South Dakota State College - Jack Rabbit Yearbook (Brookings, SD)
- Class of 1921
Page 1 of 263
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 263 of the 1921 volume:
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wx, H .Rh 1 when 1921 h :Hank liahhit Published by The Junior Class of South Dakota State College Brookings, :: South Dakota In the Spring of 1920 EINAR J. ANDERSON, - lfdimr-in-Chief GEORGE C. BIGGAR, - - Buxinvss Manager C9 f I l ll 1+ 3 l 1 iw 19 I dackmbii. - iff 4 X ,. 7547 I -ki ff 'L' l'!,' ' Q JZ fu h 'Ely Q 5 J' . W WV! M 2 X-IQSXQW 1 P , .r. A .,-- fx, N Nix ,, , 'Z' X N xx I 5 , 'x.,-- bf ,f4 fx X wx l ffffl., U we-X W X I ug, ' J X X57 X ' 5 ' 1 KX Xu? 7 Wi N u 2, Q: X W 5 W!! Qx I w I - ,f'N l'wxlX x V ,IZ ---.-1' X 5 X, Ng 'X ,f X I -X f f o o 1 .-H,-' 1- Qf' 70 -f f V x 21-1 . A 1 f I . X11 ' f lx K f' nn A f4 y?l , fjgxf' 2 , r A Q54 1 ww' 1 3 f - ff GBWX 1- M f 'Q - . ' f H V- - ,, ,fp 4 -2. Y rx NW Xfr f f , 1,155.3 -- ' fi ,,Q '14 .,'5Q2 , fXg al GTE-5 .'--1555 ,SEM ' f iff? 4 - F'-41g,f'ff'-:W 4551554-312-iffy qi ff 7 to x--I l Klyguuf- Arwxa -'gi f 'W - A' 4 Y' ,f ft V' f 4, r1 -mf 'W- ws ! 'W' 1 P' ff! Jt6iVl'f',.ff ' A ll JQL I ' ku ' if 9 X ' 0:94 If X7 'N 5, ,Q ff ' -nb . 4, If Ky ,,,,,0,4:49jQ4gL,'?'fF2K,+ Q 61,1 V. -Af .AMT-fy, , south Dakota State College Ilinretunrh ur aim in thin, the 15121 .llnrk Tliuhhit, in tn llfillll tn gnu thr giluh nturg uf Glnllrgr Zllifr aah tu pnrtrag auth rrraxll thr nmny plvaumxit inrihrutz rnnnrrtrh llli'h thin nmninrahlr grar. mr hupr gnu will always tinh. mhrn gnu lnnk num' thin ilialiliit. mnnr- thing tn rrmll tu gnur nurmnrirn thr auumriatinna mhirh are an brat tu un. mr hupr that mr haue plraarh niang unh nffruhrh frm. Elf thin hunk mrrta with gum' appruuul mr ham' urrumpliah- rh nur purpuar. Elf nut. rrmrmhrr: A man xmwt nrrnr him timr at rut-ry trahr-mum rrnumrr-rritiw am' rrahg limbs. kflcuef-44'Q, Zfvuffeif afrVf6v7 o one Whom we highly esteem our Class Advlsor BYRON BRIGGS BRACKETT Ph D we dedicate this book. Q., IIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHCH19 Jack ptaljbitql 1nuumnnnmnuun1I1I1nInInnIumumnummum- GX E E 3 E 2 E E 2 E E E , . xx, I . E WILLIS E. JOHNSON, Ph. D., LL. D. E President ' 0 W-T...1,,gl ' '. Y f V , 1 ' If 433 .xg ' 11lllllllllillllllIIIIIIIIIIllllllllIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll C5 SOUTH DAKOTA STAT E COLLEGE XlllllllllllilIlllllllllllllllllIIIllllIlllllllllllllllllllllv- qnp' Q . -llllllIIIIllII1lIHllIlIlllIllllllllllllIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllfCN719 Jack Rabbit-21 'nr I ', 5 E 5 , GEORGE LINCOLN BROWN, Ph. D., E Vice-President and Dean ot the Faculty. if G5 . --nunnummmmmnmmuuInnnmnmunnuuum Qsom-H DAKOTA QIQTE Co Lg-c Ep'n ImmnnIunInnI1I1III1I1uuulnluulmunum E H li, I , ll IllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII! C819 jack Rabbit-21 HQ BOAR RE nl' G 1920 OFFICERS OF THE BOARD HON. T. W. DWIGHT ........................ President HON. I. D. ALDRICH ...... ..... S ecrelary HON. G. H. HELGERSON .... ..... T refmurer MEMBERS ' HON. T. W. DWIGHT ............ ..... S ioux Falls HON. AUGUST FRIEBERG .... ..... B eresford HON. W. C. CAMPBELL ..... ..... H uron HON T. D. POTWIN .......... ..... L emon - HON. F. A. SPAFFORD, M. D. .... .... F Iandreau REGENTS COMMITTEE FOR THE COLLEGE HON. I. W. CAMPBELL ....................... Chairman 5 HON. T. W. DWIGHT. GY' D9 flllllllllllllllIlllllllllIlllllIIIIIIIllIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII CN SOUT H DAKOTA STAT E Co LITE G E 'llllllIIIIIIllllllllIIllIlIIllIlllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll D of nmns f l I 1 ' 1 4 ' 1 4 4 l 4 ! r l 55 .xg 'IIIlllllllllIllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll C53 0 U 1:1-Bell Q Ii 5151 L,-l,Vis.AQ llllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll' 'III ' 19.113011 Rabbit,-2153 , Ill , 'v i I, Dear Palz- 5 I'm back at State-it is Home Coming time, and the dear old campus is just as beautiful as it has always been in Memory. , V S 2 l 4' - 2 ?. -' E hum. lla... I wish you could be here and walk with me amid scenes hallowed because of sacred associations. E ? ss: z :: E 2 E z : :: z 2 E E 2 2 z : :I ::: : 2 E , E E :B 2 E S : E z 1 ::: 3 E 2 :r E 3 2 : 2 W Q' l . I IIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllIIllIllllIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllf Jack Q 'IIIIllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllll A ---dll I I 'gl' wifi, Prexy's home set amid sheltering trees is just as real as in the varying seasons of the old days. llllllll H I ll ll II Hll ll Illllllllllll l Illll llllll lllllllllll Illlll Ill ll Illll But the new greets me on every hand-Wenona and Wecota halls the domiciles of 5 laughing co-eds. A S9 IllI!!lIlIlIIIIIlIllIlllIIIlllllIlIIIIIIIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII S 0 u T H DA K O TA STAT E CO L. L. E G E llllllllllllllllllllllIlIIllllillllllllllllllllllllllllll llll I! Il Illll llllll Illllllllllllillll Hllll llllllllll .Il ll ll Il IIIIHIII . lllfllllllll II lllll Illll Q fi fi Q HIINlI Illll Ill lllllllll Illlf -Jack it- 21fEmllIlIfmfIfmfHI UE U i 'Ili 4 ' , :gf E E E E i 2 i E el i 5 V: 3 E E E E And a new pavilion where the Ag boys battle for honors in the judging arena. E 3? E 2 E .1 5 2 E is E Q 2 i E E E E S E E The Creamery and the old Gym bring memories of buttermilk and basket-ball. E c ,. ,HM , W if 53 . 41 :Wm ,wwf 6, 5ou1-H DAKo jj5vSfrAj5EuC9j,gEQ lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IMI! WW Iv .,' ..1 eg ' 'IlIlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIC519 jack Rabbit-21 'IulInulmmIII1nnununnuumnnnuulmunuuulI' GX url , 3' E But near at hand is a new Armory--splendid in its fullillment of the architects E E dream. E S ? E E 2 E E : Q .' Q A .lQ.,..--'. H . E 'T not 'kr WT. o'f.l t'.., 1 -- ' E - 'g- :. f'.-ms. . ' .- L, ,. 3 f Do you remember how Central and Old North looked on wintry mornings? ? , ' ' 7. 1 GT' llIIIIIIIIIlIlllIlIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllll C, SOUT H DAK OTA STAT E Co ILLEEE IlllllllIllllllllllllIllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll L30 hun' A llll Y 'V 1l uf' 'I 19 Jack Rabbit-21 Q -nr I H, E And the Chemistry building where we racked our brains over mysterious test-tube E concoctions. E -Q..-4, f Nearby now is the Pharmacy garden where in the alchemy of Nature, are formed E herbs of healing. IIE ' IIllIIIIIIIIIIIIll!IlIlllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll DAKOTA,51QIsE.S9lQiCQ15 t 'VW A E : :: 2 E 5 2 z E 2 2 E E 2 Z E :: : 2 E 2 S E E E E E 5 Z E 5 E : E E : : 2 :: r: :: z : e 2 .,r -1nnumunnmmnnnmmmmnIuuuuuunmuumrC5719 Jack psabbit,-21631Inunuummuuun1ununuIIIIInImunumnmnnn. GX 'll gl It's all too wonderful for wordsg pal-the grass-the trees-the stately buildings-all on dress parade-in the glow of summer sunshine. 'D H -. . x The new Ad building. of which we often dreamed, is now a reality. IIIIIIIIIIlllIIIlIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII S 0 U T H DA K 0 TA STAT E CO-L L E lllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIlllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllll' E E 2 : E Q HHICZ19 Jack Rabbit-21Q 4mHW 'V , W r iuuvf' 'llIll', - 3 5 E E E E E I can imagine how beautiful these scenes must he when touched by the magic brush of the Frost Artist. i ' The Engineering building brings thoughts of our Surveying days. llullulllimluummg -NQFQQUTH DAKOTA STA1lE-QQglQVbiEV lllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllll U ugl lliinirf +1 mnmuuunnnuu' jack ptabbit-2163 A 'Q 3 3 3 E 2 2 3 2 Z 3 , . uhh. . 11... A sacred spot is Liberty Grove, dedicated to State's boys who made the supreme sacrifice in the Great War. And through the months and years to come, these trees will be a lasting Memorial to the work they so nobly wrought. H. H. B. '10. . W3 ,,,., ,i1,Lmw5+ A65 So U T H DA K OTA STAT 5 Co Illg G E lllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll' V' 'N : , Xvl I' N ,, m 3' 'v E F2 I 1 'mnmlumnmurmmmmnmmmnmuumnnmuu cw s 0 U T H DA K Q TAL sng5Z55igf., gg'E p IllIIlIlIlIl!lIlllIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII- 19 Jack Rabbit-21gQ A ,E I ! ' ' 'll 1' ' 1 . ' - ' 0.2 IIIllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Jack IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII GX M vl , JY' Il I' 'lllu' I 7 : l zz 2 E 2 l E ' K' : x E 1 E H 2 x if hllullh L. UABBLN, 31. b., E Professor of l-lortlculturc and E Forestry. E E BYRON BRIGGS LERACKETT, IIUBERT B. MATHEWS, M. S. E l'l1. U., Vice-Dean of Faculty, Professor 5 Professor of Electrical Engineer- of Physics. E ing. E E E .mums W. WILSON, H. s., E 1'rot'cssor of Animal Husbzmdry. E ululvou C. SOLBERG, B. S., - ' A -P r if B. M. M. lc., l , 5 1'ro1'm-ssor ot' Mechnnlcnl and UUUMIAN L'ARb0N' M' S' A E Stgurn Engincol-ing, l'roh-ssor of Dairy Husbandry. E . E A1.umR'r s. IIARDING, E B. S., A. M., lqln Urofvssor of History and Political Sclencc. 1 Q IIIIllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII CN S 0 U 'r H DAK OTA STAT E Co L I. E G E llllllllllllllllllllllllIlllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll url... . ly 'I 19 Jack Rabb1t-Zlqjiillnn A 'Im ' it ' gi '31 Al,liEll'I' N. lIl'A1l'I, l'h. Il., Yi 1'l'0f0SS0l' of Agzronomy. W 1 f QW I. V A3 A JOSEPH G. llU'l l'ON, M. S.. E: l'lI STX' XV. lllillllil .M. El Associate l'l'0f0SN0l' ot' Af.Z'l'0ll0lIly. Rl A' A ' l'1'LlfQSSUl' of Botany. H E ulfiwluilfl A. STARRING, A. B., ' Professor of Journalism. FA. CLINTON R. WISIGMAN, ILS., Assistant l'l'0ft!SS01' of Vocational liducntlon. E B. A. DUIXBAR, A.M. E IIAIHIIGS ll. IIRAIJY. ll. N..A. Al.. l'rol'1-ssul' ot' Vocational Hfllllfll' tion. Z 5 V : . LE, Professor of Cllculistry. E C 7 i E W2 . T A A+ A A.,A. -A nmummnnm ffrfqbfiygo Sixggglgqgpec ep uuuumsumumnnnunnmummunuuum- Illllllllllllllllllll 2 .Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll tl E 5 I i 5 E il 5 E E 5 E E 5 5 E ? C -lg ll' ll ilif.lll ' 1unuuuunuuuuuuunn mmum mnmumumr lg Jack Rabbit-21 'IHllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll W1 l i ' ' '3 C, Q QF E 2 E E 5 2 5 E E S E E Z Nldlllllli .l. KENUALL, lj. S., Instructor in English, School of Agricultnrv. . 1 I l l 11. G. MEINZER, A. M., Associate Professor of English. ment. ' ROIRIGRT 15. l1'0RSldE, i'c. P., Principal of Preparatory Depart- w l D. L. SNADER, M. A., C. E., Professor of Civil Engineering. CHARLES C. l1l1'1', D. V. M., GUDRUN ll. CARLSON, li.S., Professor of Veterinary Medicine. l'1'ofessor of Home Economics. WILLIAM E. LA'l l'1N, A. M., Assistant Professor of Mathe- matics. 'llllIIIlIlIIIllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 2 S 0 u T H DA K 0 TALSIQI EHCQ 3515 V IIIllIIllIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllu ll 'lilllllllllllllllllll is LE' 'Ei E C r ..,...... ,ul I . IIllllIlllllIIllllIIIIIlllllIllIIIlllllllII1llllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Jack IIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll ax r .,m,,r' 5 E - 2 E E 3 E E : E 2 E - 2 'E 5 5 5 E SIIIIILICY 1'M.Ax:.1,1f:1:, 15. E E I'I'0fCSS0l' ui' Zoology and Ilurul E E Sanitation. E -E E 1 i 52 1 W E E E E ADA Mctoulmff MW AN'roN llUHS'l'A1i, l'.C.,l5.S., E E Instructor in A11lfllI'lIl2ltlCS. lnqirnotur in Plmrmacv Z E 2 5 5 E E E E ? E E f I A 3 E Z Q Mu. R. slam.:-:s, 1'n.u.,M.s., 2 E l'l'0f0SS0l' of l'h!ll'IlIilCy. E E E 2 E 5 2 E 1 E E ' . E 5 ' c1.A1ucNu1-1 lv. wm1.l.s, A.1s., E E l'IlJWAllll n. ulNNmxv11cs, ALS., M-b-, 5 E Associate lxrofussol- of Clwmjsfl-y. lIlSU'llC1.0l' in Cll0llliStl'y. 2 Z S .Q uranium 5. 1Ax1,o11, A.n., Q lnstrumrtm' in Chemistry. ,fr N9 . I1IImmnIImunnInuu1uunununmuuummnnnmQsoum DAKOTA swq-E IIIllllIIIIIIllIIllIIIIIIIIIllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII' ii ,-, 1 1 E.,l til? i 5 r V. I, Fi: E I 'I g 1 :ing E fi a Eg? if E is F1 E 1 E 'fi -1 13 I' MANLEY Cl-LAMPLIN, M. S.,- Assoclnte Urotfessor of Agronomy. AIAFRED BUSHEY, B. S., Assistant Professor of Agronomy. FRANK IG. MCUALI1, B. S., Associate Professor of Horticul- in ture. MIGRLE NV. Vl'l .L'UM, A. li., riuclpul of School of Agriculture. IIORACE JONES, B. S., Instructor in Dairy Husbandry. .I OH N A. BUNEIAJ, Assistant 1'l'0f0SSOl' of Electrical Engiucrlngx. HARRY C. SEVISRIN, M. A., Professor of Idntomology. I' M--Y - , , IH i 'I' 11 . 'lililllllll 'M '15 1 lr HHN IIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII V S O U T H493 OTA S'r,g-jg. Qgwumlgg lllllIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllillllllllllli- 'IV' E Q C4 D7 O :- E D' ,.. Q IQ .hr-A 'Q A9 m IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllillllllllllllllllillllllllllllillllllllllllllllllll IIlllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllll Ill IIIIIII III Iillllllllllllllllllllllll 'fllllllllllll 0 1. I , , Illl WW ' 11 llllllll lllllllililllllllllllllllllllIll! Jack .5 3 4 'T fi A r rg- 1 z Q35 FE K- 1 Lv. 5 Y: iif, I ,f fl fi gi F- i ' 'E J ll E . Gl4lR'l'RUUE S. YOUNG, A. B., Assistant Professor of llistnry and English. l 1tEl:IMAN ANDREWS, Instructor in Forging. MIRIAM GI'1ltI.Al!1f1, A. li.. Dean of Women. RUTH ll.llGR'L'AAS, Assistant Professor of Physical Education. CARI. S. ISlIG'l'ZGI'ZR, A. li., Advisor of Men. M. KRlG'1'14I MILLER, B. S., Instructor in Industrial Art. NVILIAAM ll. l'OW1'IllS, A. M., 1ADraI'lan and Associate Profes- sor of English. 0 IllllIIllIIIIIIIIlllIlllIlIllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll C, S o U T H D A K 0 TA STAT E IIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllhllu 5 'n uv' A l Q -uununummuuunuu IIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllllfCB19 Jack Ra1jbit4:21 ' nl WWW? ' IM r 11? , mv - i'1 57 Y FQ. 'fi i 1 i Z fir .1 252 Q ii 4 Ei if ! 52 E, 1 GRACE B. WYNN, Mus. Hue., Instructor in Voice. MARIAN CARLISLE, 1-IICIAEN DVORAK, Mus. B., Instructor in Piano. Instructor in Violin. CARI, CIIILISTENSEN, Profs-ssor ot' Music. ARTII UR -I OIINSON, IIlSfl'llC.t0l' in Wind Instruments. llpofcgsgpr of English, EDGAR 0. PRALUILR A. B., M. Acets. lrofossor ol' l,ommu'cinI SCil,llC0. THOMAS NV. BALDWIN, l'll.D., L: 5? E LII E E TE E E W E E' E3 E E 57 523 E 53 E E E ' 2? 1 , , , E E i . 1 2 4 . . .. . C A f.- -.f..f I W W 1 A W.. 4. CX-SOUTH DAlKOTA ST5-TE ggilzgpe Illlllllilllillllllllllllllllllll . 4- MJ llll ' cQ,v19 Jagk Rabb it1-21 A 'IIII :A m nmmuu Q W -- M, - Q A A ADA H. 1fAI.lJWICl,l.. ' l'1'0fussur of lnrhlstrinl Art. LOUISA KIRK, 15. S., GLADXS M. SIAOCUM, 3 Instructor in llomc Iflconumics. IIISIFIICIOI' in lf0ITllIll!1'lIi21l Scienc. QQ 4. A A 3 OMAR N. HRAIJLIGY, 5 Major, U. S. A., Commnndnnt. P :J L. 1 f A j' EI1l'1'll 1'1l'IRSUN, M. A., 3 1 Associate l'rof1-ssor of Umm- EVA HICKIGIJ, li. S., 1'f0'10'm'fS' Instructor in llomc ldcouomics. 2 In E E E : E E E C. A. WICST, A, H., EW ' l'1'0l'ossox' ut' l.'hysic:1l Idduczltion. f 2 ,Lf - 5 SOUTH DAkS,QIAf5IAT E..C0f-I-.EQAE llllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllli . - In w ' 'llIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII t 19 Jack Rabbit,-21 ' III1IIInIIIIIIIIInIIIIIIIIIIIuuuInI1IIIIIIInmumnnnumu' GX Wi 'sul , T W I' E :: E E E E E T-. E Z -.: :n : Ir!! , 4. ll X . .24 13. 1411401810 IIUSKINS, H. S., lustructol' in llnmc Economics. L. N. lAURbON Instructor in Woodwork. GEORGIC I.. S'l'l'IVl'lNSON, B. S., B. S. A., rofu-ssor ot' Poultry lluslmudry. IIAZMI. M. WILLIS, l5.S., Associate l'1'oh-ssox' of Art. MARX L ILB1 R1 SUV Assistant in l.il1rru'y 'md Art Depnrtmuxr. Associate lrofussor ol Modtru Luubuugcs. 15. L. JOHNSON, 1S.S., Assistant in U'1lry Husbandry sf X I 4 ii I, ,...... it -- , 5 H1 GB .xg -lllllllillllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII C5 SOUT H DAKOTA STAT E Co LLE G E Q ll lllllllillllllllIlllllIlIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII- 'llllf lllllllllllllllllllllllll E E E X f X J JUAN 1'AU1.1Nm smwu, m.A., E . 1 T ' . E E r O , , M I 1unuummnmnnnnnnnmmmnmuuuuuuumnlrQ19 Jack Rahblt, 21-fig IIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllIlIlIIIllIIIllllilllllIlllllllllllllllllv ,N ' r .umglj E E E 5 2 I - E E r E E E E Z E R. A. 1.ARsoN. 2 E Secretary of the College. E E E E 1412031139 Sc.hf'u11,1.11's, VNA lummb E 5 . ., XE. Ax r ', E Registrar., Assistant Librarian. E 2 ,E limit Mrahuatez E E E - E 2 r E r ? mmluxn NELSON. E u1,1cNN uoox. 1.151.141 1.. u1':NNm'rT. Il l lllllllllllllllllllllllIllllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllilllll S O U T H DAK OTA STATLE Co L 6E IIllllllllllllllilllllllllll llIlllllllllllllllllllllll I- www , fnimzn iii gjg jack Rabbit-21 Q Q 'Ili , '-- 'tk' - 3 E , 4 E 1 E I 1 ' -1 .r .4 , I I , , , l - Y I i f 5 5 Q it 5 P2 E li , ET A . V tj Prof. N. E. Hansen feeding the wild Siberian alfalfa to the camels at S9llliDal21tiIlSK, SiD8l'iEl, AllgllSt. 1913. 1 E E f v : F I I fn Y ' , ' . Q . , , ij H T .V i .n . r'v: fil' ri L, lie Z gi! W if gel l if 4, P Q E-, f,,, L 2 T- Specimens of the fat-runlpecl sheep hercl, owned by the collegeg they are the only ones I-Q, intense lmlizzmwls. llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll CN S 0 U T H D A K OTA STAT E C O L I. E G E Q IlllIlllllllIllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllli- . 0 Ciffllllfi .-:,g,,::,, .,,, ' Q E 1 T E I 5 'ff M he in the states. These sheep can go without food for two weeks and survive the most 5 2 V 1 V NNI. 1 illlllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllll -Jack GX ,,,... ...lil ill , I, 5 SD Wh Athletics Have Been Successful at State C. A. WEST. Coach West is mostly responsible for the success of athletics at State College this year. He repeated what he has done in every school that he has coached in the last three years, this being his third championship foot-ball team. lt was due to West's keen analysis of plays and ability to make the right change at exactly the right moment that State was so successful in her foot-ball season. He developed a team. the equal of any the college has ever produced from a squad containing a large number of men who had had little more than high school foot-ball experience. State's shift which West developed to perfection in the team was one of the factors that helped to win most of the games. Not only was State fortunate to have Coach West for toot-ball but for basket-ball and track as well. State's basket-ball team was one of the best In'the Northwest. Its success was due to West's alertness finding the inen's faults and his ability to correct them. As a track coach West has a reputation that is enviable. His teams in lowa were always strong contenders for the state title. His Shattuck Academy team of 1919 was the winner of the Minnesota inter-scholastic meet held at the University ol Minnesota. Coach West was assisted by Major Bradley and Hollace Jennings to round the line into shape. Major Bradley played center on two of the best teams that West Point has ever produced. Ruff Jennings is a two-stripe man and needs no introduction to the older students ot' State. These two men did much to make the 1919 team a winner by their line coaching and their methods of putting iight and spirit into the men, mnnumuuuai C, sour H DAKOTA svaggg Co -lice pi IlllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllll- z 2 2 :: 3 :: 3 2 E E E E 3 1: z : nz :- E 19 Jack Rabbit-21,22 IIIII H 'I' f f f '1 ' www IIIIIIIIII ix N FQQQDT EAM zi1f,lfc9ouvH DA g .,.. ll 51.54 .iQil.H1!!if!..1,, 1 N ..'1.fiff ..,., :.l 1 wMj,5QLAQAHfj51IfQL fn I 1 , 1 rr: ll Elg . A - E . Q , L - . e Y P , .,., . ,V,... ., ,, .?.,,, . V,, ,, Wm I F? ii 1 V Qw Vg: jx 'SQ gr-H SLU 192 L nf ' sag IW 50, V5 F qt vim W! i3-V Q: , y irni ' ic' ,ik :ER Q ig P i 55 1 H114 bQUAD . ' 5 2 M O 'J C Q 0 c1Jai'f121L1,a1aa:-wj.WI-mmf:Mla, ,Qmix1. s:1:i21WWh:':i1iwVw'wi 1' 'fi?l1,!31:wIW:i, em' ,mij ',wQiiiI'1i'V1ii:IfTfmH1! f3Qi'mm?!i':Hlf12WmTw7w' M:1i+1fi,m, 'I+ WUmiilmfi21131Z3Z5emQMgL:E212!WE5l WD . e ' ' S LJ IllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll 19 -:jack Rabbit!-21!JD an , UAP'1'AlN-isL1QC'1' JAMES SALISBUKY Fighting Jim needs no introduction. Every student in State College remem- bers how Jim smashed things in the South Dakota University game. Jim was always in the play with his nose on the ball. lt was he who recovered the fumble in the D. W. U. game and scored the only touch-down. Jim was the unanimous choice of his team-mates for the position ot' captain for 1920. Their voice is echoed by the student body. As a tackle Salis- bury has no equal in the Dakotas. He out-played every man he met this year. Fighting Jim was one ot the main fac- tors in the Yellow and Blue defense. Hi: iight is contagious and we need have no fear of not having our team ably piloted during the coming season. CAP'l'AlN RUSSELL WALSETH Bus finished his last year on the Yel- low and Blue eleven with the same success that has marked his whole foot-ball career. As a full-back Bus is recognized as one of the best in South Dakota. He is a hard plunger and a good man in the interference. lt was Bus who was on the receiving end of the forward pass that beat N. D. U. on Hobo Day. ln 1917 Bus was chosen All- State full-back. As a captain Bus was well liked by his teammates and popular with the student body. 1-le was a consistent trainer and a loyal supporter of the coach in all his efforts to develop a team that would BEAT THE U and win the Dakota Championship. lt is with sincere regret that we recall that Bus graduates this spring. We will miss his smile on the grid- iron as well as on the campus. ' 1 'D IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllIIIIIllllIlllllllllllllllllllllll C. S o U '1' H DA K OTA STATAE Co LLE-CIE IIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllli q Y 19 Jack Rabbit-21,5 GX ,,,... ...nil 'Ill I ' E 2 2 1: E E E 2 E E 1:1 1: ::: n ill X9 lml.'l'Il0lll' lliglil Hu:l1'uI Mmmtrmini 'IT l SMASHING NORTHERN NUlilX'lAL'S LINE THE N. N. I. S. GAME State College opened her 1919 foot- ball season October eleventh on a per- fect foot-ball day in a practice game with the Northern Normal on State Field. Both the 'players and the rooters were full ot' light. lt was a fast game and although it was one- sided, both teams fought hard from whistle to whistle. Coach West used every man on the foot-ball squad against the Normal team, thus seeing how they would handle themselves un- der flre. State's shift puzzled the N. N. I. S. line. The game revealed the strong def fense of the Yellow and Blue line, as well as showed glimpses of the speed ot our backtield. State used straight foot-ball throughout the game. The line's defensive work, and Kennard's and Roberts' open tield running, were features ot' the game. Both ot these fleet-footed half backs got away time and time again for long runs that netted touch downs. Kennard's 90 and 60 yard runs brought old State's rooters to their feet and reminded us ot the spectacular runs he used to make in 1917. Final score: S. D. S. C., 495 N. N. 1. S., 0. -qv UAIAII-2ll.X.XSl-JN llighl lim! lll1lQ'l'1llll ll-lil 6 V ...,.... AW!! G73 - -IIlllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Cx S O LJ T H DA K O TA STAT E Co L I. EE. E pf E E 2 z 2 2 :: 2 :za E : 2 : 2 : : E E E z 2 z : 2 E I: 2 s z: 2 z :: 2 : '? Q E E E E E E S E 5 E l E E E 5 E E E .,r QD- -lllllmlulmmlllllllunlllll1IllIlIIllnluullllllnlllnuu Q19 Jack Rabbit-21fQ' ulnllluuuullllulunllllllllllllIlllluulnlulnllllunl. A ,,....... ali Ill V ' I, ITU g H' 'lv n-q-mul. l-' 5 G QE w1l.1..xns1-:Y ? Hlllflhll1'k hluimzlulxn Ill JllVl'S FIRST TOUCH-DOWN DAKOTA WESLEYAN GAME On the afternoon of October the eighteenth, State College received a great surprise on their own Field. The Dakota Wesleyan eleven gave the surprise party. Little was known of the Methodists' strength. yet popular opinion had it that State would have an easy walk away. However. State has never had an easy victory from Dakota Wesleyan. l-ler team came onto State Field with weight, team-work, foot-ball knowledge and a deter- mination to win. Altho Salisbury managed to recover one of their fumbles on an attempted punt and ran for the only touch down in the game, they dld not lose spirit. They fought harder than ever and kept the State rooters and players con- stantly on edge. D. W. U. used their regular style of game, that is. the air route, completing several passes for long gains. However, they were stronger than usual on delayed off-tackle plunges. State had not yet found her stride. Her shift still gave the line trouble as the number of off-side penalties showed. Psychologically, she was on a plateau of learning. From her work in future games it seems she left the plateau behind her that Saturday. Final score: S. D. S. C., 79 D. W. U.. 0. yu-f l Elf? FAIIIBAIRN Quarterback ltlnnogram '19 C3 S 0 u T H DA K OTA STATWE COQLL E G E 'llllllllllllIlllllllllllllIlllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- : E : : : I 1 19 Jack Rabbit.-21 n n 'I l.l l'1'l'Il:'l' Lf-ft Guard Molmgrnln 'lil READY FOR THE HIP THE N. D. AGGIE GAME On October the twenty-fifth the Yellow and Blue played their first conference game. ln a blizzard and the thermometer approache ing zero, they battled the N. D. Aggies to a scoreless tie on the Aggie field at Fargo. The condition of the held prevented much open work on the part of the State team. l-lowever, the Jack Rabbit line held so con- sistently that the Aggies were forced to resort to the forward pass. Even then they completed but four out of their fourteen at- tempts. lt was a game of defense from whistle to whistle. Neither side were in much danger of being scored on. The whole State line played superior foot-ball. ln the backiield Roberts stood out chiefly because of the manner in which he returned punts making a number of long returns, two of them for over forty yards. Dlckinson's punting was another feature of the game. He got off fourteen punts for an average of over thirty yards. Burdett was a tower of strength on the defense, busting thru for a large share of the tackles. On the whole the final score showed the relative strength of the teams. Final Score: S. D. S. C., 05 N. D. A. C., 0. Ill flllll'I'I l' lllfxlll 'Vnvklu ljl0!g'l'lllll 'IT-lil E E 5 I 5 E L. : E 2 E 2 : :I l : 5 IIIIlllllllllllIIIIIIIllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll G. S O U T H DAK O TA STAT E Co Lt,-EE. E Q Illlllll llllIIlllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllll '? 41 'lv' -l1 fl 4 - umuuuu Q19 gack Ranbbivglfg 'av , W f Q 2 1 21 -31 1 ig 5 3 JV1 as l 7 N Q13 Q ,... Nl NUDXNUN lt! ll: llll SIMONSON BUSTING THRU N. D. U. LINE I-IOBO DAY GAME The Hobo Day Game November, the seventh, proved to be the most exciting of the games. It was a close fight from start to finish. At no time during the game did the rooters have time to rub their hands and think of the weather, State started the scoring early in the first quarter when Dickinson's toe netted three points on a drop kick from the thirty- yard line. The rest of the half was a punting duel with Dickinson out-punting Hauser of N. IJ. U. by five yards each exchange. ln the first few minutes of the second half, the Flickertails gained possession ot the ball on State's twenty-yard line thru a penalty. A pass. Boyd to Johnson, put the ball across State's goal for the first time that season. Up until the last five minutes of play it looked as if N. D. had the game safely tucked away. Then State showed a strength that she had never revealed before. Passes from Fair- bairn to lvlonkg Fairbairn to Tommer- aasen, Fairbairn to Walseth took the Flickertails off their feet. ln five passes State gained sixty yards and on a final pass, Fairbairn to Bus , scored the win- ning touch down. Final score: S. D. S. C., 95 N. D. U., 7. '1'UWl'IllS Center mog.:ruln '19 V 'fpfmimfct 5 0 U T HJ? K EQTA gpg 339 L L fs G ep nnumumluuuu1nu1luullumlmuumuuui- 1 : : 3 2 2 2 E :: 2 3 S 2 :: 5 :a 2 2 3 2 2 5 E :: 2 E 2 3 :: E 2 :B z z 3 Z 2 2 : 2 2 2 : --v 19 Jack Rabbit,-21 Il' , HEATING THE U. ' THE S. D. U. GAME State reached the apex of her success November twenty-second on the Sioux Falls gridiron. lt seems unnecessary to repeat the tale. All of State College was there to support the team and beat the And we did it. We will all remember how little McKay battled at center against Bergh of the We can still see Jim Salisbury and Lippert fighting thru the line from the tackle positions. We still thrill at the way Willadsen plunged thru the holes Simonson and Dalthorp and big Stanton opened in the line. All of us recall now Roberts re- turned punts and skirted the ends for long gains. The work of Monk and Tommer- aasen at the end positions has not been for- gotten. Dickinson punted as he had never punted beforel Walseth and Burdett fought like Romans of old. Towers was never as strong on the defensive as he was that day. Tho the U was able to hold these men the lirst half, they were helpless before them in the last part of the game. State plunged for gains at will. We beat the Fillill SCOYGZ S. D. S. C., 133 S. U. U., li. -mnnmnuu l Q s Q U T H DA K Q TA 53451 g-cgg Q Q 6 E p inlnmmunnuuuninmumnnmululmuuuul 19 Jack Rabbit-21 IlllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIlIllllIlIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- A ' CREIGHTON HOLDING STATE THE CREIGHTON U GAME State College received her only de' feat of the season in the close game Thanksgiving Day against the strong Creighton U team at Omaha, Ne- braska. lt was a hard, slow battle be- cause of the ditlicult conditions. The exceeding cold made fumbles common for both elevens and kept them from showing their real ability in carrying the ball. The brunt of the ground gaining was laid upon the two lines and the toes of the punters. Dickinson's booting was a feature of the game. Dick completely out- punted the Creighton kicker and time and again he sent the ball into Creigh- ton's danger zone. Long. quarterback, and Leahy, fullback, were Creighton's best ground gainers. Long runs his team well, and returned punts in a style that rlvaled the work of Roberts, Paulson, right tackle, was the main stay in the Creighton offense. Creigh- ton managed to get away for a long pass that placed the ball on State's yard and a half line. ln the four clowns left, they barely managed to cross the Yellow and Blue goal line. Final score: S. D. S. C., UQ C. U. 7. X9 llllllllllllllIIIIIlIIllllllllIlIIllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllll C, S O U T H DA K OTA STAT E Co L EE. E IIllllllllllllllllIIIIIlllllIlllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllll 'fl uf' l --'n IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlIlllllllllllllllllllllllIll Jack it- 'Ill llllIllIIllllllllIlIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll' GX 'I' lm, ' 1' T RU1il'lR'l'S Right llulf Mwn1og1':un 'lil THE U PIQNALIZED FOR HOLDING SUMMARY OF SEASON lt would not be an exaggeration to say that the 1919 foot-ball season was one of the most successful ones in the history of State College. State has often turned out championship teams and this year was no exception to the rule. With a new coach and compar- atively new men, State won from the strongest teams of both North and South Dakota. Creighton University by her close victory on Thanksgiving Day, was the only team which suc- ceeded in defeating the Yellow and Blue. Not only did State capture the championship title of the Dakotas' but she accomplished that which she has always worked for and never obtained until this year, WE BEAT THE The foot-ball team of 1919 will be re- membered by State College students forever as the first S. D. S. C. eleven to defeat the S. D. U. Reviewing the men that made the past season so successful, one cannot help looking confidently toward the future. Although State College loses Captain Walseth and Charles Dal- thorp, two of her best men, through graduation, we have the brighest hopes for success in the coming season, be- cause of the large amount of new material which Coach West developed so successfully. DICKINSON hott llnlf ll0ll0Hl'lllll '19 E :I : ll- IlllIllllllllIllllllllllllllllllll some DAKOTA slew ggggltvtggwfigg lllllllllllllllllllllllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll' fx E 2 :e 2 E E E E 2 E :: 2 : : : E 2 :: 2 E :z E Q D, ,,....... f ..... w 1llllllllllllIlIlllllIlllllllllllllllllllll Illlllllllllllllllllllll 191-Iaclg Rabblt-21 h IIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIlIIIlllllIIIIllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII' G, ll l -nun- ' MIN 5 l 5 2 1 .,4, ' ' l iq 1.iL.Q-m-P . .- Q f rl E E S E E 5 E BETWEEN HALVES AT SIOLJX FALLS E E SUPPORT FROM SIDELINES The student body loyally supported the E ' fs team throughout the season in a way which V proved decisively how much hearty co- 5 operation existed between the men on the E gridiron and those massed on the bleachers. E Whenever 'pep' meetings were called by E cheer leader Uulhane, either to give the boys E a royal send-off or just an ordinary 'pep' rally, never were we disappointed in seeing 2 a meager crowd turn out. E The large attendance at the games and E the interest shown in the success of tho E team, various Alumni stated, was most re- E markable. More than live hundred students E and faculty accompanied the team to Sioux Z Falls on the special train to witness State 5 College for the first time in history, BEAT E THE U. The city was literally taken by E storm by our enthused rooters from the time E we stepped olT the train until we left again. E Surely where such line spirit and support ? existed between the team and the student S ' I body, it was no wonder that the boys carried E .IUIINSUN , . ,xluulxlx E High' Half away the championship pennant of the Qnm,tCl,bm,k T Dakotas. I-,..,,,.v..'11, I u....'4 ks f. IIIIllllIlIIIIIIIlIlIIIIllIlIIIIlllllllilllllllllilllllllllllllllll SOUT H DAKOTA STAT E COLLEEZVE Q IIIIIlllllllllllllIIIIIllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- Q V' I Y Q ' ----4--- 1 IlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllillillllllllllllllllilIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII mm Q19 Jack Rahblt-21 In IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII uumumm u ufnuulunlmnn - -ur 'mII X Wu , .Q Q 2 AN 3 S lvux E Lett una E H6361 V8 2 E g E 5 . 5 E E BAUKMAN E Left Guard E KGSGI ve S E E smrru E Rignr 'racme E Reserve E 5 gl JARMAN E 1 ac kle S Reserve nv' 'llIIlIlIlIl!IlIIIlllllilllllllllllllllllllllllmllllllllllllllll Cx S 0 U T H DA K OTA STAT E Co L L E E IIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll' ff 'Q 9JackIMabbigQLU TWTmTHT 31W c W 'lfm .'f. 11593156323 5F5 5iiF'E iEpI5e9vep' wmullllllllllllmlllllllmnm J 19 Jack Rabb it-21 ,DAil1TlHl1UHf1l,.I1II1llIl1IlllP7i! gf' J Wumf mmmrmIfJf ,iz g 1 I H ' X ngx I T P 'X 114,11 ': I A 63. - s S my 1? K lmmmmmlnigsouw D E cgbggggp IW I , F L3 E? V, PQ - El FSI CH19JaCkp,ab1jUgf5fWmmi:..T3T:V1iHv1- HD mv' P5 -W' v 3 EW I , iw 1 Ei! A 3 3 Q 1 E THE SQUAD Top row: Bartlett, Thune, Burdett, Graves, Wylzmd, Coach West. Middle row: '1'o111me1'aasen, Culhane, Capt., Carey. Hottom row: l4'Z1i1'DiliI'l1, Johnson, Willzulsen. Hegg. 41mm i1i3j1 WU M: ,M,M,A,gxz:m1fE??S'o'+f5ii5+KfE?2+feTffQ Lie QEQX ,V '- 'l Iillffifl 2,1 Ii, Y Ynff. W -., ..--- ----f IIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII? Q IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllll A ' l Glaqatuin 'Qhurk Qlullpanv turns it uurr In Guptainx-rlrrt Qlarry. ' CHARLES UULHANE, Guard Captain 'Chuck' was an able captain and leader. He is a senior and a veteran of many battles. He played a consistent and unselfish game at standing a I gu rc, though standing is no suitable word to apply to Chuck. He's there with the Fight 'emi' EUGENE CAREY, Forward, Captain-elect Beans will ha x wart. is our best point getter full of pep and always reli bl , a e. As he is a freshman, three more years of Beans sound good to State College fans. ve easy claims as an all-state, if not an all-Northwest for l He lj fa' 'A : Li IlllllllllllllllllllllllIIIllIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllll Cx S 0 U T H DAK OTA V STAT E Co LL EG En IlllllllllIlllllIlllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIII' IllllIlIllllIIIllllllIlIIIllllllllIIIIllIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll -J HD 'llllllllIlllIIIlllllllllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII. GX ,,.. ll nn ' 1 5 ALBERT TH UNE, Center Lars, besides playing the piv- otal position well, is an accurate rim tossei' and seldom misses a follow up shot. His batting average is high and his fast, smooth move- ments show exceptional basket ball ability. Three more years for Lars, hurray! OTTO 'l'0lVllVlERAASEN, Forward Tommy is always in good form. l-le handles the ball carefully, is an accurate passer and nets many a basket. State will draw on long Tom for two more years,-fond ex- pectations. LAURENCE LllJlJER'l', Guard Lip was late entering for hon- ors but made up for lost time. He is a sure player, and may be de- pended upon to be in the right place at the right time and do the right thing. l-le is full of pep and iight. Lip is a Junior. RUSSELL WALSETH, Forward QXUI ln plvtilra-J Bus was the handy man. play- ing either center or forward, and even guard, and always could be relied upon. The opponents always found Bus a formidable antag- onist. Too bad he's a Senior., in s X9 o Q-rA 51-A-r E Co .ls Ee piinunnmnuuunnun I1IInmumnnunnuull 1 T IIIIIIllllllllllllllilllllllllllIIIllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllll S 0 u T H A K CLARENCE JOHN SON, lllllllllllllllllllIIIIllllllllllIlllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllll C519 Jack R8.bbit'21 Right forward Johnson was a valuable man to the squad because of his fight and speed. Tho he did not have an ac- curate eye for the hoop, his assist- ance thru passes and blocks, gives him a claim on a goodly number of State's field goals. CLAIRE WILLADSEN, GLl0.l'CI Greek always covered the whole floor and never missed his man. He has a clever dribble and a quick, accurate pass. He is good at breaking up plays and, glory be. he's only a Frosh so we'll have him in our next three issues. WILLIAM B U RDETT, Center Red is not a 11GW man at basket ball and has two more years ahead of him,-some ahead for State, too. Aggressive. full of iight, Red is a man feared in every proper sense by his opponents. Fast and heady, always ready. IlllllllllllllIlIIllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllll CX S 0 U T H DAK OTA STAT E Co L L. E G E-I IllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllhllllllllll- E 3 E E E 2 i 19 Jack Rabbit-21f,Q'unImnnmmumuuuII1I1InuIunumnmumunm- A 1 Uhr Eewkrihall Svraann With the wealth of material which assembled at first call, one is not surprised that State turned out a championship team which carried olt the state honors. The fact that we won every game on our own fioor and a half of every game played on strange floors, shows that State College had a high grade squad which was never outclassed. There was probably not a team among our opponents, save Creighton, which would have stood any show to win on our own spacious fioor. Not a team did we meet which showed evidence of such good coaching as that of State College. Omaha University was the first victim, being defeated in a slow game by a 22 to 11 score. Unfortunately, several of our home games were cancelled owing to the influenza. Creighton University was held to their lowest scores of the season in two games, State clearly outplaying them in the last half of each game but being unable to overcome the early lead of this fastest team of the northwest. An outdoor flu rally of at least five hundred men at the station, gave the team a good send-off for Vermillion, and a warm welcome awaited it on its return, although they brought the small end of the 18 to 15 score. The team that flrst went in, were too slow warming up and although the University was outplayed after the rlrst ten minutes of play, they got too much leeway at the start. A fairer index of the merits of the State and U teams was shown at the return game at Brookings when we defeated them by a score of 28 to 16. A North Dakota-Minnesota trip netted but one victory, that over the Aggies at Fargo. Fargo College, North Dakota University, St. Thomas and Gustavus Adolphus won by very close margins, less than the usual allowance which must be made for strange and inferior playing Iioors. Huron College played at Brookings and were easily defeated with a score of 26 to 14. The superiority of State team over the University was thoroughly demonstrated February 28. There was a very good crowd, a happy and demonstrative one. The game opened splritedly and for at least live minutes the University goal was securely con- cealed. State drew flrst blood with a free throw, but the University countered with a Held basket followed by a successful free throw. Another free throw by State and then a field basket, it was then that State drew far enough ahead to be out of danger, per- mitting Coach West to play nine different men. 28 to 16 in favor of State sounds decisive, Q. E. D. The state championship title was settled beyond all doubt when State's team de- feated Dakota Wesleyan in a rough but one-sided game on their own floor, by a score f 37 t 11 This game opened close but after a few minutes, State's superior iioor o o . ' work gave them a safe lead, while the Methodists were held to a single basket in the last half. We next played Huron College a return game of which little need be said as the - score speaks for itself. State 46, Huron 10. Although the games have been equally : divided between victories and de-feats, the season has been - highly successful. The team was slow in working up to its 5 final championship caliber and it was not until the second E game with the U. S. D. that it became a real fighting unit. This 'accounts for the loss of a large number of games which E would surely have been won if played later in the season. E GAMES AT HOME E state 22, if State 26, E state zs, E GAMES 5 ta state 11, E . State 15, 5 if state 21, E State 13, 5 State 38, 5 State 9, g state 11, E State 23, E State 19, 3 state 46, State 52, Omaha U 10 Huron 14 s. D. U. 16 A AWAY rnoivi HOME Creighton 23 S. D. U. 18 N. D. A. C. 12 N. D. U. 41 D. W. U. 11 Creighton 23 Fargo Col. 21 N. D. U. 26 St. Thomas 29 Huron 10 Yankton 10 p 4 -4 5,9 1 1 Gio , W P OTA STAT E Co L L. E G E IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII- nan f,,jjj,,.f W3 -Y' Cu SOUTH OAK 1:- 1: :n 2 1: 2 E E EE 1 1 E E E 5 E Q 1mnrww1a1il11 19 Jack Ra.bbitf21fI,Q wg' i FRESHMEN B. B. TEAM Uhr Eluterrlaaa Srriea The games of the interclass basketball tournament were as exciting and as hotly contested as any of the season. Some very hard battles were fought and most of the scores were comparatively low. The preliminaries started the afternoon of January S when the Sophomores and Auto Mechanics mixed in a rough game in which the College men out-classed the Wrench Throwers 38 to 13. The Seniors drew a bye in the drawing and the Preps forfeited to the Freshmen so these two teams went thru the preliminaries without drawing blood. On Friday afternoon the Juniors eliminated the Aggies by defeating them decisively 23 to 9. The battles of the semi-finals were of much better calibre than the preliminaries. Friday evening the Sophomore and the Freshmen staged a thriller to see which should contest in the finals. The Frosh had the bet.ter eye and. when the final whistle blew. a 20 to 11i score entitled them to meet the winners of the Junior-Senior game. This game was even more hotly contested. The score at the end of the first half was 2 to 1 with the Seniors in the lead. The Seniors managed to keep on top and won a 10 to 8 score. The Senior-Freshmen game decided the championship. Excitement was as great as at the S. D. S. C.--S, D. U. game. It was a battle royal with the yearlings playing a good type of basket ball. The upper classmen could not hold them and they romped away with the pennant. SCHEDULE Preliminaries Thursday, January S Afterncon-Sophoinores 1548! vs Auto Mechanics 1131 Evening-Freshmen 127 vs Preps 1l+'0rfeitJ Friday, January Sl Afternoon-Juniors 1235 vs Aggies 193 Semi-Finals Friday Evening-Sophomores 11133 vs Freshmen 1203 Saturday, .lanuary 10 Afternoon-Seniors 1103 vs Juniors 183 Finals Monday. Jan. 12-Seniors 175 vs Freshmen 1193 I Q on . Q sow H Dfw Qfistvigszp LLE E:'E E : E ' 3 E E E 1 E E E 5 :I E 2 E 5 E 5 E E E 5 5 E 5 S 5. S E 5 E 2 E 5 E E 'E' C E I -rv TRACK .,1 ' o ,19 Jack P.a.bbit521,fD I ll R A C :L Lfzrrs 'V CAPT 4' Q S Miami Sprung 5 Bmpr Due to the war track was discontinued and was not resumed until last spring. As most of the material was new our efforts were confined entirely to lnterclass com- petition. Leonard Ladd '20 was elected captaln and a large number ot aspirants were out each night working under Coach Strum. The interclass meet was won by the Freshmen with the Sophomores a close second, showing good material in the lower classes. This year a large number of old track men have returned. The Freshmen class contains many who have distinguished themselves in high school. A keen interest is taken in track at State College. The otlicial high school meet is held here each year. Last spring eleven high schools were represented by about eighty athletes. The new Armory furnishes a good place for early workouts and each afternoon finds many men working off surplus energy until the time when they can get out on the track, which is one of the best in the northwest. Coach West came to us with an enviablereputation both as a participant and coach, and we expect track to come back to its own along with football and basketball. 1 L , .5 Scenes ' High From the I School State Meet Q-, ,,. . V V 1. 1 U' X9 IIIIllIIIIIlIIIIIIIllIIllIIllllllIIIIIllllIIIllllllllllllllllllllll Cx So UT H DAK OTA STAT E Co LLE CKE IIlllllllllllllIlllIllllIlIlIlIllIIlllllllllllllllllllllll- E 1: nz r ? 19 Jack Rabbit,-21,Q 'Ili I My 'Til' 3 6 Q E E 2 E E x E X E Q . 2: .2 2 -A o 4 E ' If xi o E fw X E ,Q f V E ' 5 J EE 5 ' 501 f E ' ' V Q I -4 E E ' L' ,gg :es!v!::g' - M, E E . 1, -2 E . . Ii,::::a1a' :::::::ml:gIxs 5 E ' ' v HJ1 53355152.51 -3EiiQir5qE5EgS ':..f-1 E E -' 3 Q ? 52 E - EE5EEE5iE5ELEE'i ' 5 5 4' '?53EEiE.n.,. ? E E 55555555542 - if E ,, L 1 'Z E E :HF f E filing? 3 -E E , Q E E 'M' F 5 E -I -5' ' ' ' . . , 3 E 'xi'-:.l J, . . 1J,3L,.f:g.::Q05. - I sgfgffo H I, 'I fax? 'Hgh .Ai fd l l'lu 2 E 2 'W ' ' - - .c:q:f2:4f-Zu. -5 iff 'X E E sph! E 5 Af I . me , .du L1 E S 7. 3. e WEN 4:9 G3 .xo N I lw 1 1 C, Souv H DAKOTA ,, T,EmgQ.l:.Qe hlmw. -L - I ' if ' I 'H' :I if . .I I aiu 1' ' I. limi-1 Iv- 'vw I1-I -'--' vw 1 xi. I 1. .. ,I - - 'I 'YM 2 . I --1 awww ' a ix -f gi +IIlllllII1l M IM-i,.,.!,lI,, I V.- I uw - ,J 1'IlWl ,I'Il Mm - A .ILUII II-I IH IUQMIII II I I ii +1 M1 I ,M im f QMS X d f - 1-, :ii E I E E I Q T F 'E 5 I 5 E . Ei! E F 5 A cn SK 2 fh- + K? I C-4 U W Q o 3 F I IPI Q :J Ii: Uv Lm v-' I FT I IQ Im 1 O m P-1 -FL ' E CHRISTMAS FESTIVAL given by the GIRLS' ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION, E COLLEGE AU1JI'1'omuIx1, mac. 10, 1919 2 Miss Ruth Hjercaas, Director, 5 assisted by Miss Marion Carlisle, accompanist. ' - c 5-.c X9 'IIIIIIIlllllIlIIIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIllllllllIIllIIIlIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllil llllllll ' ' VUHHIIIIIIHIIHIIIIIHT IHlllllllIIlIlllH1l1ill1l1llIlIlill11llI1IlIlllIllIllEIIIIIIHIPIHUII ' 5 Ll1fCf..191IaQk Rabbit-215Q,E -3MTlXWmT Q ' I Girls' Basketball Team iii E 'El L: GE E 3 LQ 1 . E11 'fl 4 Valentine. Capt., Benson, Rolfe, Hinds. Goplin, Riley. lfryer. Beatty. Jespersen. if Si 'gi is Q- 1 .. 1 'El 11 PHYEILAL LULL URL L LASB S E E 5 ? C llllllllllllllllllllllll ,,f., , . fx I, . ,W IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIP Jack . Wrestling Who l6C6lVed a draw from the theavyweightsy UHIVGISNY wlestlel Ready to iiool each other. Wrestling at State inter collegiate athletics lhruout bouth Dakota a keen mterest has been evidenced in the manly arts Most ot the colleges took steps which will put the ilstlc artists and giapplers in the lime llght of intercollegiate sports next year At State Lollege under the able direction ot Loach West and Kid Hartwick, an old timer ot' some fame who is taking the auto mechanics course at btate wrestling gained considerable prominence among the red bloods of the institution hour teams of stranglers were picked from the military companies with Herbert bimonson of A Company Archie Rogers ot B Company, Donald Brown ot C Company and Conrad Hetland, ot D' Company as pilots. Thruout the second term interesting bouts were staged. Hartwick made the trip to Vermillion with the basketball team and, tho outweighted over twenty pounds, wrestled the Coyote grappler to a draw with the edge in his favor. Some interesting bouts were held between halves at the home games. Wrestling will undoubtedly hold its own in the minor sports next year. KID HARTWICK, 140 pounds, BACKMAN and SIMON Wrestling and boxing bid fair- to become one of the most popular minor sports in 1 G? X9 flllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIlIIIlIIllIIIII C-,SOUTH DAKOTA STATE CoLL.lECQEf, llIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllIIlllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllll' ? F FSI Q19 Jack Rabbit-21245 . as Boxing HARRY WHEELER and JIM SALISBURY SPICER and BEATTY lheavyweightsl sparring M AJOR BRADLEY Waxing at Glnllegiate Spnrt This hardy twin of wrestling has been nursed into life by the same diet-no. not malted milkfthat caused the art of wrestling to become popular. Without a doubt both of these sports re- ceived an impetus from ex-service men. And many of these men were among the best of the listic artists. Major Bradley capably coached the manly-art fans and with Coach West man- aged the organization of teams and schedule. Phe military companies of the college showed the greatest interest in the sport. leach organized a band of battlers and elected '1 captain. John Monk of A company Harry Wheeler of B company H. Lumberg of c Company and Ellsworth Dell itte of D company were chosen to lead their teammates. Tho none of the mitt artists made trips to other colleges some close and interesting bouts were staged on the home floor between members of these teams. The bout between Harry XVheeler company B and Jim balisbury of the same company aroused 't great deal of enthusiasm. Without a doubt boxing will come into btate college h'1nd in hand with its brother art wrestling. L3 :E :- :za wi E E 5--5 ar: 5 E E h E E E.. ,-l ' 2 , E L E 1 , E I I Y ' E ' s . . C l , ul IW C SOUTH ljlgvfbgfgn Qifngr E, CQLLECE ED' lllllllllllilllllillllllllllllllllllll . - lst -L1 R51 nw, n Illf ' ' I n-V I 4, i I nl Q - ..,, ,,. E 2 -E7 E E E E E 5 ns, llIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfC519 Jack Rabbit-21 Y . Q A 3. y, 1 I 1 I 1 Y .fa - 1 1 if r I I 3 f . i N9 'IIIlllllliiililllllllilillllllllllllilllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII C, S o U T H DA K 0 TA STAT E CO L I. E G E llllllllllllllllllllllilIllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' 4 E S .T v-V' , U A I . Y 5' 1 Fw- .W x J' H ,n npr. x f V n ' ax q Ki , V., ., .iw ., 1 I-O. Q 'SWL' 'FQ , ' .5 . 'ffl-Y, Wifi ,Q , ' 1 x. , . . , A: uykp. , s '. ff- 2 , A 1 , N M, z. ',fx.,L-, Q- EENIIJR5 E . I E A .X E ' 'lllllllllllIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIPC819 Jack Rabbit-21f,Q 'IIIIlIIIIllIIIIlllllllIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIII' GX , Ill fl - Y V X Z I 41 , - ,,, ' 7 .' A A 3 ff ' - fix ? W K ,....--.- 2 5 3 . 05' ' 5 0 'A . E T x xg, , ' -. 2 ' iQ ' 'Q I? : i X ' .,,. .aff 4 A 2 on 3 mm .1 N 1-.Q U I I -1, ,.., ww: Qs E E , X . ' V, . 'I ', ' :STA xy-T585 E E P I , X411 , w New 1'MR'5ygi- 5 5 ' QM - T A E .A yi K I , , XX. xxx v XX A X :I E Ar? 1: X Tiff- my ' k N E -V371 'wil ,-:-A 'fiw:, JE 2 Wd 'Y E E A ff' fynxx 2 1 f H' UT I E ' - effffsifix hh' E E X9 gv ' ' 0??i3:??Z 1 , Ii 1 mm N : 55575 xx I , xi S .1 wg E I f53EE:2i::ix, wx N XJ? S : 4 Q 5919:-if , .',n,,,32.1y wr-igwx .. 4 5 5 E 1 ,R -1 Q 2 f Q-rm H S 5 , WI E Pol' 5 ' 535' 2 E 1 4 . E E ' E Q 3 Q , ff. . , , , Y l W ILM M .w iw ., Cx SOUTH DAKOTA STALTYE CQwy. Lgji llllllllllllllllllllIlllllll l lllllllllllllllllllllll' . MJ Kg Q19 jack Rabbit-21 'unnum unnmnununuun nm l mul- Q nv We-e - Jf' E Leonard Ladd --------- Brookings, S. Dak. Agriculture Myrtle Keck - ---- Brookings, 5. Uak. Home Economics Charles L. Graves - - - Ashton, S. Uak. Agriculture CLASS OFFICE RS - - - - President - Vice-Presidenz - - S6Cl'6t2ll'S' - Treasurer Leonard Ladd - Harley Waters Myrtle Keck - Charles Graves - 5 Y . . , Cl SOUTH DAK0I53fIe1f5g9LL5g5- lllllllllIIIIIlllIllllllllIlIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllr . .- 19 Jack Rabbit,-215g E E E E : E Q - E E -5 Grunt I3e1'gst1'esser Eva P. Hansen Clint .Nlarshman - Harley N. Waters - Effie Atwater - Elizabeth Chase - Homer A. Mathiesen i E E E E E E 5 E E 5 E E E E E E 5 'Ill' -Civil Enigineering. i'l0lllg Ecenoniics h tlivilnldngineeliing - Eiectrical ifngineering Home Economics General Science Agriculture Wentworth. Brookings, Brookings, XVBIILWOFID Redfield Brookings, Watertown, S S. D3 K. S. Dak. S. Uak. S. Uak. S. Dali. S. Unk. . Dali. 1 G' 'D lllillllllllllllIIIIIlIlllIIllllIIllIIllIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll C, scum DAKOTAiSTAT E Co Lag-EEE p IIlillllllllllllllllllllllII Illllllllllllllllllllllllllh- E E E Q IIIllIIIIIllllllIIIlIlIIIIIIlIIIIIllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIP 19 Jack Rabbit-2155'IIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllmmmuIIIullllunnumunulllnlu GX ul nu , Robert D. Dibble ----- B61'eSf01'fl S Dali General Science Rachel E. Shelden ----- Brookings S Dak Home Economics David L. Gilkerson ---- Armour, S Uak Agriculture Andrew M. Allison - - - , - - Brookings S Dak Chemical Engineering Edith Doolittle - ----- 1DSWiCh S UHK Home Economics Genevieve Chappell ----- Bl'00Ki11gS, S UHK Home Economics Clair E. Gaylord ----- BI'00KiI1gS, S UHK General Science -4IllIIlllllllllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII SOUT H DAKQTA STAT E Co E lllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlIlIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll .,r 19 Jack Rabbit,-21ff,Q ' A ' A ll gl Alfred Stumley Lewis M. Woodrnif - Kenneth L. Hood Harry Halvorson Alvin Anderson Oreat Johnson - Rudolph Bucholz Agriculture Agriculture Agriculture Agriculture Home Economics Home Economics Agl'iCllltlll'8 2 3 - Volga S. Dali. E Wessington, S. Unk. - - Elgin, 111. S Brookillgs S. Dak. 5 Brookings 5. Uak. 5 Brookings S. Dali. 2 Brookings. S. Uak. if E cr . A-ra CQCLEEE IIuumnuumnuuIAuIuuuuummuumuuuw - ' Cwsom-H DAKorA QT 'I eo ' 1I4IIIaI1I1I1n4IIIII11I1III1I1unnnnnuummnnuulnnurC219 :jack Rahbit-21rQ -in 1 'W A mn 3 Peter E. H8l'l11E1l1SOH Florence Fryer - Harry Solberg Genevieve Noonan - John W. Headley Ray Bunday - General Science GETIETRI SCiBllC8 Mechanical Engineering General Science General Science GQIIBFELI SCi61'lC9 - Tyler, Minn. UOIEIIIKI. Brookings h'rankf0rt, M enno Brookings Dak. Uak Dali Dak Dak Madge Morrow ----- Mliier. Dali E V Home Economics E Ip, D 'I S ,. W - , l I 1 G75 ,xo AIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllilllllllillllllll Cn Sou T H DA KOTA Sjlgvr gvggjdm E Q E IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllill' hum' 1 lull Y ' ' iii 1 E -3 i llllllll IlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Jack It-21 FQ IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll GX 0 11lm.ff' A ,W,n' .x 3 Q G - 2 2 E E E 9' E L E E .-.I 5 E Er e Grace L. Rohrback ----- - Clark, S. Dak. 2 Home lflconomics E Carl Sacre - ---- Interior, S. Dali. E 2 . .. -E5 Agriculture E Q Carol Munro ---- XVill1l0t, S. Dal: E in Home Economics Z :fl Ross P. Hansen ---- Brookings, S. Dak. E General Science E Clark Jackson ---- Dell Rapids, S. Uzlk. E General Science 2 ,E Genm-0 Vera ---- Cochahzunha, Bolivia 5 E Agriculture E 'i Gurney G. May - - - - Yankton. S. Dak. E Pharmacy E E E QS Q' e 1, If ml Q '7fl' Ui 1 I . 1. C, So U T H DA K 0 TA STAT E Co L E 'll IIIIllIlIIlIllllllIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll' ' IiI1I11I1InInnIInnnIIIunlllnuuullllllumllllllllllmmQB19 Jack Rabbit-21HQ -mf I , E E E E E E E E E Charles Culhane - S Dyer H. Campbell E Cecile L. Swift i 52 Genevieve Caldwell E Jack Reedy - E Russell Walseth - S John Kneebone - E Agl'lCLlltlll'S Gellefill SCiel1Ce 1-lome Economics Home Economics Agriculture Agriculture Agriculture! Brookings Brookings Brookings Brookings Beresford Clear Lake, S S S S S S Uak Uak Unk Uak Uak Dak Eveleth, Minn 3 I, ......, : 'lf W5 .xg '1llllIIIlllllIIIllIlllllllllIllllllllfllllilllllllllllllllllllllll C5 S O u T H DA K 0 'QA QIAJYEY Sggrggvggqp' llllIlllllllIlllllllillllHullql11lHll1mllllllllllllli ll' E -ummmmmmuuunnlmmm:nlnuumummnllurQ19 Jack Rabbit-21fQ A M I ugfl 'Ill' 1 , 'llluv' ' i llllIMUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIII lllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll HI lllllllllllll lllll .lu s S165 'ww James G. Johnson George H. Valentine James H. Shepard Thomas Coughlin Frances Baker Marie V. Huntimer William Emerson - Civil Engineering Agriculture General Science Agriculture Home Economics Home Economics Civil Engineering Pierpont White, Brookings Carthage Brookings Colton Castlewooml r s Dak Dak Dak Dak Dak. Uak. Llak. flIlIIIllllllllIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll CLS 0 U T H DA K OTA i gziiug-gggnblgie pl umllmmlnuunuun f 19 Jack 'IIIIllIIliIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII- GX . l l.' ul Ill , ,v 9 S - ' A Guy Austin - Florice Hutchinson Elias D. Bastian Ruth Peterson Walter F. Robbins Edwin T. Walseth Helen Johnston - - Agriculture Home Economics Agriculture General Science Agriculture Agriculture HOH18 ECOIIOIIHCS Bl'00kiI'lgS Webster. Frankfort, Brookings Carthage Clear Lake Quinn S S S S S S S Dak Uak Dak. Dak Dali. Uak Dak l So U T H DAK OTA STAT E COLL gp E llIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIlllIllllllllllllllllllll- 2 E E E E n 4 Y 'llllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Jack A 2 Louis Vollmer - E Ruth Buck E Ernest E. Michaels E E Grace A. Sloan E E Charles R. Price - if Guy A. 'rhelin - Alla Reeves 1l 'VII' Electrical Engineering HOIIIG ECOIIOIIHCS Civil Engineering Home Economics Pharmacy Agriculture HOlll6 ECOHOIIHCS Brookings, Brookings, Watertown Brookings Rapid City Sioux Falls SL Lawrence, n v Dali Da k Dali Dak Uak Da k Uak 1 GT lilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Cm So U 1- H DAK 01-A STA-gg-gg-,gg 25 E p- I 'llllllllllllllllllllillllllllllIIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!C519 Jack Rabbit,-Qlfb IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIlllIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllh GX ,,,.... .lull 'lllf I , ,y urn 2 E E E E TE' E 5 2 2 2 E E' S E E E E W. G. Parish - ---- - Gary, oak. 2 1.-E - 5 E Agriculture E E Helen Day ---- Clark, Uak. E E Home Economics E E -E S Ephriam Trenner ---- Cash Uak. E E Agriculture E S Blanche Tompkins ---- Brookings Uak. E Ta' Home Economics E 2 Bernard Iverson ---- Madison Dak. 5 E Agriculture E E James D. Faulkner ---- Burkniere Uak. E 5 Civil Engineering E E Edna Robinson ' ---- Redfield Uak. E E . Home Economics 5 E . 5 E E E E E E E E S E E E E 5 1 l 1 will C5 S o u T H DA if o TA STQIVE CQL5 EQQ E Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllll- Q T,..--.-... ,...,.. - ,, ... -W ., ,,,, Wi. Ai.. Af, , W N X N C g9wgI,gQAKoTA STATE COLLEGE Q :f u f X-fb 'H w N' ' 'llllllllIlllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIUIIIIP J ID 'llflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllI' gx an' I ng X E E 1 E E 2 5 E 3 E E 2 5 5 E E 1IIllllllllIlilllllIIlIlIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIITII G5 SOUT H DAKOTA STAT E Co LLEEJE IllllIlIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIlIlIlllIlIlIlIlIIIlll'- n 'N ' -munwumuuumuunnnmunuuunnunmu Q19 jack Rabbit-21 'll IUUIHIW A 2.1 .-3 E E3 Qi +3 V ,, I, iz V E p.. IEE E 5 up :rf If E E UT TUTUHUU 5 5 5 'Mn xi ni. X- IL-JUN UFn'5.,.I - WHHlIIIHHHWl Cy.5iL,D'.1QJ5.K.QQlQ:QQQg E,QQ'-l-E,Q,E,Q lllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllll M 1 2 2 E E E E E 5 : z 5 gl E 2 2 S 11 I A m y .m as . .nnnununmnnnunnuuunumulmmllnulnlulrQ19 -jack Rabbit-21 -mf I 0, Will' 3 .-3 s E E 3 E E E E S ERWIN HAAHR f Sioux Falls HAAHR Civil Engineering Sioux Falls Highg Delphiang Secretary-Treasurer of Engi- neering Societyg Vice Presi- dent Junior Classg Jack Rab- bit Staffg Vice President '20 Class 123 - Studious is no name for it. If it wasn't for the Engi- neers the world would be tive hundred years behind the l.il1leS. ERMA PEPPLE Forestburg ERMA General Science La Porte, Ind., 1-lighg Junior- Class Presidentg Delphlan playg Assistant Editor of Jack Rabbit: Girls' Bandg Treasurer Y. W. C. A.g Vice President Class QZJ. Puts Iirst things first and pilots the '21 class with great ability. Prefers to do or 'Dye.' GEORGE BIGGAR Brookings BlGGAR Agriculture Brookings Highg Mfiltoniang Business Manager Jack Rab- bit: Class Treasurerg Inter- society debatesg Y. M. C. A. Cabinetg Editor '20 Collegian 123. Chasing ads and collecting the coin may be all right but not for me hereafter. Cheerful at times but crab- by usually. 3 , ,,......, Ki. imzqll W g Y I' If mv .sg '1llIIIllllllmlllllllIIIIlllllllIllllmlllllllmlllllllmlillll SOUT H DAKOTA STAT E Co LLE G EA lllllllllllllllllllllIllllIllIIIIllllmmllllHlllllmlll :: 1 El E 3 2 I, ..... .. 1 gl' w 1 . I , I V 'l 'llllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllIIIIIIII Illlf Jack HD IIIIII Il llIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Illlllllllllllllv A 'I ' 'IIIIIFN .x Q E 2 E 1 if S E E E E 5 E E 5 E i 1 -. 1 E 5 . ' iff..- , 1 A 5 5 , L...-...-..e ..g L 11 -.1 E 5 RICHARD GARDNER RALPH TOWERS E E Sioux Falls Clear Lake E Z . .. ,, 2 5 DICK RALPH E E Agriculture Civil Engineering E E , E E Sioux Falls High: Delphiang Clear Lake Hlghp Engi- E E Agricultural Society: Inter- neering Society: Board of E E society debates 1395 Treasur- Controlg Basket-ball Mono- E E er '20 Class 1175 President '20 HAZEL HUTCHINSON gram 1213 Class Basket-ball E E Class 123. Webster 111, 123, 131: Foot-ball Mono- -El E He's just plain, good, de- UH V W H lgram tw' :El 2 pendable Dick. -' 541314 1 A loyal Junior and to be E 5 Forsook studies for the Home 3300110111103 depended upon. E E fussing game this year. Webster. High: Miltoniang -'Although he speaks little. E Z Jack Rabbit Staff: Y. W. C. A. he is playing the gaule all E E 'Tis said that women have the whlle' E 5 more of good sense than E E men. E E Here's to Hazel--may all E -E her life be as happy as this E E year has been. E Q e G13 .xg -'I1llIlllll1!IllIillllllif'i'VW1 llllllllllllllllllllll QSOUTH DAKOTA STATE EOITLE6 lllllllllllllllllflIllllllllllIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllf ESM I. lla we T IIIIIIIIIIIIllIIllIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllIII Jack JMD E OSCAR HOBBS E 2 , White Lake E OLIVER E E E El6CtI'iCHl EIlg'lI1891'il'lg' T White Lake Highg Milton- iang Vice President of Engi- -E neering Societyg Jack Rabbit - Staff g Band. - Our happy carefree saxa- E phone artist. ' 7 2 He cannot be a nerifect E man who is not versed in the E world. Y' 1 I Y .h V ' 'xx IL 'Ay Lf - Q: : 1.4. 5 , f ' -. ' fl . .,.., .J ' -.4 w1 . .i,, , 4 - 4 ,mil BONNIE BUCK Bruce BONNIE Home Economics Bruce Highg Athenian Play. Sweet in the innocence ot youth, And clever too, we think, And though she's fond of all of us The one she loves is 'Pink.' - 1 I 1 1 1 EMMETT DYE Gann Valley UDYE.. Civil Engineering Miller High: Engineering Societyg Board of Control: Jack Rabbit Statfg Class Bas- ket-ballg Basket-ball Mono- gram 111. No cheers, no beers, Nothing hut work for the Engineers. All man-kind loves a lover. 3 Q 'I' J G' X9 IIIIIIllIIIIllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII C5 S0 LJ T H DAK OTA STAT E Co LLE IllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIlllllIlIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll , , . 's 'IIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllIIIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllf J AD 'm' , lv r ,V 2 E E 5 3 E 3 E 2 E 2 E- E E fl :N : E E .: LE E , . . MARCUS CHASE Brookings --MARK General Science Brookings Highg Athenian: Art Club: Jack Rabbit Staffg Y. M. C. A. I have no time for tussing. My time's taken up with work. Down to my smallest duty, You find I never shirk. VIOLET BURGE Castlewood VIO General SCleI1Ce Castlewood Highg Atheni- ang Girls' Band. MOSt independent of Jlln- ior co-eds. Oh, goodie! Here comes John. S E GLENN AVERY Alexandria AV ERY Agriculture Alexandria l-lighg Atheni- ang Agricultural Society. Ot'tseen but seldom heard, I'm striving on ahead, Though others may not know it, Toward all that's good, I'1n led. GT 'D llllllllllllll fig lllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllll CN S 0 U T H DA K OTA STAT E Co I. L E E IllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIlllllllllllllllllllllll' 'IIIlllllllllllllllIilllllllIlIlIlIIIIIIIllllllllIllllllllllllllllllf Q19 Jack Rabbit-21115 1IIIIIIIunumnurlIIIIIuuummmnnunnlmnnlmm- GX Ill' V I 5 V v T, . . t. E as ol iw s. EINAR ANDERSON I Brookings EINAR General Science Brookings Highg Athenian: Art Clubg Editor of the Jack Rabbitg Y-. M. C. A. Cabinetg Editor ot '21 Collegian 121. Whiles away the wee, small hours in the Den. Professes to be a woman- hater, but we've got to be shown. WILMA KN UTSON Brookings BILLIE General Science Brookings Highg Atheniang President Girls' Bandg Choral Uniong Y. W. C. A.g Jack Rabbit Staff. When Billie passes a bluff, you find yourself believing. Forsook nursing and came back to the '21 class. i L '7 ' G 14.5.3 PALMER JOHNSON Brookings POLLY Civil Engineering Brook-ings Highg Atheniang Engineering Society: Jack Rabbit Staffg Y. M. C. A.: '21 Class Numeral. A snuff-chewing, ski-jump- ing, luteiisk-eating son of Norway. Fond of jewels, especially 'rubies.' AllIIllllIIIlllllllIlllllIIIIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII C, S 0 U T H DA K 0 TA STAT E C0 L 5 CME IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIllllllllllllillllllllll E E .: : E E 2 E . ,.,,. , 'll rllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllll III! Jack It-21 A l 'Ill llIIl ' -quill 5 s E I Q E E 5 2 2 S E l E E ! E E T 2 E , i ig 5 ' E Ts f .. 5 5 . g 5 1 - .-., - A E , sir, . - E - .. E E E s ., 'A -- ' . s E W E. E 1 ,, , T 1 5 5 HAROLD URTON -nf ' , PAUL MILLETT 2 E Fulton V L '. Fort Pierre 5 s , ' f, s 3 BABE , ' -'M1LLls'r'1 ' Q E Agriculture General Science 2 E Fulton Hlghg Dairy Judg' A I Fort Pierre High: Atheni- E 2 ing Teamg Business Manager 5' I A - A -. ,V ang Choral Uniong Business E E SODh0m0l'e Cfbllegiall 1255 Manager Collegiang Chairman E 5 Class Basket-ball. NEVA BURGER prom Comnjittee, gg E Wessington Springs E E Our hard-b0il6d ACad6ll1y I 0ne of our preqlledicg, E 5 student. whose motto is 'Doo1ittle.' E E . , . . BUR 'E E E Specializes in dalrymg and H EG R . A capable man who has his 5 E high finance. 'ome cfmgmlcs , own opinions as to how things E E WeSSlngt0n bDI'll1gS Shollld be run. 3 E Yankton Collegeg Girls' Banrig E E Y. W. C. A. ? E When there's a man in the E? E case, Z E All other things give place, E E Tho some may think it right E 5 and others wrong. 5 E Yet we all follow with the E E throng. 5 ,3 e N Y V :H ,I C73 . 'lllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllll CN S O U T H DAK OTA STAT EHCO L 1. g G E X lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllilll' o ml' - A I I ' 1 Y I . s I Li J Ya 5 ' i n 3 . V 1 ' ' f 1 11 l 1 w M. ,. I N, ,, Y ' ' T V Y 1 , y 1. , - , L 1 , 1 I tural Societyg Y. M. C. A: 3,1 .iw h ,, I1 ' .M fv W .. .T N u ,, ,. ., Y I Y 1 .. Q , Wv , 'I I rw H . . WAM., 19 Jack Rabbit-21 'IIInnnummmuumununnuI1IImunuuumnmuu GX Vs. 06. .. PHOMAS STREET ELVIN SHINN Albee ' Larthage IOM ' bHINN AgI'iCU1tl11'G hlectrical lnngineering b. D- b. Lf- PFGDHFS-t0PY' ' Carthage High' Lngineer- !Athef1i3.H: Aft Qfllb' Agricul' ing bociety' 19 glass Numer. Jack Rabbit etaff. FRANCIS ERIE ' Brookings I hate Leap Year' they rush me so! in the pioneer student of the Z1 class. Gee I got to go to the Leap Year Dance. Wonder if 1 can step there again. li hmmm' General bcience Brookings High' Athenian' A . W. L. A. hriendship tried hiiendship true Briendship ever ready lhat applies to you. .,r MSI Y ll! 'fi 1 X9 1IIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllIlllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllll Cw S O U T H DA K 0 TA STAT E Co L I. E G E Q IillllIIIlllllIlllllIlllllllIIIlllIllllilllllllllllllllllllli' ? C Q-2 19 Jack Rabbit-z1,,Q GEORGE SIEVERS Wessington SANDY Civil Engineering Wessington High: Atheni- ang Engineering Society. And though he talks but little, 'Tis a great deal more he thinks, And his mind is rapidly in- creasing, As inward all wisdom he drinks. PEARL ZIEGLER Brookings PEARL Home Economics Brookings High 5 Athenian 3 Y. W. C. A. If Pearl will, she will, And you can depend on it, And if she won't, she won't And that's the end of it. 'V is 133, d -J f 155' L-' ROBERT WEBER Aberdeen HBOB.. Pharmacy Aberdeen llighg Pharma- ceutical Societyg Ph. G. '19. 'Tis better to have loved and lost, Than never to have loved at all. A brilliant M. D. in the making. lunnnll CBSOUTH DAKOTA STATE cggttecngb IllIIIIlIIIIIllllllllIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- z 5 : :. E E l: 1 'lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IllllllIllllllllllllllllll III! -Jack 'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IlIIIIIlllIIllIIlllllllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ,Q JOSEPH PA ULSON - Brandt UJOEH Agriculture School of Agricultureg Atheniang Bandg Agricultural Societyg Men's Glee Clubg Y. M. C. A. A cousin sweet, l must con- fess, . ' Helps while away my loneli- ness. Our Junior tronlbonistf' PEARL PRATT Aberdeen PEARL General Science N. N. I. S.: Miltoniang In- tersociety debates: Collegian Staff: Jack Rabbit Statfg Y. W. C. A. For things to be well done -have Pearl do them. And now she's here, we know she'll stay, until her graduation day. CLARENCE JOHNSON Brookings BAL Agriculture N. N. I. S.' Athenian' Foot- ball R Monogramg Basket- ball Monogramg Y. M. C. A. If gay attire delight thine eye, I'll dight me in arrayg My loudest collars, socks and vest, .I wear for you each day. Gx 1: : E u' Illl 3 Y 1 E E l L- i 2 I L :I IIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll c,sou--H DAKOTA STATE coltscdelpl umluununnmuII1nI1I1I1nnnununnnnlmn- Q 'lllllllllllllllil wz.. Jim' lllllilllIlllllllllllllllllllllllf Jack ng n: ' ,gd 2 . 2 E E 32 E 2 E 'E E i g S S S s E GEORGE JANSSEN GILBERT GILBERTSON E Castlewood Brookings 5 MANS.. ..GILBER,,.. ? . Agriculture Agriculture E School of Agricultureg Athe- S. D. S. C. Preparatory: 5 niang Agricultural Society: Athenian: Agricultural So- E Y, M, C, A, ciety' Y. M. C. A. Treasurerg E . . MARY RIDDLE Dairy Judging 'team 1213 As- E With H0 wan' more Stfikmg Wa'-may sistant Business Manager of E Than his common sense, Jack Rabbit E What a help it will be, HRIDDLEH f ' E S01116 YGHPS heme- , Happy in this, he is not Z bfmcial yet so old, but he may learn. 3 Waubal' Hlghf N- N- I- 5- A Shylock in the art of ex- E Mary had a little chum tmctmg m0ney 2 Whose name was Esther E M3YZ 5 When Esther no more came E to school E Mary also stayed away. C u- ' , ,M g C73 .xg i C. S o U 'r H DA K o TA STAT E go ll I.: E G E IIllllllllllllllllllIlIIIIIlIlIIIIIIlIlllllllllllllllllllllll- E : 2 :I V: E E : :- IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illlllll l IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII GX Jack JJD 'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Vg. ' I L. ' I 2 on ir' 1 1 '- Y f' GILBERT I. RUDEN Hayti 1-ION. G. I. General Science N. N. I. S.g Atheniang In- tercollegiate clebatesg Mem- ber of S. D. Legislature. Nothing great's achieved without questions, So that's what I always do, And when' an instructor comes before me, I always ask him a few. 152 If? gg. ,S SI f w . .. . f .U I4 . I ' -'1 ALETA VESSEY Wessington Springs HLETAH Home Economics Dakota Wesleyang Y. W. C. A. When I awake in the morn- ing, As sleepy as beforeg I just calmly skip my classes, And go to sleep once more. CARLETON SMITH Huron bVIII'HY Agriculture btorm Lake Ia. High' Agri- culture. 'Some girl I was out with last night, boy. Say boy, you ought to have been with me Thanks- giving. CA II I I I I I I , I I ,X I It Il I ............4......I I Ill C5 S 0 U T H DA K OTA STAT E Co L. L E EE , IlllllllllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII' 19 Jack Rabbit-21,3 u ,gd - ... ..- -A - V1 .. .1 ' w rf fl 1 11 fl 'l A 1 2 Wa fn rf MARS MADSON Viborg MARS Pharmacy Sioux Falls Highg Pharma- ceutical Societyg Assistant S. D. S. C. Cheer Leader: Band: Ph. G. 123. My only book's are woman's looks, I sure do love to study, I've found my book, so all you look, With glowing cheek and ruddy. 5 V l GRACE MERRIMAN Brookings GRACE HOIHG ECOHOIIUCS S. D. S. C. Preparatory: Atheniang Y. VV. C. A. Forward on, Forward on, She's passed from Prep to Junior, But now her course is all but changed, 'Tis Trenner now, says ru- mor. ' '9 LORENZ LIPPERT Timber Lake IILIPII AgI'iClllf.llI'e N. N. I. s.g Foot-ball Mono- 5 gram Q Basket-ball Monogram , Collegian Staff. Lorenz is his name, In foot-ball lies his fame, A shark in everything else, His favorite by-word Grim mie Pelts. 5' I A 1: 2 E :: z : : :: :: Q e V as so lllllllllllllllmlmllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllll Cs S 0 U T H DA K O TA STAT E-Q0 E lllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllll' w ' -unuunumnmnumu llllIllllIllllllIllllllllllllllllllfC919 Jack Rabbit-21JJD'IllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIII IIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ln- I .1 's E E 2 E E E S E E 5 E E E E MARION BRUCE K Wall BRUCE General Science School of Mlnesg Athenian play. l Some men are born great, -others to sleep. An actor of great renown. . UREEH MARIE CUSI-IING Ramona, Calif. Home Economics U. of Nebraskag Atheniang Chapel Choirg Choral Uniong Y. W. C. A. She came to us from sunny California, Cupid brought her all the way. She takes Home Ec. and wears a ring, Chances are with us she'll stay. A JV BENJAMIN BAKKE Howard HBEN., sElectrical Engineering Howard High: Athenian: Engineering societyg '19 Class Numeral. A dignified man of vast knowledge is he. Visits Little Norway occa- sionallyf' E .E E E '29 gil I Ill' j , . , G3 N9 4IIIIIIIllllllIIllIIIIIlIlIIllllllIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII C5 5 Ou T H DAKOTA STAT E Co I..l.E G Q IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllll- E :: z 2 E 1: 21 'IIlllIIIlllllIlllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I 19 Jack Rabbit- ,fb 2 .........-,......L.. ,.. ..-.,,,.- , E ' E g E E 2 .- W E --.ul : 2 E E E l i E . s. l E CLIFFORD PECK Hazel 3 P14 LK -' Agriculture ' E b. D. b. L. Preparatory' E ' Agricultural bociety. 5 Be silent and pass for a MRb, FAY ICF E philosopher. ET Oh! I wouldnt say that. St. Lawrence E Ion. : Home .l!4C0Il0lTllCS 5 bt. Lawrence High' Huron E Lollege' Atnenian' Y. W. E L. A. ? Love is blind but marriage E is an eye-opener. Although she left us at E Christmas we hope she will E return to us. v LYLE BURKI-IART Pl8I'I'B BURKE. Gellerhl bCleI1C6 Ward Academy' Agricul- tural Society' Junior l-'rom Lommitteeg Llass Numeral. He who plots mischief for , others prepares evil for him- se . Burke couldnt live with- out us so he came back the second quarter. 1 1 1 w Z Y w w, E ,L ' ' .. .. .... lf ' 2 w ' E as I ,,..... 1' H, on F' -IllIIlllllllllllllllllllIll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli GSOUTH DAKOTA STAT E-CQLQQEE nulmuuIuunnnlunnlnnummnunnulu' llll' GX E E E E 5 ' I Nl . mul i. 1 E :l 1: 1 1 I E 1 S i : 19 Jack Rabbit-ZIQ GX I i El ni GEORGE VOLD JAY WALKER E T Platte , Carthage E ' E HB. v. D. l ...IAYH E General Science l Electrical Engineering E Augustana' Atheniang In- 1 g-.-. C th H h. E - , f tercollegiate , debateg Y. M. f ing 210052331 lg ' ngmeer E C. A. E HELEN GRIFFIN H , .i E That I am not in the mu Clark niafgfffther of our Larthagl 3 of common men' an the A hard-working disciple of E sources of my life clearly re f-GRIFFINH Bracken ,, E vealh th ht . th Home Economics ' E y oug s run in e . 5. deeper channels, Woman, Oberlin Louege' , E DOUIGI' 110i me- When fun and duty clash. E let duty go to smash. E Come and have a ride with 5 me, E In my swell new Ford E Coupe. S I'IIIllIlI'lllIlIllHiIllllllllllIIllIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII C, 5 0 U T H DA K O TA STAT E Co L E E IlllllllllllllllllIlIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII' 1 1 lv ff -E ,vi 'T 2 i P1--A ....,, f . V .lll 'III -llIIIIIIIIIlllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Jack QI1I1I1I1IununInIluI1I1I1n11I1Illlllllulnllsllmmulll1 GX I -11 11111.-1 ., ' s - E 4 E E E E E E E E I E g 1 e 5 1 f 5 E ' ff' 4 E 5 1 ' . ' E- E E - . . E E PAUL GILBERT 1 DAVID KOPLAND E E Rochester, Minn. ' Brookings E S E E -1GYPvv 41COPErv E E Agriculture X Agriculture E E Rocheste1'H1gl12 Miltonifmz , s. D. s. o. Preparatory: E 5 Basket-ball Monogram 111. , Agricultural Society. E E ' 5 1 B k t-b ll C3 . ' E E MDC C its sine ft ti ORA SLOAT The Orange-Shalac Man. E E apano esaecam- ..Th .1 E E Dion Awerican Legion bas' Gettysburg , this meangjigsayshggailes E E kefeers' Y , ,A ,, a valuable addition to our E : A man whom we re mighty ORA Classy E T glad to have 1n the '21 class. Home Ecgnomicg E ? School of Agriculture 5 E E Atheniang Y. W. C. A. E iz There was a. young woman E I who lived in the dorm, E E Who had so many Aggies to E E keep from harmg E E She nursed them in sick- E E ues. and cared for them E Z in health, E g In kindness to everyone, she El Z has indeed a wealth. E -- 11ul11111nunumu1111n1111111111nuumummmuunnQsotm-1 DAKOTA STAQE cplgige IIIlllllllIIllIIIIIlIIIIIIIllllIIIIllIlllllllllllllllllllli IIlllllllllllllllllllllIIIIllIIIllIlIIIlIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Jack IIS IIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll GX . -. . ,A r': 51 MARIANA PAZ TORRICO Cochabamba, Bolivia HPAZ., Agriculture Agricultural Society, Y. M. C. A. Our happy Bolivian friend. Yes, Oh, ies! Eet eez a hard subject-Soils. I , . . ,- .,.. . . ,..,, ...,. , GERTRUDE HARVEY Pierre Gl:IR'l'RUDE Home Economics Pierre High, Atheniang Y. W. C. A. Parting is such sweet sor- row, So let's not say good-nite till it be morrow. I'd give up the world-for Louie. t , ELMER GRAM Maxbass, N. D. HAPPY Mechanical Engineering Ellendale Normalg Milton- iang Engineering Society: Y. M. C. A. Cabinetg lnterso- ciety debates. He's aiways sincere and he's chuck full of cheer, He never gets gloomy they Say, And though skies may be A blue or gray in their hue, No matter what happens he's gay. -Illlllllillllllillillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll CN S 0 U T H DAK 0 TA STAT E Co I. I. E IIIIllllllllllllllllllllll IlIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll' .,r 19 Jack Rabbit-21 1IImmnunuuunuIIInmnmuuuuununnuuuum' GX I 3 gl E . I i ' 1 3 l E E ul- LENA SPITZER, Edgeley, N. D. SPITZE . N. N. I. S.: Chapel Choir: 1 Choral Union: Y. W. C. A.: ' Athenian. 1 With her deep rich alto voice, KARL ROTTLU1,-F Of the choir she is the choiceg Sioux Fans To her friends she's ever true. M ' We all like her, wouldn't you? HANS Pharmacy Sioux Falls 1-lighg Pharma- ceutical Societyg Ph. G. 'l7. Music hath charms-so hath Chemistry. Enjoys displaying his wide and varied Knowledge. . F, 5- , U 'fa-,5., 'l-.,'Aa f l Qs . - J . . .F- .-.zdirx N' :, ',-We . , '- l m3'2,'.i?fw f: M t L g::'f:iE4h '.'.'.'.-....' - . l INA HUTCHINDORF Brookings HINA-H Home Economics Pierson, la., 1-lighg Del- K phiang Y. W. C. A. Life is a joke and all things show it, I thought so once, and now I know it. A smiling countenance is indeed an asset. fo? Y' 1nnnnllnlannuuuunnInIImuunnnnmmmmmnCasco--H DAKQ-A sw-A33-E cgllggce InIlmlunulunmmu IIIImuunmummmm.. E 5 :s E 3 Q er -unnmmnnmnumm:nun1umuunlmumnnnurQH19 Jack Rabbit-21r,Q 'ull , H, 2 JUNIOR CLASS HISTORY E They swarlned about the North and Ad buildings galore, And everywhere you looked you still could see some more- Junior: Whose existence began as Freshmen in 1917, when over a hundred of -- these discovered and entered State College, that good institution did not appreciate just 2 what wonderful wealth and good spirits had decended upon it. 'Tis as well known fact, that Genius is often laughed at and we, 5 miniature likenesses of grownups, endured - not a small amount of fun at our own ex- pense, but taking it all cheerfully, went our -i way, not caring or perhaps not knowing enough to l'8S6I'lt it. - CHAMPIONS IN 1918 But the thing that seemed to us to be awfully mean, Was when they made us do the Wearing of the green - - Caps: These were of a vivid emerald hue-neither fitting our heads mentally or - physically and visible at a distance of twelve blocks. Together with this headgear was ' a long list of Rules and Regulations to which some of us tamely submitted while the E majority oi' us revolted. After a while the wearing of the green became irksome-our i J , dignity became ruffled-we could stand it no longer-so one blustery day as the result f of a pow-wow among ourselves, we bared our heads to the cold winter world-premature E ly, the autho1'ities thought. , f D: S E HVVEARING OF THE GREEN fi il 5 'd' 11 63 .Q -lllilllllllllllllllllilllllllllllIIlllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllll C, S O UT H DAK OTA STAT E Co I-.LE G E llllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- Will 7 T' JUNIOR CLASS 1-l1S'1'U1'iY--Continued WINNING THE BAG RUSH-41917 Now, our brllliancy was shown in many a different class, There was one-a. corker-almost thought we couldn't pass- Chemistry: A common disease and we all contracted it, wondering it the time would come when Unknowns would cease threatening us with destruction. Some- where, stlll floating around in the ether, is the knowledge that we gained from them. Our influx into the Literary Societies almost swamped them-so great was our thirst for knowledge and culture. Of our skill on track and field, there no one has a doubt, That's always interesting and now opportune to talk about- Athletics: If State's athletics have been worth while-and they have-a major part ot the reason can be attributed to the members of the Junior class who have given their loyal support to all inter-collegiate affairs. In inter-class athletics we have had ex- ceptlonal success, capturing the annual Bag-rush in 1917, carrying off'the class Basket Ball Championship in 1918, tielng the Sophomores for Football honors and winning numerous events in the Charter Day Meets all three years. Y.. 1 4 VVHEN XVE VVERE FROSH IIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIlllllllllllllIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllIllllllllllll C-, S 0 U T H DAK OTA STAT E Co L. 1: 6 E Q lllllllllllllllllIllllllllll IIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllll 19 Jack Rabbit,-214g A W' 'Q -1unuuummuunnnnmuImlmmulllluuuuuuuui Jack Rabbit-21 1IIIIIumuuunuluuin1nuuununnmuuuuuumnm A -ml , A 43 351 A 1 if .J - :i ' :v :u 32 E E E Eu E 3 E E E E E JUNIOR CLASS 1-llS'l'UltY-Continued Freshies, Sophs and Juniors: we've been good as such, And with it all it seems as if we've had so much- OUR FORMER PRESIDENTS Fun: Dances, picnics, feeds, have all been dated on the Junior Calendar. Es- pecially to be remembered are the latter, where we learned to manage with admir- able dexterity a floppy paper plate- perllously balance on it a cup of awful size and at the same time ruthlessly at- tack its contents, a feat-which for social reasons-may be of inestimable value to some of us in the future. The crowning event of our three years of social activities was the Junior Prom, held on the seventeenth of March, Saint Patrlck's Day. We are sure that this wonderful promenade compares very fav- orably with those of other classes that have preceded us. They say that the Seniors are all eyes for the stars, But who can forget their wild glances at Haahr's- Derby: Relics at first pos- sessed by the Seniors, but soon by the Juniors, who developed a liking to them and began to col- lect many a wary scalp to the Seniors' utter dismay. Mr. l-laahr, not content with simply possessing a few of -the heir- looms, wore one to Chapel one rainy day in October and this so alarmed some of the Seniors that they at once set about in regaining their headgear and this they did to a certain de- gree in a hand-to-hand combat but we set aside a few to have a picture taken of at the studio. And now this year is at its close and no one knows who will be back next year but those who return will come back with the purpose of graduating and at the same time of being loyal sup- porters of Dear Old State and en- joying ourselves to the fullest ex- tent. With fond memories The Class of 1921. TROPHIES E l E 3 ssl .11 G73 .xg illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII C-, SOUT H DAKOTA STAT E CO 3527 E Q llllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll ull' f, ' 19 Jack Rahbit'21,Q -m- I 5 I E E E E E E E E E E E E as E 5 E E E E. THE JUNIOR PROM WAITING FOR T1-1111 MUSIC . GRAND MARCH I Q . ISM IMI I1 Nw IlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII C-, SOUT H DA KOTA STAT E Co LLE2?-.E I 'IIllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIII IllllllllllllIlIlIllllllllll 19 Jack Rabbit,-21,15 fuuuumulnuumnsumlu 'Q5315410igigigijgwggugigoe llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 19 Jack Rabbltf I' ' 21 2 E S E E . :X E E ,gg f - - 'H' E 2 1 'F E.: , I f-ffg 5 E --- ::: - g E 5 ' - .-fLfff f ' K , E E .f Qrf' 1 9, 'i E 5 F 4 Q -Q1-c1f?'P?f Z E V 65 - Z E f 3 E 2 E , - 5 E A ' N-1 E E if f , XJ 2 ' ,Tv I ' f ' 3 , E E --4 Q . -f J E E - I ' 1 -' ' . , I , 2 Z E w ff I W ' II x ' A :mx-A 5 E X3 X' , ' :Y Lthr. J A f, N J ,TTT E 5 lfx W S? M R- Mx. A - E E ' ri- -- , - 7 E E fJ 9 LV lf K, ff ' 'W ' . 1 2 E 'i H 1. :ff Uuwfwrf A f f if : E LJ' if -. 1 4f.,,.4y'Q'f,?i,7gL di , E i ' 'di V Q . V- 'T-Fzi' K , ,' 1- 1 E :ggi A 1 X ' fi 2 Q 31, H ' . 2 g . A ir, 5. i ,. 'Q fl' f : E ' ,. ,, .14-L3 I ' ln:-ffl , li-.S.-. ' WIQW I f I E E r -- 'f V - All-, . h -,: of 1 -- 1 x V , D--A : E I U A in v Q ,1, x i QQ,-,T X .,, A h 2 5 - ,' K1 N - 4:4 I4 ' , : E -A 6 T ' - Z - :ig f 2' ' x ! 5 E ,,'T:-? A X Y 'ff t S X i Y L E E K ., ,rf 5,r -. vm - ' V . E 2 - 2 ..-,.:2:-jfzg' 1 4 Y 1- AN 'iff' E ' ' ' X f - ' --A-H 12.1-1 if ,lv ? 3 xxgh, X, .:?jL- -75 fig- 25 2 1. 5 5 -' ' 1 ' 5Tf4 m ' ' 'M' A f 1 ?1'-:.1.. ' - E : . , 7-:yi 'AUX V , - 15441. V in - : 'Hifi' Ng. ' , ,., fi2?? A 2 2 ' ,V1:v:f1z.5::',...,,-y.MfffL-1' ' ff--f-' N f 'f,vff--f ---1-I--I - ' - .---- -X M : E f' , , xx fy , f' 1 ipggafggfzffgf'-. 1-,f frifffi , L. 2 - 1wf ' 1 A ---iiiii.- - I ,cf,v.m2Q' rgzzffan.. -fb V'-ff:-r 1 - 5. , j ff E I f f' f-,Z 211-,FP11ff'ff m': .L ,lidfffif f ff'-2' Q S E ' ' 9'g'Q:7'7fa'-f12?2 -ffmiffefe''aff'wma:z1i1:??74??2P22Q22221-f7fZf144'f1 if : 111 pngysrdi-fggl .szvyg-f7ff7? -7 ,1Z '-'13-.4143-.-, ,.-,i1,WI'V,K:1-cnqf,-9-3' ,:.'-3-7715 1---r -, 1-4-1 . -- . .,-.-.f' ' '175GZ7,.,,1:1z.11p.2.:.1s I -ff m ,L ' f- f' 5- --- E TE' f W ' fffgf i33f7:Z47WfQ?H!!Z4!1LZ'!!j,liy'2 52 5 : , ,L If Y--W-wi'-H' E E ! ff 'ff - E : ,lin-ln. M1114 2 ---4 fff f . E E' isrgiil I if-,gl f HF.-M 2 - -lem., :I 1: 1,4 ,,-,J E -' 'Ill ' S M I I If I- E ' e:. 175 W ' 'L if A fi- 2 ,nt .Al 'ei-if ,mil I E ng, , A :S E E 'W' ' i 97+ lllllIIIIIllllllIIlllllllllllllllllllllll CN S 0 U T H DA K 0 TA STAT E Co LIE EE IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllll- Q .W W ' Qiemaack Rabbit-21,5 4 + W IMI QE S ji V A B Svnphnmnrw JESSE SVULLI-IY, I'roxi:l1:u I, llrookings. GIGOIKGE IIICVNI-Ill, Trvrmll VIFVV, lhmulcimgs. 1JlfINl'l-IR Ctihlfl. Tir-4' l'l'1'Ni1lC'llf, Ilrnokings. IIAZI-111 IIIGRMANSUN, Sr3r'rcIm'y, 'l'yIa-r, Minn. MAIHIC HANSON, Bmokillgs. 0'l'llO JONES, l l'IIlIkf0l'l. N lflll .I . BRICTSUN Bmulcillgs. O. l'l1Altl4INI'I 'I'l'IlIUN llnmilton, Mont. DANIEL IQIGALS, lirookiugs. I-IIAVIN IQORSTA D, Brmwkings. M .fun fn,.M4A,-,f,G. sQgy,QAsf QTf2SjsffAfEfqQfy5egg ummuuunlmn - A V' fl ff- il' ii , EE ITE' Q31 ' ei E E FE Eg F L Y ,- E: . FL L I- If 2 2 L F Q ici E1 V. i. ,z 1 i-4 W W v W 19gQ ggqp,g15pg -m, v' 55, Smphnmnref 1 '1 ' N IIAIcm,n LAWSON. 5,14 Tulare. V 1 l 1 Q YIIUQIL FUNK, 1 Luke 1'1'0ston. 5 i 5 7 ! i A n0x.u.n l,I+IAVI'l'T, 5 Wortlming. X 5 I VIGIAIJA CLARK, Wcssington Springs. E YA TE M PTE, ' l lllIllll'CU.U. 1 1 CLAIHCNCH NVIIITE, 1 Q Clnrk. DICWI-JY 111-IIUIGR. Corsica. I'Il,IZAlHG'l'l1 SOLBICICG. lironkings. i i AR'l'lIlfR M. ' IIICIAHCRSOX, Canton. , JUIIN ll. KURRASQTII. ' l,'u0V01'. . A,A in-f EOUTHDMOTASTATECOLLECE 9 mul' 'uv Jack Rabbit-21f mmmmmw U ml - ,..f--1---5113! 3 1 I ,i -1 ,i 14 ml: 1 Q1 13 1 A 5, 5 nphnmnrea E E 3 E u'r'm '1'oml1f:l:,x.xs1aN, 5 lj Madison. E IDAYIID lmxl-Ha, Iirookings. fi lj I Vi: l Tl 4 if K 41 g WIIIIIIAAI l4l7llIll4IT'L' ig 'E Brookings. T , fi I'IS'I'lll'll! xl,xl,l.1-:Inf llc-Suu-t 'fi 1 .j 3 T ? i 1 ii . 1 lr k '4 ff Ei! XlXR1'Xl'l 1' nlfzxwuxli, ' lwsmvr. E2 El .11 Al!'1'l1l'R w. UIPIAANU, 'A llurlvy. lf? ig :Q 'jg Y.. ulms. IIIKINKIGII, Madison. E? nmmcx l'l'Il1llIK!U1llJ, E-5 l!x'uul'i11,L:.'. ii X S E ffl Fi 1 1-ff Yu Ei Q 31 1 El W ii: l'lllI,1l' .l. I-:Nu1uu'1', Brookings. 'rl E4 OLIVER LAXSON, Y Canton. -Y 1 1 71 ez 225 w ,W-w ,AAA 4g...,,,i4g iq9gi ge llHllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllh JQQQQLL ig Q UHm513iz11133315iimiiLim Q V '3 pivnplynmnwn 1 I E1 X nm:14:n'l' ll.uurl.1vsnN llrmvkingxs. V2 I ALI-'Ill-Ili NHIHP. Alillmnk. H214 I n,.xw1u1:xm'l-1 onsox. lirnokim.:s. fi 1 1il I'll ATIQINSUN, ' lil-unlcimqs. Lai iii 2 521 .11 g '1 l'IS'l'lIl'lIl IHCUWN, ISl'nokim.Cs. UUNALII VAIISHN, , i liruukings. I ,1 Uhl YI-IR li. 0VI'IIlSIC'I'll. , llllllffbll. 51: i I I E L r . 1ll'lH' JARXIAN. llruukings. L! V. K . IRWIN LIC!-I. Ynlgal. l,ullli.XlNI'l V. LAIISUN, 1.1-mmnn. l. C 4 ' MQW, 1 1TSoUfF Q e +sQ?A7AS'?iYE C3iEEE? - 0 . M719 Jack Rabbit-21A.., in A..Q ,A , 1 AAAA U ID v' 'Q I W. i Svnphnmnrw ,. 1 E Slfillllll lxxunsmm, E l3nrH1:u.:e. 5 . UAICRY .I, STILOIYSIQ Q Us-lrichs. i . - 1 , 1 e 1 I , i 1 i I 1 1 RAHNVULU BERUIGRSON, Canton. 14'l.0Rl'lNCE KIGITII, Brookings. MAGDAl,l'ZNl'1 MILl.I4Ill, Uualsun. Y 5 . , PAUL l1U'l l'0N, lflgrn Il . DIGWIC Y IGM IC It Y, Sunsnrc. ZUIAA 'l'UltNl'Ill, Ilrnnkiugzs. ERIC l'IlClt?KSUN, Trent. .I AM I-IS TRAC Y, Webster. ' 1 , 1 xf 1 . P5 C G L. f55Q +n oAm+A STATAE COLLEGE TQ ,gg1Q1jjgiiQQj5- . - N- x ' 3 Ilhxlgrzlahglg Rabbviug-2lA.JS'.Ql1 .,.L4 Qlgijfvm Q 5 5 Srnphnnnnref I I E 1ll'llI'2li'l' '1'llHltNlil'Jll, 1 Column. I'.XI'L ITXIH-IIIWUOIJ, Willow Lakes. .IHIIN tilll'Il'ININ4l, .Xl illmnk. 1Kl.Kl!Hl'l'2llI'l'l'I HAIIUI, lllll'OIl. Sl'SlI-I NIICLSICN, ltnpid City. lzultI'Ilt'l' V. SHAW, lluzvl. All'l'lll'Il AIATSHN, Ilmoklmzs. VIDA lllilyli, I I1-nrv NHICIA ll. I'lNAIlll, lvIl,!ll0l'. W. ll. I'l'l'l'l-INHI-Ill. lll'unliim.:s. I v p I I l c ww S+ATf2fmEffeuv ll favs w' InunnnunnnnuuImnnmulunumunnmmlnlunlC1719 Jack Rabbit-21 'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IllllllllllllllllllllllIn G, 'mv I a. 2 2 2 E z 2 2 E 2 Z 3 2 2 2 E sz E 5 2 :l: E 2 2 2 E E 1: : 2 z : 2 5 'lu tlllqu 3- ,V 1 'I' if G73 .xg '4llllIIIllllllIIlllllllIllIllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllilillllllII Cx SOUT H DAK OTA STAT E Co LLE G E IllllllllllllllllllIIIlIIIIIIllIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllll' Imp' x ' muwummnmmgilg Jack Rabbit-214Q5HH1UIMHH 1 X ? E O V' Q LL 1 MA: A MODERN FOUNTMN or KNOWLEDGE A f xi IM ! 12? Ea f 5 f 1 I E v Zlfreahmrn ' W ffW2'g19 g9Qgg 13Qj5lgQzI1 UIIARLICS IRLAKESLPIH President IGLS I IC FII YE It Vice President VICRNA SEXAUICR Sncrutnry LOUISE RILEY 'l'r0nsu1'0r THOMAS MCGUIRE FIAJYD BILLINGS LIQS'l'I'Ill MARTIN RUBY WOLID MAMIIC HALVUIISUN ALICE LINDLAND THOMAS MCKINNON RUSI1 LOCKE MERTON ALIJIIICH CIIARISNCIC WALSHTI1 MARVEL NEYIIART WAIl1'I'IR MICIIAICLS Qpwwm .I.. 1iQEf5gQyfib,iiZSrs65taTSi2i?eI ECII-LEQEQI III IIIIIIIII I - -'N - 1'1Q fjQf5iQ'pLg3B5ff-21ff5i1iiE'i1i'i3i1iiifiii33.mmfJi5.i1111 f 1iD Q E 3 Freshmen ' 4 e i 1 M,xns11Ar,r, WILLIAMS Q E: Ei ADOl,l'll ISACKMAN :xx LURA WA'l'I'IRBIAN PI-JIICY AIILERS f.-,E El 53 mml-:1:'lr Yum: ALVIN S4 '1-1m.z :if iii Envm 1,muoN ' i E31 GRACE um'1,1N u1cUL,x11 umm RUTH IIOON Eli Pi H ii is .xsnmsw SMAILI. ROSS KIIJMAN .mssw CU'1'LI'Ill F1 Eli L: if' ICLWIN I!AIl'l'LI'I'l'T JOHN TOWERS x li w.u.1,.w1-1 lll'IMl'S'l'I'Ill ' 1 1 .L C aw 'W Q56Qif9TQ5E?K-'4sFI+e c6L1Ec'E 0 'Ill' 1 f 1 fam,1mm C319 Jack Rabbit-21 A 'unnuu mn Q U Q E J reahnwn vlclamm ONDIGIAI1 17 nmluox nxuvlcu 2 u,xul.,xNn .louxsox uuaxm or,soN -33 E 2 SALINA MYRON f Q7 SAMU1-:L Lsrmuxilalz rf 5 41 11o1cu'1-:Nsm zu-:G1,1z1c I 2 E E v1mNoN 1f:1uc1is0N E ummz 1z1a1N1acKm E pi E 1mN.lAMIN FENN 2 5 ? E E 5 , E 2 GE'R'l'IiIwD1'I RIGICVES E 2 E E DONALD IIABER E E E 5 MERYI1 DOOLITTLE E E' E 2 E 5 5 E -E .E 'i' E 2 E JULIA 'rURN1a1c E 2 2 E V ., , E E mm IIUUGH E E E E AGNES xmssx-:Tl-1 E E E E 5 E E E E 3 ? . 1 a SOUTH DAKIQQLA-A515-5AAgg.5fQg uluuummuuumu l uulnmnmnlulnn . A 'IME ,va rf? -Tw... -..,.1., E I 1 L I E Q E Q 1 E 1 L 51 CT E72 I K-. L r :YA I lf: If Fi: K Y. L I, E , F 1 E , xv. f i ii 1 ' 1i1iiiiiMuH W!iti1 311111ig3i1mi1111i:'ii1iiEImf U VU ...W 3 Ilkezhmen IIARULID S'l'0I l' EDWIN XYILSUN J ULIA N STA YICN Ll-ION IIICNRY ISICNJAMIN HIIAVICS IIICIIARID1bAI,'l'Il0Rl' HVY LARSUN AVIJRIGY IiI'1A'l l'Y ANNA .I l-ISl'l'IlCSl'IN LI'l'Il,Ll-I Sl-ZLLPIICS All'I'lll'Ii SIMHN FLOYD RIAIITIN GUY M.X.lUll SI,l IlICIl l,I41KYul.U .TUSICPII SMITH. 1'1lIl,l.Il' VAIISUN 1 SouTH Q55-Qj'fy STAT E'.CQLLEVQiE wmalwiix W Gm X L55-1 .ZW il :Lil L. ii' xg 5? Q, ig L 5 IW' V ' ' 'A ' N'i HI 0 mf' llllf' 19 JaQ1gPQ3p.1p1pEfE2w . P HhlIE1l1Lg..1.1A.MHHE.Vf ,AAA,A.,,. ,M W ilheahmen ELL I O'l l' WALKER XVEA D SUMMERSON NURM A ROBBINS GEORGE LLOYD HARRY XVIIEELER BITRDIUK IIAUGEN IIICRRIAN STARR NELLIE HENRY Pl l YLLIS DRAYER ll.-KZEL MCINTOSH DALE DONALDSON LLOYD BASTIAN ORVILLE GERHIG ARCHIE ROGERS EVERETT MCKEAN ELBIER PAGE Cb lice X 'M llllllllllllllllmlll L L JM, . A fx. l'Hrenhmm Jack gabbit-QLQ 1111111 Al.... M31 Q . 'v-i----fi--------- M f nv' - Q fi E, 1 i, E i1 I K I i 1 I 1 E i E 1 E 1 r i E j, ,, gf r I 1 E 1 iw E3 ,H E? in ..1 5 gi 3 H1 --1 ti L ini if I L15 Q1 1 1 Q1 K1 , F I I FRANCIS LANDEII FRITZ 1TLl1IMlCN'l' DAISY MUCA ll'l'lIY ALIHGRT J ENNINGS TIII'IODOIU'I NELSON LAWIRIGNCIC TOM l'K I NS WILLIAM M AST MINXIE NUDE RUBY JENSEN ICLIZAlSI'I'l'lI BROWN CLAUDE 1'IllLl,l PS LA WIC IGNCH SA Ylili .UIC WH Y FR IC NC ll l I.UY1J WRIHIIT IIURACE CRAUN 1 IIALPII l'l'Il'I'I'IIlS 1 1 1 44 !'-VLCQQUTH IQAKQLAQTATE111C6Lw-'ecepl 1 1 - G . n F, Ea H1 1 r 1 1 in I 1 E, rig E . 5 if E' 5 E51 if E . i 1 tif . 1 Q. F E: .L 1 Hrenhmen YIYIAN NICLSUN HAZI-IL lll'INNlNG JESSIIC NVICINHV4 NPD IKICIKNIVIC MANN LOVIS l'Il!I'1IlLlCIN FR ED ORN' IS K'LAlH'1Nl'I'1 DYBDAUL JI'LIA 'l'IfRNI'IR IIAIIRIICT I'I'I'1'l'IllSON L1liNRII'I'l l'A BENSON GLIGNN WAL'l'l3Ill STANLEY l'IS'l'I'INSl4IN DONALD MI'l'4'llI'II.L ALIVE XVIGAYICII CIIAIILICS Yl'IAllIK'lil-I IDA Ill'DlC 1 :QQ W1 ,oe an 56 5-fl GN G32 C HQ llllllll H lll1'x Irv, . wnnmunnnun L u s 0 L4l:HLQQi5QlAQ5g1i1gWgE,:D5 5 E93-Q' lil lllllllIllllllllllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllh- -WW W7 W 'E . TT m O 9 EIU - Hlllll' IIIIHHU Illll L llll 'flllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' MM fcxllg Jack Rabbit,-21 HHHHIHUugg1ImIII,Im.mu11nmm U W Lf .M - 9 E 2 i 3 3 i -5 13 5 V I 1 4 ef f rg E5 as L3 il. 5, E3 :1 11 ilhrzhmrn I I ! horns x'1'1-:vl-:Ns Q ICSTIII-IR lUDl,I l'I HIGUIUJIA lPUK'l'l'IlC l ll.XN1'IS .XL'l'UX .ll I.l.X YAl,I'1N'l'INIi l'IS'l'llI-Ill lil,l'l'Ilil'IR NA'l'Al,ll'I MAIDIJICN Kl'INNl1I'l'll HI'I,LIi,'K LICUXAICID Sl'llMl'l l' I-'HANK lll'I.XlH.lCY IKALTIII-Il. SM l'I'll M A111-Il,lSl'I MClil'INNlCT'l' IRI-ISIC IIALVURSON lCl I'Il IIAWKIXS FRANK lll'IYl'Il,L ISAIHGL M ICICI!! SYIJII, IIINUS YISNII-I HIRIIIRANS :1 E 62 :: E-E :iz LZ. EE W 5:1 E? fi WW I 'r I ,pm- Q FS, m1 mmmmiG ,50u15-QAgq.1Ai,51Ar..e, CoiLfQ e,Ap' w - A 19JackRabbm21D W IW llll' -'-NW W:m , V K3 QiQ'T H Q5 g gfAj5f515cgQ gk E qgp nn llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ' 19113011 Rabbit,-21 5 E1 1 E Ei , .g 3 w E 2 2 :E 2 2 E I: : : 2 as 2 E E Q 'UII NX x' rf,-,,,-f fr' f I 1 I .. . A 1 l f ' , I f .., ,K . , ' ' !!l!cgOo9fZ,Q I . J-if f - - ' 1 f, X f -. .15 f ff f ' , X X I XX ' f W 1 1 C, ff E 1 N 1 1 K . 1 Y m ' . X . ., , . - .-,. ' Q l K 7,1 ' ! ' 1 , 3 I? ' Aull A- NN ,cs X :J . m-, 4, , . ea' 6 CW 50 5,,Z6l,E.ACO LIE Effggp' IsnmuumnnIIIIIInnuuIIuumnnunmnuul w ' nuunnmmuuum :m u l nllulnnlunnngwlg Jack Rabbit-21 'mr 1 , r Third and Fourth Year Preparatory E E Z 2 E E E E ,3 . I lllglu I' 1 C73 .Q ' 'lllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllll QSOUTH DAKOTA STATE COLLEGE , IlIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllillllll' u ' , ' IIIllIIIlIIIllllllllIIIlllllllllllilIlllIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllll Jack AQ GL ix F1rst and Second Year Preparatory if 2 E E ' i S W a up wa , 4 ' Ig G73 .xo 1IllIIlllllllllillllllllllilllllllllll V lllllllllllllllll Ca SOUT I-I DAKOTA STAT E Co LLEG E Q IIlllllllllIIIllllIIIlllllIiIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- I ull' , 'nun 1: lnnumu w P I S9 G+ HQCl'5.QIA.5fQjTf,E CO 552 mmf D K Q ! : 1-W'WwfQm19 qagk gabb1Q215Qi U k!. Auto Mechanics 3 za 2 E ,M L: Ei as ,. UHUIHTHIHHIW E 19 Jack Rabbit-21,,Q Y- K 1 5 4 1 I E a E 5 4 I i x w z I I v . f i x i 4 P w 1 .A .xg llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll SO UT H DAKOTA STAT E Co E , IIIIllllllIlllllIIIlllIIIllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- L IIIllllllllllIlllllIlIIIlllIlIlllIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllll jack 'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllll' GX ' 'li ru' I 1, yf ,r ni 5 2 Fourth Year School of Agriculture E Yvrn .lulmsml , Gnot. ,.... .BillI1t0ll,5ll!lIl. Merle Rlllllllfll .... Hunt. ........... llurlvy E Furl Ilnnsnn fllltll. . ......... . . .Lily Florence .lohnsun . .t,inot. ., ....lh'o0kIugs E A . , ,..n.,, ,.. . E l.lllla- Schul ll' .... Gnot. .. ...... Alpcnn lmw'l'0nc:u Splcvr ..,Amp. .. .... xv4'SSlllgtOll .E 2 Huy W ood ........ 1, mt. .......... XX uxthlm, Lillian lighdnhl Amp. Bl00kllH,'4 E E E E 5 E E E Z E E E E E E l. if l E lg lllal I I not ll0UlClIlLN Hnbut. I mu IN Amp .Dvlmont 1 G73 .xg llIIIIlIlIlllllllllllllllllIHIIlIIlllllllIIIlllllIllllllllllllllll C, 5 0 U T H DA K 0 TA STAT E Co I. I. E G E XlIIlIlIIlIIIIll'IlllllllllIlllIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllll' T' VN: lllllll ,.A,,, ll . ...... I' 'J ' '.' .... . ..., Jmncs Sl0l'lll0 ,,,, Hnot. . .,.... llnzvl Mulmul l'n1'c-1-lls .... Gnot, . ..... lhllnt0n,Mlnu. . 3 Ill' u . . .E 2 E 1: : Q iw' '-' V . 'nl W, llltqtl, lllllllllllIII!llIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIlIIIIIlllllllIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIII QH19 Jack Rabbit-21AIIIIIIIIIllllllllIIllllIIIIIIIIlllllllllllillllllllllmunlllllll' A 'J 'Ill' f I uw Im .Q Q 3 Fourth Year School of Aguculture 2 E E E - . ' H , , . ,, ...A , . 1 lhx-.nl ' h E Q E E ? E E E E E ' E E ' m S 2 - Q Q S E E f E .L E E E E - X 5 . 1 T' IANUUIU M0l'1'3' ---'- Amll- .... . .... Dvll RnpldS All'r4-d VIWYXYILII .... Amp. ....... . . .llroukimrs 52 i hylfr SUN ---..-.- Amn. ...llmncock Signus lmumm ..., umm. .. ........ Lily' E 3 E ZT Z E E E E S E '- E E E E E E E ' E E E Z E E E Z E E oo , E E E E 1-'gore-non Lundvc-n . Jlnut. ...... .. .B1'nukln1.:s ltlulmrd lh-uliy' . . , Hunt. ....... ....... I -Ilrml E E Wilf0l'fl 140115-Elnnn ..Gnut. .. .... Toronto Mildrual UIlkl'l' .... Gnot. . .... Groton E EE E E . E .E E E L Z E E 2 E E E ? m E 5 Ulll'iStinn llodwuy . Amp. .,...... .... 1 lmlson Vnr! XlIll'kVf' ...... Amp, .,..,........ Uriln-3' E llorlu-rr Sc-lu-rl .... Amp. ....... . .I.nk1-City Knrl l'4-tm-sun ..... Gum. . ...,. Lily Willie- l'l'lu-11 ...... Hunt. .,... ..... X Yorthing e ND IIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll C5 S O U T H DA K OTA Sjijrjvgffp LVHQQ E Q lllIlllllllllIIIllllI!IIIIIllllIIII1IIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIII- E: E E E E E E E E E E E 5 E31 E 5 5 . -IIlIIIllllllillllllllllllllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lllllf -Jagk Ranbb ' IIII IIlllllllllllIIIIIll!IIIlIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I 'UP 'A' r mv I ' Third Year School of Agriculture ' 5 1 Fa Z4 ' C: si ' ,, .. r w as L .1 :4 4 Inf M, munnunnnunuuuuuuln Q SOUTH UAKQ1-A STA-r E uu ulnul 'YS 'fllf' 'x mrrlmlll1mr ' IIIIIIP Third Year School of Agriculture G Sronabach, 0 Jensen E Johnson 0f '54f 3 lfhircli I, Plhl. A J. Baxter: jlt Maron. Mfrklfidn. MG,-gpy. C, fkdenm Jansen. ' f' XLS.-P M Melsaff Q wig 1 55 E5 ES' O r E E1 Q' ij, g E E Ei E E 2 E E E E E E LE E 5 E QiH'LM1lL HlllllilllllllllllllllIllllllllllllIlllllllllllllillllillllllllll Cx S O U T H DA K O TA SlAT EY 'Co 1. L E E IlIllllllllllllllllllllllIIIllIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllll- 1:59 '-1 1IIllllllllilllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII -Jack ' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII GX 'III' I 1 V, will lg 5 Second Year School of Agnculture 5 S w. DAY mxx E I'l'0Siflv11t E E EDNA 1zEzN1f:1: E E Secretary E E E 5 5 E E S E ' EDWIN IIANSON 3 GEn'r1cU1JE ulmxxlm E liz.: QI GLADYS RING 5 ERNEST 1sUT'rEn1-'11c1.D Z E o111E 1-11'ER E , 1'1lII1I111' 11o1,1,1xuswoR'r1-1 E T FRED Kms 5 cA1,v1N 111f:1f:nEN E E Z E E E ARQ11111: .lor E 5 RAyMoN1m 1,UNn E E wI1,1,1AM x111,1.A1cD E :H 2 E MA111:1uE sc0'r'r 5 Z E E ,. , . , E 5 A1u11U1e M. 11,xNbox E E MARY sE1,1,E1:s E 5 MABE1, 1a1:owN E 5 E E CARI. 1'11'm1Ax E E 5 E . E E : E A1e'r11un muxlu I E E 5 1s1AU1:1cE scow E E 11.x111,ow MINICR E E o'r'ro c11Es'1'E1: E 3 2 51: E 5 E E GLEN 1,Uc1:1c T 2 . GUY sM11,Ey Q 2 JOE 'r1w'rT1f:n 2 2 'nur-1011011111 Lomax E Z E 5 5 4 1 e 3 V, 1.1... 111 H rm . CFSOUTH DAKOTA STATE COQELEGE qml' f . . ' 1'l 1IIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllll M ur Q19 :jack Rabbit-21 A ' Hz- W ' 3 Second Year School of Agriculture 2 i E E E E E E uuxmms 'r14:,mx1ay E E Vice President E :E E E E 5 '1'I1l'IODOIH'I u,vr'rm-:s'm 5 E : E E E 5 E E I AIITIIIFR mm,,xun S nomux uovxm 1 E - E ' 1cnx.s mm-' E ,ucxolm sclllcllclslclc E lsvlml-:Tir ol,soN E E E j noxixno rmsw 5- if 1,1:ox.xrm 1,u'r111m E E E E um' IHCUAIWICIIL E E 5 E 5 Z 2 Z 3 E E E s,u1u1f:L IGIUIGRI 5 E uuonou Gltlfll-IN E 1:.u.1-u xonmmnlc 2 1-'RANK 1s1:.xxs'1'1':,xu 2 5 E E E 51 WIIIBIGRT ncxunsox 'Z E Juxw uusmcx 2 if Ixos:-:nm uuxnmnsox E E wA1.'v1f:u 1:1-11.1, E E 5 E A E E E E E E - E ,muon vosllllzlxl R A , E E ERIEIRALIJ zmlxmful-1 fe 'X X S E w . 5- E GISOILGIC w114:'1'1xu ,F 7 Q fi- E WAL'l'l'ZR s'r1u:x1: E E E E E E E E ALVIN 1l1c1c1u4:N E S 1:.xL1'11 11oLl,1n,xy 2 E Awmlun 11. lmxsox E E IIILBIGIRT s1:11w,xlc'1'z E 5 ' E 5 E ' '? Q NU 'F 163 Q IIIIIllIllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllll lilllllllllll CNS0Ji'H DAKOTA STATE COLLECT llllllllllllIIlllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIII- . gh 'Ill' N 'L'-in 'LTWY 7 W' ' ly S Q E V llll' N 3 First Year School of Agriculture I ,p-M3-rn., 1 R7 'Harris vb-nu . rnillp -nn . Edwgrd Ilunll' - I-'N Div-'M' 1 4' w.r,Wm,, ,www .........,......,.r......-........r Q QAi2??ggfjEFA+re CEJLLEQE unlmuuuuuulm www . -N Q19 Jackmbmt-H First Year School of Agriculture ff. SQgg13r'oAiK OT,g s+X+e'ELtga'Q gjgjl M, I t, n I .R 3 ' Q1Q QiQ15mpiQbb1tig!jQ51Q Q ' Inf' I r First Year School of Agriculture '1 4 I fj d IHIHIHUlML11Ym Ea E: FE! rj E 51 EE E ta Lil 2 E E 5 S C - ,W A -rr r r r Wg. if . G,sQs4Q11QeK.OTfritATE CQEEEQ5 ' ' W fs.. 1m4mfM19jQER Rabbit,-21,jim7rTHWmmmmm1mmmn7Ql:! Ennihutii Eliterarg Svnrivig TOR? ,,L iA ,. A. ,NW AA,..,.A. X , I g ig!-TE--DA K o TA. STAT EW CO L. L E C- END ,,w,W-4M4.M' Www? 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X! rlfiw, Q.g7 X v ef E . 2 x f g.j. aff E, ,W A W ' , all - .. ' , K-1' ' 2 ' , f SQ fl I X fffqg QQ. wx , N ,1 3 A 4 N 4. 9 : ' 1 T 1 f l W' .1 X X ' I K fiiiijg, YW Y-ff E 1' x X Q X, f ,5Qrz,??,f,.,:f1l ? '.f'g'ff','?f Q X X .7 f . '- VL -1, - f ' 'EA , ' ' 1 I K lx -'df ' A E 1 4 1 X ,X 1 . M m E .L, , 15.1. X j 6 . Y 4 I ff ,F ,Wig i5 ,V ., ,Q if ' fir' if ' 5 if X X f ZA. ff N . Ni A13 1 1?'lNf?'h'fi7Fu 2' N f, f , WWI f fn' 'uf-Q.A'22'..4 ,QA fb'.g:13'f . 1 ' F A '32 J,-'-A-Tr'-iii' -:rapt-ggkwxliffif'f23!.fiQgsf.1g , x R XC- , M If L - ' ' 'f 4 W . if Y . X - X .w x W 1 V 1 F ' . 1 X 53054 -, M , x x N - -N X x - f Vs..- xk5f,L'::1' 1 . rv ' W 1 ' ' 7 lx 'S' ' ax N M T X Q ' W , Lx? x my 45 4519 z I Mr :bfi I my A rm I l xr U fx XX Qgmm K fsxw 10NS -5 -3 rl ii ,3 ,ig C uw ,,, W, QsoU+g 'D2.9E2-1g511iifg E,,g9Q5Q5cE4D 7'vw' 1 IllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllil- . Q liitQ1, Athenian Literary Society i Top row: Bonnie Buck, Rachel Smith, Harry Solberg, Julia. Valentine, Alvia Anderson. Clair Gaylord, Wilma Knutson, Vernon Ondell, Elizabeth Solberg. Second row: Rangvold Bergerson, Alfred Stumley, Vida Belk, Alfred Nord, Lucille Sellers, C. N. Gibson, Audrey Beatty, George Valentine. Third row: Gilbert Ruden, George Vold, Marian Bruce, Lena Spitzer, Joseph Paulson, Ora Sloat, Francis Erie, Einar Anderson, Minnie Rude. Bottom row: Lewis Woodrulf, Guy Thelin, Ernest Michaels, Velda Clark, Leonard Ladd, Marie Hanson, Alta Reeves, Edwin Wilson, Elvin Korstad. OFFICERS FOR FIRST TERM President ................... Leonard Ladd Vice Pres. Treas ........... Ernest Michaels . Secretary ......... ......... A Ita Reeves Sergeant-at-arms ......... George Valentine OFFICERS FOR SECOND TERM President ................... Robert Dibble Vice President .... ..... G uy Thelin Secretary ..... . . ...... Ruth Buck Sergeant-at-arnis . . . .... Thomas Street I t E r X, V n-.Q-.l1JL.L.Dlll.rllllllL.l1J.tll,g.-..-, i- r 5 0 U T H QE: 'SQ IALSIBIL ELCQ1- '- E95 ' ii' ' 4--1' ' or , t E Miss Hjertaas, Director 5 E u:-. 2 : z rz :z :: I: Presented by the Athenian Literary Society E - cAsT 5 g William Winkler .... . ..... George Valentine E ' Aunt Jane ...... ...... V elda Clark : Jane ....... .... B onny Buck 5 Kitty .. . . . . .Julia Valentine E I Bob ............. .... L orraine Larson 3 E Benjamin Moore .... .... R obert Dibble E 5 Ting ......... , . . . ..... Marian Bruce - E Sam ...... ..... A lfred Nord 3 THE ARRIVAL OF KITTY E Sussette .... .... L ucille Sellers Z E E E 3 e ...W v ,.... tsl will if G5 .xo i i'Hl- 1 QSOUTH DAKOTA STATE Coi.l,EQ uw, 19 Jack Rabbit-21 OFFICERS IST Q UARTER eta Jac1g.etan,Qip121..D f Miltonian Literary Society Top row: Oscar Hobbs, Frank Revell, Peter Hernianson, William Mast, Wallace Dempster, George Lloyd, Carroll Wallis. Second row: Nellie Henry, Irene Reinecke, Madalene lvlcliennett, Venie Urhrans, Merle Doolittle, Hermine Mathews, Jessie Wedgwood, Daisy McCarthy. Third row: Rachel Shelden, Guy Austin. Cecil Switt, Virgil Funk, Louise Riley, George Biggar, Genevieve Chappell. llottoni row: Ruby Jensen, Vernon Erickson, Grace Sloan, Harry Halvorson, Pearl Pratt, Elmer Crain, Norma Robbins. President ........ Vice President.. .. Secretary ....... Treasurer ....... . ,... . Sergeant-at-arms . . . OFFICERS President . ....... . Vice President.. . .. Secretary . ...... . 'Freasurer ........ Sergeant-at-arms . . . . . . . .Harry 1-lalvorson . . . .Hazel Hermanson ... .. . ...Grace Sloan .Genevieve Chappell .. . . . .Peter Hermanson ZND QUARTER - ............Pearl Pratt . . . .George Biggar ...Elizabeth Brown . . . . .Virgil Funk . . . . .David Doner ., 3 L, ,---,..-.----- , ,i-.-. - . . . ' ' ' .1LLJg..L-u.4.-.g.., .... 1LCw,52!e?ILi',.,Qf5.'SQf A STATE, CO l-'-E95 P 'IIlllllillllllllllIIIIIIIIIIlllllilillllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIPC519 Jack Rahblt-21 GQ lg ' s l Uhr illliltnnian Eiterarg Svnrietg E- The Miltonian Literary Society was organized early in the history of the college, E and has been located since its beginning on the top floor of the old North building. 2 This society, exceedingly optimistic in tendency and progressive in practice, has never 5 been strictly a literary organization, but has combined activities of a literary and social 5 nature in such a way as to make a. strong appeal to the inclinations of all classes of 2 college students. It has been a place of inspiration, a resort for good ltimes, and a 2 source of numberless and happy memories to every Miltonian. The Milts have made 5 a splendid showing in all intersociety contests to date and it is safe to say that they E E stand an equal chance with the other societies of winning the faculty trophy this year. MAGGIE PEPPER Presented by the Miltonian Literary Society under the Direction of Miss Gladys Slo- cum, Thursday, May 22, 1919. College Alldit0l'il1I'Il. Esther Irish ..... Eva Bickel ....... Helen Peddicord .... Dexter Cole ...... Virgil Funk ...... Edna Riley ...... Sidonia Hast ...... Harry Halvorson. Hazel Hermanson. . . . Blair Daniels .... Oliver Laxson .... Norma Bentley . . Cecil Brown ..... Hazel Hutchinson CAST ...........Maggie Pepper Peter Hermanson.. . . . ... . .Joseph Holbrook . . .Hattie Murphy .. Stock Girl ... .Jake Rothschild . . . . .Elevator Boy ....A Stock Girl ....Mrs. Thatcher .........John Hargen . .. . . ...Ethel Hargen ..............Ada Darkin J0hI1SOIl la d6f.BCfiVeJ .................Zara ...........Jim Dakin .............J0h8.l'lI1EL John Kneebone ........ Bailey ta detectivej T 'D 'llllllllllllllllllllllll IlllllllIllllllllllllllllllllll SOUT H DAKOTA STAT E Co LLE G E llIIllllllllllIIIIIIlIlllllllllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll ...,f U 'Q l lg Qiefjaeif. Ra,bbit'21, . A ANY YA A--iw vw AY! Iv K5 rn ei ,Ei rl 5 E I i I Q i X I 1 lei E ,W 1 'Wi V. if nf: p, 1:1 ?i:1 '1 ei pi U 1 I ei gc Delphian Literary Society 1 r Top row: Helen Day, Alice Lindland, Kenneth Hood, Florence Fryer, Clark Jackson, Eva Hansen, Grace Rohrback, Joseph Smith, Ben Graves. Middle row: Floyd Billings, Floyd Wright, Adolph Backman, James Tracy, David Gilkerson, Paul Underwood, Charles Price. Bottom row: Genaro Vera, Gladys Pearson, Elsie Fryer, Myrtle Keck, Donald White- head, Etlie Atwater, Horace Craun. 0l+'h'lCERS FOR FIRST SElVlES'1'l12R President .................. Harley Waters Vice President .... .... C lark Jackson ... .Myrtle Keck Treasurer ....... Secretary .................... Etlie Atwater SECOND SEMESTER President .................... Myrtle Keck Vice President ............ David Gilkerson Treasurer ..... . . .Florence Fryer Secretary .. ..... Elsie Fryer Nami ,,,,, ,,,,, 4, c rSQvQY1'YHAfDAKOTA STAT EV Coi.L.Ec.,E ' A ,, f . '- J 0 1 if X7 C t. W A jabk itiglgwziiimip.Qgzgiimimmzimmi lllilll lilillllllllllilllllll illillllllllllll llllllll lillllillllllll HHH llllillillllllllilllll illlllllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllll Iillllililllll ll H illlll UH Illilll lllll H Illlliililll illlllllllllllillilllllllii llllil lllllll ' ll llllllllilill lil llllll lil! Illl .9 i : g - E E E' E Yg :E -1 T P, F2 - if 1-A 1 ... me - Q Z E5 ' ii - 5 ' to ALL or A SUDDEN PEGGY : F ll E Presented by the Delphian Literary Society, 1 Miss Kendall - - - Director E E CAST - Anthony lLord Crackenthorpj, Floyd Wright The Honorable Jimmy Keppel ......... E .................... Charles Blakeslee Major Archie Phipps fretiredj ......... - it ....................... J. H. Kurrasch : E Jack Menzies ................ Clark Jackson ' Parker .................... David Gilkerson Lucas ................ Lawrence Tompkins : Lady Crackenthorpe. ..... ...... E va Hansen The Honorable Millicent Keppel ....... .......................... Myrtle Keck 35 The Honorable Mrs. Colquthorn ........ - .......................Mar1e Huntimer Mrs. 0'Mara ................... Zeta Forsee Peggy ...... .... . Erma Pepple E if e Y A A , ,H , X Ill 1 ' HW' lllillllllllllllllll Cx 5 0 U T H DA P215 QTATELCQAL- '-iii'-Q! Es 'i' lllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllillllllllll ill W - um!,.r Qiifiiiizmiiiiiiiiiii QE., Q'119AQQ,Q5-lJial3.bl3f1ZlfQ5 e E ,vm , FX ' a -E! I 11 1 Back row: Mrs. MilIe1', Eva Hansen, Miss Willis, Miss Young, Miss Kirk, Marcus Chase, E5 Miss Caldwell, Carrol Green. , -fa Front row: Lewis Woodruff, Genevieve Caldwell, Grace Sloan, Einar Anderson, Miss Sloan, Bessie Chase. if E I2 Ii? Pm Fi Lv' C ,... 'M . 4'.iii.,111i1ii,,nni ...A ,..,,L.-..nQ.iiQ5ifPCZ-JT giQg5.'10T5,5rglr E, EgLggg llllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illllllllllllllil . v ! Art Club 11325 maggie-21fD Y' Engineering Society . ne, 4 ei 1 fi Y! ii M i if H li si 4 E s I, fs E12 ei 1 -1 ii fi ff. ovmcmus President ............ . ..... James Faulkner Sli Vice President ..... .......... Oscar Hobbs if Secretary and Treasurer ...... Erwin Haahr Sergeant-at-arms .......... Benjamin Bakke Ei Ei! E: k ,-. :I E Fi ea ,eg 51 Q, . E1 4 -i i 5 5 E E aiii i - i 'li Al 1-VP: WK' -V ! i! .'i3 '1.'5'Vf'4 Wi. SOUTH DAgy5AQQ5,f51f5jvE,, CO1-I-EC-,EQ' 2 lllllllllllll IllIlllllllllllillllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Jack AD IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII gx Q Agricultural Experimental Society : OFFICERS E President .... ............ .... L, h arles Graves E Vice President .... ...... J oe bmith E THl1. AGRIL UL1 Ulilbl 2 Who is the man with smiles galore E Who hops from bed at half past four E To feed the porkers by the score And milk the good cows just once more? E Who is this man? It you insist E We'll call him Agriculturist, ? - Who is the man who with delight - Works through the day with all his might, E And quits as Old Sol sinks from sight, E Then eats his little evening bite! E Who is this man? If you insist E We'll call him Agriculturist. E You know this man, my own good friends E For to Old State his son he sends, E And Sonny lots of shekels spends, E And with his knowledge science blends. 3 . Here's to this man! And youll insist E We'll call him Agricultnrist. E G. C. B. 11. E 1 5 Us E : E E E' l ' I 1 1 - - . I 'l ltS'l ll J 'im .-'l -uw' - 9 5 E E 1: E E WWYY 1 wr H E E 3 ld' ,I W3 . 'llllIlillllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Cx S O U T H D A K 0 TA STAT E Col L E lllllllllllllIlllllIlIlllllllIIIIIIIIllIlllllllllllllllllllll- ma' , ' E Vice 1-'resident ............... Susie Nielsen E Secretary and Treasurer ......,. Edna Riley E E E 5 E E 5 E 2 19 Jack Rabbit-21MB A Pharmaceutical Society Z N 2 E E 2 E 3 E E E 5 E S :B E PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY E Ofiicers : President ............... .William Pittinger uuuuml1unlu1u1unlc,souTH DAKQTA STATQ5 cggbcggg-,gi ' '- llllf 5 2 2 E :: 2 : :: z E E 2 E E S : :: E ? C lllfqil 'CLJ ' , 'IIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllll J FDxlIIlllllIIIIIIllllIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllll Gg '4 E 5 Pharmacy Graduates T Iv E E , 2 E . i 1 13 I,,., ll flliqll I. , vt- , 5 1 W3 .XD D -1IIlIIIIllllllllIIllIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll C-XSOUTH DAKOTA STATE COLLEGE , IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIII' ml 3 Iuunnlnmullllwlmmslulullummuuuunnunr 6,719 Jack Rabblt 21 Freshmen Pharm1cs nw - -e P 5 E President - - -------- ' - - George Lloyd-M l S Secretary and Treasure r--- ---- J ulia Valentine 5 -1. ' xx 1 g I L' QI A ,lf U Y ig E W3H!SU!l!L 7' e 7, Wwllliillfm 2 he 93. f1In11nn...n SWT D A QIQTE c9gLEE5e W.-... 'fl I M LW- Y 1 as fC'-. Board of Control Figq iiixifrrj T CIQ jack Rabb' t-21 5i gr v 'Ili nI N 3 '5 .Yi 14 Ei El E ,a 341 W1 I Left to right: Burdett, Walseth, West, Severin, Dye, Harding, Towers, Headley, Dalthorp. The Board of Control is the orlicial administrative body of the Student Associa- tion whose purpose is to supervise athletics, debating, oratory and the college paper. The membership of the Board is made up of three seniors, two juniors, one sophomore, and three faculty members. Each of the collegiate classes chooses a member each year who is to serve on the following year and each representative serves until graduation. The three faculty members are chosen each year by the president of the college. lw1LJwm5Zlf7 5 TEf f'5C F5QLLEEkf mnuumlunummuu li ll?U1l1E'f' .' - E EE vs E S E is E Ei :TF ss tit E E ., T1 -3 :Y 1-MHHIIII-lQQ3,19 Jack Rabbit-21,9 1 K X XR FZ 2 1 X X LH C TE S C QsfmD ,, , A ,, ,,,: Q .W M W Mg,ii:::,w,,T:,VQ fi-law - -7- -e 5 -W . -- -Y' WW M :Www , tfaltasqecgrgmezlfa AM A ' Us Q it 2 Elie Zlnhustrial Qlnllvgiem Staff Editor in Chief Associate Editor Ernest Michaels Harold Safforcl Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Paul Millett Virgil Funk Athletic Editor Lorenz Lippert General' News Llalr Gaylord STA TE Marie Huntimer Pearl Pratt Robert Dibble Elizabeth Chase Charles Dalthorp Harry Halverson Jesse Scully Lyman Merry ' ef Q un mumunnmi .':,gLQojgfmiIgfQgfAE15E gfgggeiie mnnunnuuummn ii V . -N .Ls I3 sn 3 fi r: f: 1 -ai Q ei :Lg Cv nz. s E E 5 E 4: - 19 Jack Rabbit-21fp -ln' npr Q 4 l xxxz N 'H ' 1 K Xmmkx X i Ill A0000 '-,S f , in X wk 'hx 1 N 'll' , A I I ,,vV l TM'-li A I X E I . 'I '.V.', ' . W 1 14 ,3 A mm 5 f1ff,.3igQi2oiQ TA TE coLLEcEf' Som, D-Q .6 '45 P xl, fl THECAL mf- 2 l Ric-UL? OF ,ff,lL.l:,',,f3, gl 1' Y J'?cT'l,i ' UPF N i 'f0U7J':- ff ,fa ii 'X 457A,4'fDfXX E 2 5 5 E E ll ? Our College Publications 422.421, 'fl 01 wp. , A M ' V G' IlllllIIIllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll QSQUTH oAv lAJ1El S2F'-ESF llIlllllllilllllllllllllllIIIIIlllIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIC519 Jack Rabbit,-21 3 4 f in 0 ---- ----.--n--- 'gr I Einar J. Anderson .... .... E ditor-in-chief Erma Pepple ...... ........ . . .Assistant I V George C. Biggar ....... .Business Manage Gilbert T. Gilbertson. . . . .Assistant Manage FAC ULTY H3281 H.lltChiIlSOI1 Gilbert Gilbertson Elvin Shinn Ora Sloat MILITARY Palmer Johnson Joseph .Paulson George Vold ATHLETICS Emmett Dye Lorenz Lippert Clarence Johnson Ralph Towers SNAPS Thomas Street Clifford Peck Violet Burge ART Marcus Chase George Sievers CLASSES Oscar Hobbs Francis Erie Pearl Zeigler Robert Weber Benj. Bakke Grace Merriman ORGANIZATIONS Erwin Haahr Richard Gardner Neva Burger Mars Madsen Gertrude Harvey ACTIVITIES Pearl Pratt Bonnie Buck George Janssen Paul Millett Lyle Burkhart COLLEGE LIFE Wilma Knutson Glenn Avery Aleta Vessey I' I' .L ., 1 2 9:,-1 . 'A X af Na l' W ,fq I1 5? 'an W S9 fillllllllllmllllllkllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIII G, S 0 U T H D A K OTA STAT E Co L. L. E Q IlllIIIIIIIIIIFIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll- E E z r:.- 2 E E 2 ? 2 ,, I Q-LU h Jack LHf fTfZm: lk ,,., Fv, i v wif l, V 4M---fl-N-4..L4M ' 'LiQ Q54I '1wDAKOTA STATE COLLEC 19 J it- IQ'llllIllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIlIIIIIIllIllllllllllllllllllllllll gx '..l'.' lu, .gd l l i yi - Y l 'A ,-tgagz. dnurnalism Gllasn llllake Glrip In Ahrrhrrn O get first class information relative to up-to-date publicity methods and newspaper and magazine editing-this was the pu'i'pTJ'se of the two days trip to Aberdeen by the State College class in journalism. ' - At the invitation of the Dakota farmer on March 11th twenty-tour students entrained for this memorable voyage. As the class pulled into the l-lub city at eight oclock in the evening cars furnished by the commercial club awaited to take the budding journalists to the grand banquet prepared for them. After the banquet the students were rushed to the Dakota lfarmer Plant where they remained till midnight listening to talks on the workings of a big publishing com- pany and inspecting the plant the subscription department the foundry and press room where the largest rotary press in the Northwest was in operation. The next morning the class went further into the details of the plant and the printing business. After a hurried inspection trip thru the I. l-l. L. building the class was taken to the oflice of the Aberdeen News and American where the evening edition was just being run thru the press. The experience and the useful knowledge gained from the personal contact with noted successful publishers can hardly be estimated. Lverybody enjoyed the trip and it is hoped that a trip of this nature may become an annual feature or the class in journalism. E E E G? ll T 'I - -ll 1 xo llIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllll C, S O UT H DAK OTA STAT E Co LLE G E IllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllll' M Ill S 9 Jack Rabbit,-21 W V i -ui A, '3 41 ' f . MULMARY , E'ffvAfJTAQfd . - 'X J GSOUTH D -,e+.,fgEiEcoL1. egEs r P Ei Lil Z! tes: : 1,31 : -,et 'QF ...vi zz Ili' ri Q Ln F: 'Tl 'ltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll III V' ll lllll H R-abblt-21JNLD IlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII' D 'lt qmlpl' quwlpf f -E -- 2 Kgs E E sd' E Q Y' .Es if l E vit E 1, 5 y n E O. N. Bradley, Major U. S. Army D. B. Benge, Sergeant E Commandant Assistant E Eeaerne Qbftirera Glraining Olnrps E ::::' E F4 E can truthfully say that this has been one of the most successful years for the 5 if military department in the history of the college. A large per cent of the men 5 Qi now taking military are ex-service men and it would seem natural that they would E EQ not take an interest in this kind of work. But this is not the case, in fact it is very E E: much the opposite. The interest the men take and the splendid work the military 5 til department is doing are due to the efforts of Major Omar H. Bradley, our commandant. E Major Bradley has served in the 14th Infantry since 1915, spending over a year in E Lil active service at the Border. He is a graduate of West Point and has taken over the S ifi' work as a West Point man would. 5 fi Not only has he organized the batallion and brought the drill to cover a larger 5 gg scope of military tactics than ever before, but he has spent much time and energy in E i promoting the physical welfare of the students. This he has done by organizing classes E gi in boxing and wrestling. He has also taken an active part in coaching athletics and has E won a place in the esteem of every State student. E 11 He is ably assisted by Sergeant Benge who has seen 15 years of service, one of E in which was spent overseas in the 2nd Infantry. E we The college is fortunate in having the military department in such capable hands E gj, and truly expects equal or better results the coming year. E ll Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll CQ S 0 U T H D A K o TA STAT E Co L L E G E IlllilllllllllllllIlllIlIIIIIIIIllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllf . fi 4-li ?,m tuts i OFFICERS COMPANY A . Rabbitql -In Q U uf .Q 3 fx L....! E ai 1 ' 3 2 2 1 'ILE i i 152 , , E 1 E, , ' 1 E 1 in ' 55 i E .ai ,E I gg if OTTO TOMMEEAASEN 0THo JONES GEORGE HEPNER E First Lieutenant Captain Second Lieutenant J L 2: , , . 4 'i is z 3 3 BATTALION REVIEW ' - Q -1 -t ' -E ' M -- fl'x'u?'A 4 I--' .E ifi Efii iff E --fi I V 2 i 1, . V . L, : i - 1 'i 121 3 15 E Ls :fi L51 5-5,2 , 1 551 f': F-' 21 W V1 P - r- ' -M Q21 13 N ' -' ' fi COMPANY A 3 E -W-wi ?C,SOUTHv-QAKYOTAfSIAT ECOLLECE MJ Qi, C Qjijijack Rabbit-Q1i5hiimiH Q in in A S if' '1Illl'l 'lllll' w 3 OFFICERS OF CONIPANY B fA'. A . E7 z, I E E K gr, I i L, I ,, Y I i ' JAMES SALISBURY JESSE SCULLEY DEXTER COLE First Lieutenant Captain Second Lieutenant D INTERIOR OF' ARMORY COMPANY B lllllllllllllllllllllllll Q 33 U Txli lfwg IAMS TA? EW x. iff Q 1 Vi ' llllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllll . 0 4 19'JaCK Rwbin-z1, -V . E XE wi f I 5 rr, '17 A -' YF g, X IIN I ' 1 P- X f F . BATTALION OFFICERS WM. PITTENGEIR CARL CHRISTENSEN JAMES SHE1-'ARD Battalion Sergeant- Captain of Military Drum Major. Major. Band. QN1 l52f.K.Q1A,.S1IA+ E-.C9.':Ll?F3.g hw .Q cv - W es 5 53 EE Z Ei E' 5 ITE E E 53 E EE E E es Et. iliumnra Ahnut the Cbgm When Wheeler executes the silent manual, it sure is bloody murder. e If it took every man in the army as much room to turn around in as it does Stanton, the government would go broke buying acreage for drill grounds. If you would like to hear a real good story of action, ask Otho Jones, the gallant L young captain of Co. A, to relate to you his experiences in the battle of mud at the seige 'QT of Camp Mac Arthur. F With Abner Brictson as guide, it's a good thing that the armory has four walls. After much trial and solitary training, Kidman has been able to decrease his pace 2, from sixty inches down to forty-live. L Simon says he ought to be a corporal. He's had two hundred men under him at 1. one time. He must have been playing in a cemetery. Benjamin Fenn's friends will not doubt be surprised to know that certain orlicials, E who were greatly impressed by Mr. Fenn's soldierly manner and splendid military bear- g ing, have prevailed upon him to enter West Point. He expects to leave as soon as the 5 Mexican situation is settled. 5 Wanted: A man to act as guide in Co. B. 'Must be of good moral character so there will be no possibility of the company being led astray. Captain Salisbury says that Helgerson would make a good soldier if he only could be convinced that his rifle was not meant for a necktie. ' llllll Illllllllllllllll t lf. 5 0 U T H DA K OTA STAT E Co l- L E C- E lllllIlllllllllllllllllllllll N T eeee M iiii I i lll nr jack 'ummmummmnmu ll , e ?fvi 'f ,Aiwa , qw. f. k5,.1'4aEf f 1 - , 5. -iw - BUOK V ACTIVITIES A ' L., Ya, ,X 1 A, ,at 1 L ,- -f xg 1. 'Ill' ' . nln r Jack c VJ lilly N 3 fi gg : ,Y ,1 1, I 1 ? j 1 ', S 121 1 i iw L ffl if Q 1 fi ff A 5 I ai Q :fi 'W Q 3 ' ll? L lg: E23 if Es 'f 7.1 T t N W t l I 7' 'N S E Q cn N- Q Q- Q 5+- 5. Q Eb Q Q. Q X S Q Q2 'T 'Q Q fe Q P. The man that hath no music in himself, Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds, A S ls it for treasons, stratazfems ana' spoils. M1z.sic has charms to sooth a savage beast, To .soften rocks or hend a knotted oak. C ,, ,... Gigs? 5T5T ?351ieofic, unumuummmuuumumnv- - . - p i C.J ' IlllllllllllllllllIlllllllllIIIIIllIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl! J A sg Nj 5 Eff -i -.f-. ,'- ' 1.3. 'x -l E E : E 2 z E E E E STATE COLLEGE MILITARY .BAND Cornet - P. E. Hermansen Manoah Ondell Louis Vollmer Clarence Johnson Frank Headley G. C. Wallis M. L. ,Anderson Horn Horace Campbell Clarence Olson James F. Tracy Glenn Rohrback Baritone John Headley Thomas McGuire Bass Robert Corbin Alfred Stumley Leon Henry Captain Carl Christensen, Director PERSONNEL Drum Harold Salford Kenneth Gullick Harold Slocum Timpani Harold Salford Piccolo Arris Palmer C larinei Arthur M. Johnson James Shepard Clair Gaylord Ray Bunday Harry Solberg Virgil Funk Earl Matthews J. Kurrasch L. B. Ennis Vernon Ondell Lloyd Lindland L. E. Schmitt Ralph Peterson Saxophone F. W. Martin Mars Madsen O. O. Hobbs Harold Nelson D. D. Curtis Bassoon George Gilbertson Trombone Alfred Lekvold Carl Bemis V. L. Larson Carl Sacre Joseph Paulson Mark Keith William Mast Richard Dalthorp Clarence Solberg Elvin Korstad 19 ,, ,..,.,. . lil 'xy on S' cl sow-H DAKOTA suis COLLIEEE .,r 19 Jack Rabbit,-21 ,Q 2 E E s E E T S E l 2 E E E E s E E W ,m ,f '33 SD GIRLS' BAND Carl Christensen, Director Wilma Knutson ---- -President Erma, Pepple - - - Vice President Eflle Atwater - - Secretary Zeta Forsee - Treasurer Cornet Jessie Wedgwood Violet Burge Eva Bickel Alvia Anderson Ellie Atwater Audrey Beatty Horn Leona Christensen Helen Peddicord lnrma Pepple Lsther Brown Vera Wing Thelma Wing Piccolo Florence Fryer Baritone Ethyl Scarlett Marlt Hegelstrom Bass Genevieve Chappell Wilma Knutson Frances Forsee C larinet Frances Baker Myrtle Keck Marie I-Iuntimer Zeta Forsee Oreat Johnson Grace Rohrback Velda Clark Garland Johnson Agnes Pearson Trombone Marie Hanson Helen Day Irma Delaney Beulah Kerr Alice Lindland Ruby Jensen Elsie Fryer Gladys bomers Saxophone Madge Kerlin Julia Valentine Drum Ruth 1-Ijertaas Elsie Bartlett :: 2 : E S 2 z zu E E z E 2 :s c: 1: I: : V 'W 1 1 E 1 1 1 E : I I l 'L I 3 I' Q ll- II, l .lu all , W Y - - .4 - lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllll S O U T H DA K OTA STAT E Co L I. E G Ep llllIIIllllllllIIlIlIIIlIIIIIllllllllllllmlllllllllllllllln- IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllQ19 Jack 11ullnnmlunuunuuunI1ummnnumumuuluun. A .,,,. ...ill 'Ill I ' 'H 'lin' 5 S 'LL E 5 re 5 E e E 51 E Q E STATE COLLEGE sYlv1rHoNY ORCHESTRA i of Carl Christensen, Director : 3 PERSONNEL Z Violin Horn Flute 5 Q Helen Dvorak Horace Campbell Arris Palmer E E Mrs. Gulbranclsen CIHFGHCG Olson Arthur Johllson ' 3, Harold Saflford 5 Manoah ondell 'lrombone Cl . t 1 Julian sraven Rudolph Bucnmz a e 3 ' Elsie Fryer ' Clair Gaylord z E James Milne Yimpgni H-arry Solberg E E Roger Atkinson Robe,-t Corbin E E Basvoon 5 E Vida Piano t. S E Ruby Solberg Marion Carlisle Geolge fx11b8ltS0l'l E E Cello - Bass T rumpe! E E lqllizabeth Solberg William Mast Peter Hermanson E E Lois Martin Elmer Sexauer G, C. Wallis E E E E E E 2 E E E E 5 E ? PROFESSOR CARL CHRISTENSEN ' c all ,513 'fm' C, soo T H DA K OTA sloping-ggseeg-eg' llllllIIllllllllllllllIIllllllllIIllllllllllllllllllllllll I- '5..-M MENS GLIQE CLUB 19 Jacggwgabb it4g1fQ ww' THE COLLEGE FOUR L W rf y Q, E 2 E E 2 2 2 5 E E E S E E 2 E 2 2 E 2 E S 5 5 S E 2 S 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 E SANFORD OYLOE L. OLSON C. OLSON . 4llllllll umnnmuunlmuummuun v -W'C ?0UTfj' Dfs19jis91AT5C5gM5eg5 nuumnmnummnmul W, . -N -1nummnmmmmmuuuuuuuunumuuuuuuuuur C319 Jack Rabbit-21 Q ji CHORAL UNION HE Messiah was given in the College Auditorium, December 16, 1919, by the Choral I Union, under the direction of Miss Grace Wynn. This is an annual event on the music calendar, and was a distinct success, ranking very favorably with the pro- ductions of other years. Miss Esther Osbourne, of Minneapolis, was soprano soloist. and Ernest Davis, of New York, sang the tenor parts. The other soloists, Miss Marion Carlisle, contralto, and Gerhart Oyloe, bass, were local talent. Miss Marion Carlisle. who is an instructor in the music department of State College, delighted her audience with her mellow sweet voice and pleasing manner. Mn. Oyloe, leader of the Viking Male Choir of Brookings, a well known local musician, came up to his usual standard and was well received. One of the largest audiences ever seen in the auditorium attended the Messiah, and its success was manifest by the appreciation of all who heard it. - I ' E s 'E a: s E z 5 F. 5 If E E 2 E a: 5 E E S E 2 :: 2 :: E 1: 2 :: 2 2 2 E E 2 E : E 2 3 E Miss Wynn Director 3 e :M ,I G73 .89 A Illlllllllllllllllll G, S O U T H DA K 0 TA STAIE COi.f5 E llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllll- IF' 'I 5, f-.. JWUUHUH 'CQiQiIif6kARibiQ21 I B 5 Ei gl? fgfi 5 1 :ii ei 124 ii fi EI: 53 E: ag 7, w--1 E11 -1 1: Ei K. :EE E m i E EE E: e E E el fx' 3:1 T ,1 Li H. M. S. PINAFORE A Nautical Comic Opera in Two Acts. Presented by the music department of State College under the direction of the 3 Z3 Misses Grace Wynn, Nell Kendall and Ruth Hjertaas, March 2nd, 1920. W Peddicord, Bemis, Riley. SHff0I'd. Milne, 015011. ' Q a if AGSCifTit!-5ee'1Q3i?SETFfECSFFGQ W1Mmillx'wirwumlvxx 0 lg 119JaCkRabbit-21NQ mui1 ummm ,AAA Q ' di 4- 'A 7 4-A' -L ,Li ' Li : Q E IE E :Ei E E :rx 5, IZ' 5 1 . Y E f'QBLJQ' !'5 QIPs,514'LTA fi CQ L 1- E9,E.Q -J W 5 i S W 19 UQQB ialfbin-2 Q5YHlUHlIIlIIHH1lHHlHHIHHHHSYlHEHEXl7IHEIIP A wa! N I Y . 4 w ' r? Q LATW RM 4 mY mHH1HMfGTi-TT50f1H T5 fffii , 5?f?fQiA-,agp lilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliilililli 5 to ' -mmuuunnunuuuunuum nmunununnuum C819 Jack Rabbit,-21 ln- 1 ,, nil , 'g MIHU ll llllll ll llllll lllllll ll Illl ll llll HMM! . I lllllllllllllliilill Illlllll lllllllll llllllll llllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIII Illlllllllllllll lllllllll .gun Ck. E. G. MEINZER WILLIAM MAST instructor of Forensics and State College Representative Debating Coach. at the Intercollegiate Oratorical Contest at Sioux Falls. Eflinrrnzirz 0' ORENSICS of all kinds were an important factor in student activities at State jH,College this year. The intersociety contests, which were the lforerunners of the intercollegiate contests, were among the iirst of the forensic events and aroused much interest and rivalry. The oratorical and extempore contest came first and was followed by the intersociety debates, in which a large number of students participated. The Athenians and Miltonians tied for flrst place in the Oratorial and Extempore con- test. The Athenians won first place in the Debates, with the Miltonians second and the Delphians third. The members of the public speaking class gave a recital the first term, consisting of declamations, orations, and a short play. The most important event of the year was the intercollegiate debates of the Pentagonal Forensic League, in which State College met teams from Dakota Wesleyan and Huron College. Later in the year State College debated a strong team from Drake at Des Moines, Iowa. A live interest in these events was displayed by the student body in general, as was evidenced by the large number of students participating in the contests as well as the large and spirited audiences which attended them. z l: f.-: 1 : 3: E n I' llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll S 0 U 'r H DA K OTA STAT E Co Ll.. E G E Q llllIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- E 5 nv' u 'lrr l lllllllllllllllllllllllC519 Jack Rabbit-2155 IlllllllHIIIlllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllv G, -uv , E E Doner Ladd Bemis Vold Solberg Ruden E 5 E 2 PENTAGONAL 1JmBA'1'1NG LEAGUE E S Question: Resolved, That the United States government should formally recognize E E the Soviet Republic of Russia. E 5 STATE COLLEGE vs HURON 2 E Held an Huron, February 20, 1920 2 E State College Amrxnative Team 2 E David Doner, '22 Leonard Ladd, '20 E E Carl Bemis, '23 Joe Smith, '23, alternate E E Won by State College. I E E DAKOTA WESLEYAN vs STATE COLLEGE E E Held at State College, February 20, 1920 E E State College Negative Team E 2 Harry Solberg. '20 Gilbert Ruden, '21 E E George Vold, '21 Robert Yule, '23, alternate E E Q Won by Dakota Wesleyan E E DRAKE DEBATE ' E 5 N April 19, State College and Drake University, met for a dual debate on Com- E 5 pulsory Arbitration of Industrial Disputes on Public Service Corporations. State's E E Aliirniative team, consisting of David Doner, Miss Elizabeth Solberg, and Gilbert E E2 Ruden, won from Drake at home, while State's Negative team, consisting of Harry Sol- E E berg, George Vold and Carl Bemis, lost to Drake, at Des Moines. E llllllbill cz Sour H DAK ovA svgle-co Lge 6 E pl lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIlIlllllllllllllllllllllllll- E as E E ' : : .. U - 3 DAIRY JUDGING TEAM 119 puck Pfaabbig-21lQ Jones Wright Gilkerson Urton Iverson Bucholz Trophies Won by the Team At the National Dairy Show held in Chicago last October, where fifteen of the largest colleges in the United States were represented, our team brought back live silver loving cups and three gold medals as trophies of their excellent work. The team won first place in judging dairy products with Bucholz high man in the contest and Iverson second. In the cattle judging contest, State College stepped into second place, Gilkerson placing as second high man. Much credit for the splendid showing is due the instructors, H. Jones and T. H. Wright, Jr. ia Qi E fi EE ,ES Z .Q 'Hllllil liillllllliliillil lllllli illllllillliillllllllillil lilillllli llllli Hllllll FIIII Ili Y IIIIWT V 'T fl I., E C rl' E5 Mi3Mmiiiiy.d1ig1igiglMQg's2TJlgwE5QQj5lg1A1.eggiftLegg lmummmuuuunun u unnmnnununm L- . 0 Il IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIP Jack WS bit-21,Q A T I 0 NSDEUI jg 1. , .. , , W X S ,w,.f' ri 123: g ' ' 1 ' 1 H 5? ,gf X X X ,WH 4 K, f 9 Cx SOUTH D S-4555 QOL gg Eigp' uuumnmumu1nnInIuIIInulunumnumnln E l is will 19 Jack Rabbit-21 LAURA KEITH, Secretary Huang mnmerfa Qlhriatian Aaanriatinn HE'highest ideals of young womanhood expressed by a true Christian life is what I each member of the Young Women's Christian Association must pledge herself to live. The organization makes itself known to those on the campusthru various deeds 'of service it has rendered. About one hundred and seventy-iive girls have made it their privilege to doin the Y. W. C. A. this year. These girls have been the working force, with the cabinet, in many worthy projects. From the day a girl enters State College till the time to leave she enjoys the services rendered by the Association. ,Her social life commences with the big annual Y. M. and Y. W. mixer and the girls are entertained in various ways throughout the year. Religious meetings, Bible and mission study fill her life with spiritual inspirations and thoughts. Our local secretary helps to organize the work and is always willing to give personal attention to perplexing problems that arise in every girl's life at college. A cozy room has been furnished on the second floor of the Administration build- ing to which girls are always welcome. Many girls count the hours they have spent and the friends they have made in Association work, as the most precious memories which they take from their Alma Mater. -ll' 7 i 'mul xo 1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIllIIIIIIllllllllllilllIlllllllllllilll S O U 'T' H DA K OTA STAT E Co L L E G E p IIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll 'IIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQ19 Jack Rabbit,-21 'Ill I H, 'ITU' 5 E E E Y. w. c. A. CABINET 2 5 OFFICERS E E President ....... ................ .... 1-1 e len Johnston E E Vice President .... ............. ....... E v a Hansen E E Secretary ....... . . .Hazel Hermanson 5 E Treasurer .................................. Erma Pepple E' E COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN 2 E Bible Study ....................... . .... Blanche Tompkins E g World Fellowship ........................ Elizabeth Chase E E Social ............. ....... Z eta Forsee E E Membership ......... ..... V . . .Eva Hansen E E Religious Meetings. . . ..... Grace Rohrback E 5 Finance ............ .......... E rma Pepple E E Publicity ......... .... O . Charline Tehon E E Music .......... . ..... Florence Fryer E E Social Service ................................. Helen Day E Z ADVISORY coMM1'r'rEE E E Mrs. B. A. Dunbar E E Miss Miriam Gerlach E 2 Miss Edith Pierson E 5 S 2 3 e ,,, ....,. ,......., IW .Lf C73 -xg Cx Sou'r H DAKOTA STAT E Co LLEG qv - hw. 'lllllllllIllllllllIIIlIllllllIlllllIIIIIIlIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll Jack b it- Carl S. Metzger, Secretary Uhr Huang 1llllen'a Qlhrialian Aaanriatinn HE Y. M. C. A. occupies a place of vital importance at State College. lt waits on the E student the moment he steps foot upon the campus, provides his room, boarding place, work if desired, and furnishes social recreation and a place 'to spend his leisure moments under a moral environment. In other words, the Y. M. C. A. is a big brother to the student while he is attending college. N In the fall, the Y carries on a heavy program of socials and frolics for the special beneiit of the newer students. Every Tuesday night throughout the year, the Association devotional meeting is held, which is open to all men. In the churches, organized Bible classes are conducted and led by competent teachers. Every winter, a Lecture Course is managed by the Association, which is greatly appreciated by the entire community. This year, a circus was staged, which proved to be one of the biggest amusement events of the year. The Y. M. C. A. oflice is open at all hours of the day and serves as the information Bureau for the College. This last year, the Y. M. C. A. and Y.. W. C. A. were able to raise twenty-three hundred dollars for the support of an agricultural missionary in India, an achievement which won recognition all over the country. Following it a Lite Service Movement was started, which resulted in fifteen young men deciding definitely upon some form of Christian lite work. Running thruout the entire program of the Association work is the aim to stimu- late moral character and an appreciation of thc deeper spiritual things of life. 5 gil wge slltlhr' ' . W, 5 ,f , is , p . . ,,:, W 1 x K -:' I l A ' , , ' I-1. J ' Qfhfx -- - ,N-AQ , Ff- x ' - ' f I 2' X V I:-5.3 , . K .f4x,'L. ,Ds - gl ,- nmmurmsnunnlm c, som-H DAKOTA svn-E COQLEEE IlllllllllllllllllllllllllIIlIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll- - E E :I 4' 'lv' 1 I ll: ..,' I--il IIIIIIIlllllllIlllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIllllllllllllllllllllllllIll QH19 Jack Rabbit-21 Ili I E E E E E E 2 THE CABINET E OFFICERS E President ........... ............... .... C l ark Jackson E First Vice President ..... .... R obert Dibble E Second Vice President .... ..Glenn liohrbach E Treasurer ............ Gilbert Gilbertson E Recorder .... ..... V ernon Erickson E E COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN E Religious Meetings ............ David Doner E Bible Study ......... ....... l Elmer Cram E Social ............ . . .David Gilkerson E- Campus Service... ..... Alfred Nord E Lecture Course .... .,.... G uy Austin E . ,Glenn Hoon E Deputation ...... ..... 1 Joe Smith E Missions .... .... G eorge Valentine E Publicity ..... . . .Robert Dibble E Membership . . . . . .George Biggar l 3 ,,,t .... 5162 . -IlllllllllllllllIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll c ,soovH DAKOTA STAT K L 19aaC1f.Rab1m21 'nur' uni' LAKE GENEVA CLUB ..Zg.nmiLmc,qgQ!Ll:Q55QL5 gigfgjgp Qgggp uumrmumunnuluuuuuuuunulnunn mr I 3 ' Chgggj' HWQA K o TA STAT E Co L. 1. E G E llllllllllllllililllilllllllllllllllll ' gm1 TTTmTj QI19 11365 Rabbitizlfnb unn mmnu uu Q 3 lllllllllllllllll 1 T W' 5 O U T H DAK O TA STAT E Co L- L E C E llIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliillllllllllllllll 3 E Zi ::1 Ii E E2 Ei TE ia mmuumum E E E E E E E E E 2 E 2 2 -All 19 Jack Rabbit-21 fi :R ! m ni 0 gm R C1 5 0 ULLQA w '-' 5- 0.1. . nunununmnnnm IIIIIlll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIC519 :Jack Pmabbitfzl GX -li! 'Ill' , E I I I f ' I ll , ll. ffnt E fl lf? 4 .iw l - V-1 .. g-.- ....,.. .5 .YA H . 3-1--. lm- . .. DEDICATION To Ed Phillips, head of the vac- cuum cleaning department at the Col- lege, we most respectfully dedicate this section of the Rabbit. Pursuant to this year we have dedicated it to prohibition-its and effect. .qv - 1 . ' tigsih w .wma-1 ffm- W4 11515191 4195 mgggsgsaffff I . il - I K 1 ci' 252: . L!! 03.1138 The reader will please send all E E E bouquets for this section to Box 65, E . E 'Y ' f Station A. II' X Il xi ,7 if f 0 , l, 4 ,f fl Q91 ff ll W ,fa ff p fl M ff!! 9 g 3 HM Y 4-qi A ' 1 f - I 10,1 A1 I L In I If f 'i ly '95 I I I H- l I I is ..... I r -T. Iv ll AY' M H ! ,,,7 1 52. L' I E Prof. Mathews tin Physics classjz E height of a 'building with an aneroid barometer? E A Leavitt: I would lower the barometer by a string and measure the string. Mr. Leavitt, how would you determine the Z HEARD IN 'rum BOOK-STORE E Did you get your shirt back from the laundry? E Yes, Richard, but not the front. E THINGS THAT MUST BE FORGOTTEN IF WE SHALL ENJOY OUR VACATION E The day Prof. Grant arrived in town. 5 The day the boys promised the coach to give up E , smoking-and pie. -5: The day Dunbar was persuaded to have his last g photo taken. tSee faculty section.J 5 The day Sigurd Knudson started to take piano les- E SOIIS. 5 The day the basket ball team got back from their E trip. V -5: The day the flu ban went on. E The days you paid your board bills. E The day Emmett Dye cashed his meal ticket to go E to-. E The night the Athenians went to the movies, choos- g ing partners by lot. tAsk Va1entine.J E The days the doors of the Auditorium were locked. E The day compulsory chapel was re-ordered. E The day the alcohol supply was exhausted in the E pharmacy lab. - E The day Pete Hermanson yelled his loudest and it cost him two-bitst The day we took the final exams. 1 4llIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIII'IIllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII CN S O U T H DA K O TA STAT E CQ L L E G E , IllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIlhlllllllllllllll' 251 A I 1 E f sn V L ..1.1.AL., i E if I 1 51 :Q E Y E E g EI, 4 I E s Eff! YJ 1 L1 H N --,-,--WT.-W.--.v-1 'Q ! a 1 nm .1 f - , , fn ,- E: f:- EE ,-1 E i, E: l., E. V 1 f ,, Eg W NET ,L L, C. 5- 1 L, u V: F, F4 r-L g 4 Q lj u. K E1 if 5 l: E Ii is E E + jg5aUgH oMQQqIg s?x+'elc Qffgg5 w ' 0 iv E illllllllllll llllllllllIIllIIIIIIIIIllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Jack gg f' L' r.. il! if QW! fa-ff 0 rv H- V. .Q -1. Nfl l' 'FQML-N 5'ruor F3 'ml A il elf, H15 exams be had Zflixe And Wwe he 'rr1eThfS JOOTT7. 'l71ere wa.S 770 cfvawce 'Ib fa.K'e The Prof sfajed 7117776 room.- ' ir If Arthur Simon didn't talk His friends could never stand the shock. If Charles and Carol were long apart Each one would have a, broken heart. If everyone to chapel went, I'm sure the freshmen would repent. If Profs a sense of humor had, This college life would not be bad. If no one ever crabbed at State, . We'd homesick be for old times' sake. If Miss Jean Smith lost her record book Her French classes relieved would look. If the Junior class didn't have the den, Oh, where would certain members go then? If all women liad small feet, by chance, No boys would have been at the co-ed dance. If no one criticized this verse, He would be doing something worse. If with this book you're not satisfied, Be kind, don't tell the staff they lied. Dick Gardner: The only thing I don't like about Soils class is that Prof. Hutton talks so loud I can't sleep. ' Why are Vollmer's calls on Gertrude Harvey like a successful newspaper? Because they commenced weekly, grew to a tri-weekly, and then became daily, with a Sunday supplement. ' ' l . 'f7 .X -W x, A 'X1f V 1 SCENE IN THE SUNPARLOR, LATE SUNDAY Al+ l'EltNOUN Note the number of empty settees in the' close background. 1 X9 'IllIIllllllllllllllilllllIIIIllllIIllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllll C, S 0 U T H DA K OTA STAT E Co I. E E llIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllla cjiiiijiiiiiiiigi13itgii111T311iiiiig1i1ifQ jIQii1g3i51i3ii' ' jggfiggijipiiiiif ii a 3 C4-low TIME: CAZE fvu1..5urlON ..,,.,...........,,........,....,.. E- 'if7 Winn- H A 1 f '-- 7 7 ' 7 Y - V - A-'N ,.,...,,..... C A., AA, ,.,.,,M,,, A.A,...A,AAA. my .f .5 Oy T HA OAK OTA STAT E CO 1- LE G E ,AA,, A.,A K 0 'Q i 19-JaC1gRab1j,-2-1JN,D -4 5' r. r, lr...- Q W 1mQSSFU'i,i 5A EQi5QEAteQQEaweQExp vw IlllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllv . n I - 7- -A., mf.-7-4m NA HW, , K5 M5NLQQQQLQBQ12 1 n,1z1 ,NQ 55JfFME5XR'54FQSL'STA'r E COLLEGE I 19 Jack Rabbit-21 'nmII1I1uI1un1IIuI1I1I1I1I1I1I1InIIIIIImuunmnnuum. A ' ' W QUICK smavicia GUAR- rwl ,j ny Mf t-?'lTfFqL7Tqfqvl'? ANTEED fl . :f, ' 1 If m l M1 ,Q ,4 ' There is a place of which Iwrite, I is I v ly! H .HIM t Which nestles near this place, ,I W3 if gg ji' xiii! :V IU ' For this, at different times of 'Ll H J I if day, Q H 1 ,' lf ' I K 'K b The students madly rush. wi., . 1 ' , To feed the hungry, feed them iQ .I 'ff 7 if well, ll J X Q Q This place serves in good stead: 'lf' - gl , ' 1' H , Its Gl1lliCk'S Lunch and The M' A -' X' IW ' 5' ' Cafe 'ff Y , H I 1 - 'il Hn- - W 'At which'one's often fed. Xl, W Q 1 V' N k'Tis here we argue, here we bet, fm KGIEE TL R fs- .4 .,L -51,24 I 3,1-xg And here we make our dates, E . '53-ifkw I .W,'Qfg'f' K And watch our money quickly go, V' f' , T- 1 fill . 'viii-X And write for more, in haste. , W l'j,, :.::Q-3 aff- 'Q 'Aly-if Some day we'll see a Runabout, I , V ,,f W' ' 'Sl'- , ff' Of gorgeous matchless shape, I - 1, ' lg?-es A - , , , ,, H '- ffgilx- , And in it, proudly driving it, ff i, ':,,r:t. fT ':- X'-I -'A a Rides Percy G. in state. 1 wil l I K J ly But so it goeth here below, . 1 ll . J I I As our shekels disappear Q- I . And fill the tin or that cate n . The La' That lies so close to ere DEAR E'1'HELBER'l': Life is just what the poet said it was. Last Sunday I went over to Wecota Hall to see the fair Ophelia. She was there all right, but so was everyone else. Honest, Ethel, it would have driven you to good old Methyl. If it wasn't one couple it was two on each davenport, And the sidelines were full likewise. We found a couple of empties tl mean chairsj, And took 'em into the old parlor, and we were all alone. We were just enjoying the fireplace, when in comes the- You know who I mean-and says, l'm sorry, but- , And I says, Oh-, I guess the standings good. And Ophelia says, Let's go to church, and so we went. And honesty Ethel, there were plenty of empty seats for everyone. Amen. ElSie. i -.-- J i- , , 5, ---- ...l-.....u A PHOTO OF THE JUNIOR-SENIOR CLASS SCRAP AFTER CHAPEL At the moment the picture was taken, a fierce hand to hand struggle was in progress, just beyond the horizon. , flllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIllllIIllIIIIllIIlllllllllllllllllllllll So U T H DA K OTA STAT E Co L L. E G E II IlllllllllllllllllllllIII IIIIIllllllllIllllllllllllllll' .E E E z Ev N L' ....m.. uummm'rwQj6ji1QIfQ'iaJQfD192115. 3 1 ,N W W.A.nn.1u.1 soUTH Q.eKoTA S T4IEiS?,'r LE?,E ' i . ,! ff! L3 ' ' Ti i 1 1 'I J ,s ,fi 1-2 5 fi-1 f 1 1 v' ,,.--Q Q f' ---J-'J'-'4 A 'Y V -Y YLUWXL 1 ' W' ' ' X- , F w M 1 , + ' W N' w K i AN EPISODE IN THE LIFE OF THE BOILER In the early days of October when the green cropped boys of the class of 1923 had barely made themselves members of our own State College, an alarming situation developed, contrary to all precedents and ideas laid down by upper-classmen for years before. What was it? Clad in suits of blue, not the conventional blue serve, but blue denim, they bodily made their way to the college campus and stealthly stole away Culh.ane's highly prized machine, which for years has served as an example for all mls-behaving freshmen. All that was heard was the Rah-Rah-R.ahs of the green ones and everything was quiet. A group of about forty upper-classmen assembled at the administration building, only to find a grave neatly covered with ferns, onions and evergreens, and a neat tombstone bearing the suggestive inscription: Gone, never to return, your memory still remalns. -Freshmen. ' At about this moment the hearse carrying the remains, and about forty pall-bearers was discovered making its exists from the campus. A desperate attempt was made to rescue the beloved friend who was so irreverently and carelessly being carried away in disgrace-Intervention was of no avail, the deed was done and the college community was shrouded in woe and sadness. But, alas! Upon appearing for classes the following morning the Freshmen were greeted by a new boiler firmly cemented in the ground. Besides at every corner of the campus a group of unconcerned Seniors stood with stern faces and long paddles, determined to paddle every Freshman until the burial place of the veteran of a former day was exposed. The plan worked well and the following week a selected audience of uuper-classmen saw to it that the same hearse and the same group of pall-bearers brought back the respected friend to the tunes of Bring back my boiler to me, and Cheer, cheer. we've got it here. The respected veteran was not reburied, but through the efforts of the upper-classmen it was reinvigorated and reborn, and today, as always before, it stands as a fitting and exemplary landmark to all disobedient yearllngs as well as others. 19 :Jack Rabbit-21,9 FRESI-IMAN INSTRUCTOR IIIIllIIIIlllIIIIIlllllllllllllllIlllIIIlIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII G, souv H DAKOTA STAT E Co tae o E p IIIIIIIIIIIlllllllIlIlIlIIIlIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll P L -Q gi ,A D ii 4 Hr Hom: E Hanan D. , E, ! f77osH , Mvmr! OF fl Nlsur. CL ...- .MQ LMlHH1fQ! 50Li1E119f'fQT5 STAT E ?Q !+E9 '? ' W 'L Qmrm1,Q1Q31i11immmmV jgfgk iigbfj ' 2' V w . .nnluummnluuuuuInIIIIInIInnumnmuuuuulnfC319 Jack Ra-bbit,-21f,Q -url 1 A l, E 2 'I 2 GT' lui HOBO DAY, NOVEMBER 7th The first Hobo Day celebration in two years f- f was welcomed with open arms by State College W students and their friends. Althmlgh the day I'-we , , was not warm, everyone. was in his hobo garb early in the morning ready to have the regular time that one expects to have on this famous f ' . day. At 9 a. m. they all assembled in the audi- torium-this outlandish looking horde who .- called themselves students--and the parade was on. U'p and down Main Street it went, a longer procession than had ever been seen before on ' similar occasions. The features of the parade ' were the large number of special stunt groups which were scattered throughout, and the four- teen floats which brought up the rear of the 4 line. J The train bringing the visiting football team sf .ff --5 Y NJ being late, the parade did not go to the station but begging began at eleven o'clock according to schedule. After all the results of the begging had been safely stowed away, we went to the game where we saw our team win from N. D. U. The celebration ended with the dance in the evening, after which everyone went home to mentally review the events of the day. ' '..'f 'MZ -,, -g - 5,1-. Ze' X We 13 s XY r ,I ut f 1, 1 ,f , X vi ff x fx? , ' Y if V , F' Xt ,ll if ti A LOCAL FROM THE GANN VALLEY CHIEF Emmet and Lynette Dye, who are attending State College at Brookings, were at home for the Christmas holidays. Lynette is a senior in the preparatory department and stands high in her studies. Emmet is a Junior, civil engineer and stands high with his professors. According to reports he seems to pay strict attention to his studies- and girls, especially to the Junior Class President, who is also Assistant Editor of the 'Jack Rabbit, Treasurer of the Y. W. C. A., Vice President of the Girls' band, and leading lady .of the Delphian play. fff K X grxgxg 4 gs --Y Y '- Y-if l A GLIMPSE OF THE ROUTINE LIFE OF A DORM GIRL Note the bare-footed girl in the right foreground, carrying a pail of soft H 0 from the pump house, after the native fashion. 1 X9 flllllllllIlllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli CN S 0 U 1' H DA K OTA STAT E CQ li EJ-E Q IlIlllllIlllllllIlIIIIIIIIIlIlllllllllllllllllllllllllll II E E l'l'?-ll r 'I -J . A 'Q ' 1IIIlllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllll numumnnumnuunr C519 Jack Rabbit-21 um, ' I Ill IIIIHHH Il IIIIIIIIHIIHIIHII I .U UM IIIIIIIM WH I M IIIIIHMII ll I! I I Ill llll IHII IH lllllllllllllllll IIIIWWIIIIIIIIIIIWII IHI lllllllfdlm Hlllllllllll Ill a S Q 1 E 2 1 3 2 Q 2 -. '- 2 2 2 E 2 2 S. 2 2 E 2 2 1 Q a 5 W lllp G Sour:-4 DAKOTA 53,115 CQAQQEQFE numummnnum:nun 1unmmmunnumuu- -III llllillllllllllllillll C, S 0 U T H DA K 0 TA STAT E CQ l, 1. E G E Q IIIIIIlllllIIllIIIIllIIIllllllllilllilllIllllllllllllllllllll- Im: LJ ' -mmIInunIIIn1I11InnmulnmlmnulunnnmmumrQ19 Jack Rabbit-21Q nn A THE BATTLE OF DERBY' Sing ho! for the battle of Derby, The flercely fought battle of Derby, With boilers and paddles, Bad noses, black eyes And clouds hanging gray In the sorrowing skies, Sing Ho! for the battle of Derby. When Seniors with collars that tickle their ears Parade on the campus, the Sophomore cheers, But ever the Juniors, The sane minded Juniors Feel in dignity even their peers. 'Pall derbies, tiat derbies, Black derbies, brown derbies Covering Senioresque brains To Juniors, sane Juniors, Pert Juniors, plain Juniors Give horrible mental pains. . Chapel's the place for parade, VVith Senior men strangely arrayed, But they leave with less pleasure, Less dignified measure, Of the loss of their lids they're afraid. On the road to the boiler Their paddles they wave, And their Derbies consign To an early sad grave- The Derby, the Derby, The poor flat-topped Derby, A horrible finish they gave. The Victors-who are they? They say that the Senior men carried the day, But the flat-tops where are they? We know that we saw them adorn, not too low, The place where the Juniors, the brave and bold Juniors Had hung them, up over the road. Sing Ho! for the battle of Derby, The fiercely fought battle of Derby. IIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Jack JJD'IIIIIllIIIIIIIIllilllllllllllllllllllll Iillllllllllill g vv ,,, +- ', f ' ,w 'f 4,12 .M 'f'7f'2W ,v +35 . ' af?f.w.,.Q'57f', ' 1512- 1 X E W ' -' ' N Q ' A 'iii x S: 'E E F184 W l ll ll I 'muy' 3 ,Q f PM M By- 5 it : 5 f S E E E E E f 5 5 E E E E 5 E S IIIllllllIllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIllIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII S 0 U T H DA K OTA STATvE ' lllllllllll lllllllllllllllll llllllilllllliltlllllllllilla C K Jack Rabbit-21Jjummmmm U N 'Will' 3 k f w E E - ..- E Q E s ..- E Q 4? 3:1 23 E3 53 151 if Ei , ,.. E f..- ' ' '.,,c' '. ll, ' E C 1' 1 ?QEE game' nnmmmm 1 ' D E Q ,, . .f , ,-- -. . 4 W ' Q W, ' a 1 3 -1 i 1 :I ! 4 3 1 3 i 3 4 Q -A 1 Y FE ,Ld 1 g-, 5 1 Ei 1' 'fl 5.1 E' f, xii fi ii 41 Il 54 ,j I , 4 Ii ,4 14, 1 , . . U 1 1 a f l ? f ' Vi A 5 z sw y 'E 5 ii - i 3 I ' S .S , 5 i I 2,1 l A I l A f ' 2 LJ f 2 V2 i , 4 ggi 3 gg 1 f Vi 4 H ! Q ' 3 , ge- ! fl m E is C V.. .1 1 Q QlilllllllllllmlllllllllIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllll C, SO U T H DA K OTA STATLE COAL LE G E ' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIillllllllliIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII- E ... Y .......- sql' ' I Q 1 w -IIIIllilllllllllllllIllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllf Q19 JACK P.abb1t'21,Q '' '''''IIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll' ax ul I III Y 1 mm l llll , 9 , - A ,Q A HAVE You EVER SEEN -1:,. f?-. -'j ' -5-L.-.1-:Y 'E i Q if E J Y- The hstovelpthat helped Florence E V, 'L-ri wi ' I ff- ff, ', 5 I'yeI'. E I 7 6 Va- . ' -, -7- I 2 I The car that let Marion Driver? 2 l 'A ' A ' rf H T Anything to make George Biggar? E fx - ,V . The flowers on Charles Graves? -E -. . 7 Eflie Atwater at the fountain? 5 , j 3 . Q 'L' 1 'rue hoisting of William Mast? E 'Q b M5 7 2'-'iff 1332221311ii1L'I.Fl Qlt-Tm 5 Q A X 41:3 EE - E 1 , ll 1559 A 'L Dora kinum? E -- . ' ' x f' f ' . E f W The locks of Madge Kerlm? E g ' W ,V ,I A cage tor Norma Robbins? E E LT. , I -Q A-Af. A box of Ralph Peppers ? 5 A A L I i ' 412- Bonnie Buck? E W W I i The speed of Mae Swift? E - ' ' ' - K0rstad's best Sellers? E 3?-' -1 '-' The dome ot Ralph Towers? E ' T f K -- A piece of Spec Bacon? 2 X. -fi 5,1 3 ' f. ., E il 5.y.i..f..7 The light ot' Helen Day. E 7 .V N Marcus Chase anything? E The jingle of Anna Cach? E As You FELTON-BATOCCASION A drink of Harley Waters? E Genevieve, What are you going to give Marie for an engagement present? E Cecile, I always give her three silver spoons,-next time 1 will iinish the dozen. 5 Marcus Chase, in history class, The constitution says 'all men are created equal' E but does not mention women. 5 Prof. Harding, Well, where only men are designated, man always embraces women. E Student on side lines, Why're girls so crazy over battered up football players? E Another student, I suppose its their love for remnants. L A-A-----e-1 s . 1 g I Z i -: 5 Z 0,7 ,-,,,2 E A N - s s 1 S .C .,,. r , - .- ... .... 5 A TRUE PHOTO TAKEN BY OUR PHOTOGRAPHER OF AD HALL, Q TOWARD THE POSTOFFICE, AFTER THE NINE 0'CLOCK CLASS E The FEW extravagant students we see just behind the horizon, are buying E candy at the bookstore. ' e l ' 63 . A Q. 5 ' HHC519 Jack Rabbit-21, Z E - E 2 E E4 :iq 511 '1 - Q E 2 - - - - E S I 1 3 - .. - - 2 - 2 I A V A Y I YS C soyw DAK9lA.SfATE.,C0LLECE i .,1 19 Jack Rabbit-21,9 gl I . '1 v 6' WHY NI y ' 1 My 5: My f . My My 1 AM PROUD Uh' Aggie following-Joe Smith popularity-Pete Hermanson superior musical accomplishments- Paul Millett authority-Miss Gerlach democratic principles-Andrew Alli- son ' Hiram J0hI1SOI'l'-Abllel' .BI'lCtSOIl ' I-at ,I 1' . My F-'IQ I 'ss 'f ,Y'iH::m L ., ., . My . N5-gf .1 John-Violet Burge illustrious career 'in France-John Kneebone funny stories-Prof. Baldwin nationality-Billie Knutson originality-Lyle Burkhart grace in dancing-Elsie Fryer frat pin and my diamond-Cecile extensive vocabulary-Harry Halvor- journalistic ambitions-Lorenz Lip- fl Hier H I, My My bs X My L , My J Swift ' H Lg' Myself-Guy Austin ii Zn Son Boy ro Dogpq gina, wL'ARnvj Mus H0130 Day: My S'cuss ME Sis BUT -your STocK1fv'S DOWN pert or your 5K,rfs :S uP or SomE77wfv My conquests--Marie l-luntimer. Ruby: What's the difference between having the 'flu' and getting in love? Virgil: The 'ilu' begins a chill and ends with a fever, while love begins with a fever and ends in a chill. fMarie Huntimer will now sing that pathetic ballad entitled, She threw the dish-pan at his head and then she cried, 'Darling, I have Missed You.' 5 In an absolutely silent f??J chapel period, some chilly Senior sneezes- Whoo-ze ? From Freshmen section, 1 don't know. He, Are you interested in art? She, Why, yes, you know l gave up Jim lgymj to take Art. - ' Chas. Leighty, 'Tm so hungry l could eat any- thing. Alice, Could you eat the jam off the door there? A Printer, What makes the copy so soiled? Editor, Why-er the other editor, Sir. Miss Henry, I went home to see my folks in Volga last week. Miss Kennard, How did you find them. Nellie, Oh, I knew where they lived. Wheeler, I think next fall I'll 'try out for font- ball. Neva, I think from what I know, You would O -f-'-'i AW li Qogcb ' - XX 2 41? iq. I , , 'X- ,xvv .ff . , get penalized for holding. ,.,....5gT. ' . ' - f Fat Dalthorp, That isn't the same story you . .. 1 4 'V EW D told me last time Harley Waters, No, but you wouldn't believe that one. Q .-.. V q . a-' Q ' -- Sl Q 2':.L 9 g l x I l at ,.f--'11 :ij ..f- - . E E E Z 2 2 E 9 A . - l u 'IW' lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll C, sour H DAKOTA sul-r E Coi.n.e oe Q lllllllllllllllllllllIlllIlIlllIlllllllllllllllllllilllllllll- um CTII1fEWlHIlIHHHFMUJHMHIV' qgY1Q Qj5ER'RiiEb 16215 mnH1:111mymmg1ig::1gg5:i:i:gg1 ... , , ' .4 . ..-..' , LY' -mf' . f ,fv?f9Jffi 4 , ' - A ,Y v CL C. Slow H QAK oTA STAT E Co we c E Hmmm s mg 2 Violet Burge-Chewing gum. E E Pete 1-Iermanson--Reading Tyler E .. Bonnie Buck-Writing to Pinky. E 5 Harley Waters-Doing nothing. E : Carey-Shooting baskets. : E Julia Valentine-Playing her sax. E E 1 culus. : : . Marion Bruce-Coming late to class. : fill y LJ ' 19 Jack Rabbit-21 IQ ' ulnlununnnnnmannnnuII4nI1nnluuunuluum. GX A HH lldllvu 3 - FAVORITE PAST1M.ES E 5 School News. E 3 Marie 1-luntimer-Talking. 5 E Georgia Doktor-Waiting for Mac. 5 Paul Hutton-Sleeping. Z 5 v John Kneebone-Being familiar. 2 E ' Ed Nelson--Dodging girls. E E ' Einar-Talking it Over. E E , Oscar Hobbs-Studying his sub- 5 - ject. - 2 Marguerite Baird-Talking to Ki-ud. E E Elsie FI'y6I'-'D8.I1CiIlg aI'Olll'ld. E - Marie Kennard-Smiling. E : Lyle Burkhart-Pestering every- E E body. E E Edith .Doolitle-Interviewing the E Dean of Women. E - Andrew Allison-Raising objec- E ti0IlS. E .-: Ross P. Hanson-Carrying a strap- : - load of books. E E A George Biggar-Faking a grouch. E -E , Ralph Towers-Boosting for cal- E A 1 Alfred Nord-Taking a nap. EZ 2 WHY DID I COME TO COLLEGE? E S Being the results of interviews with several representative students: 5 E Ross Plebius Hanson- I came because-oh I'm too old to remember now. E E 'JEICK EFIIGSUIIG Reedy- Well, mainly 118081188 I hated to get 8. j0b and g0 to WOI'K. E : Harold Eustacius Urton- Because I felt that every gentleman should know how to play E E ' poker. 5 '- Paul Gipiferous Gilbert- 'l'hat's one of the things that I've never decided. E 3 Abraham Axelvitch'Wilensky- To become an assistant to Prof. Solberg. E - Harold Angelic Salford- The fact is-my wife wanted me to come. E E Clarence Evergreen Hegg- I came because I expected to make the basketball team. 5 E Hairbreath Harry Wheeler- My one reason for coming here was to get an education. E T FSQJ! vm, .k,,-.. -..- ... . ! E E A GOOD VIEVV OF THE OBSERVATORY, TAKEN BY A 3A AUTOGRAFLEX 2 E CAMERA, FROM THE WATER TOWER E E ' You will observe that the vista is obscured by Kneebone's large stock judging class, E 5 a: 1 ::l E z E ..- E E E E 1: E f whom you can discern reclining in the shade ol! the old gym. ' I ,rr 'J - IIIu1unuIIIlIlIlIInI1I1Iu1I1IunnnunnunmununmQsouvi-1 DAKOTA sus-re COLLEGOE , IIIIlIlllllllIlllllllIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllr llll ' S MgTTTmM1 w Qf5'j5,5RT3liijl5!Z1junMiiiliinmmmlmmiiiilii 71 1lllv ' um , I Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll C, S o U T H D A K o TA STAT E Co L L. E C. E llllllll llllllllll .,, TTTTT T FVIPRESSIONISTIC Her smooth, round cheek glistened undei the hanging lamps. Suddenly he surged toward her. They kissed. Instantly she whirled around and buried her cheek in the near-by cushion. But he, unclaunted, was off to meet her fair companion, who glowing faintly, seemed to dare him. Slowly he ap- proached, noting the perfect curve of her cheek. Yet something within him made him hesitate, perhaps a spark of conscience a touch of manhood, a rememberance of the one just left. 1-Ie stopped but an inch from that tempting face. Shuclcs -said my companion as he chalked his cue, I should have put more 'pep' into that shot. 19 Jack Rabbit-21JJD'InmmuumnunnnunIIIIIIuummm!nllmmnmm GX S. D. S. C. SPECIALISTS George Valentine, in study of FE At H 0. Dave Gilkerson, in Horticulture. 2 Paul Millett, in minimum of work. Wallace Dempster, in first aid. Sigurd Knudson, in shorthand sentimentalism. Harry Halvorson, in big words. Don Carson, in fussing. John Backes, in the tonsorial art. EGOTISM Prof. Harding in Political Parties, Why do they put the emblem of the party above the column at elections '! Joe Smith, For the beneiit of those who can't read. Prof. Harding, That wouldn't effect you, would it? Smith, No, it cuts no ice with intelligent voters. 0live1', Do you'like tea? Edna, Yes, but I like the next letter better. Prof. Brackett: Hobbs, did you fix that door-bell at Johnson's that I told you to fix yesterday? Hobbs: Well, I rang the door-bell three times and concluded there was nobody home so I left. - Aww Male, : 3 E E ? lsr I ll E N IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIlIIIIllIIIlIIIIIIllllilllllllllllllllll G-, S O U T H DAK OTA STAT E CO L I. E cf Q IIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlIIIIlllllllllllllllllllll l SM A.m1.mmHm11ni c fffwfmmmwmmmwn Qj1gij5511ga Wi, 5it- if M W .f W .lb x .,,, ,,,,-,,,,,,, A MWA ,,,, r W,-VAQWHM, . W ' J' ' W ,Q nw , K. .1 1 If T I ! EY! Ei l E , ,V , pa-:H QHLJ 1 1 nmummmunummun FgdL,g3AQ559I5:5?AT E, cp L pg Q E SI 1. ,,1,,, IllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlIlIlIllIlllllIllllllllllllllllllllIlll' Q19 Jack Rabb lt,-215.9 I, -.- ....... . hereby agree to take a course --,a--. - class dancing lessons from Prof. G E. Grant, for which I agree to pay S- -Q -in advance It is understood that the course is guaranteed and also that I forfeit lessons missed by me ton-failure to appear at specified time fSignedD EM professor attempted to furnish them, thus relieving the boys of tuition for said partners. RIGHT, CLOSE RIGHT Left, close, left: You heard it upon entering the armory between 7 and 8 P. M. for a period of a week last fall. It was the orchestra to which a long line of figures were moving forward and back- ward-the musical voice of one Profes- sor Grant. It went so well at first that it looked as if it might become a success and in time necessitate the providing of two places in which to hold our weekly in- formals, when everyone got the dancing bug. But alas the storm broke. The lack of partners made it hard for the class to continue its training, so the good relieving the situation and incidentally This was the big obstacle. The next scene features our hero, Peter Hermanson, the one gentleman of the college, who dared to brave the storm and escort the departing one to the railroad station. The two were followed by the howling mob with fingers itching to get hold of the object of their wrath, but the presence ot our hero stayed their hands and he escaped with nothing more serious than a crushed derby. Madsen, chairman of the dancing recruiting committee, has predicted that there is very little chance of the white-gloved pumped shoe, flitting phantom's return, to claim and collect the numerous outstanding 54.00 fees that he forsook in his hurry. ' WRONG NUMBER , Miss Johnson to Ross Hanson: Have you ever had a proposal? Hanson: Once a lady proposed to me over the phone but I discovered that she had the wrong number. Freshman: That certainly was a well-timed speech we had in chapel today. Sophomore: Yes, fully half of the student body had their watches out. Prexy: You are suspended for a period of three months. Griffin: Mercy, I'll be dead if I hang that long. ll Cs soon-1 DAKQ-rp. sw-ATE cottece Q luuumnmmnnnn 1nIumnuununuuu- 3 3 3 1 5 E 2 3 E 5 E E 2 2 l 1 E 2 E 1 2 1 5 Z 2 E T 9 I, ......,. 5 31,1 073 .sg -IIIIIIllllllllllIIllllIIllIIllllIIIIllllIIllIlllllillllllllllllllll S O UT H DAK OTA STAT E go Egg my IIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll - -uuunmmumuI1InIIIIInlIIIImllIIulunuulnmnunrQ19 :jack Rabbit-21f,Q -my V A ' 1 ' I ll 1 l THE YOUNGSTERS 'LJ ' IllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllll Jack Rvabblt-zlfxb'IllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII G-X A MERRY REVELL It was a bright Sunday in spring, when the events recorded here happened. Arthur Simon, Elwin Bartlett, Ruth Hoon, and Garland Johnson went out riding in a brand new Henry, which, by the way, is one of the best Sellers among French Limousines. The Robbins were singing in Glenn and Dale, and here and there a Daisy peeped up from the grass. My father was a Weaver, said Bartlett, as they were riding along. That's why I'm such a bad 'Heggf ' Isn't he a Fairbairn, Ruth, giggled Garland. No matter who he stepped with. I'm sure he could Lander, and, besides, I believe l'm Enright. I think he is a Marvel, said Ruth. Yea, Mann, watch me Carey home the Bacon, said Bart, gleefully. Don't be such a Kid-man, put in Simon, who was Driver. After riding a long way into the country, Bart finally said, Let's go Back-man. Thank the Lord for that, exclaimed Simon. l'm nearly frozen. Guess I'll Button my coat and Turner round. They consequently reversed directions and returned to town. ln passing the Leon Simon ran over a Brown Kerr, the force of the impact tipping I-lenry over. The Marshall came running up the Street, and a crowd soon gathered. You have'raised the Dickens-son, said a Stout gentleman. Uon't stand around and Doolittle. Some one call a Dokterf' No, don't do that, gasped Bart as he picked himself up. Nobody's hurt, but it's a wonder we're not all in our Graves decorated with Garlandsf' 4'Why, Arthur Simon, you Monkteybl It wasn't Wright to hurt that poor Kerr. That would Madden anyone, said Garland. Guess I'll take Ruth home before I have to Wheeler, put in Simon. You sure got us into a Mix, said Bartlett. I certainly, saw more than one Starr. Ye-s, and I think you're very Rude, added Garland. It seems to me you're mighty Riley, said Simon. We never Major go with us. S I : z l: :: z n v rv u See you next Yule-tide or maybe Valentines Day, said the girls. Aud thus ended the Merry Revell. llnnunmulnuluu1lc,soovH DAKOTA s-I-A1-E colleges lllllllllllllllllllIlIIIllIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- 1 ia... Jack Qabb it-21fQf nHHnmuim1mHum' by .., w H fmmmm fc ,59,1T.9:Q4,Lg If,ig-,TAIELLgofgfiqE l mumuu mm MJ . - lull iq' QD ' IllllIllllllllllIIIiilllIllllIIllllllIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllli -Jack FD'IIlIIlIIIIIlllllllllllllllllilillllIlllIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllhf A ' - Y l lIll ,I MUSIC ROOMS during PRACTICE HOURS , P erhaps you have heard the rumble of a xggp xx M onstrous thunder stormy or a '-Ifq I - R oused-up bunch of Dorm girls yell, U ntil the air was cold and warm. 'W A nnoyed were you ever in a boiler S hop, or say a big stampede after chapel? X N I C tgtainly you've heard a squealing porker get l t in t e head and neck, well I N, T he racket and noise of these national brays, X - f C learly take the dandelion bouquets, but X l ,J I ndicate, did you ever hear the music students, 4 f ,, 4- A , 5, R ave in the Music Rooms during Practice Hours? y 7 WY E 'f C ertainly you have heard them scale the heights, W-:js Q 1., 0 ften, falling headlong, rending our reverie, with ,ff V f if E ndless howls of flendish anguish X VM iTff 0 blivious of all our tears and pleadingg , ,, Q H oodwinked maybe, and you no warning have, let I ,V a....,,,,,:,,,.1I 'f M e say this parting word w' mmm R etrace your footsteps and go Y S ome place where this music is not on us forced. lv 4 S ome quiet rest-room in the Astronomy building. -Contributed. -L In music class: What is the meaning of Andante? Student: Ann Dante was the wife of Dante, an Italian author who after his mar- riage, wrote the 'Inferno.' SOUND INFORMATION Hazel: Tell me, Professor, whether the Canary Islands were named after the birds or the birds named after the islands? Prof. Baldwin: Yes, probably they were. A green band member: What is that little projection on Pete's cornet for? An all-wise second: Oh, that's to help him carry a tune. FEW LINES TO A DEVOTED COMPANION lBy a Musicianl You blatting, screeching, harsh old thing, X With your shining brilliant form, -L ,fvf You almost drive me to despair, , In many a musical storm. 'g f I rest for maybe twenty bars, ' mm I have high UF to blow, ' '57 But when I blow I hit B flat X af' As the measures come and go. 4 , i j' I strain my face, and hurt my soul, W And injure my diaphragm, jx nu 0 As you, many a time 1 cursed ' y 4 - And felt like giving a slam. c,,,x But such is the sad fate of one, Who in his thoughtless life Got chummy with a thing like you, ' . And commenced eternal strife. .q , llllllllllllllllllll C, SOUT H DAK OTA STAT E Co LLE G E llilllllllllllillllllllllllllIIIllllillIllllllillllllllllllll- : z 1 : : ?' inf' E ' unnuun nn Y Qiifj Jack Rf1Qbbit'21J ,lu l ' A' Wwny ll 3 5 L 1 , I E, Iii? r 5 I Q 233 api z. G: fi it I E5 gl YS' 5 t5 L- , ' 'Z Lg: E53 E IE 'ff ,J 3 57 V L 1 v'-' 1 ig! l , I s l 5 T4 LV, , X 1 3: T li X 1 1 , 1 4 5oU4W'1jgK5Hi 5+x?'E c6Lg g ge IllI1IIllllllllllllllllllllllllll llll ? S 2 1 5 E , g 2 E Q gn ..., Q.,,-.., M M,,,,.r, A,.. ., Q ,Q ,,,.., .. W-ll M 'IG . A 'lr' 19 -jack pgabbit,-21 'ummnnnunnnnnl InI1IIIuIInnunuuulluunnnl A 3 A-'O'MlM7 AN INTERESTING PANORAMIC VIEW OF THE WILLFUL SEVEN, CARRYING AWAY THE AUDITORIUM DOOR, SUNDAY, 3:00 A. M. The heavy masked flgure just beyond the horizon, carrying the bolts and hinges, is the ringleader of the little band. NOVEMBER 22 All in all, it was a grand and glorious day for State College. From the first ting- a-ling of the old Big Ben at 4:30 to the last drowsy We beat the U at 1:30 that night, it was a. day of days. Hargett's ditty band woke everyone early in time to catch the 6:30 special, which in the usual Special style, was some two hours late in starting. Nevertheless we arrived in Sioux Falls at noon, determined to bring back a victory. Do you remember the little old pep we stirred up on the train, the songs, the ditty bands, the parades through the cars, the hilarious spirits-all for one purpose, Beat the U. Do you remember how the sight of Sioux Falls made your blood tingle, and when Chuck got us into line how we were all rarin' to go? Oh, the yelling, the cheering, the singing, the bands, and how Sioux Falls did stare! Why! Is that what you call State College pep? You tell 'em it is. ' T Then through the streets between the THE CAUSE Au-I THE Rssul banners of yellow and blue we marched. Mn , And then Cataract hotel-and can't you 's' ' see Bus, Josh, Jim, Big Ed, Roberts and X-QT V X the rest of the team, sticking their heads ,X 1, V4 out of the third story windows with a i h:2'Z!ko-EEZ I -Q Yea State and our return Yea team- l:U'm:Egf:5,', li fight 'em. Then curiosity brought a few ix fx University men to their windows and -'flflllmqffdl ' -. ' 3 g their feeble Yea Cow College was an- W -: ,.'Z5 Um 3- - - swered by a mighty Beat the U. J m' -TZT'-L ,- - Fix 5-1-If li--W, After State College had shown Sioux 5'um'4 'fl ':1'?' X,-,x '4.'fff?'lff.' Falls what real bands call music, we all gg, - -pq Q13 went to dinner. Of course, none of us lzfgzliv QD -X have forgotten that march to the grounds. But where, oh where were the Univer- fmfi' L-1 7 f l sity's H500 rootersf' iThat question will --1--Q ki - never be settled.l Do you see that l -...- -- straggling line of people led by the Huron .1 l ' Municipal band? , ' 5 Ll You all remember the game-13-6. . ' ' - And you can't forget how Sioux Falls 7, turned over her streets to us that we D 'IQ C -N50 --,jun LH might make 6ur triumphal march before Z5 Q, MA the woe-begone University rooters, who ' j' f- with the game had lost their brag and ff fu MQ banners. --Q I fqq I Leaving Sioux Falls at 6:30 we ar- lm 2-Mg-F ,, ff I ' ,vm rived in Brcimkings in time for a grand wwf M ,,.,u,,,, ' mga' midnight celebration, bonfire, cheers and 'ijhjgmf 1 1'1 'l ' .,B all, thus commemorating the turning of 55?'-'-fr? a new leaf in the history of State College. 1 43' Y, IIIIIIlIllllllllIIIllIllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIllIIllllllllllllllllllllllll CN SOUT H DAK OTA STAT E Co LILEE E llllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- E E E l: l: E 19 Jack Rabbit,-21 1 w L llIlllIlIllllllhlllllllllllilllllllIlllllllllllIllllllllllllllllll S O U T H DA K O TA ilfgfilg- ,CQ IIllllllilllIIIIllllllllIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll ' NURSERY RHYMES Q., . 19 Jack Rabbit-21,9 .all , ' Wav E ff -L ...Q PL E jf 0700 310114 Law 73 754106 E 5 -Q ' 2 , E E V E 1 E Hickory dickory dock, 2 Be in at eleven o'clock. ? When Dora s in sight, E Quickly say good night. E Hickory dickory dock. E Charlie Charlie, where have you been'! 5 Over to the Dorm. to see my queen. E DOZSIIS of fl1SSeI'S everywhere. E Charlie, Charlie, what saw you there? 5 'rwo little Jills went o'er me 1-ull, E To carry some soft watery 5- Two Jacks they met, And then yOu bet 5 The Jills just toddled after. E Sweet Hazel has so many beaux, E That to all the dances she geaux, 5 Sometimes she will vamp 'em, EL And other times lamp 'em, But to me she just turns up her neaux. See, Saw, Margery Daw, Mcwhirter shall have a new Dokter, Who will give him generous doses of love, And of his life be the proctor. Tom, Tom, the piper's son, Stole a heart and away he run, 'Twas 1-lenning's heart, but they had to part, When she for the city made a start. Franky, Franky Lander, whither do you wander? To the Ad., to my meals, back to my chamber, Once I met a pretty girl who with me would like to step, She smiled, but I just turned my back, I didn't have the pep. l. !E X tl 'f.5k,xJtjf 47 1-D. 'ig' , S 'fl' N tn f x Y f f.fg',,, ' 1 WD Q , 'Z FXX r 'H xmflfs Z' Kgs 'Uwe f4l'ver'61j6 Sfudefw-mi DVCZZ, TTL 3 ll, ,....... x :mln , 1. ty 'I' 1 55 .Q -lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll CXSOUTH DAKOTA 'nur' ' ' STAT E Co LLE G E llllllllllIllllllllllllll IIllIllllIlllllllllllllllllll' 'VI If , CL 19 Jack Rabbit-21,D'HI U ,Ib l 1. ---Y .-. 5 3 i f L rn A f A , Ei zz i E -- E '-Z, E, sz: Q i A 1 : , :F 5' 1: ig ' - li, , E E f 1 - E 4 E T E 3 5 3 E 3 E Z 2 5 5 E 2 T E j S E 2 A . 5 E Q E E .,.u,H 1 , -wal 9 'bv . f ' . . . url - J 0 Y ? Ein . QSOUTH Qj5Qr2!s1Ai EAEQQg5cE , A- 0 1451 p 19 Jack Rabbis-21 A A N al. , .,, ' s 'f ,l '? ill. H E , ik ,' . f f' 3 lt lZV'f1tf,?l l , , ,, it luljglnultsn E 1 - l 'ltr ,ll -..lj J , Illllliillli E ' ff 15 Jil L mflMW'lilIl'- .se T a 1 get can T sv -, , 4? ' ' 4, xv N 1 Q f nf ' If ffl' E 4 , ' , ,I I rwqk 1 , E I H vt, I- -X, ' fi few ,N I f i ? X l- I I I xl ' 1 ' 4 i XB JI WI 'L I Ill' l 4 E, W F' 2 ' , U 4 N , f ' 2 w in ' l g! ' y' I ? POETIC JUSTICE E A Drama.. Prelude: A solemn subjectg so a solemn rhyme E E E With feet that move in pentametrlc time, E Oh muse, I would implore that thou E Might give me, for forsooth 'tis needed now. E E E E Z A freshman lassie, sweet and coy, but wild, E A naughty, naughty, impolitic child -1 Has stepped the night before, and her we view E Hauled on the carpet by the august crew. E The judge in velvet lounging robe arrayed f Is stern enough to make a Soph. afraid: E Oh, justice, swift and terrible must fall E Unwished for, and lamented loud by all. 2 ACT 1 5 Scene 1 5 .Scenez Dorm: time, the morning after. E Dramatis personae: The judiciary committee, a freshman, the bellhop. and in the E background, a figure half seen, dressed in tan. : Bellhopz And sure, your hdnor, It was after ten, E lBecause I set my clock last nightj when E Th' accused upon the bell did sweetly play And 1l1I'6 the Sandman fl'0I'Il my sleeply eye 8.W3.y. E Figure in tan: Oh, did you say in' truth that after ten This damsel dared to linger out--since when E Have freshmen seized this right-the right assured E To seniors only? Oh, she must be cured! 5 Until the youngster fears an awful fall, E And then in accents long and deep and loud, - Each clears her throat and tumbles from her cloud.J , E Lady in tan: Your mother sent you here into my care, 5 lThe crew looks on in solemn silence all 5 It is a task which someone now must share. , E Oh judges, she must be consigned a fate, 5 That will prevent again her stepping late. E tAgain the crew, this time in mild surprise, 5 Look on the girl, but sleeply are their eyes, E And' the chief magistrate who sits between, 5 Covers her lips lest her wide yawn be seen.J E Lady in tan: Such sorrow do I feel for your sad lot, E' A I'd weep if I'd my kerchief not forgot, tContinued on Page 2163 I Im fx' X9 1InInIIInumuuluunIIInnnIaInIIIIInmmumnuumuc,soo1-H DAKQ1-A sw-A1-E col.-.ace n nnunmumununmumnnnununnnnmuf' Q Y fi' ., .M .. ,A if ri 3 A H M . . , W1 x pa l N iii Fil lei Ei fi LJ g if 55 ,..,f,,.,,, t K , , ,, -h 4 - A ' A , Lvf.,.,,A . AA A - , 1 C QL. ...ff -'II' CE-9223,2f:l'5i?If?fiIfi'i,SC3E 5Ei9 'H Ml' 1'1 Rabbitgl-1:3 1Pmun1Hm1n51Hu11HmHu'iiQfi.M,,.,M : U W E4 ll 1' I ll lgl I, 41,,I1,, , POETIC JUSTICE-Continued from Page 214 IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllll C1719 Jack Rabbit-21 Oh children, will you ever understand That culprits always feel law's heavy hand? lAt last the magistrates, their voices strained With deepest pity and their sweet eyes pained, Pronounce the sentence just and fair, but sad, The while the truant strives not to feel bad,J Magistrates in unison: We do decree that every night this week The miscreant child before us shall not speak To habitants of fair Wecota Hall Until the watchman twelve o'clock shall call, But that she shall abroad be forced to roam And wait that latest hour to come home. Thus, oh my lady, rest yourself assured By stepping often, shall the maid be cured. Quick curtain. Postlude iby the lady in tanl: Poetic justice meted out to all The fair young dalnsels of Wecota Hall ls the 0116 thing that WB have l2l'lOllghl1 of late To be of greatest beneht to State, And thus you see, the law so well applied That none, e'en scoifers, have it's worth denied. Exit. Low music-very sad. Kenneth Hood ito his class of Aggie girlsl, The bell has rung and I will hold you no longer. SHIFTING THE BLAME Miss Riley went into a downtown music store. She tripped lightly up to the counter where a new clerk was sorting out mu- sic and asked in the sweet- est tone. Have you Kissed Me in the Moonlight? The clerk answered, lt must have been Mr. Jones, I've only been here a week. ANTICLIMAX She clung to him. He could feel the subtle warmth of her, burning into his soul. Something within him stirred. He touched her bare shoulders with the tips of his flngers, her hot breath in his face. My gosh! he said, trembling. What would you have me do? She lifted her eyes to his-eyes in which burned an inscrutable fire. Pick up your feet, you poor fish, and donlt step on my gown again until this dance is over, she murmured. Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll S O U T H DA K O TA STAT E Co L LYE E Q llllllllllllllllllIlllllIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllll i ' ' 1llllllIIllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIT Jack JJD MH Wm, 3 i 1 K E E E if e II ..1i.QlI gl tu. iq M 4 'ZW' qs' .Q 44llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Cy 5 O U T H DAK OTA STATLE Co L HE G E IllIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll- W WSU I . 1 - , n' I 'IH I 'lllll ' 2 E iii Q E fi Q 55, 63 lIllllllllllllllllllllllIlIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Q19 jack Rabbit-21 i H: ,- f. 7! 4 5 1 K A 5 W :fl- E7 fi' - ' ' ': -, .vt ., .1 NIJ' - 1 f . 'illllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIlIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll CNSOLJTP1 DAKOTA STATI5 Co CLE-CQEKQ' IlllllllllllllllllllllIllllIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllv F 3 ' U 1 1 4 r 1 l - 4 , n- ' ' A. A .V g wl1wA11 '- f7i.QiQ:'..1?51?Q9 Tfx516155Q59EQE4 1 W Y . 0 PJ! E 1 19 Jack Rabbit-21 'IllllllllllllllllllllIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII' G, mt, SOFT WATER Many a tender romance has arisen from a pail ot soft water. Take for instance the ancient case oi' Rebecca and Isaac. When Isaac saw the image of Rebecca smiling up at him from the depths of the ja1', his heart became as soft as the water and-he fell. Poets have warbled and twittered for ages since on the activities of Cupid and H20 even in the stage of puppy-love as exemplified by Jack and Jill. The wise old Dads of State College must have realized this eternal truth when they placed the fountain ol' soft water at one end of the campus and the fair sex, who use it, at the other. Let the cynic who says that the days of chivalry are over, view the Jacks and Jills who climb the hill to the engine house every week, returning with a pail of the magic, steaming fluid, supported by Jack's strong right arm. Every Jack has a Jill, of course, and if circumstances and Cupid will possibly per- mit, every Jill has a Jack. lt not, any unsuspect- ing man who intercepts the path to the engine house is in danger of being vainped by the magic spell of Jill and her pail of soft water. THOUGHTFUL Laxson: Say, I got a bid for the Junior dance. Johnson: A bib? Laxson: No, stupid, a bid. What would I want wth a bib at a dance? Johnson: Oh! I thought it might be a dinner dance. fx .-'-sm T N x 9.3 1 r FT ffl' 5 X AN APPRECIATION If ll f I .N We feel constrained to inform our read- K XXX' ' ers that this College Life section was in- serted only to maintain our sterling reputa- X X tion for originality. l We wish to acknowledge our indebted- X ness to our cartoonists and humorists, who limi N, have made in possible to libel ana malign W N I our classmates with impunity and accuracy. O 0 ' ' . ' l .L-. in 3- 5-4 -' T' ' in ,I 1 5 WITH DEEPEST REGRId'I:S 'llllllllllllllllllllllllllIIllllllIIllllllIlIllllllllllllllllllllll C5 SOUT H DAK OTA STAT E CO LL E G E IllllllllllllllllllllIlIlllllIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllll' TE' E'-E E H , 19 Jack P.abbit,'21 1 4- --V-L-. E E 510000.00 f 11 Q J ZIIRIHYAL 0' KITTY' I SATURDAY PEB21 5 E ' C, SO.liILf:Q:g?g153jQQ:,iIf5j512435-5525 lilllilllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lv, n Quwrm-1 N 4 F ' F ' L 3 3 f I 1 5 l l ' - gf ll , I 'luv' i 19 -jack Rabbit-21 'IIlIIllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l uummunmm CALENDAR 1919-1920 ' September Everybody back to Old State again. Y. M. and Y. W. mixer in the Armory. Bag rush. Frosh the victors. OCt0b6l' -Michaels elected editor and Millett business manager of Collegian. -Frosh rules on. Button there! -College community dance. Collegian and Jack Rabbit get new rooms. Hermanson punishes 'Frosh violators. -Daiiry judging team cleans up at Chicago. -State 49-N. N. I. S., 0. We beat Wesleyan 7-0. S. D. S. C., 0-N. D. A. C., 0. -'Phe Aggies arrive. ' NOVGIIIDSI' -Hobo Day. Win over N. D. U. 9-7. -Armistice day. Legion presents Hag to college. Lecture course, N. Y. lvladrigal Singers. -Everybody at Soo Falls. We Beat the U. Lecture Course, Gay Zenola lVlB.C- L3.I'611. -Creighton 7, State 0. E DBCGIHDGI' Intersociety contest. Althenians and Milts tie. - Messiah a great success. -Christmas vacation begins. J ElI1l1211'Y -Registration for second quarter. -Co-ed Prom. -Intersociety debates, Athenians win two, Milts one. -Frosh win interclass B. B. champion- Ship. -Zoellner Kc Week, Lecture course. -Flu ban on. Gloom prevails. 2 1 3 I E 1, E l E E E ,fl-lbfif E -1 Ye E , - .... -LJ E February E 14-Flu ban oil. Joy reigns. .lunior E Prom NOT put on. E 20-Pentagonal debates. We lose to Wes- E leyan and defeat 1-luron. E 21-Athenians 'present The Arrival of Z Kitty. E 27-State 28, University 16. E 28-Delphians present All of a Sudden E Peggy- . E March E 2- 1-'inafore makes big hit. E 5-6-High School Basketball tournament. E Elkton victorious. E 13-Y. M. C. A. circus. 2 16-S. D. S. C. Military Band Concert. : 17-Junior Prom. E 19-General Wood speaks. E 19-S. U. s. o. 51, rankmn 10. State E champs. 5 22-Band goes on tour. ? 24-School of Agriculture play. 5 25-School of Agriculture graduation. E 30-Last copy of Jack Rabbit goes to 2 printers. E June E 15-19-Big Reunion and lflomecoming. 2 16 fCOl11l11eIlC61'I'l8Ilt. r e p ll I I ' 1 63 lull-Ill' i..m,:ui1 CQ o u T H DA K o'r5g 515115 7 Qpriing Q E 'IIllIIIIIlIlIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll WJ 00,3 AT Amy N M 0 . :V F-wx 6 L: -Q K E254 f fffffm K ' ..f, Aigifgfl Rag, N ASX ,lin lx aaglgd KXI I! ' 'W Oug f - - Y: NN Q- Q5 .. 'itF'Qrf 4 - - Ill! V I 1345 19211 Seventy five years untarnishecl record. Always purely mutual Uhr mutual Igrnviii iliife nf Numark S55,ooo,ooo,ooo.oo Learn now about the biggest and most scientific Business in the World. Having been a student at State, I appreciate your posi- tion, anal want to explain Mutual Benefit, Whether you begin your policy now, or merely seek information. I am at your service. H M. A D7'SfT7.Cf Agent ' t ' f ,ifiili no 77m ' 'Y 'Qi , ' p ESTEY Q.-1 PIPE I 4 ' ' 'll , ' B - .I fs, N I 1 4 ..., 4 ' Y .rj p Q D 0512 GAN it 1 1' ' I Lift-yy onate to qxggjw State C ouege 'M ,yo,y y,ooo 4 , . . I W v by the Alumnl ASSOCIB' ' 1 tion. was purchased from 1 M p ggfjg f f vgi our concern and IS evl.. . clence of our ability to 2 O 911' care for all Musical De- ?s 'df' ' mands. WILLIAMS PIANO CG. ' Since 1887 Eat Sweet Sprouts, because they cannot get as Sweet Things GETTY KEEP GETTY'S GOT IT Phone 175 BROOKINGS, SOUTH DAKOTA Bessie: lf you insist on knowing, there are two reasons why I can't marry you. Rejected one: And what are they? Bessie: Yourself and another man. Max Green: Gee, this Dean of Women is getting strict. John, Howzat? Green: Why she wouldn't let one of her girls accompany me on the piano with- out a chaperone. Noonan: What did you think of our scheme for decorations in that Christmas scene-holly leaves over laurel? Eddie: I should have preferred mistle- toe over yew. Prof. Lattin: Well, Burkhart, have you proved this proposition? Burkhart: Well, prove is a mighty strong word, but 1 will say I've rendered it highly probable. I fear I am not sticking to facts, said the postage stamp on the letter of a gay young Soph, to his father. Prof. Hu-tton in Soils class. Now men, draw an outline map of South Dakota. Mr. Vera, Shall we include the United States in it? FAD THEATRE United Artists, Universal, Goldwyn ' and Triangle Plays Always a Good Clean Entertainment We will appreciate your patronage S. C. CORNELL, Prop. WORNSON'S STUDIO ll TH E HOME OF RE-AL PORTRAITS Phone 411 Brookings, S. D. THE HOME OF GOOD CLOTHES Brookings' Leading Men's Clothing and Furnishing Goods Store OLSON-GRAVES CO. Sioux Falls, S. D. Watertown, S. D. Huron, S. D. Rapid City, S. D. Sisseton, S. D. Grand Forks, N. D. Minot, N. D. Marshall, Minn. Montivideo, Minn. Wheaton, Minn. ATTENTION! EIU We liope tliat tlme Professors will teacli you to trade at lmome wlien you leave College. Send- ing away from l-nome will not lauild up a community. Yours for a College educa- tion .and common sense. A UE! Ideal Home Bakery THOS. BANG, Prop. Your friends can buy any- thing you cangive them--except your photograph. ll Make an appointment today Oyloe 's Studio Brookings, S. Dak. BE A REPE TER Start a -Savings Account and Then Keep .Everlastingfy at it To start an account is a good thing, but the counts in the long run. W hen you make the account a 'live and 'growing one. you become interested in its expanding abilities. : : 1 : : The Bank of .Strength and .Service pays H7.g1l6St Interest on Savings. THE BANK OF BROOKINGS THE JOHNSONIAN COSTUME PARTY Ford Sales and Service El Ford Cars and Trucks Fordson Tractors THE EDUCATIONAL t ADVANTAGES AT THE Thirty-sixth Annual South Dakota State Fair Will be greatly increased in every department We had over 125,000 students, in 1919 No citizen of our state should miss it. E No expense will be spared to educate, enthuse, and to entertain our cholars. Our dates should be kept constantly in mind. REPAIRING SCDICIHBCI 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, , 1920 E Write for Premium List' . W. S.1-IILL1, C N M ILVAINE Farrington, Vessey Xt Conover ,,,,,,,'jfS 1e ' Hu, S Y COITlDllII'lCI1tS of A Sioux Falls Paper Co. Wholesale Paper Sioux Falls, South Dakota 1116 Bee Hive Sl0l'C ,A Reliable Place to Shop A place where the Satisfaction of each customer is made the First Consideration of every transaction VVe guarantee everything we sell, because we discriminate in buying before we sell. E. S. Hanson THE CLEANEST CLEANERS Cleaning---Pressing---Repairing High Grade Made-to-Measure Clothing ALRICK 85 SEVERSON Our Prices Consistent With First Class Work 422 Main -:- Phone 177 Can anyone tell me three foods required to keep the body in health? Carol Munro, after short silence, Your breakfast, your luncheon, andlyour dinner. El'1l1El..D.Z What mark did you get on your French paper? Jessie W.: Oh, I spent nine hours on it and got stung with a B. Soph: This college certainly takes an interest in a fellow, doesn't it? Frosh: How's that? S-ophz I read today they would be glad to hear of the death of any of their alumni. Choice Farms and Wild Lands for sale in Brookings, Deuel and other counties in the Big Sioux Valley, the most successful Farming and Corn Raising Counties in the west. Lands loolced after and taxes paid for non-residents. Corres- pondence solicited. HOLLAND LAND AGENCY Wm. P. Holland, Mgr. LANDS EXCHANGED FOR MERCHANDISE. TOWN PROPERTY, STOCK. MORTGAGES. Brookings, S. Dale. Gettysburg, S, D, lf our Name is on the Label Its Dl'l1gglSt 409 Main Street Brookings '16 '16 A. E. ANDERSON' '16 '16 BURRIS PRINTERY Job Pr-inting Exclusively We appreciate your patronage Brookings Steam Laundry A White Man's Laundry For White Men PHONE 95 420 Williams St., Brookings, S. D. Pl-IONOGRAPH SHOP H Lil Victor and Brunswick Machines Phone 459 407 Main St., Brookings, S. D. ATLAS LUMBER CO. All Kinds of Building Material HANS PHILLIPSON, Agent North Main Street coivirtsriz Home Furni her We carry a Complete Stock of: Furniture Rugs Linoleums Stoves Gas Stoves X Congoleum Rugs Phonographs Refrigerators In fact, everything for the furnishing of the house. We can give you hetter merchandise and on laetter terms than you can get elsewhere. We invite you to call at any of our stores and inspect our complete line. The Home Furniture Co. Sioux Falls Aberdeen ' Watertown Huron DEAR ETHELBERT2 That nut from Pecan University Could have been ground up And sold in yellow packages labeled, There's a reason, Compared to the one That escaped the squirrels here. He was a chestnut, A horse one at that, For he sure was a horse on us. But speaking philosophically like, Have you ever noticed how people fall, For soup and fish, A striking pubescence on the upper lip, A cute bow tie, and, lest we forget, White silk gloves? 1-lonest, Ethel, Even the Dean of Women, Fell for him. He was such a nice 111311, Was Prof. G. E. Grant, Bachelor of the Light Fantastic, At four bones for ten lessons Paid in advance, And taught en bl-oc. Honest, Ethel, The Professor would have made The cutest shave-tail The way his battalion Of four-for-tens did By the left! To time rear! lvlark time! Halt! Battalion, about face! Would have warmed the heart Of his great grand uncle, Ulysses S. But alas, Ethel, Just about the time the troops Could about face! Halt! There was an argument. And the nut from Ulysses family tree Went West To grow up with the world. And that ain't all. The four-in-advance went West With him. The moral is, dear Ethel, this: Tho soup and iish have a pedigree As long as State's prize Duroc Jersey, Keep your hand on your pocket-book. ElSie. ,nm A ,, iii. if f sinlws 'di' 1' ,.-I fel- -'i 1' .' ws' at ,. ,V A CLOTHES FOR COLLEGE MEN We Dress You Right Our Price Is Right Our Style is Right We Treat You Right All Right Come In And See Us Today Up-to-date Clothing for Young Men hu Brookings, d. S. Dak. THE W RDROBE Dry Cleaners and Tailors For Dry Cleaning, Pressing., Repairing and Altering of all kinds. The Modern Plant--- Service and Satisfaction. Fine tailoring for the ladies also. We call for and deliver. Phone 472 Williams Bldg. 320 Main Street C. B. SMITH, Prop. YOU'LL LIKE FENN'S UHUCULATES ' Bulk or Packages MANUFACTURED BY FENN BROS., sloux FALLS I n C I Always 'Proglrams. Booklets, Cards. Letter Stationery and all kinds of J Printing for Col- llege Students. BROOKINGS COUNTY PRESS 420 Main Street Aleta, You don't ever speak to him? Margaret, No, when l passed him l gave him the geological survey. Aleta, The geological survey? Margaret, Yes, a stony stare. Cause! quick we married people pick up the habit of using a woman's reason. Mr.SaiTord, answering question: Prof. Brady: 'iStrange how liuden, seeing the proof of his picture: I wonder why the hair on the front of my head never shows on a picture. bl IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIII I E 5 E x XII iffy! ,, -E: I ' M W 154333 gvgliga E X if'-A4 dfqfi x X .AW ' 5 ' 'WM' L! P l' 'L E RQ! - J Q - , l , : I - I-I ' ' ' E l 5 lf YI ' Z , ' E A ff fl, X E T I if ' 5 E 7 NK -' E f','InWTII 'Qx' 'IG X A : 15.41 111' . E uv- 6 I A E Q IS 'x 5.21 : ' Q Illlllll llllllllll IIII Ill IIIIIII III III III IIII IIIII IIIIII lllll I m Y 'N E ,-- - -f --. E E , II E III I IIiI,,IIIe1fIII E THE IH c LINE E Z IL.: - I: -I -IDI: ILCI. I- vim. :D E E 3:54 -,,q55I5,g5.gI,IIIIII,IIv..f Q GRAIN MACHINES 5 A E ' III' E aINoERs HEADERS I 2 ,Iii j1F'II.4Ij.. ,L ' ' J ' ' REAPERS PUSH EINDERS 162 H 'W HARVESTER-THRESHERS , I i- I N L I i I-IAv MACHINES 'J Wg: f MOWERS I-IAY I.oAoERs qw 5- I -I ,I .Ist 'lf RAKES sweep RAKES fb- ----- 1:11 ,. I N ,I Vg r, K- , ,y ,--ll. I. ,,..u.x- I II kd IQ -rEDDERs HAY FRESSES -my III, w ' 'I , I I ' ' SIDE DELIVERY RAKES III ' ' HAY STACKERS ff COMBINATION RAKES ,fi ,QQ Q N AND s1'AcKERs Efgzgffj ' v - CORN MACHINES I ' mg ' 1 PLANTERS DRILLS L -f -u-411531 , CULTIVATORS PIcKERs vi A ' EINDERS sI-IELI.ERs 4- 7,,,A,,, A, SI Ase CUTTERS , 5II,4i'l3!' ,, fx. ITISK-ERsasHReDDeRs eff STALK RAKES FRN' I ....,, ,, qi X -gf-Alifww 1II.I.AcE 3 DISK I-IARRows ' ' ' 'I' ' Q - COMBINATION HARRows if AIX ' sr-1RIr-Isfroo-rn I-IARRows 4 ,, fi I PEG-1'oo'rI-I HARROWS , in, -I: -1' Y-A -il l! CULTIVATORS ' N ' I ,. 'I- 1' ' GENERAL LINE I Q .f fling' 529315 ,X gifglkl' ,gg 11215 KEROSENE ENGINES wig -rn WAP W c-AsoI.INE ENGINES E .1 A 'Eff '-:VE g., KEROSENE TRACTORS .: g1i MOTOR TRUCKS , sni!::g:Gg1'g,5 ypfj FARM wAGoNs I-, .N,,.,l , ,, - Wi Ilmrrpjfqf FARM TRUCKS 55. I . EAQVWH' g- ,Y 5 MANLIRE SPREADERS -5 I W' ' ' CREAM SEPARATOR5 lj., N J, GRAIN DRII.I.s Q, ,N MI is -M 5 FERTILIZER AND LIME ,, ' sk -D- 4' 1 , 5 SOWERS 2 Wi'qi?:?'Qf'f'-QQ E FEED GRINDERS , L V H' A533 E STONE BURR MILLS pix E-257' ,iv-T4 - - -H52 1,5 THRESHERS : I ' 2 STALK CUTTERS : 'iq-gi E ' KNIFE GRINDERS E E E BINDER TwINE E , I E ' I E Write tha International Harvester E 1 ,- A. II, JI' E E Compnny of America,Chieqo.USA E . 'Q iii E I E lor cntnlogue on any of theme mA- E .ik E I k E chinel in which you urs inlerelted E- . v. ii way.. 1-3 E ' ' 3' K illIIIllllllllllllIIIllIIllllllllIllIIlllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllifi ' v M' K 1 sb E X C.. IA E FI- .. 2. ly ' .. ' fi! , A--1 E --I-Ie.-I 'iv .- ,f-'JM I . ,. I' E W5 '5I 'eI9 ffaiimf. If . I .. In I E piudmqb' '-'. - ' - .Q-M ' V - llllllIIIIlllllIIIIIlIIllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIlIlllIIllIIIlIlIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIllIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlullIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIlIlIIIIIIIlIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I Buy Your Home JOHN G. RAAK Residences Residence Lots Brookings County Farms Office 309 Main Street Phone 107 BROOKINGS. S. D. Property SOILI at Ownerqs Prices. F. C. NEILL EE TRUNKS AND BAGS S. MARVIN 81 CO. Plumbing and Heating Contractor UD Vapor Heat a Specialty EIEI Phone No. 173 BROOKINGS. S. D. SAFETY SERVICE SATISFACTION CORNELL ELECTRIC COMPANY L. D. CORNELL, Proprietor EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL BROOKINGS, S. D. Young Man. are you preparing for tI1e rainy clay? If not. start Iauying sI1ares in the BROOKINGS BUILDING 8: LOAN ASSOCIATION Take a few shares. payable in montI'1Iy instaIIments of 50 cents, and each sI1are will return you 5100.00 in about ten years. New series start March .Ist eacli year. Start any time. See Seciy. 309 Main Street Brookings, South Dakota BROOKINGS TIRE WORKS VULCANIZING A SPECIALTY Retreading, Sectional Repairs and Tube Splicing A complete Iine of Goodyear and Firestone Fabric and Corcl Tires and Accessories. ARTHUR FRICKE, Prop. 513 Main Street Phone 199 CORNER GROCERY Home of Quality Groceries and Iaest Iine of Fruits anti Fresh Vegetables in the City. Quality and Services'--Our Motto 4 Deliveries Daily-Phone 11 CHAS. MARTINSON, Prop. Good .BUSiTleSS is created by Good Service WE HAVE THE BUSINESS ll POOLE'S BARBER SHOP Tub and Shower Baths--Shine Parlor 2 C Good Jewelry E Egan' 'l . l l. BEATTY P E,f1-nl flii' , ,,..-:vb .T-1 . -nn, .,.. A ae... ' vf A '- H Lg' P- Jump: G U Veri thin Watch W. A. CALDWELL, President H F HAROLDSON Cashie O. J. OTTERNESS, Vice President L. A. OTTERNESS. Ass't Cash e THE FARMERS NATIONAL BANK Capital and Surplus, 560,000.00 Deposits, S 1,300,000 00 We transact a general banking business and welcome the accounts of College leoplc Five per ccnt paid on Certificates of Deposit and Savings Accounts BROOKINGS, SOUTH DAKOTA BROQKINGS PRCJDUCE C0 Wholesale Fruits, Poultry, Butter and Eggs Call Brookings Produce Co., when in need of pure ice. Phone 353 A. A. McMillan The Nissen-Hinkley Co. Jeweler and Optician STUDEBAKER Motor Cars Fountain Pens Music and Musical Goods Victor Talking Machines and Records Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted We aim to plea y Twin City Tractors General Garage Business Where you get Service Opp te Post Office, Next to Grand Theat The Hub Geo. P. Sexauer 81 Son Fil . Brookings, S. D. Grimm's Dept. Store E EI The HOIHC of The Popular me Perfection Flour lil For Ladies' Ready to Wear Dry Goods, Notions, Etc. El T Brookings, s. D. Perfection Coal Perfection Seeds Perfection Chick Feeds Come and see us We aim to please you Kabrud Brothers Insurance Agency INSURANCE AND BONDS Life, Health and Accident, Fire, Tornado, Hail, Grain, Automobile tFire and Theftl. Public Liability, Property Damage, Collision, Workmen's Compensation, Live Stock, Plate Glass and Burglary Insurance. Fidelity, Court, Contract, Depository, Internal Revenue and Check Forgery Bonds. Brookings, South Dakota Lawson, Say, dad, I'm one of the big guns amongst the Pharmics at State. Dad, That may be so, but why don't I hear better reports, then? Miss Hinds, P00I' b0Y! I'm so sorry that you did not pass your examinations. What was the reason, I wonder? ' Mr. Staven talso wonderingl, I can't think. Graves, Come on, Cough up those class dues. 1'm the guy that put the dig' in dignity. Jackson, Elias, you were talking in your sleep last nite-. Bastian, Pardon me it I interrupted you. Good Drags Make Good Roads e e es BUT- A Good Drag Must Dump 4 fOr You L who can appreciate M them X fi- 2f',', ' eee -. . That is Just What This Drag Will Do I 75 You can fill up a hole in the road with it just the Q L same as you can with a scraper, always keep- ing the grade smooth and level. Do not be de- ceived in the drag that has a lever: that is no proof that it will UMP and deliver all the dirt in the low places. Brookings Machine Shop THE BOOT SHOP Brookings, S. D. ' Brookings, S. D. ADAMSON'S CAFE Meals and Lunches New Era Shine Parlor P. B. ROBINSON Phone 181 415 Main Street Brookings. rr South Dakota Brookings, :z South Dakota J. O. PETERSON Jeweler and Optometrist Expert Watch Repairing and Glasses Fitted Correctly I. X. L. Grocery Our Business Aim is not Conquest, but Co-operation and fl bigger and better understanding -let us feel acquainted Phone 148 Brookings, :: South Dakota C. A. ANDERSON, Proprietor Brookings Candy Co. The ,Mn Pleasant Hour A w h Home Made Candies and a lfttciealrgjere the Best of Ice Cream and WU a whole lot WHOLESALE AND RETAIL . 'S ' f JAM ES BOWER, Mgr. Brookings, :: South:Dakota Better Pictures You get your money's worth here il, f, MURPHY 81 HANSON Brookings, S. D. H fha Old Reliablen The irst ational of roolnngs .W '..-1- '- Tw. '-,,,.-uilf '. . rf . -J: T RR ' ..'- t V ,V l ,Nix xx 1 2 xxx . o 1-f - -4-- i P '1: f' ' A. v. 4 f 1 .. H A Bank of service and accommodation A friendly institution of finance 1 Highest interest on savings deposits The college student's friend for many years SAFETY COURTESY STRENGTH SECURITY If You Banle With Us, You Can Bank On Us. The First National Banh of Broohings South Dahota ff it I l:S'72,f QQAI, drbzy if back E cafe ercanzwe Co. EJ E . I GULLICK'S CAFE when in need of Ice Cream, ask for P' R' GULLICK' Prop' Soo Valley Brand... Z We serve the best Lunches that 1. J. BIBBY. Mgr. money can buy' Brookings. South Dakota Z One block south of Campus. 'E lil SELLERS 8: BARTLING Complete House Furnishings E Undertaking Funeral Directing a Specialty l E Complete Motor Equipment Phone 108 Brookings THE NEW FURNITURE STORE G. G. RUDE, Manager Best Place to furnish your home. Undertaking a Specialty. B. T. RUDE, Licensed Embnlmer Phone L-308 Binford Block Phone 3 Brookings, S. D. RONNING BROS. Cleaners and Pressers Repairing Promptly Done 'l'wo students walking on the campus: one speaks to a co-ed. Who was that? laa. Ida who? Ida know. How very different- Claire Gay1ord's hair is all waves, and- Vera's is all beach. George Sievers: I wish to ask a ques- b t d ,tion a out a rage y. Prof. Mathews: Wel1? George: What is my grade in physics? Dr. .Clfrfhur H. Stoll Office over Beattyis Jewelry Store BROOKINGS. S. DAK. B. T. Green. M. D. G. H. Gulbrandsen. M. D. Residence Phone 293 Residence Phone 5 Office Phone 350 Office Phone L-350 Drs. Green G gulbrandsen Office: Medical Block BROOKINGS. S. D. QT. E. A. .Len-tz Dentist Over First National Bank Brookings. OLAF EIDEM LAWYER Brookings. South Dakota Residence 911. 2d Street Phone K-46 B. J. Bjerum Expert Tuner and Repair Man BROOKINGS. S. D. Dealer in Pianos and Player Pianos The Leon Hotel Welcomes You Brookings. Dak. , V f D bl Life giitaierieixndosi iiiiiiflfa if 222 ii. fmlmlllly thevesta patented I J i ix parts in repairing 8 fill any make of bat- L Q 5' '. ,,l.x cery- ly ' Service guaran- Y Iii' 'I 1 teed XX Phone 484 BA TTER Y S UPPL Y C O. J. W. LARSON. Prop. The Clarin Stuclio Is the Place where Photos of Quality are niacle. You should not he satishea' until you have given us a trial. R. E. Clarin, the zllan hehincl the Gun with I5 years exper- ience, will be there to rneet you ana' to give you service. The Clarin Studio Over Hub Store BROOKINGS, S. D. Vulcan 8: Machine Works R. J. GETTY, Prop. 7 OAKLAND MOTOR CARS Repairs-Parts Supplies BROOKINGS, SOUTH DAKOTA l 7 W ' , . e',fr-x1!.!7 ff lrfwr fx 53 umurz AN :lx X T .IU Newest Type of Closed Car THE LEX-SEDAN has the style of the built-up type. Yet lighter, more economical, and better balanced. See it today! WOODWARD'S GARAGE 421-423 Williams Street, Brookings, S. D. Lexington Motor Company C rlville, Indiana, U. S. A. it . T, 1 I' O ff .H l ff Lf C t tand f I f M 0 S r the ard test of I , . College wear. The rec- ognized standar Uni- ' form for colleges every where. I Lill ll Unif BFE 0 style mili N and ' WOT ' vidual measurements, in- N surimz a perfect flttmg uniform. j 9 Catalog on Request , . . ann. 4 . - Visit Our Factory when in Sioux Falls Famous B L1 ley ' Umforms ADE 1' glMIA no f if Q A T wr M A M1 l d l'fflbals4ll3.9 REG. u., s. FE. olfmci C We Are PICRSCCI To Show ViSit0I'S HOW Our Candles Are Made THEM 0 LILLEY ra COLUMBUS omo i i The MINNEHAHA CANDY CO. BROOKINGS CAFE G. SOULIS Ed STRATION, Props. lil .First Class Meals 6:00-10:00 11:30-1:30 5:00-8:00 Sunday 12-2 il LUNCHES AND SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS BROOKINGS. SOUTH DAKOTA T-rg' .5 4' 5:2 'ES' , 2. -assi-eats: asia. l Eglin' HE graduate of today enters a world electrical. Gathered from the distant waterfalls or generated by the steam turbine, electric power is transmitted to the busiest city or the smallest country place. Through theco-ordination oflnventlvegenlus with engineering and manufacturing re- sources, the General Electric Company has fostered and developed to a high state of nerfectlon these and numerous other appli- cations. And so electricity, scarcely older than the graduate of today, avpears in a practical, well developed service on every hand. Recognize its power, study its applications to your life's work, and utilize it to the ut- most for the benefit of all mankind. .. .t...,,. .X . N tt X 9 ...... .,t... . .......,. ' .sy General Office S E Q Em Sales Offices. in Schenectad5cNX all large cmes as-use OUTER JACKET REMOVED T0 SHOW CASTINGS SELF CLEANING A8 IT APPEAR8 Ill YOUR CELLAI Small Boy, Mr. Valentine teaches me Agriculture in the seventh grade. Prof. Miller, And does he know anything about Agriculture? Small Boy, 1 don't know, anyway he teaches it. CAMPUS LIFE First Stude, Do you know that fellow over there? Second Stude, Yes, he sleeps next to me in Fie1d'Crops. OH, HOW MANY Miss Kerr, There will be some hearts broken when 1 marry. Mr. Gullick, How many are you going to marry? K DAYBREAK I dream about a. promenade, Where men and angels mix. Divine bells chime-I wake to find The church bell striking six. E. T. B. PHILANTHROPY When a rich man wants to get rid of his In-I-ERHA-I-IOHAL CARTON FURNACE surplus Of money, he either gives a million HEYWOOD HARDWARE CO. Expert Installers uf Warm Air Fumacss Brookings, S. D. to charity or sends his son to college. A spinning sat Miss Violet fairg John Headley came to woo her there. So she put down the spinning wheel, While he put up the winning speel. E. L. K. '23, For PLUMBI G See RIO MI ER Foreign and Domestic Granites Cemetery Fences, Vases, Urns, Grave Enclosures and Lot Copings Brookings Marble and Granite Works. Q75 N I , , I 6' Qx7Jg2ucc.lQ'?Q Bnoomnas Xxbffd DAKOTA A.1M.Wold-Mark Construction Co. QUONG WING CHONG LAUNDRY General Contractors WORK DONE WELL Brookings, - - South Dakota Heavy Construction and F-ire Proof Buildings gifiss mfartfzza Lindsay 95fanfcuring,Sllam15oofng, Scahi and Facia, Massage. Switches .Made of Combfngs. EQUIIIRICS ChCCI'fll1ly FllI'l1iShCd Phone 180 BVUDLIAIIQS, S. D. We Terms BUY and and Title the Sen Best. only List the With Choicest Us For Service. Land K MITCHELL LAND CO. REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE BROOKINGS SOUTH DAKOTA We BROOKING COMMERCIAL CLUB BROOKI NGS, SOUTH DAKOTA THE WELCOME SIGN IS ALWAYS OUT College Students., who have parents or friends visiting in the city, are invited to make the cluh rooms their headquarters. This invitation is nottlimited. We extend it to everyone visiting the city. Lve want everyone to learn about Broolings, and to those who cannot visit the city for the purpose., we will gladly send information of any kind ahout the schools, colleges or city. Address all communications to THE COMMERCIAL CLUB BRooK1NGs, s. D. GOOD GARDE WILL HELP FEED A HUNGRY WORLD You are cordially invited to join the South Dakota State Horticultural Society. Our annual reports are printed hy the State. hut aside from the official list. are sent only to memhers of the Society. Our mission is to gather and disseminate the hest knowledge and experience concerning Fruits, Trees and Gardens. The Thirty-first Annual Meeting was held January 20-22. 1920. 'Liberal Plant and Book Premiums. Send to the Secretary for a list. Annual memhership One Dollar. Address N. E. Secretary SOUTH DAKOTA STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY BROOKINGS. S. DAK. Watertown Carhonating Go., Inc. Watertown, S. D. Manufacturers of all High Grade Soft Drinks Keg Cider, Pure Kampeska Distilled Water. Also the Famous Nactural Laxo Vim Health Water A Glass at Night Makes the Next Day Bright. THEO. C. AKIN Special Agent Brookings, S. Dak. with the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company oi Milwaukee The Dividend Paying Company of America Compliments of the Stokes Milling Co. E Manufacturers of the Celebrated GARLAND FLOUR E Milled for Dakota people by the Largest Mill in the Dakotas MEANS 8: SANDERS Billiard Academy na Finest Tables in the city We also handle a complete line of Cigars, Cigarets and Package Candy E THE POPULAR PLACE Fashion Herd Farm Breeder of Big Type Poland China Hogs Accelerator No. 380811, head of herd of richly bred saws. Herd kept Cholera Immune. The laest of stock for sale at all times. The best of family strains represented. Farm located five blocks south of depot. Where we make a specialty of Growing Them Big. a ll P. O. KENNARD, Prop. BROOKINGS, S. D. Men's Exclusive Wear, Haberdashery of Class and Quality We Aim to Please rg- Tum i f ggi... M 1 ' K' JM A w. ff? X x wi' lf ! Wi 1 ff WM - W' W -'W M M MV' 'H ,A mf A Wi? is H fl! tu 'il k i klj-. A A Y X it if 1 is N - if N, iixiiix l x iii A U' Jw., , '1'.'?'X ii: ,, ' X4 ' w MEN'S WEAR For Dress and Work Large Made-to-Order Department in connection. 1 f I ba' PHILO HALL WALLACE PURDY Han as fzvu,-dy Attorneys at Law Brookings, S. Dale. Cheever G Clleever Attorneys at Law C. Trygstacl , Office Corner Main and Wm. Street. Doctor Hyde Brookings, D. . Office: Hyde-Harris Block Residence: Corner 4t11 Street and 9t1x Ave. Dr. Harr1's Dentist I Telephone L-84 Brookings, H 59:00 to 11:30 A. M. Ph Soffice L-9 W 21:30 to 5:00 P. M. on' 2Res. 275 E. M1'7ler, D. Physician and Surgeon , Brookings. Soutl-i'Da1cota Dr. O. H. Lawrence Dentist Phone 434 Trygstad-Haugen Blk. Brookings, Dali. B leclaer E? B lecleer Cizirogi rac to rs I Office Phone 147 Trygstad Building Dr. Borst qyentist Over Kendall! Pharmacy FRANK TELKAMP, Pres. CHAS. YULE, Vice Pres. ED. SHANK, Sec.-Trees. armers Co-operative Co. I Capital - 350,000.00 H igliest Price Paid for Grain We Sell Farm Machinery, Tractors, Twine, Lumber, Flour, Coal, Salt, Seeds and Feeds of all Kinds Operated strictly on a co-operative basis. A small amount of stock yet to be sold. Write or call for further information J. D. WILSON, Manager BROOKINGS, S. D. Learn to say- Mars kissed her on the cheek, It seemed such harmless frolicg He's been laid up for a. week- They say it's painters colic. CC 33 E Magna Cigar I. A. TAYLOR Cigar Manufacturer BROOKINGS, SOUTH DAKOTA Erma Pepple, buying pumps tor the Junior Prom.: I think 1'll take these. But Louis XV. heels are too high for me. Give me a size lower-or say-perhaps Louis XIII . will be high enough. Hazel: I don't know what to give Bob for a birthday present. Esther: Give him a book. Hazel, meditating: I think he's got a book. Miss Young, in American History class: Where was the Magna Charta signed? Sculley: At the bottom. John Kneebone: I don't want a big picture. Mr. Oyloe: Then you must close your mouth. Florence Fryer: I just can't have my picture taken until I get my hair washed. Elsie: Never mind, it won't show in a '- picture. 1 'ffm11 -Z!QZ42ZMWQZ97??ZWfffffffiii 'fi5iZWZf! 1l21lTL'ii,Wi2211Z1ZZZ1Zi' 'W 'lI1IIJIII .........,......... ........................ ..... .... .... ..,.... . .... ............... . N zz, LL115, EN-G RAVING QQMPANX efganerf azzaffffyfvrerf - n ew ,Q., . fff?ieff.Q11af6f ze. . I V-vw fn Y' ., ANNUAL-9 , V Sfiw , .f. .wk 1' ,Qi 4'ncP1jr ,xg : All :mu 14 UH- 'J 'iii 1, f..-P .--tlfg -J 1- :- .'5i3...-- - r f 'Vx 195'-f. i fe f gy 1 A .-3 E . it z g , WI:-'ri' qi.-1...j.,vKq.-, ug-'ANI'-Rigas, ... .-,, X :Mer-'f .. 5011 .-' if , fY,i'fjjr'.fX,f FEM ' dffiik: gfw' , .'.' ' ' W -.':!5:.g l:, ,' ffj 'QW .3.Mpmf. P IW, 9:5- f , is al : ,f,'.kg, I !iy g,. I N H 5:5-' fm..- y' ' F .' -:W A'. 3 1,1 u f- m is.: Q, --.5 1 - Vs .. vqis'.+f , v w Hff- 5.56495 Q 11-f m' f lil! .V i qi, .3-ea ffpfffr 1. .yglfffif if :I ' rm. .H if wgl' 'fm 1. d z ff.', 's 2.3-..'7::.-'G Jw' 'if . . W -Qxvyrf 'Z5Qj:5Q,d - 2' ,I J' -e,,:',,-iw ' 1 I 3' :9,:j. ' W 2:3 'g gif-Af. ,ff '-:v'3f5:-'4f ' ,1J. - - X ,Z SN- 'I '-f E 9.2-Peg I: .f: Q?PT,7sE.-XA '-!, ', SX .-mtv , A-gf-V5 ,T-I. 11.3 , N X l, 11 ' 1 ,H-..-wx, I. .. A-,mg 55 Y .. I , mi l. V. L51- . -' si wr -' . 'K' ' 5 'w ' , 4 ,: .1 ' . -fm p-- :'-J. ,, ? ,Af 'ww ..i,-mav5'Q:M...f:'-',fm y , iff 1'-N-Q .1,:- .-C3 , . 44 -AA . . '-'11':4fE5f5QM'f': x'Q: l Q52-fg:l11F1-,lf .iff ..::1:1-LQ ,. 5W,,r - , ' ,-,. ,' -1':'2if.rQ1,fT':'i?i1fy:ffify: .Tb-s55c'Zf.' ?:'2 fi2af' milf' 4 e' 11195915 sg' J ' 5221. U'-2, - 1.12 Ha- f 0' eff 0 , , ggg -q'.--.p'5:fge1iff3's :g if-gl Illush- 1'lOTlS.D6S1 ns M aww is , ' Photo 1-aphsj w I , K W'-N5 Half-4: es.L1ne M0 5 :'e3 ':'i - -uf :ug ga - . 5753553 15. 9 2r iv--W1 7 '5 f':-iv -..-332311 WWE!! . . . . . 1 E J - as H ,-,., , -- . nf-nnaq zinc Etchin s 3 'E :wwfuiz Threew0FourCo1or r' :,.- '::1., Y . - -1 v -1- f'. , . .Q ,sw5.m,,15L3:,,,- .. ' A, .. Process Plates-t , . .1. I -jglafgfasf Quay QinwwsafnifiianmcnlcAGOf56iz2G,z?3,fZ'fi'Q5iHw:SZf ,? M ,W I X I fi LQ? 1 1 L 1 4, 8 M ..,..,... m,.,m,,n,.M.,.WW..W . , , , . m 5 THIS ANNUAL WAS PRINTED AND BOUND BY THE Will A. Beach Printing Co. Sioux Falls, South Dakota High Grade Printers, Lithographers. ' and Binders I . '- '. -.-' .- K F . -.-' f K W W' Comer 7th and Phillips COMPLETE OFFICE AND BANK OUTFITTERS DESKS - CHAIRS SAFE CABINETS - - VAULT FRONTS ROYAL, CORONA AND ELLIOTT FISHER TYPEWRITERS A Filing Devices in Wood or Steel IF IT IS USED IN THE OFFICE-WE HAVE IT SOUTH DAKOTA STATE COLLEGE COURSES OF STUDY Scientific Agriculture-AAgronc my, Animal and Dairy Husbandry, Forestry, Botany. Home Economicse--Collegiate course of four years, and a two-year course giving scien- tific training for intelligent home making and for teaching the subject. Engineering--Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical. Pharmacy-'Most thoro course in the west. General Science-.Provides a thoro collegiate training with special reference to the sciences. - Commerce--Elective courses offered in college and preparatory departments. Prepares for business, secretarial and office work. EQUIPIW E N T Fifteen Buildings- -Scientiiic equipment and apparatus for thoro collegiate work. Campus-A-and horticultural gardens- eighty acres-beautifully ornemented with trees, shrubbery and driveways. Athletic .Field--Excellent gridiron and track- well drained-splendid new grandstand. Gymnasium and drill hall in special building. Museums-f In the Zoological, Botanical, Geological, Art, Engineering and Commercial departments. in VY 7- . For Complete Information Address WILLIS E. JOHNSON, President SOUTH DAKOTA STATE COLLEGE Brookings South Dakota the Corn Belt State '.T ' A Attend the Annual State Corn and Grain Show and School ofthe SOUTH DAKOTA CORN AND GRAIN GROWERS ASSOCIATION Become a member of the Association of South Dakota farmers, who do things. 1921 meeting in Yanleton Watch for the Date A. N. HUME, Secretary J. C. DENISON, President Bl'00klng5, S- D- Vermillion, S. D. F. P 'H'm-It I r-p ImJ.Iu. 1 ll' LU d wmfrflllwl IIM Wllllllwmf- r , . . ,l ?E:il:IIuu:,Ij,.l:Wlljff:UW1gdMQ:,lWI:Ij1rlL.I:H.I,lf.fl,,f,.,x' Ajm1M:.:1Q:EM:l1IIWI:lII1l u1IljW1l'1l'I'Ill I ,H ll lu 'I------n ---p 1- - uf- 0 -1 ll - xxgsxggggzgg gg. L22 it ,Hn ,Hppreczatzon 10 all who have glven ald or shown consideratlon we glve thanks lhe task of getting out a college annual IS f0l the student a trying one and all who have helped deserve our gratltude In nartlcular we extend oul thanks to Mr Hubert Mathews who has enuched the book with various 'trtistlc drawings and sketches We also wish to thank Professor Hogstad and Professor Laur son for the many new campus vlews they ave contrlbuted Professor btarrmg has been a great help to us wlth his many valuable suggestions for whlch we are most grateful Above all we wish to express our ap preciatlon to our advertisers Wlthout thelr support we would not have been able to put out as good a book as lt may merit to be called lhe students should whenever posslble lhe btatf llfra n IH ,Init .E 1. II Illwgu rx' e lf' E 5 E: ' ' E 5 5 E 0 ' f ' 1 ' - ll Ki K . :E fa , i .- 5 l ' ' V , ' . 5 . 1 ' i5 Q n ' . ' ' gi- li' ' E X I show their gratitude by patronizlng them 5 1 It - ' H . - ' T 2 QE Ei e -....-------------..-m., gigv.uv' ,, I'.g.I'Jl.'lulrIal'1'l'.4'u' nl, l,1'1'f':'i'r,',l,'I v'f,'., n llhl yu ll' IM 1, :,I, ll I ,l, Il, I,.uIq'. ,ll ,lllWlfll1II'1'1-li' qugl in R? sEBI::i:::rllWH'-Ilfrlzfleev':'f1l f 4:filfi'-'3'F'i'JfI'l:1l1'I'lI'II'1'1'If'i'1f Il!'lf'llI'Mll:'f'z'1':flf !1'l'1l'l'!l 1'l' f .l'l 'l !f'Ba j1I!',lu'l'lIII ll
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