannah won second place in the half mile, and Bright placed second in the javelin. Cates set a new state record in the high jump, his mark of six feet one-tenth of an inch breaking the one established by himself and Bigg in 1920. Tiie Conference Meet The Bobcats took seventh place in the Conference Meet held at Fort Collins, Colorado. Only two men were sent to the meet, Captain Cates and Bunney being picked from the squad to represent the school. Both of these men upheld the record of the college, by winning points at a Conference Meet. Cates won first place in the high jump, while Bunney got third in the? mile run. Cates was aide to make onlv five feet seven inches in the high jump, while the week previous lie had set a new state record of six feet one-tenth of an inch. Bunney ran the mile in four minutes and forty Weights m wmzMmm 104 THE Athletics MONTANAN Cates gave the best exhibition of nerve seen in the entire meet. After having his knee so badly dislocated in the broad jump that he could hardly stand upon it. he competed in the finals in the high jump. After binding his knee firmly with a bandage he succeeded in clearing the bar at five feet seven inches, winning first place. Had he not sustained this injury he would probably have won the , broad jump. At the time of his injury he had made over '2‘2 feet, but was unfortunate enough to step over the takeoff board a fraction of an inch, thus making a foul jump. Cross Country The annual cross country run between the freshmen and sophmores were held on the 29th of April. The course is three miles long and has obstacles in the form of hills and rough country roads. The freshman class won the race by the score of 17b to The first fifteen men to finish from each class are counted in the scoring. Ten men from the freshmen class finished among the first fifteen. Edward Bu'N'sv.y Hal , Mile and Two-Mile Bunney, captain of the sophomores, won the race, and was awarded the sweater given to the winner each year. Uis time was sixteen minutes and eight seconds, while the record held hy Bachman is fifteen minutes and twelve seconds. Tolman, junior, and Adams, freshman, finished second and third respectively. THE JSl aStUL Athletics MO NTANAN II ■'imrnmmmmmmm ... mum • PRE'VIEW OF 1923 TRACK SEASON Prospects for a successful track season seem very bright as the Montanan goes to press. Excellent material has reported to Coach Jones, and the men have been working hard in preparation for the grinding tests this spring. The new gymnasium has provided adequate training quarters for the men, and consequently they have been able to get an earlier start. A regular coach, for the first time in years, has done much to develop new material for use this season. Three letter men have reported for track and form the nucleus of the squad. Cates, captain, holds the state record in the high jump, and will specialize in this event. He also runs the sprints and does the broad jump. Bachman is a veteran in the two mile and the mile, having won the two mile at the conference meet. He holds the distinction of having never been beaten in either event while in college. Bunney is another veteran in the distance runs. He runs the mile and the half, having won third in the mile at the conference meet last year. Benton and Wester are two promising men in the sprints. Benton also is a broad jumper, going 21 feet consistently. Cates and Walter are also working on the sprints. Cogswell and McCoy are running the 220, and showing well. Livers and Holloway are new men in the quarter mile. Holloway has been showing up excellently in the half mile. Bunney and Livers will also run in this event. Sales and Peters are other distance men of much promise. Cottam covers the high hurdles like a greyhound, while McCarren has recovered from his football injury sufficiently to run the low hurdles as in the past three years. Blumenthal holds the state interscholastic records in both the shot put and the discus throw and has been throwing the weights in fine shape. Joubert has been working on the javelin throw and is getting good distance from his heaves. Shoebotluim has been showing better form in the pole vault than last year and should be a point winner in this event. An especial effort is being made to develop a high class team to represent Montana State in the conference meet this year, and with the excellent material available, it seems more than probable that the Blue and Gold will have a most successful track season. A well balanced team seems likely, with point winners in every event. Meets have been scheduled with Wesleyan, the State University and with Idaho Tech. The conference meet will end the season, being held at Denver this year. FROSH THE JbesSsatm Athletics vmnMmminmxim MONTANAN FRESHMAN FOOTBALL, 1922 With the addition of a fulltime coach to the staff. Freshman Athletics underwent a great change this last year. For the first time in the history of the institution, a regular freshman team was developed with a purpose other than to scrimmage the Varsity. A schedule of six games was played with the freshmen victorious in every one. Park County, Gallatin, Anaconda and Beaverhead County High Schools all went down in defeat before the fierce onslaught of the Bobkittens. The strong University Freshman team was defeated in a fiercely contested game on a muddy field, while Idaho Tech also was defeated in a good game. Freshman football started the 15th of September, when all prospective candidates were asked to report at Karst’s Camp for the two weeks’ preliminary training. About twenty men reported for the squad, and they were drilled in the fundamentals with the Varsity candidates. This two weeks’ training did much to get the men in shape for the strenuous season, as many of the high school stars did not know what intensive training was until introduced to it at Karst's. Bobkittens, IS: Park High. 0 The freshmen played their first game against Park County in Livingston on the 30th of September, winning by the score of 18 to 0. The game disclosed the fact that the Bobkittens had wonderful possibilities but had not settled down to play the game as a team instead of as a collection of stars. The Park County team put up a stiff fight, showing much better team work than the Bobkittens. Many penalties were inflicted on the freshmen, preventing them from running up a much larger score. One of the spectacular features of the game was a 00 yard run for a touchdown by Georgia Benton. Floyd Romuev was perhaps the outstanding star for the freshmen, his brilliant broken field running being a wonderful feature of the game. Rivers, at end. and De Wald, at quarter, were also brilliant performers. Bobkittens, S3: Gallatin High, 0 On the 7th of October the Bobkittens swamped Gallatin High Si’ to 0. by scoring almost at will and at the same time keeping their own goal line safe from attack. The game was replete with thrills, the Bobkittens showing a varied assortment of plays that kept the game running at full speed. Forward passes and end runs were mixed with line plunges in a swirling attack on Gallatin’s goal line. Myers. Romney, Myers and De Wald were the outstanding men for the Frosh, while Wylie was the whole Gallatin team. Bobkittens. 73; Anaconda, 0 The Frosh won their third game on the 14th of October when they trounced the fast Anaconda team 73 to 0 on Gatton Field. This was the first game that - THE , . Ithlctics MONTANAN the Robkittens really showed their true strength, and they put on a wonderful exhibition of football. They made most of their yardage on long end runs, the fast backs of the Frosh sweeping around the Anaconda ends for long gains. I oth teams tried the forward pass, but with little success. The Anaconda team put up a plucky fight but were no match for the fast freshman team. Romney was again the star, his broken field running being little short of marvelous. Lincke and Rivers played good ball on the line for the Frosh. while Fmmons of the Anaconda team showed a real knowledge of the game in his generalship. liohkittrns. T'nicersity Frosh. 0 The Fniversity Frosh went down to defeat on the 20th of October in the hardest game the i.obkittens had played. The field was wet and slippery, preventing the Robkittens from showing any of their spectacular end runs that had been the feature of their season’s play The heavy Fniversity freshmen’s line withstood the attacks of the light Kitten backs in good shape. Most of the yardage made by the Fine and Fold yearlings was gained by means of the forward pass, the ball being worked into the danger zone several times by this means. The lone counter came in the third period when Floyd Romney booted the ball over the bar from the 20 yard line in a perfect place kick. All of the Robkittens played splendid ball, with Romney perhaps showing the best form in his line plunging against the heavy Cub’s line. Habe Meyers ran the team in splendid fashion from the quarterback position and made some pretty runs around the ends until downed by the mud. Sugrue, for the Cubs, played one of the best games that has been seen here for a long time, as he carried the brunt of their attack. The Undefeated Bobkittens THE at mxmmmmmm ..itoiftry Athletics m o ntanan Boh k i t ten s . 19 ; I da h o Tech. 12 The Bobkittens stopped into real prominence when they downed the strong Idaho Tech team on the 24th of October. It was one of the most fiercely contested games ever seen on Gat ton Field, with both teams fighting every inch of the way. The lighter Frosh line held when a few inches meant points for the opponents. It was a game featuring the best of everything in football: brilliant end runs, sensational forward passes and hard line plunging. Idaho Tech made most of their gains on straight line plunging, having two wonderful men in Holmes and Place. The Kittens swept the ends or forward-passed themselves into a victory over a team that had held the University regulars to a tie score the week before. One of the most spectacular plays of the game came after Idaho Tech had fumbled the ball. I tokens recovered and started for the goal at what looked like a snail's pace. Perfect interference by the rest of the team saved him from being downed until he had crossed the goal line. Every Bobkitten in the game was a star, as each man fought his hardest and his cleanest for a great victory. Captain Floyd Romney gave a wonderful exhibition at the halfback position, while Babe Meyers ran the team at quarter in a most creditable manner. Bobkittens, Beaverhead High, 6 The Bobkittens completed a most successful season by defeating Dillon High at Dillon on the 18th of November. The Kittens played very listless football in the first half and let the Dillon team get away for some unexpected gains. In the second half they came to life and walked away front the High School by showing what they could really do. Forward passing featured the play of the Kittens during the game, Babe Meyers throwing the ball with deadly accuracy into the arms of an end or back almost every time. The interference of the backs was especially good throughout the entire game. Arndt tackled a Dillon man behind his goal line for a safety in the last quarter. This game ended the 1022 football season. It was a success in every sense. One of the main ideas in the development of a freshman team is to provide seasoned material for the Varsity, and the freshman team of 1022 did much along this line. Every man on the Frosh team can be considered as a strong contender for next vear's Varsity. The men who played throughout the season are: Centers: Brittain and l.incke; guards: Kump, Ario, Arndt and Norman; tackles: Pitt. Dobeus. Horn-beck; ends: R. Romney, Rivers, Hanna, Cottam; backs: R. Meyers, F. Meyers, F. Romney, De Wald, Benton, Shorthill. Foster and Jacobs. FOOTBALL SEASON 1022 Sept. 30 Bobkittens 18 Oct. 7 Bobkittens 82 Oct. 14 Bobkittens 73 Oct. 20 Bobkittens 3 Oct. 24 Bobkittens 19 Nov. 18 Bobkittens 48 Bobkittens 243 Park High - - - - 0 Livingston Gallatin High - - - 0 Bozeman Anaconda High - - 0 Bozeman University Frosh - - 0 Bozeman Idaho Tech - - - - 12 Bozeman Beaverhead High - - 6 Dillon Opponents - - - - 18 I 1 ORGAN THE JB WJZmMMKM MONTANAN a STUDENT SELF-GOVERNMENT The government of tlie student body at Montana State is vested in the Student Senate, which is composed of tin Student Council and seven elected commissioners. The Senate has control of student body legislation, and is in direct control of the activities and general interests of the student body. It also acts as a judicial body in case of violations by members of the Associated Students, this including all student conduct, and violations of the rules, customs and traditions of the college. The Council is composed of the President of the Senate, the presidents of the senior, junior and sophomore classes, and a councilman-at-large. It acts as the Senate committee. The Senate is made up of commissioners elected to the various commissions, together with the council. The commissions represented are those of Finance, Publications, Demonstrations, Interests Athletic, Interests Musical. Interests Literary and Forensic, and Interests Social. The commissioners are elected by the student body at the general student elections. In the past year the work taken up by this governing body has included cases of student conduct, and student constitution legislation. 111 THE 3 Organizations MO NTANAN Rivenes Bergstrom Cashmore Bowen Tenney Hardy Lyndon Mountjoy Hatfield McCarren King A- S. M. S. C STI DKXT SKXATK Raymond Mountjoy . Charles Lyndon Charles King .... Frank Hatfield Claude Hardy .... Karl Kelley.................. Ray McCarren .... Howard Tenney .... Arthur Bergstrom Robert Bowen .... Dewey Cashmore . . . ( Alp Rivenes .... President of Associated students Senior Class I’resident Junior ('hiss President Sophomore Class President Commissioner at Large Commissioner of Pina nee Commissioner of Athletics Commissioner of Publications Commissioner of Porensies Commissioner of Interests Social unmissioner of Interests Musical Commissioner of Demonstrations The first five of the above officers comprise the Council of the Associated Students. 112 Honorary If CARROLL DONAHOE Ray McCarren Edward Cf afe Emmett moore Charles lyndoh harry McCann EDWARD COGSWELL BRUCE HOLLISTER ROBERT WALTER RAYMOND MOUNTJOY mrMmkwmm LES BOUFFONS Founded 1000 MEMBER IX FACULTY HONORARY MEMBER Ott Romney r. c. McChoro Res Bouffons, the men's honorary social fraternity, is the oldest fraternity m the campus. The Annual Les Bouffons formal is considered one of the leading social events of the year. It is also the custom of the members to hold theater parties occasionally. The Les Bouffons scholarship cup is awarded annually to the men's fraternity having the highest scholastic average for the preceding year. Membership is limited to ten active members chosen from the junior and senior classes. 114 THE Organization M O NTANAN CHARLES LYNDON Edward Cates Arthur Bergstrom George van Fleet m - P HH Edward Paulson Raymond Mountjoy Bruce Hollister SEPTEMVIRI Founded 1020 Septemviri was organized for the purpose of perpetuating, creating, and governing the customs and traditions of Montana State College and of handling other like student affairs that would come under the jurisdiction of such an organization. The membership of this organization is limited to seven active members who are chosen from the junior class, being elected by a committee of the faculty during the spring quarter of the college year on a basis of one hundred points: scholarship to count fifty, activities thirty, and personality twenty. 115 THE Al JtiOflb Organizations MONTANAN Griffith Forbes Shaw Keyser Brentnall Bullock Estes Wester Peters Briscoe Smith Neill Ralston Keyes Fox Baker Scotten . Rivenes INTERCOLLEGIATE KNIGHTS Founded 1022 at Vnirersity of Washington FANG CHAPTER Fs tab Iish rd April. 1022 HONORARY MEMBERS Alfred Atkinson J. M. Hamilton M. J. Abbey Ott Romney ACTIVE MEMBERS Ai.f Rivenes.......................King (Ex-officio) Glen Fox......................................Duke Robert Keyes . . . Royal Chancellor of Exchequer William Baker..........................Royal Scribe William Baker Elbert Brentnall Allen Briscoe Clifford Bullock Cleveland Estes Glen Forbes John Griffith Robert Keyes Emmett Keyser Frank Lamb Officers McQueen Lawton-Frank Neill Howard Peters Francis Ralston Walter Sales George Scotten Bradford Shaw Thomas Smith Wyman Smith Joe Wester Intercollegiate Knights is an organization composed of freshmen and sophomore men. the purpose of which is to foster school spirit. 8 v. 116 the Organizations MO NTANAN SCs MMMMHM. i :z' • 1% 9 Cashmore J. Rouse r. Rouse Howard Neuman KAPPA KAPPA PSI Founded till!) n( Oklahoma State Coll rye MONTANA ALPHA CHAPTER Established 1920 HONORARY MEMBER Lou Howard ACTIVE MEMBERS Dewey Cashmore Leonard Neuman James Rouse Robley Rouse ()PFK'ERS Leonard Neuman . • Vresident Dewey Cashmore • • • Vice-President James Rouse . Treasurer Robi.ey Rouse . • . Secretary Pl.E .John Barto Glen Cottier George Clarkson Carroll Donohoe :i)GKS Edgar Fox Bert Julio Fred LaBonte Ivappa Kappa Psi is a national honorary fra tern i tv for band men. Carter Moore Schurch Rivenes Lyndon Bergstrom Barger Van Fleet PHI ALPHA TAU Founded 1002 t Finer son School of Oratory KIIO CHAPTER FstaIdished May. 1022 J. W. Barger Arthur Bergstrom Charles Lyndon Carroi.i. Donohue Alf Rivenes Arthur Bergstrom Carroll Donohoe Walter Carter Ted Johnson Ted Cogswell Bert Julio W. F. Brewer 1 resident Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Charles Lyndon Charles Schurch William Moore George Van Fleet Alf Rivenes Bryan Wilson MEMBERS IX FAC (LTV HONORARY MEMBER B. J. Osborne ACTIVE MEMBERS Officers Pbi Alpha Tan has as its purpose the fostering of the speech arts: debat m mammrnmam 113 « THE Organizations MONTANAN rmmnmT rmturnm r mm— mm m Willson Brewer Gilman Poulsen Barger Ham Johnson Moore Schurch Bergstrom Carter Holmes PI KAPPA DELTA Founded tiitd ut Ottaira I ni rersit 11 MONTANA BETA CHAPTER Established March. 1i)2l MEMBERS IN FACULTY J. W. Barger W. F. Brewer V. A. Gilman F. W. Ham W. B. Holmes ACTIVE MEMBERS Officers Charles Schi'ROU William Moore Arthur Bergstrom . Charles Lyndon President Vice-President Secret a ry-T rea surer (’orrespondint Scen t.try Arthur Bergstrom Ted Johnson William Moore Charles Schurch Walter Carter Charles Lyndon Edward Poulsen Virgil Willson Pi Kappa Delta is a national honorary debating: fraternity, membership being open to those who have participated in intercollegiate debates or oratorical contests. Eell Fitzgerald Mitchell Savage Cates Powers Lyndon Orcutt Mountjoy Luther Carnes C. N. Arnett E. N. Bressman E. L. Currier ALPHA ZETA Founded 1$97 at (jhio State College MONTANA CHAPTER Fstablishrd danuurg. 1922 MEMBERS IN FACELTV L. F. Gieseker E. H. Lott A. J. Ogaard V. A. Gilman R. C. McChord H. E. Selby E. J. IIaselrud J. A. Nelson J. 0. Tretsven W. O. Whitcomb 110NORA RV MEMBEES Alfred Atkinson F. B. Linfield Clyde McKee M. A. Bell Paul Carnes Ted Cates ASSOCIATE MEMBERS J. C. Taylor ACTIVE MEMBERS Kenneth Fitzgerald Merrill Luther Ethan Ford Fergus Mitchell Charles Lyndon Ray Mountjoy David Savage M. L. Wilson M- M. Oliphant Paul Orcutt Lfroy Powers Alpha Zeia is a national honorary fraternity, the purpose foster interest in agricultural development. Mi 120 THE m mmmmmmam Organizations MO NTANAN Schurch Bennett FerrellWillson Hoffman Wiles Sheppard Newkirk Shoebotham Alderson Cobleigh Getchell Cash more ALPHA PI rounded Win Edmund Burke MEMBERS IN FACELTV W. M. Cobleigh E. J. Quinn S. G. Scott G. D. Wiles ACTIVE MEMBERS Officers Wa y n e Getc h eli................ Ted Cogswei.i...................... Dewey Cash more.................... William Alderson................... President ice-Presiden t Secretary Treasurer William Alderson Ray Coulter William Bennett Carroll Donohoe Dewey Cash more Lewis Ferrell Ted Cogswell Wayne Getchell Carl IIoffman Ted Johnson Floyd Newkirk Oscar Quimby Charles Schurch Thomas Shoebotham Virgil Willson Alpha Pi is an honorary fraternity organized for the purpose of promot- ing the interests of chemistry. if 121 THE Organizations MONTANAN .. Moore Haines Buckingham Hoffman Brown Bergstrom Thomas Norris Poulsen SIGMA EPSILON Founded 192! HONORARY MEMBER E. B. Norris ACTIVE MEMBERS Richard Thomas Alva Brown Arthur Bergstrom . Officers President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Arthur Bergstrom Francis Haines Herbert Lange Alva Brown Carl Hoffman Harry McCann Earl Buckingham Pledges Gordon Cottier Floyd Newkirk Emmett Moore Edward Poulsen Richard Thomas Harry Wallace Organized for the purpose of petitioning the national engineering fraternity. Tail Beta Pi. this society selects its members from the highest one-fourth of the upperclassmen in engineering. THE SsH Organizations MO NTANAN PHI KAPPA PHI (General Scholastic Honor Society) rounded ISO7 at University of Maine MONTANA STATE COLLEGE CHAPTER Established dune. 1021 W. M. Coblei iii L. D. Conklino . W. O. Whitcomb A. J. OCJAAKl) W. F. SciIOPPE )l FICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Marshal MEMHERS IN FACULTY M. J. Abbey Alfred Atkinson C. N. Arnett E. N. Bressman Aline Burgess W. M. Cobleigh L. D. CONKLING F. S. Cooley R. A. Cooley Jessie Donaldson V. A. Gilman J. M. Hamilton W. E. Joseph F. B. Lin field Mrs. E. H. Lott Burdette I.owe R. C. McChord Clyde McKee H. E. Morris E. B. Norris A. J. Ogaard W. R. Plew W. D. Tallman J. C. Taylor J. A. Thaler J. 0. Tretsven Howard Welch W. O. Whitcomb M. L. Wilson R. 0. Wilson W. F. Schoppe M. H. Spaulding D. B. Swingle FROM CLASS OF 1022 Fuhrman Asbury Mildred Forrest Emmett Matthew Helen Bancroft Vera Galliher Gladys Mathews Elizabeth Bole Harley Hollingsworth Oliver Pouder Ian Briggs William Husemeyer Dorothy Reed Mary Egan Arnold Kruger Oscar Tretsven Henry Ellingson Marguerite Lindsley Huston Smith Ward St. Clair Mary Stranahan Willard Watts Herbert Wildman Phillip Willis Emil Anderson Alva Brown FROM CLASS OF 1023 Dorothy Dean Carl Hoffman Paul Orcutt Roma Elmer Raymond Mountjoy Edward Poulsen Richard Thomas THE ... Orqanizations MONTANAN Forswall Brentford Rivenes Erdman LaBonte Williams Bowen Winslow Legge Dutton Duncan E. Bell Swan Stephens S. White Griffith Lange Wallace McSweeney Walker H. White Chestnut Johnson Reynolds Wiles McGandy Baldwin Rodriquez M. Bell Cobleigh Taylor Christopher Gilman Barger Potter Holmes McCall TROWEL CLUB Founded 1921 ACTIVE MEMBERS Officers M. A. Bell................... Edward McGandy .... Harry Wallace .... Oscar Forswall .... Richard Thomas.................. President Vice-President Secret or if Treasurer Guard W. N. Christopher BOARD OF TRUSTEES J. M. Hamilton M. H. Spaulding MEMBERS NOT IN PICTURE M. J. Abbey Alfred Atkinson Ray Bowden Edmund Burke E. L. Currier J. M. Hamilton W. C. Hansen J. II. Holst W. E. Joseph C. W. Plumb Roy Sommerlad Wallace Todd Eric Thf.rkelsen M. L. Wilson R. 0. Wilson The Trowel Club is a Masonic organization, all Master Masons of good standing, either of the faculty or the student body, being eligible for membership. The club promotes the welfare of its members by offering Masonic instruction and also provides for social activities from time to time. PROFESSIONAL THE MEMMMMMM Organizations M O NTANAN fl mm ft 1 jfl If f b if fi M 4r f, Ml f I f i ■ t ' 1 .£ [i ri « If y Schurch Cottier Bowen Thomas Hoffman Schanck Albrecht Hardy Norris Stacy Poulsen ENGINEERING COUNCIL rounded 1U 2 HONORARY MEMBER E. B. Norris ACTIVE MEMBERS Officers Wellington Hardy........................President Richard Thomas.....................Vice-President Robert Bowen..................Secretary-Treasurer Arcii itkctiral Engineers Gordon Cottier Clarence Stacy Chemical E ngi x eeus Carl Hoffman Charles Schurch Civil Engineers Arno Albrecht Charles Schanck Elected i. Engineers Robert Bowen Richard Thomas M EC H A NI c A L E NG I NEE RS Wellington Hardy' Edward Poulsen The object of the engineering council is to promote cooperation between the various engineering organizations at Montana State College and to provide a means by which all engineering students may operate as a unit. THE M O NTANAN Cushing Duncan DeHart Quist Esgar Spaulding McVey Hodgson Cottier Cheever Plew Marshall Stacy Osness ARCHITECTS’ CLUB rounded 191!) HONORARY MEMBERS H. C. Cheever W. V. Marshall W. R. Plew Clarence Stacy Gordon Cottier Perry Gage Gordon Cottier Ralph Cushing Joseph DeHart Norman DeKay Claude Duncan ACTIVE MEMBERS Officers Ray Esgar Perry Gage Stanley Hodgson Albert McVey Edwin Osness President Vice-President Secret a ry• Treasurer Carl Quist Christ Raaen George Spaulding Clarence Stacy The Architects Club is similar in its purposes to the organizations of the other professional departments. 127 THE Organization MONTANAN McCune Boss Almquist Elmer Anderson Willson McNett Newkirk Cheney Shoebotham Getchell Bennett Lang Bunney Langston Earhart Thayer Green .Ai.derson Casiimore Maxey Hoffman Thompson Foust Wiles Solders CHEMISTRY SOCIETY Founded If) 11 Officers Carl Hoffman . President Olive Schreiner Vice-President Victor Tiiayijr . Secretary-Treasurer This society serves the same purpose to the chemists as do the other technical societies to their respective departments. Meetings are held at the regular seminar hour on Tuesday, when reports and abstracts are presented by the members. In addition, the organization holds meetings of a social nature, at which time men prominent in the profession of chemistry are usually engaged to speak. 128 THE MO NTANAN ELECTRIC CLUB Founded 1007 Richard Thomas Harry Wallace Frank Hatfield Glenn Boyer Officers I resident Vi ce-F resident Secretary Treasurer The Electric Club is ihe oldest of i lie engineering societies, having been organized in 1907. Ii leads all the other organizations in membership, having-on its roll this year more than one hundred names, as all students majoring in the electrical engineering department automatically become members. The electrical show, staged by the club on the annual Engineers' Day. is always a center of attraction. 129 THE Organizations M O NTANAN Fortin Whitacre K. Gallagher Brittain Avery Nicholson Holgren Van Rhee Griffith Banks .). Gallagher Moore Albrecht McGandy Brockway Zimdar Schanck AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS FoilnIS.)2 ol Xcir York ( it M. S. C. S'lTDEXT CHAPTER Fstablishrd January. 1922 MEMBER IX FACELTV L. D. Conk ling )FFK'KKK ........................President Vice-President Secretary ........................Treasurer s. c. E. is an outgrowth of the old Civil Engi-ns. All students registered in civil engineering are members of the society. Meetings are held at the regular seminar hour on Tuesday for the purpose of discussing topics of interest. Arno Albrecht Emmett Moore . William Bawdkn Karl Gallagher The student chapter of A neering Society organized in 1 THE Organizations M O NTANAN Enrico Hartig Adams Poulsen Fiscus Estes Dobeus Wood King McCann Gay Barto Wilson Rouse Atchison Hardy Tenney Haines Guillot AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS Founded I$80 (it Xeir York City M. S. C. STUDENT BRANCH Established 1020 MEMBERS IN FACULTY R. T. Challender E. B. Norris ( )fficers Wellington Hardy..................... Francis Haines....................... Leonard Atchison..................... Howard Tenney........................ Eric Therkelson . P resident I ice-President Secretary Treasurer The old Mechanical Engineering Club, founded in 1914, was reorganized in 1920 as a student branch of A. S. M. E. The membership includes all me-chancial engineering students who pay their annual dues. The seminar hour is taken over for the meetings of the society. THE Organizations MONTANAN Ross Bell Carnes Noble Lyndon AGRICULTURAL CLUB Founded 1020 Charles Lyndon Paul Carnes Helen Noble . Richard Ross . M. A. Bell Don Brittain ( )iticers President Vice-President Recording Secretary Co rres pon d i n g Sec ret a ry Treasurer Marshal The regular meetings of the Agricultural Club, held every other Monday evening, afford the agricultural students an opportunity to become better acquainted and to hear talks and discussions on topics of interest to them. The annual Ag Day. to be held rhis year in May, is one of the original activities of The club. a 132 THE MO NTANAN 8 Stockton Ballantyne Berryman Plew Roberts Graves Miss Schneder Mrs. Hannon Nordstrom Adams Staebler Ryan Patten Blankenship Williams Andrews Reddout Richardson Weydemeyer Maxey Leckliter King McXai.l Ayler Marston Ayler ART CLUB Founded lit I!) MEMBERS IN FACULTY Mrs. 0. R. Hannon Miss C. K. Schneder Officers Lucille Staebler Genevieve Cooley Harriet Nordstrom . I reside nt Yiee-F resident Treasurer The Art Club includes in its membership all students majoring in the art department. Meetings are held every two weeks for the purpose of entertainment and to discuss the history and the applications of art. The club has been instrumental in bringing to the college lectures and exhibits of educational value to its members. THE VlVf n — Organizations 'te. M O NTANAN King Mares Burkf. Stranahan Barry Rundell Jacobs Eagle Lobdell Stone Axtell Tibbles Hart Larson Thompson Waite Atkinson Stewart Chrystal Kremer McNall Ryan Matthews Farnum Snedecor Campbell Utley Marquis Walker Dahi.strom Newkirk Easton Clark Davidson Cobleigh Graham Nelson Williams Werre Beatty Hoadley Phillips Spargo Cox Dean Moody Moebus Winter Potter Foley Ewalt HOME ECONOMICS CLUB Founded ISO.'t ( Ikkiuers Helen Waite Dorothy Dean . Ruth Davidson . Virginia Schneider . President Vice-President Secret a rif Treasurer ('Ol NCILMEN Keturah Tiriu.es IIazei. McXai.i. . Alice Stranahan Entertainment Program Publicity The object of the Home Economics Club is to develop a professional spirit among the members, to bring the students into contact with state and national home economics organizations, and through its meetings and programs to promote greater interest and understanding of the broad scope of home economics and to keep in touch with the current problems and activities of home economics. .. Organizations M O NTANAN a THE K 9MMMMMKM Adams Hornbeck Thomas Barto Bawden Cowan Shaw Mitchell Lyndon Baker Holgren McLean Boyer Ralston Sears Hansen DeKay Ferrell Estes Stanton Arndt SCHURCH Ross ZUCK FORTIN BERGSTROM Sanford Van Fleet Holmes McCann Finch Avery Felt Tenney MONTANA STATE WINTER SPORTS CLUB rounded 7!)22 ACTIVE MEMBERS Officers Harry McCann . Carl Finch President Sucre t a ry- T i vu surer John Adams Paul Arndt Stewart Avery William Baker John Barto William Bawden Arthur Bergstrom Glenn Boyer Earl Buckingham Jack Cowan Norman DeKay Cleveland Estes Herbert Felt Lewis Ferrell Carl Finch Henry Fortin Phil Holgren W. B. Holmes Lea Hornbeck Charles Lyndon Harry McCann Wendell McLean Fergus Mitchell Paul Orcutt Francis Ralston Richard Ross Hollis Sanford Arthur Sears Bradford Shaw Malcolm Stanton Howard Tenney Richard Thomas George Van Fleet Merlin Zuck The Montana State Winter Sports Club, the newest organization in the college, was organized to boost the winter sports, skating, skiing, and tobogganing. among M. S. C. students. Membership in the club is open to all Montana State students and faculty. THE —MSbt L m (Organisations MO NTANAN mimmmmwqiwriim vr- mm raa s m asm rt 136 SIGMA CHI THE ie w MONTANAN It. Kumnky DkWai.ii Kkck Finlry Ennis I-awton I- I.ynisin MacDonalii Cowan I’irr Zaciikr Riciiakiis Salks Kisti.kk CntitY I.iniisky THE IPX Organizations ' %y MONTANAN SIGMA CHI Founded IS.').) at Miami ( nircrsiti BETA RIIO CHAPTER Established Voreinber, liH7 MEMBERS IN FACT'LTV Dean J. M. Hamilton C. N. Arnett J. C. Taylor MEMBERS IN COLLEGE Ted Cates Ben Chestnut Lewis Erwin George Finley Richard Buckby Edward Bunney Albert Beck Don Bennett Jules Benton Cliff Bullock Seniors Bruce Hollister Tom Kirk Charles Lyndon Larry Lyndon Donald MacDonald Fergus Mitchell Dick Richards Dale Sheffield Juniors Frank Cowan Arthur McDonald Glen Fox William Moore Sophomores William Ennis McQueen Lawton Walter Sales Fresh m en Bob Curry Rodney Foster Arnold DeWald John Kistler Pledges Frank Lamb Thornley Pitt Lyle Lindsey Reuben Romney Bert Williams M. H. Spaulding Leonard Swan Wallace Whitney Hallam Williams Vernon Zacher Floyd Romney Frank Wilton Earl Lewis Edgar MacLeod Burt Street Fred Weldon 139 THE (if ions J 2 . MONTANAN I to THE . JaaSbatt—, Organizations M O NTANAN SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Founded 18')0 ut University of Alabama MONTANA ALPHA CHAPTER Established October. 1019 MEMBERS IN FACULTY W. F. Schoppe W. H. McCall A. L. Strand I. M. Fiske H. E. Selby Seniors Frank Beckley Ted Cogswell Hollis Matthew Dewey Casiimore Carroll Donohoe Lee Popham Dr. W. C. Hansen Max Stanton George Van Fleet Juniors Robert Bowen Ray Coulter Henry Jacques Harry Brentford Joe DeHart Frank Knight Gordon Cottier Lewis Ferrell George LeCornu Sophomores Frank Hatfield Marc Maylor Fred LaBonte George Smith Emmett Moore Joe Patterson Ray Squier Kenneth McIyer Freshmen Ralph Cushing Ray Esgar Russell Findley Wyman Smith Ben Walton Pledges Elbert Brentnall Hugh Cottam Mac Bryan Emmett Keyser Walter Stanley bi aw tan a 111 OMEGA BETA Kortin Dorkis Ksiks IJawdkn Horn ruck Ciittinc Bakkk liAirio IIannon Rai.xvo.n Sanp ri McCakkkn I’ktkks Whitacrk Avkrv J. Brittain I.kary Sijcttkn McGanhy I)kKay Fki.t Jorcknxnn Thomas Garvin Zuck McCann Hi k:;strom Mohntjoy Masiiin Toih THE______Organizations 10 K. MONTANAN THE M O NTANAN nwMMMNmr 4 • OMEGA BETA rounded Idlj MEM BEK LX FACULTY A. L. McMahon MEMBERS IX COLLEGE Seniors Arthur Bergstrom Arthur Jorgensen Harry McCann Richard Thomas Herbert Felt Earl Kelly Ray McCarren Merlin Zuck Merrill Luther Raymond Mountjoy Juniors Stewart Avery Everett Cutting William Garvin Wilfred Leary John Brittain Henry Fortin Champ Hannon John Mashin Edward McGandy Sophomores William Baker John Barto Norman DeKay Francis Ralston William Bawden George Clarkson Jake Forbes Hollis Sanford Ted Sletten Freshman Vakder Dobeus Pledges Don Brittain Paul Carnes Lea Hornbeck Burton Rivers Cleveland Estes Howard Peters m ■ BETA EPSILON H i 1‘asiia (iAi,ui:ii I'incii IIaiitwii; Sands Haugmnu I. mats McCoy I.inckk O'I.kaky MacLkan Ai.dkkson I (ox Hkikcoi: McGuik Sih-i-u: Scottkn Johnson Ga«k W. Gkaiiam Sciiurcii Ross Dykr Siiokkotiiam Baciiman Kknnkdy Wai.tkr Pktkksok Kknck Wiiitk Cktciiku. aafifaif- THE deS2EI Or(f animations irrMmz M O NTANAN BETA EPSILON Founded 1919 MEMBERS IX FACULTY S. G. Scott J. P. Walker HONORARY MEMBERS Edmund Burke W. D. Tallmax MEMBERS IN COLLEGE Seniors William Aldersox Wilson Eiidman Wayne Getchell Leslie Gilbert Lester Bachman Martin Bell Lloyd Graham Walter Kennedy Herbert Lange Nicholas Oberle Carl Finch Perry Gage Ted .Johnson Millard Peterson Edward Poulsen Ai.f Rivexes Art Sears Bert Julio Wendell McLean Charles Schurch Thomas Shoebotiiam Robert Walter Harold White A. G. Stephens James Supple Juniors Edward Bell Andy Briscoe Lloyd Dyer Ranald Axtell Fred Box Sophomores Karl Gallagher Yerl McCoy Herbert Haugland Tracy McGuin Robert Keyes John Pasha Freshmen Herrick Brasfield Paul Jackson William Graham Jack Lincke Pledges Allen Briscoe Joe O’Leary Adolph Hartwig John Redman- Rich ard Ross Glenn Sands George Scotten Joe Livers Joe Wester H. O. M. CLUB THE ___w+O— Organizations MONTANAN li« Wrigiit Baiinum Lagb Gallagher Trnnkv Giui-kitii Brown-Van Rhke Pokbks Sciianck IIaruy Fuwk McMillan Barret Cook THE JkaSah Organizations M O NTANAN H. O. M. CLUB On unizcri 1U22 MEMBERS IX COLLEGE Seniors Frank Barxum Alva Brown Walter Floor Claude Hardy Patrick Gallagher Howard Tenney Juniors James Lage Charles Schanck William Barret Frederic Cook Sophomores Theodore Dozois Glen Forbes Morris Griffith Donald McMillan John Van Rhee Freshmen George Wright THE ORDER OF THE BARB THE Organisations MONTANAN W. ItoYKK Hainks Wii.sdn Ai.hkkciit Kinc I loss LkCorNU Davis Fiscus IIaktic Stokuak Atchison Tiiaykk McCunk THE Organizations M o NTANAN THE ORDER OF THE BARB Organized 1921 MEMBER IX FACULTY J. A. Kelson MEMBERS IX COLLEGE Arno Albrecht Alva Brown-Earl Buckingham Walter Carter Leonard Atchison-Frank Barnum Seth Bohart Ormsby Burgess Jack Cowan Charles Fiscus William Flood Lloyd Hansen William Hay John Adams Herbert Almquist George Baxter Paul Bender Wesley Boss Glen Boyer William Boyer Jack Cartter Peter Cok Luke Dagnall Elmo Briggs Clem Davison Clarence Kerlee Eugene Low all Seniors Adam Fiscus Walter Flook Ethan Ford Oscar Forswall .Juniors John Halloway John Jensen Charles King James Lage Joseph McCune Robert Xewell Edwin Osness Roy Powers Oscar Quimby Sophomores Carl Davis Virgil Gibson John Griffith Glen Forbes Sascha Guxglia Clarence Guillot Bruce Hannah Rudolph Hartig Philip Holgren Walter Chamberlin Freshmen Lyle Roeseler Walter Sutherland Cecil Thomas Richard Thompson Francis Haines Carl Hoffman Paul LeCornu Robley Rouse Juan Rodriquez David Savage Charles Schanck Leonard Searle Andrew Storrar Edgar Udine Harry Wallace Edward Wilson David Willson Paul Lamp Harold Lang Donald McMillan Lewis Matthew Harold Xicholson Bradford Shaw Victor Thayer John Van Rhee Ross Walsh Casper Wendei.n Frank Wilson George Wright 149 the -miBtmmKtam MO NTANAN Marston Brittain Kelley Cowan King Moore Moody McCann McNall Peterson Cox Walter Moebus Donohoe Floor Cates INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL Foil 11 dcd 1010 ACTIVE MEMBERS Officers Marie Moebus . • President Ted Cates . • • • • , I iec-President Emmett Moore Secretary-Treasurer A LIT! A ( .MICRON Pi Chloe Cox Cm Omega Marie Moebus Beulah Kelley Pi Beta Piii Esther King Eleanor Marston Iota Delta Alice Moody Bernice Floor Zeta Kadi a Hazel McNall Keturah Tibbi.es Sigma Chi Katherine Towns Ted Cates Sigma Alpha Epsilon Franr Cowan Carroll Donohoe Omega Beta Emmett Moore John Brittain Beta Epsilon Harry McCann 150 Millard Peterson Robert Walter ACTIVITIES THE - w. MONTANAN THE 1923 MONTANAN Charles Lyndon Assistant Editor Charles Schurch Editor-in-Chief Richard Ross Associate Editor Till: EDITORIAL STAFF Art Editor: Gordon Cottier. Assistants. .Joe DeHart. Clarence Stacy, Perry Gage. Leola Adams, t Art work directed by Prof. H. C. Cheever. Department of Architectural Engineering.) Classes: Pace Carnes Athletics: Walter Kennedy Organizations: Richard Ross. Assistants: Leonard Seakle, Bert Julio Activities: Keturah Tibhi.es Co-Eds: Rutii Davidson. Eleanor Makstox Features: Margaret Conki.ing. Edward Penney Conkling Forswall Cottier Carnes Tibbles Davidson Kennedy THE Activities M O NTANaN THE 1923 MONTANAN Stewart Avery Assistant Manager Leslie Gilbert Business Manager Herrick Erasfield Advertising Manager THE BUSINESS STAFF Advertising Assistants: Walter Sales. A. G. Stephens. Joe O'Leary Faculty Sale : Jack Lixcke. Mary Baldwin Staff Photographer: Oscar Forswall. Assistants: James Sipple. Hattie Williams,. Ralph Cushing General Assistants: Herbert Haugi and. Administration: Margaret Tobin. Stenographer DeHart Gage Cottier Avery Supple Brasfield Lixcke Julio Cushing Stacy Searle Forswall Bunney Carnes Kennedy Gilbert Tibbles Schurch Adams Ross Conkling BOBC- r AND i----------:— --- Extra Perk Requiret Both Nights Whpn , core Is Tied fj V a Min Blue and Gold Pluch «uv ixjji i • or tiK-r iut . Old Whittle at ' College No More m CF.$Fl)R BRUINS Loft: Right: Sciianck 4q('IER XORHST Center: Seari.e rom Boyer Bergstrom Norm: Tenney Eli Cottier Buckby Con Brow KLI NO N Boss Heilman ■aaBSBWWMBWBBl m m 154 ...y , THE____________ Ci Activities MONTANAN 'V'Tlin Bruins’ Chance Fw nte Title Two From Br ips Boosts ream • ( champion- «n Picked For NiBobcnts.. Oc6a « 7Va m tty io win r.. ,r.fr-airt -------------- « •- ;.llu±i.li Diilnct iourney. With two HIGH .SCHOOL Form. Week chip b W Blur nod . -3r rr« t r m u Tormentors Get First' Music Students Give Recital PRILL HALL MIXER TOMOt EVERYBODY SAY AFTER FIRST MINES TOMORROW r a Left: High t : Julio Cento Zacker Gilbert Ralston McCann Moore Brasfjeld Baldwin Bennett Tiubles Lyndon Kennedy Marquis 155 THE Activities MO NTANAN THE WEEKLY EXPONENT ESTABLISHED JANUARY 1, 1910 fOutgrowth of Monthly Exponent, Established January 1, 1895) OFFICE—Room 1, REPUBLICAN-COURIER BUILDING The Weekly Exponent is strictly a student enterprise. Its chief purpose is to present to its readers, each week, an accurate and complete rcord of the developments in college affairs during that period and to exert its fuli influence for the upbuilding of Montana State Coliege. The paper is the result of voluntary effort put xorth by the students who compose the staff. __ - - - - - - - I Published every Tuesday of the College year by the staff chosen from the} students of the Montana State College of the University of Montana, Boze-: man, Montana. Acceptance for maiiiiw at special rate of postage provided for in Section 1 1103, Act of October 3, 1917, authorized February 17, 1919. j SUBSCRIPTION RATE Two Dollars Per Year...............Ten Cents Per Copy Students become subscribers upon payment of the regular Activity Fee. j STAFF EDITORIAL EDITOR-IN-CHIEF—Phone 756-W..r.........-....H. L. TENNEY, 23 MANAGING EDITOR............................NONEETA NOBLE, ’23 ASSOCIATE EDITOR............-............... G. C. BOYER, 25 SPORTS EDITOR...............................R. A. BUCKBY. ’24 CARTOON EDITOR..............................G. G. COTTIER, 24 MANAGERIAL BUSINESS MANAGER,—Phone 933-J............—...B. B. MOORE. '24 ADVERTISING MANAGER,—Phone 473............... L. S. GILBERT. 23 ASSISTANT ADVERTISING MANAGER............H. C. BRASFIELD, 26 CIRCULATION MAN ACER,—Phone 26................ H. McOANR, 23 ASSISTANT CIRCULATION MANAGER...........F. A. RALSTON. 25 REPORTORIAL Special Reporters Society.....Harriet Nordstrom, ’24 Sports . Walter Kennedy. 23 Exchanges.....Charles Sehanek. 24 Publicity.Charles Lyndon. ’28 Proof Reader...v Bert Julio, 24 Musk ..... Oct a via Marquis, 25 Agricultural News..........................Leonard Seerles, 24 News Reporter Iris Brown, 25 Richard Ross, 25 Vcrnor Zacher, 23 Ed Heilman. '26 Katurah Tibbie , '25 Don Benntft, 26 Margaret C-eu h ling, 24 Ray Sqnier. 24 Mary Baldwin, 24 REPORTERS BEING SELECTED BY COMPETITION___________] The Exponent has experienced a fairly successful year. The paper has never failed to appear on the hill on Tuesdays as scheduled. During the basketball tournament it was published daily, the issue of the last night being put out in the record time of fourteen minutes after the final whistle of the last game. THE Mxtsamvxm DEBATE Prof. J. Wheeler Barger Coach of Debate ami Oratory Mr. Barger came to Montana State this year from the Kansas State Agricultural College. As Coach of Debate and Oratory he has succeeded in arousing a great deal of interest and enthusiasm among tlie members of the student body, as witnessed by the fact that the record number of fifty students tried out for the Varsity Debate Squad this year. Debating is once again assuming an important place in the activities of Montana State College, intercollegiate debates have this year been scheduled with the University of Montana. University of Wyoming, Colorado Agricultural College, North Dakota State College, and the Kansas Agricultural College, making a total of nine debates, three at home and six away. Those who participate in intercollegiate debates or oratorical contests become eligible for membership in Pi Kappa Delta, national forensic fraternity, and are awarded the gold M.” THE Activities ■iXM .ZXimtM MONTANAN Edward Bell Arthur Bergstrom STATIC UNIVERSITY DEBATES Resol red: That the several states should establish courts to adjudicate labor disputes in their essential industries with power to enforce their decisions. Montana State. Affirmative; University of Montana. Xegative. Decisions: February 2S at Bozeman. Xegative; March 1 at Livingston, no decision; March 2 at Big Timber, Affirmative: March 3 at Butte, no decision. WYOMING AND COLORADO DEBATES Resolved: That the United States should adopt the cabinet-parliamentary form of government. University of Wyoming. Affirmative: Montana Spate, Xegative. Decision: March 3 at Laramie, Affirmative. Colorado Agricultural College, Affirmative: Montana State, Xegative. Decision: March 5 at Fort Collins, Xegative. Walter Carter Charles Lyndon I'm 159 THE a2L Activities MO NTANAN SOPHOMORE TEAM — BELL MEIER TIBBLES IXTEECLASS DEBATE Resolved: That the state of Montana should adopt a court similar to the Kansas Court of Industrial delations. Freshmen. Affirmative; Sophomores. Xefjative. Decision. December 15, Xct atire. FRESHMAN TEAM MACLEOD ANDERSON WILSON THE vM MONTANAM WOMEN IN DEBATE The opening of a new era in debating at Montana State College is seen this year in the appearance of a women's debating squad, composed of seven members selected by a competitive try-out. Debates are being arranged with women's teams of several of the other institutions of the state. On April 20 this team will meet Montana Wesleyan in Helena on the question: Ne solved: That the United States should adopt the cabinet-parliamentary form of government. An attempt is being made to schedule a debate with the State Normal College at Dillon on the same question. Mary Baldwin Dorothy Johnson Gertrude Meier THE SQUAD Olga Weydemeyer Solveig Rivenes Thelma Shaw Keturah Tibbles Johnson Shaw Baldwin Tibbles Weydemeyer Meier 161 THE M O NTANAN ORATORY William Moore ANNUAL ORATORICAL CONTEST A local oratorical contest is hold each spring, the winner representing .the college in the state contest. In 1022, William Moore, with his oration on “American Imperial ism. was the winner of t he local competition, and took part in the state contest held in Helena on April 28th. This year the orators of the college will have an opportunity to try for the honor of representing Montana State in two forensic competitions. An interstate contest with the Kansas Agricultural College will be held in Bozeman on April 7th, while the annual state competition is scheduled to be held in Butte later in the season. EXTEMPORANEOUS SPEAKING CONTEST This year will see the revival of the collegiate extemporaneous speaking contest which has in years past been the source of keen competition among those forsenically inclined. This contest will be held April bth in connection with the Colorado debate. (8 162 vmm jKX'xmzsmK.tszfc. a l9 rama'ttt2 anb m usic :r£?i3£tfrfr THE -«a9f Activities kTSd?;- MONTANAN : rum' I I ■ MIMIMM.. ' BK Donohoe Bowen Buckby Lyndon Cogswell Gilbert Prof. Ewer Cox Mrs. Keister Brown Davenport THE LOOTERS Musical Comedy Management MANAGEMENT Ted Cogswell . . . General Manager Leslie Gilbert .... Stage Manager Carroll Donohoe .... Treasurer The Looters, Montana State musical comedy management, was organized in 1921 for the purpose of staging each year a college musical comedy. Their first production. “The Loot,” from which the organization took its name, was a pronounced success, and was so well patronized that plans were immediately laid for the production of a second show. Last winter the management selected for their show the musical comedy “The Honeymoon Trail,” a show which has played successfully throughout the country. The work was under the direction of Mr. George Davenport, whose energy and experience were vital to the success of the play. Much credit is also due Mrs. Roy Keister, who had charge of the choruses, and Professor Ewer of the music department, who handled the music end of the show. The management is already organizing for another show next year, and present indications, judged by the activities already under way, point to a successful season. r. a MO NTANAN THE -•Ictiritics Moody Mitchell Bunney Van Fleet Julio Conkling Cobleigh Lindblom Rivenes Marstox Staebi.er TORMENTORS Drama tic Club OFFICERS Ai.f Rivenes . Xoxekta Noble George Van Fleet Miss Anna Lindblom Preside n t Vice-President Treasurer Coaeh Edward Bunney Helen Chase Winnifred Cobleigh Fred Cook MEMBERS Margaret Conkling Bert Julio Laurence Lyndon Eleanor Marston Fergus Mitchell Floyd Newkirk Lucille Staebi.er The Tormentors Club, which has been a prominent organization on the campus for several years, is doing some very interesting things in dramatics. Each year one or mere dramatic productions are given and this year “The Truth” by Clyde Fitch was taken on a tour of the state. The Tormentors are fostering interest in dramatics and have been instrumental in bringing Tony Sarg’s Marionettes to Bozeman. The Tormentors also represented the college in the Woman’s Club Stunt Night and won first place. The Club is petitioning the national organization, Theta Alpha Phi. THE XSt 'VSUMtMZWSKtKim 9( It Y. W. C. A. STUNT NIGHT Emerson Auditorium. December .9 “Synchronous Athletic Exercises,” Presented by Sigma Alpha Epsilon First Place “The Modern Girl,” Presented by Pi Beta Phi Second Place k wmmmMwaa 166 THE Activities M O NTANAN “THE TRUTH” Direction of Miss Anna Lindblom CAST OF CHARACTERS Warder Roland .... Lindon . . . . Servant at Warders Becky Warder Eve Lindon . Laura Fraser Mrs. Genevieve Crespigny George Van Fleet Alf Rivenes Bert Julio Laurence Lyndon Lucille Staebler Eleanor Marston Alice Moody Margaret Conkling “The Truth,” presented by the “Tormentors” of Montana State College at the Ellen Theatre April 2nd, Whitehall April 3rd, and Deer Lodge April 5th. had what could be truly called an all-star cast. Every person in the play had taken part in at least two other dramatic productions which have been put on by college organizations, and the four actors taking the leading roles had all taken leading parts in several former plays. Miss Lucille Staebler, who took the role of the leading lady in the person of Becky Warder, handled the part exceptionally well. George Van Fleet, playing opposite Miss Staebler in the part of Tom Warder, showed himself to be a real actor. Miss Margaret Conkling played the role of the gum-chewing landlady, Mrs. Genevieve Crespigny, and was ably assisted by Alf Rivenes, who took the part of Roland, the gambling father of Becky Warder. THE Activities MO NTANAN MONTANA STATE COLLEGE REGIMENTAL BAND The band has become so much a part of all college games and other affairs that its influence is not appreciated until for some reason it does not perform. Mr. Lou Howard organized the first college band seventeen years ago this spring and has been its director ever since. lie has seen the organization grow from a group of twelve instruments, which played on the streets of Bozeman three weeks after the first rehearsal, to a company of thirty pieces which makes an annual tour of the state. Every football and basketball game during the past season has seen the band out to do its part in arousing the pep of the teams and the rooters. During the basketball tournament a concert was given before each session and between games, the music being broadcasted from the college gymnasium by radio. the Activities montanan Barto Otterson Cash more McAllister Neuman Hatveldt Steinbach Beck R. Rouse J. Rouse Wiles Cowan Bullock Jones Donohoe LaBonte Clarkson Cushing Howard Haggerty Kuhl Shanahan Banks M. S. C. REGIMENTAL BAND Lou Howard. Director Piccolo Fred LaBonte Clarinets (I eorge Ola i;ks n Ralph Crushing Robert Haggerty Vern Kuiil Ward Shanahan Cor arts William Burl-Cliff Bullock Frank Cowan Valens Jones Tenors John Barto Hilmore Riek Altos Edgar Fox James Rouse Harold Wiles Saxophones Terry Hatveldt William Steinhacii Rop.lky Rouse Trombones Dewey Cash more George McAleister Pari tone Leonard Neuman Passes Albert Beck Otto Otterson Snare Drams Stewart Avery Kenneth Banks Bass Dram Carroll Donohoe Drum Major: Gordon Cottier jiw umirmw a 169 THE Activities ■'% , montanan Cheever Haggerty Scott Cashmore Ewer Boyer Jones Freeman Howard Blankenship Hollier Patten Schneder COLLEGE ORCHESTRA Prof. J. W. Ewer, Director Violins Mildred Blankenship Stella Hollier Josephine Howard H. C. Cheever Mary Patten S. G. Scott Piano IARG UERITE E V A NS Flute Mary Schneder Clarinet Robert Haggerty Cornets Valens Jones Virginia Freeman Trombone Dewey Cashmore Traps Glenn Boyer Playing in the orchestra has always been a position coveted by the musicians of the hill. The quality of music produced by this organization has brought it many rounds of applause at musical assemblies and other college occasions. 1T0 THE Activities MONTANAN Mitten Peterson Brentnall Osness Mountjoy Hardy Andries Cok Ewer Avery Ralston Cowan Bunney Cottam Ennis Hornbeck Rickman MEN’S GLEE CLUB The historv of the Glee Club almost antedates that of the college, but even though an old institution it has not ceased to improve with each passing season. The club meets regularly for practice and has put on a number of entertainments during the college year. The organization plans an annual tour of the state but this did not materialize this year. However, it went to Livingston in the interval between the winter and spring quarters and put on a program at the Strand Theater in that city. THE vH Activities MONTANAN Rundell Jacobs Patten McConnell Phillips Powers King Foust Bonino Andrews Ayler Marston Burke Hoem Ryan Marquis Gerstner White Walton Cecil Byrne Evans Harris Kenyon TREBLE CLEF CLUB This musical organization for women has this year, under the direction of Professor Ewer, surpassed in number and in quality the Treble Clef Clubs of former years. The fact that college credit is offered for active membership in this club, as well as in the other musical organizations, is a double inducement to those musically inclined to take part. sez 172 THE ictivities ■mmemmmn M O NTANAN 9 Cecil Andrews Harris Evers Phillips Maxey TREBLE CLEF SEXTETTE The Treble Cleff Sextette has met with decided success at its several appearances during the year. “Breezes of Night” and several popular numbers made up one of the enjoyable feature of the College Stunt Night show. Successive appearances have pleased such audiences as the Girls Vocational Congress, the college assembly, and the Kiwanis Club. THE Activities MONTANAN Cowan Bunney Cottam Ennis COLLEGE QUARTET The applause of delighted audiences has called these four singers back to the platform for encores time after time during the past year. As entertainers this smiling quartet is much in demand at college and community functions, having appeared frequently at college assemblies and on special occasions. THE Activities MONTANAN iraiwMMiwwiwiicii'ViiriWM iiimwim h ir rn wimi a RESERVE OFFICERS’ TRAINING CORPS .MONTANA state: college battalion Gilbert Lawton Bell Lincke Kistler Brasfield Arndt H. O. T. (’. CADET OFFICERS Jack Lincke John Kisti.kr Harold White . Pail Arndt Herrick Brasfield William McCune Leslie Gilbert Glenn Boyer . Edward Bell . McQi:een Lawton Cadet Major . . Cadet Captain Cadet Captain Cadet Captain Cadet First Lieutenant Cadet First Lieutenant Cadet First Lieutenant Cadet Second Lieutenant f'adet Second Lieutenant Cadet Second Lieutenant ITS THE Lt. G. A. Jahant Commandant Sgt. L. A. Ellsworth Instructor BATTALION OFFICERS Mary Baldwin Sponsor 177 THE Activities M O NTANAN Kistler Rohrer McCune Lawton COMPANY A OFFICERS John Kistler William McCune . McQueen Lawton Li ( ilk Rohrer Captain First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant Sponsor Company A 178 THE Activities M O NTANAN White Rivekes Arndt Boyer COMPANY B OFFICERS Harold White Paul Arndt . Glenn Boyer SoLYEIG RlVENES . Captain First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant Sponsor Company B 179 THE A Activities MO NTANAN •; - .- x.--- ssmsauiK Gilbert Evers Bell COMPANY C Fred Weldon Leslie Gilbert Edward Bell Lillian Evers Captain First Lien tenant Second Lieutenant Sponsor Company C 195 k amKaamniM 180 THE mmmmemK mJtMOU Activities M o NTANAN st ttj tcxr-aat a Simonfy Banta Sletten Adams Boss Enrico Boyer Davis Almquist Kligora Gay McCune Lantz Thayer Stanley R. O. T. C. RIFLE SQUAD The R. O. T. C. Rifle Squad lias engaged in target competitions with a number of other R. O. T. C. units. In the Ninth Corps Area match this team placed twelfth. The State University team placed eighteenth in the same contest. Montana State College Battalion 181 THE Activities montanan Sutherland Petries Erickson Duffy Peterson Dutton Gruel Johnson Burns Cok Jensen Hartig Dollemore Redpath Mitten Taylor Rumelhart Raaen Storrar Newell Fiscus DISABLED VETERANS’ CLUB Founded October, 1020 The purpose of the club is to promote the social welfare of the Vocational Men and to foster athletic spirit among them. It maintains a summer camp on Middle Creek for the use of the Vocational Men. In the early part of the year the club gives its annual get-together for tlie purpose of enabling the men to become acquainted. 182 1 Ha CO-EDS THE MONTANAN Hoem Kremer Stone Cox Dean Clark Patten J. Noble Davidson N. Noble Moebus Maxey Towne Member not in picture: Mildred Roberts WOMEN’S LEAGUE COUNCIL (H'FICEKS Marie Morbus . Kith Davidson . Jessica Kremer Xoneeta Noble . Katherine Towni Ella Clark President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer President of Council Secretary of Council The Woman’s League of Montana State College has experienced a very useful and successful year. The league introduced the point system for Women’s activities, a new arrangement whereby the activities of women are limited to a certain number of points. In this way they feel that the work of women will be made vastly more efficient and that new talent will be developed. The Vocational Congress for High School Girls is undoubtedly the largest single undertaking of the League. The best possible speakers from over the state and country are obtained for these meetings. It was the good fortune of the League through the efforts of Dean Herrick, to secure Dean Sarah Louise Arnold of Simmons College as chief speaker for the last Congress. 1S4 THE 58 JS 2jSW 8SB WS MO NTANAN Patten Dean Waite Tibbi.es Adams Langston King Makes Cobleigh Baldwin Burgess Flook Y. W. C. A. CABINET Dorothy Burgess Lillian Marks . Elsbktii King . Keturah Tntm.Es Officers I resident Vice-President Her ret a rf) Treasurer The local Y. W. C. A. has been very active and in many ways have made this organization one of the most noteworthy on the hill. At the beginning of the year a committee met the new girls upon their arrival at Bozeman and in every way possible made them welcome. Later in the year they helped in making Community Meetings at Belgrade and Springhill a success, and in this way did much to link the college with the rural communities. Perhaps the biggest feature of the work of the Y. W. C. A. and the one the students know best, is the sponsoring of the Annual Y. W. Stunt Night. At present the local organization is working to raise S1800 which will go toward hiring a full-time Y. W. C. A. secretary for this campus. • hi 1S 5 THE Co-Eds MO NTANAN Moody Burgess Elmer CAP AND GOWN Honorary Senior Women's Organization Dorothy Burgess MEMBERS Roma Elmer Alice Moody The members are elected each year from the Junior Class on the basis of scholarship, character and personality, the number of members depending on the size of the class. The aim of this society is to promote all worth-while college activities, especially those in which women are interested. THE Co-Eds M O NTANAN Waite Moody Mares Davidson McXall Dean PHI UPSILON OMICRON Honorary Home Economics Fraternity Founded 1911 at University of Minnesota Epsilon Chapter Established 1917 Officers Alice Moody .... Lillian Mares .... Ruth Davidson- Hazel McNaj.i................... President Secretary Treasurer Chaplain MEMBERS IX FACULTY Gladys Branegan Blanche Lee Edith Franks Emily Linhoff Agnes Hutchinson Mirdy Maxwell Anna Turley MEMBERS IX COLLEGE Dorothy Burgess Ruth Davidson Lillian Mares Seniors Juniors Alice Moody Hazel McXall Helen Waite 187 THE s2C MO NTANAN ic:aiTiri nn.in.th rw a '■ Sparco Brown Willis Meier Matthews Patten Woodard Tallman i angston Bevans Marquis Coolev Evers Cobi.eigh Rivenes Tidland Reddout King SPURS Honorary Organization of Sophomore Giri.s Founded March, 1922 Officers Lillian Evers . ..... President Gertrude Meier • . . • Vice-President Winnifred Couleigh . . . Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS Alice Bevans Dorothy Langston Solvieg Rivenes Iris Brown Octavia Marquis Ethel Spargo Winnifred Cobi.eigh Jane Matthews Hazel Tallman Genevieve Cooley Gertrude Meier Gale Tidland Lii.lan Evers Margaret Patten Verna Willis Esther King Carlie Reddout Miriam Woodard The purpose of the Spurs corresponds to that of tlie Intercollegiate Knights; one of supporting all college activities and furthering girls7 athletics. The membership consists of three girls from each fraternity and three from the non-fraternity group. memmesms 1SS rar-aa IB MO NTANAN Chrystal Mares McNall Noble Davidson Marston Flook Cox ALPHA EPSILON THETA Women's Literary Society Founded 1919 Bernice Fi.ook . Xoneeta Noble . Lillian Marks . Ruth Davidson Officers 1 resident Vice-President Secretary Sergeant-at-Anns MEMBERS Mary Baldwin Dorothy Burgess Margaret Chrystal Margaret Conk ling Ruth Davidson Bernice Flook Lillian Mares Margaret Maxey Mary Maxey Alice McClintock Hazel McNall Nonetta Noble Katherine Towne The pm'pose of this organization is to gain a greater knowledge of art, music, and literature. imn a 189 4m Co-Eds M O NTANAN mmmxaem a Tumbling Waters KCTIVITIEX WOMEN’S ATHLETICS Laura Asbury Championship for 1922 The point system for women’s athletics, which was introduced by Cap and Gown in 1921, proved to he even as successful last year. Laura Asbury won first place, having acquired the greatest number of points. Miss Asbury was first in distance hiking, second in the speed hike and scored points upon entrance into all events. The results of the contests held last spring are as follows: Tennis: Dorothy Blair, first; Margaret Chrystal, second. Speed Hike: Eleanor Marston, first; Laura Asbury, second. Shooting: Velma McConnell, first; Marie Kirk, second. Swimming: Kuth Wylie, first: Margaret Conkling, second. Distance Hiking: Laura Asbury, first; Lillian Evers, second. 192 THE Co-E(is ■ , M O N TA N A N mi, ...... ....................——a McConnell Wylie Marston Blair Winners of 1922 Events C. G. A. ICE CARNIVAL The first annual skating tournament held under the auspices of the Girls Athletic Club was held at Beall Park February 10. The senior girls won first place with a score of 34 points, juniors second and freshmen third. Olive Schreiner, leader of the Skating Club and winner of first place for 1022, was again high point winner, taking first in all but one of five events. A great deal of interest has been shown in skating this year and it is hoped that next year as good a record will be made. 193 THE MONTANAN Margaret Coxkling President Eleanor Marston Hiking Olive Schreiner Skating C. G. A. SPONSORS Margaret Coxkling Eleanor Marston Olive Schreiner . Marion Arnold . Gale Tidlaxd } IA IiG A RET C11R V STA I. Mildred Morse . Keturah Tibbles Keturah Tibbles Yell-leader President II iking Skating Swimming Rifle Tennis Basketball Yell-Leader Mildred Morse Basketball m wvamm 194 stsavam. ■ .tttmtxmazzmammztzM a MO NTANAN Stockton Miss Pack Sanford Markin IIoadley Adams Langston Marston Rundell Conkling O’Connell Grabber Elmer Meier Snyder Patten Kirk Kuhns Arnold Cox Gibson Farnum Snedecor H. Ryan Stewart Schneider Evers Phillips Campbell Spaiigo McKenzie Rohrer Kellams Reddout Gerstner Johnson Potter Winter Foust Swingle Kenyon Harris Graves King Nelson L. Ryan Byrne Evans McLaughlin C. G- A. The year 1922-23 marks the advent of athletics for women at M. S. C. At the beginning of the autumn quarter, there was effected the organization of a permanent association of college women, for the purpose of promoting and fostering athletics for women in the college. It is organized with student officers and sponsors and operates under a written constitution. Black and white are the official colors; C. G. A. are the official letters, representing the organization’s name, “College Girls’ Athletic Association.” The association is comprised of eight separate clubs whose activities embrace almost every branch of athletics suitable for women. The following clubs have perhaps contributed most to the support of the movement and achievement of success in various lines: Swimming Rifle Hiking Basketball Tennis Skating They have been recognized by the Western Division of American Athletic Association of College Women, and have been invited to join. is mass MMMWMMMMB) 195 Hamilton Hai.l 196 SORORITIES «t am THE Co-Eds .«5c 3m «c a Rivenes Powers Chrystal Maxey Evers J. Noble Nye N. Noble Walker Nordstrom Kuhns Atkinson Moebus Newkirk H. Noble Willis Conkling Chase Cox Baldwin Patterson Border Stranahan Staebler Waite THE viC Co-Eds MO NTANAN ALPHA OMICRON PI Founded 1S97 at Barnard College Alpha Phi Chapter Established February, 1917 PATRONESSES Mrs. W. S. Davidson Mrs. A. H. Sales Mrs. W. N. Purdy Mrs. F. F. Willson MEMBERS IN COLLEGE ClILOE COX Seniors Marie Moebus Noneeta Noble Mary Baldwin Helen Chase Margaret Chrystal J UNIORS Margaret Conk ling Mary Maxey Thelma Newkirk Harriet Nordstrom Lucille Staebler Alice Stranahan Helen Waite Lillian Evers Edith Kuhns Sophomores Helen Noble Elizabeth Powers Solveig Rivenes Verna Willis Alta Atkinson Freshmen Joy Noble Violet Nye Ruth Walker Elizabeth Border Pledges Helen Patterson acTjaaaga 199 THE Jamas Co-lids MONTANAN II arris Berryman Howard Neil Bevans Byrne King Brandenburg Kelley R undell Bigelow Evans Caldwell Shaw Knapp Eagle Burgess Cecil Brown Phillips King Jones 200 ami a Co-Eds C M O NTANAN CHI OMEGA I'OMHflcd at I nirersita of Arkansas: Sigma Beta Chapter established October. J920 PATRONESSES Mr. F. S. Cooley Mrs. W. R. Plew Mrs. Nelson Story, Jr. Mrs. L. L. Howard Mrs. R. P. Seidlitz Mrs. A. J. Walrath MEMBERS IX COLLEGE Dorothy Burgess Seniors Mary English Lindsey Marie Brandenburg Juniors Josephine Howard Madeline Shaw Sophomores Alice Bevaks Iris Brown Beulah Kelley Elsbeth King Esther King Jean McCay Mary Neil Freshmen Tiielma Berryman Mildred Bigelow Margaret Byrne Nellie Cecil Eunice Eagle Rhoda Harris Doris Rundell Pledges Ruth Caldwell Marguerite Evans Anne Jones Lillian Knapp Doris Phillips Margaret Tobin K THE MONTANAN - a Ayler Connors Andrews Patten Maxey Rohrer Patten McDonald Clark Marston Williams COBLEIGH Davidson Cooley Moody Ayi.er Pollard Roberts PI BETA PHI Founded 1SG7 at Monmouth, 111. Montana Alpha Chapter Established September. 1921 Mrs. C. N. Arnett PATRONESSES Mrs. E. H. Lott Mrs. W. R. Stewart Mrs. J. M. Hamilton Mrs. S. C. Lovelace Mrs. T. B. Story Alice Moody MEMBERS IX COLLEGE Seniors Eleanor Marston Kathleen Cameron Juniors Ella Clark Margaret Maxey Winnifred Cobleigh Ruth Davidson Sophomores Genevieve Cooley Margaret Patten Katherine Andrews Freshmen Elva Ayler Mildred Roberts Mary Patten Lucille Rohrer Evelyn Ayler Pledges Christine Kirk Virginia Pollard Maxine Cameron Mary McDonald Ethel Sanford Margaret Connors Margaret Williams THE Co-Eds K-''- MONTANAN White H. McNall Mares Kremer T. McNall Keeler Schreiner Flook Tidland Reddout Rorvik Ryan Marquis Burke Graham Markin Hoem Barry THE Co-Eds MO NTANAN IOTA DELTA Founded May. 1910 PATRONESSES Mrs. C. L. Ancenev Mrs. E. F. Bunker Mrs. L. D. Conk ling Mrs. F. A. Fielding Mrs. G. Y. Patten Mrs. R. C. Purdum MEMBERS IX COLLEGE Bernice Flook Seniors Olive Schreiner Jessica Kremer Lillian Mares Juniors Florence Markin Hazel McNall Octavia Marquis Carlie Reddout SOUIIOM ORES Helen Ryan Gale Tidland Alice Graham Freshmen Thelma McNall Helen White Lillian Barry June Burke Pledges Julia Hoem Alice Rorvik Meier Spain Graves Langston Richardson Tibbles McClintock Beatty Snyder Dreyer Siiaw Towne Watson H. Williams Hayes T. Williams Bryan Spargo THE W) C ——— JkOSfa —— Co-Eds MONTANAN a ZETA KAPPA Founded May, 1020 PATRONESSES Mrs. Raymond Beck Mrs. H. S. Buell Mrs. C. Korslund Mrs. R. E. Brown Mrs. E. O. Holm Mrs. E. B. Xorris Mrs. W. B. Holmes MEMBERS IX COLLEGE Alice McClintock Marguerite Bryan Dorothy Langston Emma Dreyer Lola Hayes Dorothy Beatty Seniors Katherine Towne Juniors Sophomores Gertrude Meier Irene Richardson Louise Spain Freshmen Elvera Peterson Margaret Shaw Pledges Elsie Graves Hattie Williams Ethel Spargo Keturah Tibbles Adena Watson Twilla Williams Julia Snyder FEATURES (Bold y ?n Corporation 3olct s :turc$ 2Zto Studios Culver City California February 21, 1923. To the Winners, Montanan Beauty Contest, Bozeman, Montana. Dear Girl of the North: My congratulations on your good fortune— that is, in being beautiful. For it will profit you in whatever land. It has been a pleasure, indeed, to aid in the selection of the most attractive girls at M.S.C. Very sincerely yours. CL :H LET US DIGRESS The pages which follow are devoted to the less formal aspects of college life W Fiction, Fact and Fribble presented in a form designed to bring back pleasant memories of college days. THE Features MO NTANAN 0 second men. S c rfs f ootc j ng-U o Voo dev Tfe Together ogam Gosh Sfrorji tfornbeck i92j THE Features MO NTANAN COLLEGE LIFE As Revealed Through tiie Candid hi t Well-Meaning Remarks Made by a “Hello, you mushed potato, when did you get in town? Gosh, but it's good to see you. Got anything to do? Hop in and I’ll ride you around for a while. Say, boy, this is sure the cat's tibia of a college town, more nice fellows. and the way they treat you ain’t nothing feeble. They invite you down to dinner, and get you dates and, man. they introduce you to some of the most wonderful fellows! Why. can you believe it. I’ve lived here in Bozeman all my life and I never began to realize how marvelous some of the men were until the fellows at their fraternity houses told me about them. Bur I can’t understand how Hatfield and Hollister can each be such a far better guard than the other. By the way, up there’s the laundry. They sure iron a raggy collar and wash a dirty shirt. And there’s Klienschmidts’ pool hall. The fellows in there belong to the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. They are arguing whether to move the chapter house down here or leave it on South Black. They had to stop holding their chapter meetings here because some Sigma Chi freshmen started playing pool and learned the significance of their Mystic Pool Ball. It is said that a man has to be able to run fifteen straight in call shot before they will pledge him. I guess that’s why they don’t bid me. But they are a great democratic organization outside of Bozeman anyway. Do you know they are trying to outnumber the Masons nationally? The girls say they are hard to get but I think they are just too tight to pay the extra College Freshman to an Acqu aintance Who Is on His First Visit to Oi k City. The Sig Alimis Find a New Pledge ■ 219 THE MONTANAN price for a show ticket. They are going to build a new chapter house as soon as Corp Bowen pays up his hoard bill for the last four years. Their prettiest boy is Ted Cogswell. Some folks say that he is nothing but a handshaker, but he has an M’’ sweater—I wonder how he got it. Next to Ted for popularity conies Joe DeHart and Fred LaBonte. But, really, their strangest member is George VanFleet. He is quite a curiosity. Everybody says so. That’s Fink Willson's store. They sell Whiz Bang and Hot Dog there. Ha. Ha. The Chi Omega freshmen like that store. The Chi O's are a great bunch of girls. Jack. They have the fewest lights and the softest settee of any of the sororities. You can see a big shadow in the corner of the front room on Sunday, Monday. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. Friday, and Saturday nights. That’s Fliat M illiams and Alice Bevans. The dazzling glare is the diamond he gave her. The crowd located around the corner of the next room on the same evenings could be identified as Emmett Moore and Iris Brown—if they untangled. The Chi O’s are running in debt from the high cost of male boarders from the Sig house. They have a keen-cutter of a girl in the form of Rhoda Harris who is famous for the way she dances. And they have more funny looking girls. See, there goes two of them now. That’s Madeline Shaw and Thelma Berry- Fai.i. Rush ( ino.i at the But a Epsilon Hotei. 220 Features THE KMt tzxp , MONTANAN VA7onder X7hat A Freight (§ar Thinks About Gee ure am loaded to the. gifts. v onder whot r ?ey put n me. I feel rSeak T Hah!, I sure am f red The of her. c a dorit took so a u-m. I'd give a 'Or rr xi t nic A -- -) q AH I Know is that I am b med for , ,5oyem an, non t f-fopn dont breakm two. Hy Contents Sure is heauej. M a 11, here lam All unloaded at fast, found that mg carqo yas Z X pledge p hs. Hope I dont get the job ne r ea£ man. Dodo Howard is a Chi O too. I forget who she's going with at the present time. Let's ride up to tlie Iicta Epsilon house now. There it is. IPs that large unpaid-for hotel on the corner. They have the greatest bunch on the campus. It is said that they will pledge anybody whether they want to be pledged or not. They used to be friendly with the Sigs but they are jealous of them now since the Sigs had to order an extra gross of pledge buttons last rushing season. Hut the B. K.'s are still safe in the lead—they had to cut roll call out of their chapter meetings because it kept them into the wee small hours of the morning. They are starting another rushing season now because another payment on their house falls due next month. The fraternity is noted for their grades. If any of the brothers show signs of failing in a subject they initiate the offending Prof, into the group. The funny little fellow with the misplaced look of intelligence is Chuck Schurch, he is talking with Alf Riveues, who is holding his teeth in his mouth while he laughs. lie must have pulled the joke this time. Their most successful active member is Hob Walters. He's engaged! Lots of the other fellows are trying hard though. Tommy Shoe-hot ham has tried every girl on the hill and Jack Lincke takes Mary Baldwin out when no one else asks her for a date. See those fellows following Lucille Rolirer? They are Sigma Chi's. Their bunch is noted for going to school at least three times a quarter but they are jroing to cut that down at least two recitations since the S. A. E.’s gave them THE Features MONTANAN such a scare by almost bumping them out of the bottom place in the Scholarship standing. The Sigs are launching a campaign to have the calendar revised so that they can have more than seven nights a week to go queening in. The fellow tearing along in the lead is Bunny. lie gets his track training from beating the rest of the brothers to his room which is the telephone booth at the Sig house, where he sleeps and eats talking to Maurine Hew. The fellows say he gets his wind from talking for eight hours straight over the phone. The gaudy individual is Torchv Swan, noted for his quiet manner. As a member of the instructional staff at the High School his duties call for that attempted intelligient look. However, nature refuses to hide her handiwork even behind his freckles. The Sigs and Sig Alphs work rare team work during rushing season. First the Sigs frantically try to pledge everybody in the school before Chester Morton gives the signal to the Sig Alphs that they can begin. Then the Sigs sit back and only rush freshmen to help the s. A. E.’s pledge them. They have an athletic chapter and were strong on wrestling When a Fellow Needs q Fnenot The Broken Da.«enport at the Pt Phi House until the Dean announced in assembly that all Firesides must be chaperoned. That spoiled Dick Buckby’s practice so he got engaged to Merle. The chapter’s greatest joker is George Finley. He’s just one big joke. He’s captain of the National Guard, too. and somehow nobody can forget it. Take a good look at that tiny bungalow. It is the Pi Beta Phi House. They told my girl that they are the best bunch on the campus. The best looking one in the house is Mary who does the cooking. It is a boarding fraternity, as they rely on outside boarders for support. I was reading the minutes of their iast meeting at their house last night. I remember some of it: “The house committee requested that Sister Davidson and Mr. Cottier be asked to pay the cost of repairing the davenport. Members were called upon to tell of their work in school activities during the past week. The Ayler twins responded with a detailed report of last week’s dates, five apiece—and all with different men. The sisters received this evidence of Pi Phi’s greatness with much enthusiasm. Ruth then told the enchanted sisters what Dode said last night, and Eleanor read the best extracts from her last letter from Paul. Such of the sisters who had not sneaked out of the lodge room, and who remembered the words, then sang a Pi Phi ballad 'Ring Ching C'hing’ and the THE aOf Features M 0 NTANAN mbaMHMMMMKi'' ■ • meeting adjourned. Now wouldn't that jar your grandmother’s preserves? Just look at that house with the dirty yard. It belongs to the . O. .1 . club. It is another one of the strong arguments for the continuation of the Barb Organization. Howard Tenney, the most prominent member, is a modest boy retired behind a confusing array of pins and shields. Among the prominent alumni is Tom Astle. janitor at the Livingston Enterprise. They say H. O. M. stands for “House of MOON.” About the most interesting and at the same time the saddest thing about this group is the affliction of one of its members. Slim Hardy. He is engaged in a mortal struggle with Jack Canter for the fair hand, and lips, of Adena Watson. And this has been going on for over six months! Just think of the dreadful expense! I’ll show you the Alpha O House next. You can find the entire chapter at home any evening with the exceptions of Mary Baldwin. Lucille Staebler, and Helen Chase. These girls have dates during the weekends. Mary has broken more hearts, or had her own broken more times, than any other girl on the hill. See those girls with their fingers in their ears? Lucille must be singing. In spite of the fact that the Alpha O’s have five good girls, frosli rushees have been “ r known to prefer the Chi house to the residence on Sixth Avenue. They are fiends for entertainment and are quite generous with their aw you a Li tie fairymyour Home ?-AOTf House. 223 THE Features MONTANAN hospitality. Last winter they gave a card party and sent special invitations to everybody in town who had fifty cents and asked her to bring it with her as a donation. They are poor, but good thinkers as their money making schemes and grades show. Let's go over and see the Omega Heta house. Never go in there though or they will lock you up and not let you out until you take their pledge ribbon. Of course you won't have to keep it though. Their most prominent fusser is Kay McCarreu and their most prominent athlete is Hollis Sanford. They were hard up for pledges one rushing reason so they put their pledge ribbons out on a post and Art Bergstrom took one. They rival the II. O. M.'s in liquid consumption. According to Swede Jorgenson they are the greatest athletic chapter on the hill. Their men are noted for their weak wills, consequently if a girl wants a fraternity pin she picks on an C). B. By far the greatest attraction which the fraternity has is Earl Kelly's -bug which he uses to good advantage. The most eloquent man in the chapter is John Mashin. He is the sort who has an apt word for every occasion—and that word is -I'll hire. We'll go to the Zrta Kappa house next. They are strong for dancing. Every night after dinner they turn on the victrola and dance with each other. Since Tom Astle graduated there haven't been any men around the house, and the two freshmen. Misses Snyder and Graves, know better than to bring their escorts around where the sistern would have a chance at them. 1 have already told you about the effects of Adena Watson's charms. I would tell you more about them but I'm afraid it would make the Iota Deltas jealous. That's the Iota Delta house in the middle of the next block. The girl talking to Duckie Ferrell is Garlic. She is trying to arouse bis courage enough for him to have another date with her tonight. Duckie comes every night and wants to stay to breakfast, of ••■mrse the house mother kicks him out and Duckie is naturally timid. features 1 MO NTANAN THE Xll a Di cky Leaves i he I. D. Horse 'Hie Iota Dolts have gained ground (lin ing the last couple of years owing 10 the growing attaclmient of Lillian Mares to Art Sears—and an Oakland Six. It is fortunate that Venus or Minerva are not here to see this organization which has taken a (I reek name. The shock might be beyond even Tanlac’s influence. Have to leave, do you? What? Got a date with a college girl? Listen, 1 II give you a tip. It she’s a Senior ask her if she isn’t a Freshman and if she’s a Sophomore ask her if she isn’t a Senior. That always tickles them. Hut don’t get in bad by not asking her to eat after the show or she’ll cause you more discomfort than a leaky hot-water bottle. Well, see you tomorrow.” t 225 the i Features • , montanan m 226 THE Features MO NTANAN CoZ eye Jew Jisry or ' fff:'s Swede - Pots ffanaZs - c J n sf CZ)ums Chums aff e Count i i —. 7a re Off 64-02-33 JV 77 i9 227 s a THE Features i!; montanan '•Zests. Afay c 'or A ew fy os ? D C 7 C n 7f 7'Sags 228 a Features MO NTANAN THE 2 29 THE Features MO NTANAN Heshozzom Howe - - Enniware Course: Scientific Handshaking Social Fraternity: Iota Phooltha Profs. Activities: Athletics 4 all kinds including parlor! 4 1) (2) i3i 4.4) : Dancing (1) (2i (3) (4); Conceit ill 4.31 (2) (1): Nature Study and Astronomy (3) (4); Graduated by Degrees (4). Si'TCH A. Nawfulgrind - Knoware Course: Letters and Motes Social Fraternity: Lett us Heava Sigh. Activities: Honor Roll (11 (2) 31 (4): Front Row in Class (11 (2) (8) (4) : Class Scraps (watched them! (1) : Seven Wcarie. Watt A. Funnyface - Punkinsenter Course: Refined Crapshooting Social Fraternity: Yawna Snora Gappa. Activities: Sleeping ill (2) (4): African Golf (3). Thesis: Thumbtacks. Gozza Waddling - - Bootleg, N. B. Course: Home Economical Gossip Social Fraternity: Iota Koppa Hus- band. Activities: Intensified Eating (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) : Reducing Exer- cises U) (3) (5); Ukelele (1) (2) (3) (5) . Thesis: Gertrude as a Name for a Girl. Thaycallim Gooph - Soula, Miss. Course: Advanced Stable Cleaning Social Fraternity: Beta Nickel. Activities: Absence Committee (1) (2) (3) (4) ; Scholarship Committee (1) (3) (5) ; Assembly (one day) (1); Smoking on the Steps (11 (2) (3) (4) (5); Pool (1) (2) (3) (41 (5). Thesis: The Value of a College Education. Isiiea Knott Keane - - Enniware Course: Homeward Round Social Fraternity: Weliva Wildlife. Activities: Ninety-two Fraternity Pins: Wholesale Hairnet Destruction (1) (2) (3) (4): M” Sweaters (1) (2) (3) (4l: Senior Bench Club. is c zzm a 230 THE Features montanan THE Features montanan i92j 232 THE Features TtPjt MO NTANAN THE Features montanan i0 ; 28 4 JbsStBsL. Features THE MO NTANAN if tmnmm nrfu r i r r yir mtim Trrm FINANCIAL STATEMENT 1923 MONTANAN 17.07 1333.33 0.31 87.89 10.00 327.98 3279.80 0900.0001 85050.9S CASH PAID OI'T Engraving, Printing, and Binding . . . .8 25.00 Stationery, Stamps, etc., for Montanan . . 0.07 Ditto, for Staff........................................ 70.07 Hospital Fees for Feature Editor .... 225.00 Limousine for Editor.................................. 3000.00 To Beauties for Cse of Their Pictures . . . .30 Banquets for Staff.....................................1313.13 To Editor for Personal Expenses .... 1000.00 To Beauty Contest Judge for Choosing Bight Girl 1250.00 To Butcher for Fish for Brain Food . . . 47.51 80931.11 Deficit Made Up by Good Intentions ... 8 1874.13 iiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii muni THAT WHICH CANNOT WAS One twin without the other. YViddy disregarding the advancement of the chewing gum industry. Coach Romney with his hands in his pockets. Maurine looking like the rest of humanity. Floyd in a rainstorm—farewell marcel. A Chi O without an attendant Sigma Chi. Central not saying “Line's busy when we call 500. The following: Ruth minus Dode. Mary without Jack. Alice away from Phat. Solveig not hunting Walter. The “M Store without patrons. As Compiled by Heck, the Office Boy's Pup. CASH RECEIVED. Sale (O’ Books ........ 8 Advertising (Personal) .............. Advertising (Commercial)............... Societies i Humane, Eugenics. Child Welfare, etc. i Fraternities and Sororities............ For Printing Certain Pictures .... For Not Printing Certain Pictures .... Donations (3,000,000,000 Marks) .... THE j Sk Features NTANAN 236 THE MO NTANAN THE mtmmmmwam MONTANAN MMIMNMQeRMMMNMM MB • THE Features montanan i92j 239 THE si — ] mm T M O NTA.NAN A WORD BEFORE WE CLOSE As the last lines of the Montanan of 1023 are being moulded into hot type and the big press is putting its impression on sheet after sheet of Old Ivory paper, we wish to express the appreciation due all who have contributed in any way to rhe success of this year book. The present undertaking has been fortunate in. having on its staff people of real ability and initiative who have handled their respective departments in a manner which required little supervision. The measure of their success is the students appreciation of this annual. Space does not permit of individual recognition of all who have helped toward the successful culmination of this year's Montanan, but we feel that there are some who merit special mention. Mr. Ray Bowden was found ever willing to help us solve our technical problems in the light of his editorial experience. To the two Messrs. Schlech-ten should go the credit for the high quality of the photographs. Professor cheever made a real contribution as director of the art work. We have enjoyed the most pleasant relations with the Bureau of Engraving. and Mr. J. J. Slier, who personally supervised our engraving work, deserves the credit for a number of the unique features of this volume. The splendid work of the Tribune Printing Company of Great Falls, under the supervision of Mr. W. F. Bennyhoff. has made possible the full realization of our dream of the 1023 Montanan: -Something different—something better—and OFT ON TIMF. ’ If the editorship of the Montanan has necessitated the sacrifice of many lesser interests, if it has presented problems difficult of solution, it has also brought its pleasures, its never-to-be-forgotten associations, and the real joy of absorbing work to do. Tut: Editor. OUR ADVERTISERS OUR ADVERTISERS deserve the patronage of all fair-minded people not alone because they offer the best in Quality, Service and Value, but also because they support all worthy enterprises THE . Idvertisers M O NTANAN you might call it “The College Store ’ we specialize so highly on what is “it” for the college trade—but it is generally known as J HOLLOWAY’S Lowest Priced High Grade Store in the Northwest 242 Advertisers THE MONTANAN Iris had a little pet : Its heart teas pare an snotr. I ad erertjtrhcre that Iris treat Emmett teas sure to (JO. One day the pet reformed And joined the Bouffons. Lo! Xotc he's learned to shake A tricked shim-mtj-o. - ———— — .i.. ———. | A Store of Friendly Service—Your ! Drug Store i i You are welcome at this store, whatever your errand; whether it be to use the phone or to buy a stamp. Cox-Poetter Drug Company 10 K. Main Phone 12$ -------------------- ----------------------- Do you know how little would be the cost of building a four or five room house? Call on our plan Service Department and let us help you. Copeland Lumber Co. THE Advertisers MONTANAN a Books are soon forgotten, But memories long survive. Kramer’s Cafe E Q F S u F E A I R L C V I I I T E C Y N C E Y 22 East Main and Elks' Club Building- After the Dance Parties and Fraternity Banquets D. E. KRAMER Domestic Science Always finds a ready, willing and tireless servant in Electric Service. Electric Ranges Washing Machines Dish Washers Percolators Toasters and a multitude of other app1i a n c e s lighten the burden of household drudgery. The Montana Power i Company . ------------- The Best Candies Are the cheapest Ask For Purple Gold Chocolates Extraordinary i We also carry a complete line of five and ten cent bar goods Lindsay Bozeman Company (Wholesalers) •J - - - i i — — - _ .—...... 1 | More Strong Characters jyjosT of our youthful strength, once to every man,” KJE’ER was intended to be wasted, THAKE heed! young man, while you can. AS life's such a wonderful battle KTO one, but wants to get through, AWAKE! Make your life righteous, JURTURE your name—that’s you. ! SAWYER'S A Stalwart Good Name 4 ------------------------------ and ot comp eiion that rubs off. Roecher’s Drug Store CAMERAS AND SUPPLIES DEVELOPING AND PRINTING Columbia Grafonolas and Records I ---------------------------------- • mmJ CiS ZL'wa Advertisers THE ' tmwwMxzasn xi« M O NTANAN :♦ BUY IT FROM Story o7Wotor Supply And “Save the Difference” IF IT CONCERNS AN ACCESSORY FOR AN AUTOMOBILE—WE HAVE IT From Tire to Top. From Radiator to Gas Tank. We carry the largest stock of tires and tubes of any retail accessory house in the northwest. Our stock is complete in every detail. We don’t sell prunes or soda pop, but we do sell automobile accessories, and give service equalled by none. We are the originators of low-priced gas. Both our gas stations open every day of the week. Our store and gas station, corner of main and grand, open EVERY NIGHT until twelve o’clock. Yours for service STORY MOTOR SUPPLY, Inc. 129 West Main COCHRAN, Managei Bozeman Montana oMEN You Can Save Gallatin Drug $10.00 On High-Grade Company SUITS QUALITY AND SERVICE IF YOU EASTMAN KODAKS STEP UPSTAIRS AND SUPPLIES Farrell’s Clothes Shop Satisfaction Guaranteed r THE Advertisers M O NTANAN immKimMzmnm ,« —«mmi w « Stationery « ——- — — — ■ Office Supplies Hauseman McCall Successors to GEO. H. WILLSON COMPANY “SERVICE” Sporting Goods Tobaccos ----------------------------------- Xo one could ever say that Torchy was a Sony bird—Xevert h class ice hare heard chirps. Of course the sudden reforms are quite hard to understand. Just one reason has been advanced up to this time. You see. he has always been Icnown for his celluloid coiffure. All is different now. for alas! the undeveloped feathers are falling one by one. And Cone is to blame. For August (Whew) Swansdown note cannot help repeating,''‘Day by day in every way they're getting fewer and fewer.” The Electric Shoe Repair Shop “Service and Good Workmanship” Shoe Repairing of all kinds by expert mechanics at reasonable prices. Mail Orders promptly attended to. JAMES S. TAYLOR 112 W. Main, Bozeman « 247 lit The BOZEMAN COURIER 1922 Montanan, The Exponent, The Gallatin and other publications are printed by The Courier. We cater to student printing, dance programs, form letters, stationery, pamphlets, etc. WE CAN’T DO ALL THE PRINTING WE ONLY DO THE BEST Every college has its landmarks— Of ours we're justly proud. Although they look unusual They're not the least hit loud. I Light as the proverbial feather They tripple to the ripple Of Tcrpsiehorcan Ballet— At least, so ■Tones and Bunney say. i -----—— -------- --— ——————— — — — ■ -------—♦ -------------------------------------------- . ALL ROADS LEAD TO WALSH’S CLOTHING STORE NO DOUBT—NO DETOUR A tour of inspection will help us prove we have the winners in Mallory Hats Michaels-Stern Clothes Douglas Shoes Cooper’s, Allen A. Underwear WALSH’S -,------------------------------------------- 248 8 THE s 2L Advertisers MONTANAN M. S. C. JEWELRY A recent addition to our stock includes the following articles in M. S. C. Jewelry: RINGS PINS BRACELETS CHARMS DORINE BOXES BOOK MARKERS Sample Line From Which to Select Favors, Etc. Also an assortment Crests for your National Sororities and Fraternities and M. S. C. Seals which may be soldered on to various articles of jewelry. H. A. Pease Co. Jewelers and Optometrists The Hallmark Store PICTURE FRAMING When you see a framed picture that is particularly pleasing it is always the correct framing that has made it appeal to you. There is style in framing just as in the clothes you wear. The frame either makes or mars the picture. We take pride in our work and frame your pictures correctly. We show all the new shapes and finishes. You will find our prices very moderate. HAND CARVED FRAMES For the Favorite Photograph Alexander Art Co. The Store of Quality Gifts DRUGS The REX ALL Store iiiitiiiiiiiint EASTMAN KODAKS BOOKS AND STATIONERY The Bozeman Pharmacy Bozeman, Mont. Cigars Cigarettes M. H. WHITE 115 E. Main St. Tobacco Candy mwmm m 249 THE mUBSSBSfcMLm, Advertisers MONTANAN Better Built Homes With Curtis” Woodwork Have your Furniture “Built-in”—It makes housekeeping easier. When may we show you the latest designs? KENYON-NOBLE LUMBER CO. 120 West Main St. ♦....... ...........— —— yHEN your clothes need cleaning, send them to The Star Cleaners —------------------------ D. H. Budd Co. Plumbing Contractor for the New Buildings at M. S. C. i ---------------- . ....... Advertisers 3S a M O NTANAN ■ —————— When you want j. Flowers or Plants for any occasion | phone or see I I i M. IGangnljr 3FUirisl 315 S. Tracy Phone 95 1 i Other People’s Money Why pin your hopes on other people’s money ? Why not have money of your own? A savings account in this bank will assist to make you independent. Gallatin Trust Savings Bank Bozeman, Mont. Member Federal Reserve System CENTRAL STUDIO Alfred Schlechten PHOTOS KODAK FINISHING COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY ENLARGING CORNER MAIN and TRACY 251 THE Advertisers MONTANAN Y ra JjJrfor .unc ? f me Wreck. r 7rv ns zee Jersey 252 THE ut flBanpm Advertisers MO NTANAN S HOE S FOOTWEAR—NOTHING ELSE X X a 33 o Reed s Bootery C £ X w X 8 E. Main St. Phone 77 ---------S HOE S-------- We know that dreamy look of old. It means (mother heart is sold. Curtain down! It's our turn now— Lucille can surely show us how. f • Fashion Barber Shop Dr. W. C. Dawes J. B. NEIL, Prop. Osteopathic Physician First-Class Barbers Where All Good Office and Residence Fellows Meet Martin Block Bozeman. Mont. BATHS PHONE 461-J 37 W. Main Phone 371 ❖ • • THE MONTANAN Owenhouse Hardware Home of International Harvester Company’s Line of Harvesting and Tillage Tools McCormick and Deering Binders and Mowers Lowe Bros. High Standard Paints, Oils and Glass Cole’s Air Tight Heaters Fairbanks Morse Gas Engines and Pumps Make Your Selections From These Well Known Lines and Montana’s Climate will do the rest STORES AT BOZEMAN, BELGRADE, AND MANHATTAN Monarch Ranges Heavy Harness % i5 rhlrrht?n Bozeman, Montana PORTRAITS MONTANA SCENERY PICTURE FRAMING KODAK FINISHING Bozeman Hotel s • Class of 1923 We congratulate you Completely Remodeled and Re-decorated on your achievement, and trust that among the trials of life you will find a goodly por- Moderate Price Cafe tion of success and happiness. 100 Outside Rooms 40 With Bath IDEAL FURNITURE CO. We Cater to Dinner Dances and Banquets Earl S. Marshall 35 W. Main Phone 372 ❖ ---------------------fr I Ellen Theatre Bozeman’s Finest Theatre Best Attractions Always I SERVICE AND COMFORT POOR THIXOS In Xctr York a woman doctor claim that thousands hare died from, kisses. That's nothing compared to those thousands dpi up to he kissed. —Green Goat. tusexu 255 THE Advertisers MONTANAN Bungalow A place to meet your friends and enjoy a delicious fountain order or a light lunch. We always cater to the students. Your wish is our wav. What'll you have today? MV offer the best in college. What's that? Vi Phi you say? Sorry, hut they're all spoken for. a KaawssaMW ® 256 THE ... Advertisers % MO NTANAN ---------------------------------- H. B. McCay Hardware Power Farming Machinery Bozeman, Montana YOU Call 328 or 513 J DRS. J. A. AND MRS. PETRAUSCH Palmer Graduate Enjoy CHIROPRACTORS JlA Ey JL X rl Over Chambers-Fisher. Bozeman, Mont. Get Your Meats From The Sanitary Meat Market HATS CAPS THE VOGUE The Lowest Prices for Quality GEO. CHAVEY SHOES GENTS FURNISHINGS ❖ 1— 257 THE ME® L Advertisers VtA M O NTANAN The new and unusual—that sparkling reality which is known as the life of each school year—is caught and held forever within the pages of Bureau built annuals. The ability to assist in making permanent such delightful bits of class spontaneity rests in an organization of creative artists guided by some 17 years of College Annual work, which experience is the knowledge of balance and taste and the fitness of doing things well. In the finest year books of American Colleges the sincerity and genuineness of Bureau Engraving quality instantly impresses one. They arc class records that will live forever. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING, Inc COLLEGE ANNUAL HEADQUARTERS” MINNEAPOLIS. MINNESOTA The practical fide of Annual management, including advertising. telling, organization and f. nance, it comprehensively covered in a series of Editorial and Business Management boots called Success in Annual Building, furnished free to Annual Executives. Secure Bureau cc-operation. We invite your corretpon-denee. 25$ THE i wmmmmmxM dSESStiSAmmam Advertisers MO NTANAN Mft49in06MMK£3MH2! iWK£l%i iKaK 81 ---------------------------I YandE Filing Systems That Simplify WOOD OR STEEL I ---- I I STUDENTS SUPPLIES Phillips Book Store 4.------------------------- some secluded corner Where passersby ere few— Take your fjirl and ask her for dust a kiss or tiro. ❖ Yellow Bus Line The Students Bus and Taxicab Service Phone 3-1-4-W That really want to economize should do their Originators of Regular Bus Schedules to College trading at j The i Get Your Palace Store Home of GROCERIES | Hart Schaffner Marx at the Good All-Wool Snappy Clothes i Gallatin Grocery ! Lower Priced ❖ THE m mmrnmam:: e Advertiser MO NTANAN If Your Home Merchant Cannot Supply You Send to 'The Quality First Store” •v CONNELL’S Butte, Montana Keep your garments wholesome and looking fit—you’ll find it an investment in personal pride that’s profitable. Send It to the Dry Cleaners Gallatin Launderers and Cleaners 137 E. Babcock THE Advertisers montanan 261 THE w tvs tmxnxem MO NTANAN mmmmMvm'mmanmm’Mxanri a F. W. McKAY 1103 S. Third Avenue Resident Agent New York Insurance Company Office Phone 732-J—Residence Phone 732-W Bozeman, Montana M cilia's Food Revue at M. .s'. C. Advertisers MO NTANAN wmmmmmrxtm. mmauum« — Idaho, Montana and Northern Wyoming Representatives for GILKERSON’S Addressograph Kardex CAFETERIA General Fireproofing (All-Steel! Filing Devices, Furniture Safes. Shelving Special Built to Order A Good Place Bank and County Work Vault Interiors to Eat Office Furniture Any Kind—Steel or Wood Desks—Chairs—Tables Special Attention Given to Filing: Systems Worked Out and Installed Party Dinners Addressograph Plate Service Mrs. T. J. Gilkerson, Prop. Derge-Howell Co. Butte, Mont. Tel. 461-R 24 W. Granite St. Phone 478 . — :• Quality and Economy Inseparably Associated 11 nrac 263 THE sa asL Advertisers MO NTANAN THE Advertisers M O NTANAN Dr. J. K, Thompson Dentist Over Chambers Fisher’s -------------------------- Choice Meats At The Bozeman Meat Market 435 E. Main St. Phone 187-J MINDER HUFFINE Proprietors Vour Guarantee of Furniture Satisfaction Globe Wernicke Bookcases Hoosier Kitchen Cabinets Hoover Vacuum Cleaners Klearflax Linen Hubs Home Crest Floor Coverings Sturgis Baby Carriages and Go-Carts Standard Sewing Machines Nationally Advertised and Karpcn Levin Bros. Upholstered Furniture Way Sagless Bed Springs Maish Laminated Cotton Down Comforts Sealy. Ostermoor. Hair. Stearns Foster Mattresses Armstrong's Linoleum Congoleum Rugs Bissells Carpet Sweeper Guaranteed Lines Handled by 9 W. Main D. D. SMITH Phone 180 265 « THE Advertisers M o NTANAN New Engineering Main Building. Montana State College j When You Choose j 1 Your Profession j Take time to consider the opportunities that the State of | Montana offers you to prepare for your work in these | important branches: Engineering Agriculture Applied Science Household and Industrial Arts The educational ideal in Montana is to equip the youth of this | state for their chosen profession with training as complete and | efficient as that found in any other American institution. In | training for the above professions, Montana State College is | equipped to rank with the best. For information about any course write to J Montana State College j Bozeman, Montana 266 THE Advertisers 12 h MO NTANAN HOLLINGSWORTH’S Exclusive Dry Goods Shop Specializing in high class silks, wool and cotton dress goods— white goods, Eiffel hosiery, Gilt Eagle underwear, etc. Phone 510 New Location 33 E. Main fCan't You Drive with ont hand, Jac f? 'WZc££ji%rrer' Voo Start A Place to Enjoy Your Idle Hours Cigars—Cigarettes—Candies ARCADE POOL HALL THE «!♦ I ! The Happiness of Your World Purity Butter and ♦ Is Centered in Your Home Decide Now—Build a Home This company is headquarters for building ideas, plans and materials. Call at this office to talk over your building problems without any obligations on your part. Gallatin Lumber Co. 237 West Main. Bozeman, Montana Purity Ice Cream The Best in the City Manufactured by | The Gallatin Milk and Produce Co. Wholesalers in Milk, Cream and Eggs I 10 X. Willson Ave. Phene 63 1 W. 0. BOHART, Mgr. -----—— The Specialty Boot Shop Quality Footwear JOE CONATY JOHN HINES • Bozeman, Montana —-------—______-----—.——— DR. W. E. DEAN DR. D. T. GRIFFITH Osteopathic Physicians Bozeman. Montana « I 1 I 1 I i [ 91 26S the • A dvert isers pw. 'S - montanan THE Advertisers Fashion Park Clothes —Young man, remember that your appearance counts. — Fashion Park Clothes have proven their style leadership and intrinsic value. The Willson Co. Since 1866 H. F. WEST FUNERAL DIRECTOR Ambulance Service ---------------------------- EYES TESTED GLASSES FITTED A. E. SIESS Optical Parlors 35 East Main Entrance Specialty Boot Shop The Cow From Montana Dealer in All Kinds of Livestock W. O. BOHART Breeder of Brown Swiss and Hampshire Swine BOZEMAN, MONT. ------------------------- THE Advertisers sk' M o NTA NAN Columbia Gardens Butte’s Greatest Free Playground With the largest and most beautiful ballroom in the northwest....... Your trip will not be complete unless you visit the home of the largest pansy on earth, situated on top of the Continental Divide. r xnmmm 271 THE vtCM MONTANAN ■5 I Heads up! Meet the world eh in first And knuckle to no man— Xo man—hut what about -Jon? Oh! She irasn't around. .♦---- . — ———— For Real True Value in Groceries Phone 24 Thos. H. Rea Co. -------- —— Trade at WAGNER BROS. You’ll He Money Ahead Everything for College Students 1C East Main St. ----------------------— THE house of per-s o n a 1 service. We have one of the best equipped dry-cleaning plants in central Montana. Your clothes are attended to by expert workmen. City Dye Works 122 East Main. Phone 185 GUS J. STEFFENS The Jeweler i Bozeman, Montana GIFT FLOWERS for All Occasions Tracy Floral Co. Member Florist’s Telegraph Delivery Phone 46 ---------------------- 2 72 THE Advertisers m o n ta nan HOWARD’S The Quality Shop for College Men Where Style and Your Satisfaction Govern CLOTHING FURNISHINGS HATS LUGGAGE SHOES WORK TOGS ED HOWARD’S lou The Hub WE WILL MOVE IT w. T. HOGG TRANSFER 25 N. Tracy Phone 34 : vxmtsm t esazat sa m 273 THE Advertisers MO NTANAN The National Bank of Gallatin Valley Bozeman, Montana : : Established 1904 AMOS C. HALL, President R. E. MARTIN, Vice President H. R. GREENE, Cashier. 0. A. LYNN, Assistant Cashier iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Your Patronage Solicited --------- DANCE ORTON 34 WEST MAIN ❖ The genuine victrola and new dance records are always ready. We carry everything in music all the time. It’s easy to pay the Orton way. BROTHERS PHONE 750-W THE M O NTANAN STATE UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA AT MISSOULA, MONTANA MAIN HALL—FIRST BUILDING ON THE CAMPUS There Are Now Fifteen Buildings Over 1500 students attended the State University during the college year 1922-1923 COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES EIGHT PROFESSIONAL DEPARTMENTS GRADUATE DEPARTMENTS Thorough Graduate Courses Leading to the Master’s Degree LECTURES CORRESPONDENCE COURSES For information write to The Registrar, State University, Missoula, Montana 275 THE MO NTANAN £2VSMf NMUM • i92j 276 THE Advertisers MO NTANAN ...............IIIIIIIINIHIil....................................................Hlllllllllllllll.........Ililllllllll.......................................................... REMEMBER! Your troubles are our troubles; your problems are our problems; your success is our success! Keep in constant and close touch with us and you will % agree with hundreds of other customers that this store is a most reliable place to trade. We outfit the entire family from head to foot— with merchandise of quality as well as the leading styles—at prices that are always right. Congratulations to the Graduate. Let your life, as it unfolds, bring you countless opportunities for service, for pleasure, for growth. Chambers-Fisher Company Always Reliable Bozeman, Montana 1 • ! ■ 277 THE M O NTA NAN COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK BOZEMAN, MONT. Capital and Surplus $450,000 OFFICERS GEORGE COX, President. CHAS. VAXDENHOOK, Vice President. J. H. BAKER, Cashier. H. M. GRANT, Assistant Cashier DIRECTORS George Cox. R. S. Dawes Chas. Vandenhook. J. H. Baker John Walsh A gallant young main Of notorious fame Who spends all his time— (But shoot! this is a rhyme) Xow. how can one explain Just who is to blame, For making him fall— (Darn, again I recall) .1 very fine couple With arms very supple But as for the spectacles (Gee, but this is skeptical)— Why weren't you named Charlie $o 'twould be easier To explain about Carlic! THE k wtaimarmnam Advertisers MO NTANAN i iiiwim n— wmiir-iw a JIT Business men appreciate high quality in jl things as well as in people. And the quality of your merchandise is evidenced no less by the character of the stationery you use than by the manner of your writing. JTT “Tribune Printing” is a proper and digni-□J fied companion for good language, describing good merchandise. You’ll never have' to worry about creating a good opinion of your goods if you use ‘Tribune Printing.” We Have The Plant— The Men— The Ideas mini ik i muuiiL We Give You the Service and Quality Great Falls...........................Montana mis
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