University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) - Class of 1920 Page 1 of 284
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SEM OF THE HOUTITALES Gem of the Mountains Che ASSOCIATED STUDENTS of The UNIVERSITY of IDAHO VOLUME SEVENTEEN JUNE 1, 1919 PAGE 1 PAC TiS ITALIC Wee 7 ERNEST HIRAM LINDLEY in appreciation of his untiring strife toward a bigger and better Idaho this book is respectfully dedicated SEM OF THE CHIOUTTAILIES GREETING HULU Be i] UPR EH ENO eY eo eT EAN 1 wnt PTET OOKUETONAUBURNNTOVTEHOYEH TOL LOY ee teveetenet net eUET OA eNeAeYeTEvNYEPRAMUMALOVOROAFaNON eneneneteterevetsnauere = ax N this the seventeenth volume of the “Gem of the S| Mountains’, the staff has endeavored, in the base short space of time granted them, to collect a @ Y 2 ( mass of material representative of this college This year the book was under the man- agement of the A. S. U. L., instead of the Junior class, and on account of this fact it was possible for the staff to utilize all of the available material and ability in college. There- fore we desire to take this opportunity for thanking all of those students and members of the faculty who were kind enough to donate their time to this work, thus making the book's publica- tion possible. The short space of time allowed the staff limits originality and restricts the number of features we should like to run, but we shall at least bridge the gap between the years 1919 and 1921 in the Gem of the Mountains line by this publication. THE STAFF. PAGE 4 SEM OF “THE CHSUTTALHS THE:STAFF ‘vovanrnsavvarapetatanannegcapacurataes}epevEvontgvnyeV0U¢00 7pevevoveMegenevveroranenspeUPOyenQeONnzeacanaqniaueeverovenenetneceroygteteetp etre vtenettory dst eye OUEPEDARIENEVEDY Oy ene} eAOHOnOOnARATERR LANA a vavatanateeLeiannanNeSh Editor-in-Chief Preston A. Richmond Associate Editor Angelina B. Burns Business Manager Richard B. Ott Clarence J. Taylor Dean Wilson ce D. T. Proctor __William Langroise Assistant Business Eula Badger Athletic 0 ee ee Sea J. Hollis McCrea ___ Helga Anderson ___Maurice Jackson ( _..Wilfred Newman Pat O'Brien Organization Goff Photograph Editor War Activities PAGE 5 PAGE SEMOF TRE HMOUTTALHS UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO with certain mental reservations, that all the men and women are merely players. But why a stage and players without a play and an audi- ence, and a means of communication with that audience? Many agencies are constantly at work bringing to the attention of the people of the state, the alumni and the absent brother something of campus and gen- eral intra and extra mural university activity; but the Annual is the only one in which the student himself without let or hindrance operates the spot light, featuring and accentuating whatever pleases his fancy and throwin g into the shadow that which, in his judgment, appears less worthy of note. Not only does he throw its relentless rays upon the foibles of his fellows for the moment, but he preserves a changeless record for future generations that men may look and learn and take warning. In ancient days men erected pyramids, obelisks and other monuments in order that the memory of their lives and their achievements might not perish from the earth. The thought of passing on and eternally out has always been abhorrent to the mind of man. When the day for the final exit is at hand the in- stinct which prompted the erection of the monuments of old as- serts itself, and one of its manifestations is the college annual. Emerging as we now are from the shadow of the Great World War, it is believed that this little volume particularly justifies its publication as a chronicle of the events of that momentous period and the notable part taken therein by the University, its faculty, its students and its alumni. JAMES J. GILL. PAGE 7 : rh OF q 8 PAGE || za T_T aA PAGE LEAN LITTLE Si (HH THE DE; LDAIVGS AN FRE D: LEAMW GILL DEAN ar ay 1) eS fe, im ; ae SEM OF THECHOLTTALNS BOARD OF REGENTS EVAN EVANS, President Grangeville RAMSEY M. WALKER, Vice President Wallace J. A. KEEFER, Secretary WILLIAM HEALY J. A. LIPPINCOTT City ETHEL M. REDFIELD, Superintendent of Public Instruction. __ Boise THE COLLEGE OF LETTERS AND SCIENCE Professors ERNEST HIRAM LINDLEY, Ph. D. (C lark), President of the Uni- versity Professor of Philosophy and Psychology MARTIN FULLER ANGELL, Ph. D. (University of Wisconsin) Professor of Physics HAROLD LUCIUS AXTELL, Ph. D. (University of Chicago) Professor of Greek and Latin E. J. BALDWIN, Assistant Professor of Chemistry E. O. BANGS, Professor of Vocal Culture, Choral Work, and Public School Music WILFRED CHARLES BLEAMASTER, B. S . (Grinnell College), Asso- ciate Professor of Physical Education and Director of Athletics MINNIE MARGARET BRASHEAR, A. B. (University of Missouri), . Assistant Professor of English HERMAN HENRY CONWELL, M. S. (University of Kansas), Assist- ant Professor of Mathematics and Physics On leave of absence PAGE ft SEM OF THLMOUITAIN: JAY GLOVER ELDRIDGE, Ph. D. (Yale University), Professor of Germanic Languages and Dean of the University Faculty PAUL EMERSON, Ph. D. (Iowa State College), Acting Head of De- partment of Bacteriology FRANK MORTON ERICKSON, M. A. (University of Chicago), Pro- fessor of Education RONALD E. EVERLY, First Lieutenant of Infantry, Assistant Com- mandant of Cadets. LUTHER B. FELKER, Captain of Cavalry, U. S. A., Professor of Military Science and Tac tics and Commandant of Cadets PERMEAL JANE FRENCH (Graduate of College of Notre Dame), Dean of Women FLOYD WHITNEY GAIL, M. A. (University of Nebraska), Associate Professor of Botany HALLIE M. HYDE, B. S., D. E. (James Milliken University), Assistant Professor of Home Economics JESSIE MAY HOOVER, B. S. (Kansas Agricultural College), Pro- fessor of Home Economics EDWARD MASLIN HULME, A. M. (Cornell University), Professor of History and Dean of the College of Letters and Science FRANCIS JENKINS, Bursar and Secretary to the Faculty CORA IRENE LEIBY, B. S., D. E. (James Milliken University), Assist- ant Professor of Home Economics HOWARD THOMPSON LEWIS, A. M. (University of Wisconsin), Professor of Economics and Political Science GEORGE MOREY MILLER, Ph. D. (Heidelberg), Professor of Eng- lish . HENRIETTA EVANGELINE MOORE, Ph. D. (Columbia), Professor of English Literature Y. M. C. A. Work PAGE 12 SEM OF THE SHOUTITALTS HOMER BLOSSER REED, Ph. D. (Columbia), Assistant Professor of Psychology and Philosophy EDWIN ROSENBERG, M. A. (Missouri), Assistant Professor of Com- merce MABEL. HOFFMAN SHELL, M. A. (University of Michigan), Assist- ant Professor of Romance Languages H. SHAPIRO, B. A. (New York University), Assistant Professor of Chemistry CHESTER SNOW, Ph. D. (Harvard and University of Wisconsin), Professor of Mathematics PHILIP HENDRICK SOULEN, M. A. (Hope College), Professor of Education ISABEL MARY STEPHENS, B. S. (Columbia), Assistant Professor of Physical Education MARY BELLE SWEET, B. L. S. (University of Illinois), Librarian and Instructor in Library Science CARL LEOPALD VON ENDE, Ph. D. (University of Géttengen), Professor of Chemistry JERRY EDWARD WODSEDALEK, Ph. D. (University of Wisconsin), Professor of Zoology and Entomology VICTOR H. YOUNG, Ph. D. (University of Wisconsin), Professor of Botany Instructors and Assistants in Instruction GRACE BALL, Instructor in Stenography NETTIE MAE BAUER, B. A. (University of Idaho), Instructor in English MAUDE E. COVINGTON (Spokane Public Library), Loan Desk Assistant REV. WM. HENRY BRIDGE, B. A., L. Th. (University of Durham), Instructor in English PAGE 13 SEM OF THECHOUTITAINS CELINA R. GOETHALS, B. A. (University of California), Instructor in Spanish and French MRS. AMY H. GOSS, B. S. (H. E. C.) (lowa State College), Assistant Instructor in Home Economics LEONE HAMILTON (Graduate University Wisconsin Library School), Catalogues RAYMOND D. JAMISON, M. A. (University of Wisconsin), Instruc- tor in English MRS. D. C. LIVINGSTON, Home Nursing BERNT NIELSON (Band Leader U. S. A.), Leader of the Cadet Mil- itary Band LULU E. VANCE, B. S. (University of California), Analytical Assist- ant in Agricultural Chemistry MRS. ALICE A. VON ENDE, A. B. (Wells College), Assistant Instruc- tor in Chemistry HELEN WEGMAN (Soloists Diploma from the New England Con- servatory of Music), Instructor in Pianoforte Playing and Theory of Music ELSIE CLARISSE ZEISE, B. S. (Columbia University), Instructor in Art COLLEGE OF LAW JAMES JOHN GILL, L.L. B. (Kent College of Law, Chicago), Pro- fessor of Law and Acting Dean of the College of Law ALVIN ELEAZER EVANS, Ph. D. (University of Michigan) and L.L. B. (University of Idaho), Professor of Law CLARENCE. G. MILES, L.L. B. (Harvard University), Associate Pro- fessor of Law Instructors and Assistants in Instruction FRANK LEE BARROWS, M. D. (University of Colorado), Instruc- tor in Medical Jurisprudence FRANK LATHAM MOORE, L.L. B. (University of Michigan), In- structor in Law U. S. Medical Corps PAGE 14 SEM OF THECHIOUTTALHS HENRY G. JOHNSON, L.L. B. (University of Michigan), Special Lec- turer in Law HON. BURTON L. FRENCH, Ph. M. (University of Idaho), Special Lecturer in International Law — ——— ain COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING IRA LEONARD COLLIER, B. S. (C. E.) (University of Washington), Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering LAWRENCE JAY CORBETT, B. S. (University of California), Pro- fessor of Electrical Engineering CHARLES NEWTON LITTLE, Ph. D. (Yale University), Professor of Civil Engineering and Dean of the College of Engineering HERMAN MILLER, E. E. (M. E.) (Cornell University), Professor of Mechanical Engineering BURTON S. ORR, B. S. (Kansas Agricultural College), Associate Professor in Mechanical Engineering Instructors and Assistants in Instruction ARTHUR BENJAMIN COATES, B. S. (M. E.) (Washington State College), Assistant in Mechanical Engineering WILBUR HENRY ELLER, B. S. (E. E.) (University of California), Assistant Professor in Electrical Engineering A. ALDEN MARDEN (Assistant in Mechanical Engineering U. S. C.), Instructor in Shop Practice Cc. A. MARTIN, Instructor in General Mechanics —— -—- - SCHOOL OF FORESTRY IRWIN W. YCLIFFE COOK, M. S. (University of Michigan), Associ- ate Professor of Forestry FRANCIS G. MILLER, M. S. (Cornell), Professor of Forestry and Dean of the School of Forestry HERMAN E. SCHMELTER, M. S. (Cornell), Instructor in Forestry On leave of absence VAGE 15 SEM OF THECHOUTTAIRS THE SCHOOL OF MINES Professors FRANCIS A. THOMSON, M. S. (Colorado School of Mines), Pro- fessor of Mining Engineering and Dean of the School of Mines DOUGLAS CLERMONT LIVINGSTON, B. S. (Min.) (McGill Uni- versity), Professor of Geology ROBERT RHEA GOODRICH, Ph. D. (Columbia University), Associ- ate Professor of Metallurgy. Bureau of Mine Staff CLARENCE A. WRIGHT, Ph. B. (Yale), Metallurgical Engineer JAMES G. PARMELEE, M. S. (University of Idaho), Assistant Metal- lurgist JOHN H. JONTE, B. S. (University of Kansas), Analytical Chemist x COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE HARRY PROCTOR FISHBURN, M. A. (University of Virginia), As- sociate Professor of Agricultural Chemistry and Agricultural Chem- ist Idaho Experiment Station HERBERT PERRY DAVIS, M. S. (Pennsylvania State College), Professor of Dairying and Vice Director Idaho Experimental Station EMERY FOX GOSS, M. S. (lowa State College), Associate Professor of Dairying CUTBERT WIEGHT HICKMAN, B. S. (Agriculture) (University of Wisconsin), Professor of Animal Husbandry ROBERT KLINE BONNETT, M. S. (Agr.) (University of Wisconsin), Professor of Farm Crops HAROLD W. HULBERT (M. S.) (lowa State College), Assistant Professor of Farm Crops T. E. LONGLEY, Assistant Professor of Horticulture CHARLES W. HUNGERFORD, M. S. (University of Wisconsin), Plant Pathologist, Idaho Experimental Station. Transfer EDWARD JOHN IDDINGS, B. S. (Agriculture) (Colorado Agricul- tural College), Professor of Animal Husbandry and Dean of the College of Agriculture, Dean of Agriculture of the State of Idaho PAGE 16 SEM OF “THE CHISUTTALHS PREN MOORE, Assistant Professor of Poultry Husbandry RAY E. NEIDIG, M. S. (Cornell University), Professor Agricultural Chemist and Chemist I. E. S. PETER PAMELL PETERSON, Ph. D. (University of Chicago), Pro- fessor of Soils F. LEO BURKHART, Assistant in Soils JOHN JACOB PUTMAN, Ph. D. (University of Nebraska), Professor of Bacteriology, and Bacteriologist, Idaho Experiment Station CARL BURGHART WILSON, M. A. (lowa State College), Principal of the School of Practical Agriculture and Assistant Professor of Education JOHN C. WOOLEY, B. S. (lowa State College), Professor of Agricul- tural Engineering and Irrigation ARMED CHARLES BALTZER, B.S. (Agr.) (University of Missouri), Instructor in Dairying ERNEST BERNARD WITSBERCK, M. S. (Agr.) (University of Wyo- ming), Instructor and Research. Assistant in Soils ANDREW TAMAR INMAN, M. S. (University of Idaho), Instructor in Botany JULIUS EDWARD NORDBY, M. S. (Agr.) (University of Illinois), Instructor in Animal Husbandry CHARLES W. HUNGERFORD, M. S. (University of Wisconsin), Plant Pathologist Idaho Experiment Station O. ELBERT CONWELL, B. S. (University of Missouri), Instructor in Animal Husbandry PAGE 17 PAGE 18 PAGE 19 Sandelius E. Thomas Glindermann McCallie Senior Class Officers Rresid@ntenc eo - 2a ok eee Walter Sandelius Wictecbremcents 220s Oe Anne Glindermann Detratet tee A eee Esther Thomas SPYO@RMUSOY ets Annette McCallie PAGE 20 — ——— WALTER E. SANDELIUS,B.A. (Hist. ) “Sandy” Moscow H. S.; Persident Sr. Class; De- bate Mgr.; English Club: A. S. U. I. Sec’y.; O. T. C., Camp MacArthur, Texas; “A” honors; Executive Board; Sheathed Hammer Club; Economics Club (4). “White collars are not always in good taste” GLADYS DUTHIE, B.A. (Latin) “Glad” Columbia Jr. College, Milton, Ore.; Pres. Y. W. C. A. (4); Honors “A” (3); Assistant Zoology lab. (4); Kappa Kappa Gamma. “Always ‘Glad’” EDWIN G. NETTLETON, B.S. (C.E.) “Ed” Nampa H. S.; “A” honors (2), (3). “A(n) honor to his country” PAGE 21 RUTH ALICE YORK, B.S. (H. Ec.) “Pq” Boise H. S.; Phi Upsilon Omicron; H. Ec. Club; Y. W. C. A.; Sec’y A. S. U. I. (16); V.-Pres. Phi Upsilon Omicron ('18); “A” honors (1), “BY (2), “A™ (3); Sec’y. Pan-Hel- lenic ('17); Pres. Pan-Hellenic (18); Sec'y. Soph. Class (16); Gen. Chairman of Senior Ruff; Delta Gamma. “The Delta Gamma's ‘Pa’” JOHN HENRY CHRIST, B.S. (Agr.) “Heinie” Coeur d'Alene H. S.; Band and Or- chestra, °15-'16; Honors “B” (1) (2), A (3); Glee Club (3); 39th F. A., Camp Lewis, Wash.; Chem- ical Warfare Service, Gas Defense Division, Lakehurst Proving Grounds, Lakehurst, N. J.; Ist Prize Grain Judging Contest Ag. day, “19; Pres. Agricultural Club (4); Beta Theta Pi. “Am Ia soldier of the cross? 1 follower of the chicken?” CORA MAE JONES, B.S. (H. Ec.) “Shorty” Pocatello H. S.; Phi Epsilon Omicron, H. Ec. Club; English Club; Y . W. C.. Ais: Sactys “Yo Wa Ge Aw. 1%; Pres. Y. W. C. A. '17; Society Ed- itor “Gem of the Mountains” 18; Sec'y. Junior Class; Pres. Phi Upsi- lon Omicron; “A honors (1) (2) (3); Delta Gamma. “York Will Come Again” SEM OF THE HOUTTALHS | NORMA DOW, B.A. (History) “Shorty” Coeur d'Alene H. S.; Y. W. C. A.; honors (2) (3); Commerce and Economics Club; Kappa Kappa Gamma. “We're ‘Happy’ now” HOWARD L. HATFIELD, B.S. (Pre-Medic) “Happy” Moscow H. S.; Pres. Pre-Medic Club; 2nd Lieut. Cadets; ““B’ honors (1) (2) ; A honors (3); Beta Theta Pi. “In fussing he ts ab-norina(l)” BERNICE BOWERS, B.A. (English) “Pinkie” Vancouver H. S.; Assistant Art Ed- itor “Gem of the Mountains (3); Program Com. of English Club (3) (4); Senior Play Com. (4); Eng- lish Club (3) (4); Economics Club (3); Gamma Phi Beta. “She's little, but, Oh, my!” PAGE 23 RICHARD B. OTT, LL.B. “Dick” Ritzville H. S.; Honors “B” (1) “A” (2); U. of L Military Band (1) (2): Sophomore Class Orator; De- bate (2) (3); Winner Ayers Schol- archip (2); English Club; First Lieut. U. of I. Cadets; Bus. Mer. “Gem of the Mountains’ (3) (4); Assistant Debate Coach (3); Chief Justice of Bench Bar (4); six months’ military service U. S. N. A.; Commission 2nd Lieut. U. S. R.; Phi Alpha Delta; Alpha Kappa Ep- silon. “EE pluribus unum” CAMILLE McDANIEL, B.A. (Eng.) “Smilax” Moscow H., S.; Graduate of Expression Department, W. S. C.; Cast “Joint Owners in Spain” ('18); President English Club (4); Dramatics Com. (18); ¥. W. C. A.; Economics Club; Delta Gamma. “Does she? Tl say she does” PRESTON A. RICHMOND, B.A. (German) “Tack” Ft. Lapwai H. S.; “B honors (1) (2); “A” honors (3); Prinicpal Musician (2); Class Treasurer (2); Class President (3); Athletic Board (2); President Athletic Beard (3); Executive Board (3); Captain Cadet Corps (3); Varsity Track (1); Captain (3) (4); Eng- lish Club (3) (4); Presidio, R. O T. C., West Point, N. Y.. Novem- ber '18-January ‘19; Sheathed Ham- mer Club; Editor-in-Chief “Gem of the Mountians” (°'19); Argo- naut Staff (19); Beta Theta Pi. “Oh, fair, divine Josephine! Why seck another Jack?” OF THE SHMOUTITATAS JOHN QUINCY BIGGS, B.A. (Eng.) The Reverend” “My text for this morning is ‘Peter's wife's mother lay sick of a fever” GLENNA BERNADINE ADAIR, B.A. (Music) “Bernie” Moscow H. S.; “A” honors (1) (2) (3) (4); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Glee Club; English Club; Gamma Phi Beta. “She considers Corn(ie) the best sub stitute” J. ARTHUR ALMQUIST, B. S. (Chem. Eng.) ‘Art’ Moscow H. S.; U. of L. Rifle team (1) (2); Baseball; S. A. T. C. He may vet be a second ‘Ty Cobb” PAGE 25 ANNA GLINDEMANN, B.A. “Anne” Coeur d'Alene H. S.; Class Sec’'y (2); Class Vice-Pres. (4); Treasurer A. S. U. L. (4); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4); English Club; Economics Club; “B honors (1); Delta Gamma. ‘So tall you can easily Hunter” EARL BAXTER SMITH, B.S. (Pre-Medic) “Pinkie” Boise H. S.; “A” honors (3); Band, Orchestra (1) (2); Pres. Pre- Medic Club (3); Student Ass't Zo- ology (3); Sheathed Hammer Club; Senior Ruff and Military Ball Com- mittee’s; Ist Lieut. R. O. T. C.; Cadets; Zeta Chi Alpha. “Serious, that’s Ine, Pearl” PEARL MORGAN, B.S. (H. Ec.) “Tempie” Boise H. S.; Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A. Annual Staff; “A” “B honors; English Club; Phi Up- silon Omicron; Kappa Kappa Gamma. “Light red is my favorite color” aL TOUTITALHS } THEKLA BECK, B.A. (Ed.) “Teck” Moscow H. S. “We come at your beck and call” OLIVER H. CAMPBELL, B.S. (Agr.) “Ollie” Bonners Ferry H. S.; Track Team (1) (2) (3) (4); Cross Country (1) (3); Sec’y. Agricultural Club; Win- ner Annual Horticultural Judging cup; Ist Lieut. R. O. T. C.; Argo- naut Staff; 18 months in service with 9Ist and 13th Divis ions; Ist Sergeant Battery “C’, 38th Field Artillery; Zeta Chi Alpha. “This is the straw that broke th Campbell's back” EFFIE IDAHO SWANSON, B.S. (H. Ec.) “Zeffie” Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (1); Phi Upsilon Omicron; Co-Ed. Committee; “‘B’’ honors; Chi Delta Phi. “My fair Idaho, P'm coming back to thee” PAGE J. HOLLIS McCREA, B.S. (Chem.) “Skees”’ Sandpoint H. S.; “A” honors (1); “B” honors (2) (3); Drum major cadet band (2); Cadet Capt. Co. C (3); Junior Prom, Military Ball Com- mittees (3); University Yell lead- er (3); Junior Photographer 1919 “Gem of the Mountains ; Athletic Editor 1920 “Gem of the Moun- tains’ (4); Argonaut Staff (3); Economics Club; R. O. T. C. Pre- sidio; 2nd Lieut. F. A., U. S. A, Camp Taylor, Ky., July-Dec. 18; Athletic Editor Argonaut (4); Beta Theta Pi. “T quite fancy myself” RUTH CHAPMAN, B.A. (History) ‘Chappie” Colfax H. S.; Economics Club; “A” honors (1) (2) (3);Delta Gamma. 0 prefer Warr—en its cous quences” ALVIN DENMAN, LL.B. (Law) “April Fool” “A” honors °16-'17, “B’ °17-'18; De- bate ‘18; First Yr. Law Scholarship Pr ize, 1916-17; Ass’t. Editor 19 “Gem of the Mountains’; Sheathed Hammer Club; Ist Lieut. R. O. T. C. 1918: U. S. Army 1918-1919. 7) iT (i , | 3 a dA ns IN fg . ae. FY . SS... VICTOR E. PEARSON, B.S. (E. E.) “Hick” Moscow H. S.; Football (1) (2) (3) (4); Track (1) (2) (3) (4); Pres. Student Branch, A. D. E. E.; Sec’y.- Treas. Athletic Board. “To the victor belong the spoils” MARIE C. FREEHAFER, B.S. (Ed.) “Sue” Inter-Mountain Institute, Boise; Eco- nomics Club; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 18-19; Vice-Pres. Women’s League 18- 19; Temporary Bus. Mgr. Ar- gonaut ‘18; “A honors (2) (3); Chi Delta Phi. 4 “A Sufejmac that grows on the cam pus” WILLIAM R. McCLURE, LL.B. (Law) | “Mack” : Council H. S.; Co-operative Club; As- sociate Justice Bench Bar; Pres. of the Associated Barbs; Phi Alpha Delta; Sheathed Hammer Club; Fly- ing Cadet A. S. E. R. C. “Oui, Oui, Marie” ees es HOUTTALS ELSA N. VOSS, B.S. (Ed.) Babe” Potlatch H. S.; Sec. and Treas. Riden- baugh Hall ‘17; Pres. Ridenbaugh Hall '18; Executive Board Woman's League: “B' honors (3); Inter- class Tennis; Senior Stunt Com.: Co,-Ed. Prom. Committee. “Right at home on the court” EDWIN C. RETTIG, B.S. (Forestry) “Eddie” Orofino H. S.; Varsity Baseball (1) (2) (3), Capt.-Elect (4); Treas. Soph. Class (2); Athletic Board (2); Pres. Forestry Club (3); Pres. A. S. U. |. (4); Alpha Kappa Epsilon. ‘Prof. Gale says that Edxin is such a nice boy” JULIA ANNETTE McCALLIE, B.S. (Zoology) “Mac” Kamiah H. S.; President of Women's League; Song Book Committee; Treas. Senior Class; Y. W. C. A. Kappa Kappa Gamma. “OL sunshiny insurance against the blues” PAGE 30 SEM OF TRE CHMOUTTALHS ESTHER E. THOMAS, B.S. (H. Ec ) “Tommy” Moscow H. S.; DeSmet Club; Phi Up- silon Omicron; Home Economics Club. “Civilized man cannot live without cooks” LEONARD HELLAND, B.S. (E. E.) “Len” Moscow H. S.; Associated Engineers “Hell(and) its consequences” KATHRYN B. McCORMACK, B.A. (English) “Kate” Lewiston H. 3S, English Club; Eco- nomics Club; Pan-Hellenic ‘ ss'n.; Delta Gamma. “K-K-Katy—beautiful Katy” PAGE 34 CLARENCE J. TAYLOR, LL.B. (Law) Ricks Academy; U. of Utah (1); Ag ronomia Debating Club (1); “A”‘ honors (2) (3); Debate (2) (3); Winner Borah Debate Prize (2); Debate Mgr. (3); Phi Alpha Delta; University Military Band (2); As- sociate Mgr. “Gem of the Moun- tains’ (4); English Club (4); Al- pha Kappa Epsilon. In unusual combination of a laveve and an honest man” HELGA MARIE ANDERSON, B.S. (H. Ec.) Boise H. S.; “A” honors; “B’ honors: Pres. Home Economics Club; Sec. Pan-Hellenic; Sec. Y. W. C. A. “17-18: Editor of Argonaut Ist quarter 18; War Activities Editor ‘20 “Gem of the Moun’‘ains”’; Chairman Membership Com. Eng- lish Club; Phi Upsilon Omicron: Kappa Kappa Gamma. “You know me, Al” FRANK H. THOMAS, B.S. (Botany-Forestry) “Hank” Moscow H. S.; Basketball (2) (3); A. E. F. France ‘17-'18-19; “B’ hon- ors; DeSmet Club; Alpha Kappa Epsilon. Duties fulfilled are pleasant memorics = Se ae SSeS PAGE 32 OF THE HSUTTALAS RONALD CURTIS ROMIG, B.S. (Pre-Med.) “Nuts” Moscow H. S.; Basketball squad ‘1 6- ‘17; Varsity Basketball '18- 19; Pre- Medic Club; Capt .Cadet Corps ‘19; Track Squad ‘18; Beta Theta Pi. “Who put the Roam in Romig?” ANGELINA BURNS, B.A. (History) Payette H. S.; “B’’ honors (1), “A” honors (2); Sec. Soph. Class; Ass't. Editor ‘19 “Gem of the Mountains”’; Dramatic Committee, English Club; Economics Club; Vice-Pres. Pan- Hellenic; Y. W. C. A.; Gamma Phi Beta. “Leave tt to Ann” ARTHUR CARLISLE HORNING, B.S. (Agr.) “Ascher” Grangeville H. S.; Dairy Judging team (3); Rifle team (2); Sgt. Machine Gun Corps, Camp Lewis, Wash., Apr. to June, '18; Camp Hancock, Ga., June, ‘18, to Jan., 19; Dis- charged at Ft. Logan, Colo., Jan. 18, ‘19; Beta Theta Pi. “He's a pinochle shark” PAGE 33 SEM OF THE CHOUTTALNS SS SS TE I ass == PAGE 33 a5 PAGE Dermot O'Brien Taggert Thompson Bloomauist Denecke Mel ntosh Junior Class Officers First Semester Second Semester William Denecke_________ Presidentso. 02 ico Patrick O'Brien Helen Douglas________ Vice President_________ Roy Thompson Ga Faogerte 5S ss Secretary= = 2=220 Ruth Bloomquist Katherine MclIntosh_______ inressurer.: = 5 Virginia Dermott PAGE 36 ERNEST K. LINDLEY, B.S. (Hist.) “Prox” Bloomington, Ind, HL. S Editor Ar- gonaut ‘18-19; Debate 18: Bas ketball °17- 18, ‘18°19; ““A”™ honors 17-18; 2nd Lieut, Inf. (M. G. Camp Hance Ga.): thtetic Board “1819: English Club; Pres. Sheathed Hammer Club 18719; Phi Kappa Psi, “Master of a TEANETTE EF, North Central TI honors; Literary Editor “Gem of the Moun- tains” 18; See’y. Junior Class 71 Dramatic Club; Cast ¢ : k- ings” and “Pine of Peace Treas, English Club; I Club: Y. W. C. A.; Delta Gamma. “Some kidder’ WILLIAM KENNETH NEWLAND, B.A, M Sandpoint H. S.; Class Stunt and Song Committees (1) (2); Sopho more Frolic and tunior Prom Com- mittee: Sgt. Maior Cadet Battalion (2); FE xomics Club; English Club: Central Officers Training School, Camp Pike: Phi Alpha Delta (2); Sheathed Hammer Club: Sigma Nu. How can you tell if your is true? How can you tell if her love is for you? You may be faithful, loyal, as well, She may love another, how tell sweetheart can you ALICE W BESSER, BA “Ress” Moscow H. S.: A Chi Delta Phi. ‘Music hath charws to soothe the age breast.” (French) honors HOWARD W. STAPLES, (Forestry) Tutly” Moscow H. S.; Pres. Associated For- esters (3); Pres. Rifle Club (1): Treasurer Class 19 (1); Sheathed Hammer Club: 2nd Lieut. Air Serv ice (Observer); Alpha Kappa Ep silon Where the Myrtle doth entwine.” MYRTLE LORRAINE GANO, (English) “Toughie” Moscow H. S.; English Club; Geology Assistant (3): Y. W. C. A.; Kappa Kappa Gamma. ‘She carries a line of Staples- SEM OF THEHMMUTTAINS HARRY HOWARD HARTWELL. B.A, (LL.B.) “Happy” Buhl H. S.; Football ; U. of I Club; Cz Aviator, A. S. M. A.. Mather U. of California, S M .; Economics Club, SARAH NETTLETON, B.S. (H. Ec.) Nampa H. S.; Home Economies Club Economics Club; Phi Upsilon Omi cron ‘The divine Sarah iu 1 ‘ RICHARD MELVIN WESTOVER, ( (B.S.) “4 i : iI “Dick” Moscow Hl. S.; 2nd Lieut. R. O. T , C.; Sigma Nu. i hy iM) i I 4 : _— | LILLIAN WHITE, B.A ‘ Moseow H. $S.; “A” honors (1) (2); | Executiv e Board Woman's League ) Chi Delta Phi. a LEONARD J YOST, ES (Mechanical Eng 5 “Frenchy Moscow H. S.; Member DeSmet Club; ‘ Member S. A. T. C i “Percy, the mechanical man | MANILL REED, B.s. (tL Ee.) | | “Spook H Boise Phi Upsilon Omicron; Sec.-1 Home Sconomics Club 18; Y. W. C. A. ‘19; Co-ed Prom. Committee 19; Pan-Hellenic Council 19; “RB” honors (1) (3); Chi Delta Phi “She can bake; she can brew She can keep you in a stex @ - (,. eS - ‘Se Se SSE = —_ — SEM OF THECHSUTITAINS | W. A. DENECKE, B.S. (Agr) “Bill” Richfield H. S.; Class Pres. (3); Vice Pres. Agr. Club (3); Sec. Sheathed Hammer (3): Sooh. Frolic Com- mittee (2); Phi Delta Theta. “The Wiley man.” MARY McKENNA, B.A. (French) “Woosey” Coeur d'Alene TH, S.: Class See. (2): See. DeSmet Club (3); Cast of “Best Man (3): Junior Prom General Committee (3); Society Ed- itor of Argonaut (2); _ Economies Club: Enalish Club; DeSmet Club: Pan-Hellenic; Gamma Phi Bets. “Oh, the magic of your eyes.” BERNARD A. MeDEVITT, LL.B. (Law) “Mack” Burke H. S.; ice . Associated Barbs: Pres. Club; _ Rifle team ‘16-17: Set. S. A. T. C.. U. of I.; Bench and Bar Association: Photo Manager “Gem of the Moun- tains”; Aver's Law_ Club: Junior Prom Committee; Sheathed Ham- mer Club; Co-op. Club; Phi Alpha Delta “A head to contrive and a hand to execute mischief.” EVALEEN KERR, B.A. (History) “Littl Eva” Sandpoint H, S.; Executive Committee of the Woman's League. “Life is a jest and all things show it.” CHARLES HAMILTON DARLING, LL.B. “Ham” Boise H. S.; B honors (1) (2); De- bate (1) (2); Business) Manager Argonaut (2) ; Ist Sergt. Cadet Battalion (2); Captain (3); __ Ist Sergt. S. A. T. C.; Boise Club; English Club; Beta Theta Pi. “The light that failed.” VIOLET GERTRUDE SABIN, B.S. (H, Ec.) “Gertie” Ten Davis H. S.: Y. W. C. A.; Home Economics Club; See’y.-Treas. Rid- enbaugh Hall; Tennis Tournament; Music Committee Co-Ed.; Phi Up- silon Omicron. “Modest as a_ violet.” PAGE 40 ARTHUR ROY THOMPSON, Es. (C, Eng.) “Tommie” se H. S.; Football 15-1617; All wthwest Football 17; Athletic 18; Captain Class Track F 17°18: Cadet Major 18: Vice President of Class °19; Phi Delta Theta. “Ll rise to a point of order—Can a major ever act os a sergeant?” GAIL TAGGART, BS, CEngtish) “Mrs. Beck Colfax TH. S.: See’y. Junior Class: Dance Com Freshman Glee-Soph. Frolic and Junior Prom; English Club; Y. W. C. Al: Delta Gamma. ‘An ever Reddy Gail.” CHARLES WILDING GERLOUGH B.A. (Economics) “Chuck” Moscow H. S.; Economics Club (2) (3); Sergeant S. A. T. C.; Beta Theta Pi “Gerlough the fifth.” VERL OLIVER, B.A. (English) Penrod” Argonaut reporter; Vice-Pres. « English Club: Nom ination Committee of Woman's League; English Club. Orofino H “She hails from Orofino.” PAUL HINCHLIFF, B.S. CAgr.) “Hinkie”’ New Plymouth HH. S.; Agricultural Club; Band, S. A. T. C. He cares not for wine, women and song.” EULA BADGER, BLA. (English) S.; “A” honors (1) (2); W. C._A.: President Rid enbaugh Hall; English Club; Act ing Associate Editor Argonaut; Lit erary Editor 20 “Gem of the Moun- tains.” Faithfulness to duty has its reward.” GEORGE WILLIAM MASON, Bs (Chemistry) New Plymouth H. 5S.; Band ‘17-18; Se, PRR cs ‘His favorite chicken—P’lymouth Rock.” KATHERINE McINTOSH, B.A (H. Ec.) “Klattern” Holy Names Academy, Spokane: honors (1), “A™ (2); Executive of Economics Club; DeSmet English Club: Treasurer of Junior Class: Junior Prom Con mittee With life and all in tt, she seems quite content,” HENRY R. KING, B.S. ( EK.) Nampa H. S.; “EB honors (2), “Uneasy lies the head thot wears a crown,” SUSIE ELODE MOW, ELS (Physics, Mar Weiser HS GUSTAV A. CARLSON, BLA. (Hist) “Gus” Troy H. S.; Co-op. Club; Associated Barhs; oS. A, TC “A sure-cnough Siede” LA DESSA TALL, TA, CHL Ee.) “Dess”’ Moscow H. 5.; “A™ honors (1) (2); Cast “Joint Owners in Spain” 18 Vice-Pres. Junior Class; Economics Club; English Club. “To talk too much is ta talk in PAGE 42 WM. H. CARDER, B.S. (Pre-Medic.) “Bi” Moscow H. S.; Basketball (3); Chair- man Junior Prom; Pre-Medice Club; Sigma Nu. tnd they say he's gone ‘cuckoo’.” MARGARET ELY BYRNS, B.A. (Music) Moscow H, S.; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 19: Glee Club ‘1819; Economics Club; Delta Gamma, With gentle grace, she wears the crown of youth,” LEW E. MORRIS, B.A. (Com, Ee.) “Lew” Moscow H. S.; Soph Cliss Pres.; Jun- ivr Prom Committee; Economics Club: Sheathed Hammer Club; Sig ma Nu Linger, lounger. Low LETA MAE SABIN, B.S, CH. Ec.) Ten Davis H. 5S.; “B honors (2); Home Economics Club; Y. W. C .; Phi Upsilon Omicron 1 Home Ec-er, not « Home Wrecker.” }. WARREN BARBER, B.S. CAgr.) Jazz” Boise Hy S.; Ae, Club: Athletic Board (3); Pres. Athletic Board (4); Foot- hall (3) (4); Member Executive Roard ALS. U. 1; Kappa Sigma 1 surely can pick ‘Hicks’.” JULIA ESTELLE SMITH, HLA. (Ee, History.) “Tudy” Boise Hl. S.; Treas. Economics Club; “A™ honors; English Club. Judy ants her Punch.’ RUPERT LEROY PECK, B.A. (Ed. “Sliver” Lowville HH. S.; Student ssistant Psychology (3); “A™ honors (2) SYLVENA CLARA. PECHANEC, BS (CH. Ee.) “Pocas” Nampa H: S.; YY. W..C. Avy Tenis Tournament: Home Economies Clab: Co-ed Eats Committee. She needs no euloev. she speaks for herself.” WILFRED EWART NEWMAN, 1S (Pre-Medic) “Kewpie” North Central H, Pre-Medie Cla B- henors (2); ..% kane Club: Fnelish Club; University Dramatics (2) (3): Reporter Argonaut (2): City Editor Argonaut (2); First Lent: R:O.2T.C. (63) “Sat Sx ah FP. Gos Glee. Club (3):- AS oa Annual Staff (3): Zoology Assist ant (2) (3): Alpha Kappa) Epsilon ‘Who ts your tatler?” RUTH (0: BLOMOUIST, “Bo S: (H, Ee.) “Bloo-nie”™ Mloackfoot H. S.: See'y, Junior Class 19; Pan-Hellenic; Home Economies Club; Y. W. C. A.; Delta Gamma, “Does she miss Darling?” LEON PERRINE, B.S, (Agr.) “Pat” Nezperce H. S.: Football (2) (3); Basketball (2) (3); Track (2) (3); 4th place grain judging (azr. day) (1); Athletic Board 18°19; Set. Cadet Jat. (2): ist . Lieut. (S¥: Sheathed Hammer Club; Zeta Chi Alpha, ‘dn athlete and a would-be farmer.” BROOKS D. WEBER, BLA. (Re) “Brooksie”’ tllogg HH. S.; Economics nd: Set. S. A. T. C.: Cap O. T. C.; College Orches ra Com. Junior Prom; Militiry Beta Theta Pi. a girl—really—! think T do.” Wardner-K Club; PAGE 43 f wn ae 4 Ls PATRICK EL. O'RRIEN, LI Pat” I. Hh. M. Academy, C. D'A.; Phi At pha Delta; Bench Bar Ass'n DeSmet Club; Joke Editor °20 nual; Sheathed Hammer Club: Pr Junior Class; Baseball and Football squads; Naval Aviation 15° mos,: Kappa Sigma Signed Patrick Lambert O'Brien, President? VIRGINIA DERMOTT, B.S. CH. Ee.) “Ginger” Moscow Tl. S.: Treas. of Tunior Class (3); Economics Club (3); DeSmet Club (3); Junior Prom Committe: (3); Gamma Phi Veta Is this the face that launched a the sand ships EDWIN DANIEL PETERSON, fs (Mec. Eng’r.) Wardner-Rellogg H lee Club (') (2); Asst. Engr I.; Varsity Band (1) (2); S. A. T. C. Cadet Supply Set. (3); Zeta Chi Alpha { heart never won by women's charm.” RUTH MIRIAM SCOTT, B.S (Hi. Ee.) “Scottie” Garfiekl il 35 Home Econumic- Club: “B honors (1) (2): Y. W C. A.: Phi Upsilon Omicron She has a reputation in the culiner world.’ I, ROSCOE JONES, B.A. (Ee. Com.) “Swede” Potlateh TE. S.: University Orchestra (1); University Glee Club (2); Ca- det Band (1) ¢ Color Sgt. (3) R. O. T. Ci: Presidio: Economics Club; Sheathed Hammer Club; Beta Theta Pi, Ind along came Ruth.” ERNESTINE BROWN, ILA. (French) “Brownie” Moscow Th. S.: “A™ honers (1); RR : Chi Delta Phi. honors (2 ‘Je vous aime, je vous adore OQuevonles tous encere ORD CHRISMAN, TLs. « 5 “Chris” Panama Canal Zone Hl. S.; 2nd Lieut Tank Corps; Kappa Sigma The library hound SET OF First Semester Second Semester William Langroise________ President. = Garde Wood Alfred Kinney__________ Vice President_______ Nelson Howard | Corspoaitera——___. Secretar 22-2) 2.4 Marjorie McCrea Gladys Clarke___________ ‘Preastrer.o- aa David Proctor Gor Kinney PAC nT OF “TRE HOUT Sampson M. Jones Colburn Burkhart Kendall Shrontz Salter Roberts Bloomquist Wilson Parsons Hibbard 1. Brown Rowell Hofer Howard Hoffman Decker Frantz PAGE 48 Capns Cossitt McRea V 00 Sutherland Fanning ps Tolbert Edgecomb loyd Moc PAGE 49 fa 2 aie Ae Bowers Stryker Sund LeClair Scott Clark Hege Friedman Stalker Chapman Irving Denning Richardson Nagel Haynes Corneilson Brigham Dingle Butler Chubbuck PAGE 50 SEM OF F Edith Anderson Frank J. Blackinger Beatrice Blomquist Russel D. Bowers Boyd L. Brigham Josephine Brown Leo H. Buescher Charles C. Burgher Carl A. Burke Wm. John Burkhard Wm. C. Butler Lee H. Campbell Edna Capps Olivia A. Chapman Marian |. Chubbuck Gladys Clark John Frederick Cline Bernice Corneilson Boyde W. Cornielson Floyd M. Cossitt Robert Cozier Lusie H. Davis Harold Decker Margaret Denning Alice Edgecomb Frank Erickson Margaret Hannah Fanning Angeline Flemming Helen Frantz Margaret Friedman Clyde A. Gaffeny Esther Gremmels Browne L, Haynes Fletcher R. Haynes Harl T. Hege Clarence R. Hibbard Thelma Hofer Nelson J. Howard Elra L. Hunter Kenneth M. Hunter Robert N. Irving Ralph S. Jacobson Leland M. Johnson Reuben F. Johnson Mercedes Jones Jean |. Kendall ae HOUTITA LH: SOPHOMORES 1921 Alfred A. Kinney William Henry Langroise Titus G. LeClair Robert B. Leitch Francis E. Lloyd Marcel E. Malige Walter H. McCallie Joseph B. McDonald John G. Meeker Leslie N. Moe Latham D. Moore Alfred S. Nelson Judith Olson Charles M. Otter Clarence H. Oylear Lois Parsons Carthon R. Patrie Verne W. Patten Carl F. Pearson David T. Proctor Ferol Richardson Cyrus E. Roberts Ralph Rudolph Rowell Cecil C. Ryan Cora S. Salter John N. Sampson Linus W. Sanberg Mary H. Satoris Lena L. Schott Russell T. Scott Thurlyn Shrontz Walter S. Smith Pearl Snyder Geo. C. Space John G. Stalker Wm. L. Stephens Frederic D. Stewart Katherine Stryker Anna Sund Wm. W. Sutherland Jerome Ernest Tolbert Dorothy E. Waring Marie O. Weller Frances E. Wiley Dean A. Wilson Arthur G. Wood PAGE 51 SEM OF THE HIOUTITAINS SEM OF THETMNUTITAINS Goff Wehaugh First Semester Second Semester Hugh Richardson Coff Homer Lipps Maurice Jackson Inez Calloway Florence Allebaugh Octavia Gowen Joel Priest PAGE 54 SEM OF THE ANUNTAINS Briscoe Munroe Bell Kaonudson Nusbaum lohnston Wali Hull Lyons Baken Lipps L. Johnston Wrebe Bloom McDougall a i Smith L. Smith DeVault Beach Vergy Green Kerin Oylear Kullberg Rose Anderson Zimmerman O, Anderson Nero Thomas Aikeu Hankinson Simonsen MacDonald Knipe PAGE 55 Macey C. Westover Henderson Thometz King Brigham Brandt Smith Holland Tate Garrison Friedman Nickel Center Edwards McGowan Poulton Thompson A. Thompson Hamilton Scott Rose Robinson Bailey Gelkerson Jimerson Pierson Turner Bundy Chamberlain PAGE 36 SEM OF “THECHIOUTTAINS Reiman Cowgill Schroeder Peasley Norlin i Graham Gorow Pari Fmerson Burbridge Thomas Marti MeKay Cornelius LL. Stalker Jones WW. Thompson Weaver Harding Kutnesky Sampson Daniels Packenham Watk'ns Soderberg PAGE 57 a2 Larsen G. Gill Wate rman Wyman Sawyer Sternberg Hasfurther Wright llays Berryman Murray Bonham Vogelson Hechtner ———— ——2 - - . oe ieee) on S ———————— Ww XxX 09999 delay . ™m cher = ee ——— ee pee! TL _“ { Tacobsen Morris D. Stalker Crump W. Hamilton Nelson j Sandelius Davidson Tecklenburg Wyman Helland McGovern Paine Ellis Prout Harsh Sargent Neaville o Sciley Speedy Sanger Wolfschlage!l Baker ‘Toeves ( ¥) Buck Putmar Parsons I. Baken C. Smith Harbir ot Oxford Hart Core Corbett York SS S| ave 40S Be FRESHMAN 1922 Julia L. Adelmann Edwin H. Aiken James F. Ailshie Marjorie Albert Chas. S. Allard Florence R. Allebaugh Alfred Anderson Eric G. Anderson Olga Anderson Freda M. Augustine Elmer R. Bailey Clara Baken Josephine B. Baken Mande Baker Rex Scott Barnes Betty Barr Lynn M. Barrett Gladys M. Beach Thelma M. Bell Carl W. Berryman Marshall L. Blair Fred C. Brandt Alfred C. Brigham Jacob W. Briscoe Agnes M. Brown Frank A. Brown Philip H. Buck Wm. E. M. Buckingham Bryan B. Bundy John R. Burbridge Inez E. Callaway Virgil Canter Amy Thersen Carlson Geo. B. Chamberlain Joseph F. Chod Gertrude Christen Earl M. Christenson Helen V. Cochran Ruth H. Coffey Frank C. Corbett Freda E, Core Nell Cornelius Maud E. Covington Harry J. Cowen Norma Cowgill Clifton U. Cochman Daisy |. Crump Orville Crumpacker George V. Curtis Joseph A. Curtis Albert S. Daniels Genevieve Dartt John R. Davidson Ralph J. Davis Walter Henry Davis Aylett F. De Vault Hazel Draper Neva A. Drury Ernest Martin Duarak Weir E. Elliott Herbert H. Eberle Theo. Edgecomb Kenneth D. Edwards Ruth L. Ellis Harry E. Emerson Eleanor E. Faris James W. Farrel Mary E. Ford Richard A. Fox G. W. Friedman Orval D. Farrison Lawrence W. Gilkerson Gerald J. Gill John S. Gill Abe Goff Merl Gorow Octavia L. Gowen Mabel M. Graham Adolph T. Greene Wm. E. Hamilton John B. Hamilton Alice Hankinson Wilbur Harbin Bernice E. Harding Thelma L. Hare Lyle Harsh Eugene G. Hart John J. Hasfurther Gus Hays Howard Haynes Clarence Hecktner Howard D. Hecktner Edna Helland Glenn W. Henderson Bertha M. Hoffman Fred W. Holland John K. Hull Paul H. Hull Albert Hyland Norma J. Jacobson EMSUTTALHS Maurice B. Jackson Flora Jackson Jack Jimerson Alfred P. Johnson Helen E. Johnston lrene Johnston Laird L. Johnston Frances Jones Vera E. Jones Lloyd C. Jordan Claude F. Kiteley Raymond S. Kerin Clara E. Kitto Richard W. King Margaret Knipe Arthur H. Knudson Buford E. Kuhns Regner W. Kullberg Ruth E. Kutnewsky Norma F. Langroise Christen R. Lieghty Orange W. Lemon Homer H. Lipps Dena Lower Marjorie A. Lyon Emma Kenney Thomas Maberly Kenneth MacDonald Marshall B. Macey Frank M. Marler Alonzo W. Martin Dan C. McDougall John Thomas McGovern Leo A. McGowan Ellen |. McKay Violet V. Meacham Harvey |. Melick D. Vernon Miller Gladys Mallory Fay Morris Margaret J. Munro Fred Murphey Harold E. Murray Carl F. Nagel Harrieth M. Neavill Eva Neil Stella Nelson Edward F. Nero Bessie Newman John W. Nickel PAGE 61 SEM OF Harl H. Norlin Geraldine Nusbaum Phyllis E. Orford Georgie S; Oylear Ivan L. Packenham Russel M. Parsons Henrietta N. Peasley Geo. H. Phelps Stanley I. Phillippi Waldo W. Pierson Gladys Putnam Ervin C. Reiman Hugh Richardson Pauline H. Rieck Sidney Wright Robinson Ernestine Rose Wm. E. Rose Siguard L. Sampson Elizabeth Sandelius Inez B. Sanger Charles A. Sargent Arthur |. Sawyer August H. Schroeder Arthur R. Schuldt Wm. L. Scott Violet Seely Harold L. Simon ee AE HSUTITALAS Clinton Simonsen Nadine L. Sims Charles G. Smith Hoyt D. Smith Lottie E. Smith Mabel M. Smith Marjorie E. Smith Paulmer S. Soderberg Allen Frederick Space Thomas E. Speedy Dwight F. Stalker Lloyd E. Stalker Carol L. Sternberg David D. Sullivan Mabel Marie Sweeney John Patton T ate Lorine Tavey Nathalie Tecklenburg Hilda C. Thomas Polly H. Thomas Michael A. Thometz Albert N. Thompson LeRoy W. Thompson Oswald Thompson Herbert W. Thomson Walter Toevs Henry Torsen Sake VIMEO ers DDeey ia gS Edward L. Turner Fred M. Veatch Chas. D. Vogleson Aloysius J. Wagner Madeline F. Wall Laura A. Waterman Zora Waters John H. Watkins Arol |. Weaver Oscar R. Weaver Geo. Warren Wedgwood Chris B. Weisgerber Ellwood R. Werry Clayton B. Westover Joe M. Whitcomb Chas. E. White Gustas A. Wiebe Verna Wilkinson Clyde Wm. Williams Albert L. Wohlschlegel Wililam Wolfender Robert B. Wright Thornton D. Wyman Arthur Yeggy Marguerite Yingst Lorna E. York Olive Zimmerman THe deere, Jas.2ivs TOF THESHOUTTAINS SEM OF THEHMISUTITAINS School of Practical Agriculture and Household Arts In spite of the unusual conditions created by the war, and the demoralizing effects of the “‘Flu ’ epidemic, the year 1918-19 was a succesful one for the School of Agriculture and Household Arts. The enrollment has been small, but the enthusiasm of the students and their loyalty to all school enterprises have been fully up to the standards of other years. For the first time since the school was established, there is no graduating class this year, practically all of the members of the Senior class having enlisted. Since the beginning of the war at least thirty-seven students, former students and graduates of the school, entered military or naval service. Many of these saw over-seas service, and several became commissioned officers. Jo- seph P. Ricketts, of the class of 1917, died of pneumonia while in training at Camp Fremont, California. In the contests on Agricultural Judging Day, the short course men competed with the college men and the former won two out of four first prizes as well as fully 50 per cent of all awards for the judging of grains, live stock, fruits, and dairy products. The men of the school have been too few to maintain a separate unit in the University Battalion, as in other years, but the individual students have shown the usual “‘pep”’ in this branch of their work. The S. P. A. basketball team played a series of games with the fraternity teams and the literary society retained its place as the only live organization of the kind in the University. PAGE 64 PAGE 65 SEM OF THE CHSUTITALHS Soldiers Triumphant A young American soldier was found dead on a battlefield in France. Near him lay the bodies of four German soldiers. By the side of the American was a knife driven deeply into the ground—token of his victory in the unequal combat. The only mark of identification found on the American was a ring bearing the seal of the University of Idaho. % % % At the beginning of the war college men were quick to under- stand the issue. They did not wait for others. They gave them- selves promptly and wholeheartedly to the cause. The history of the war is bright with the achievements of the college men of East and South and North and West. Among these, the men of Idaho maintained the high traditions of their alma mater. As in the Spanish-American War the Uni- versity of Idaho contributed an overwhelming proportion of her man-power to the army, so in the Great War, large numbers of our men rushed to the colors. They made a magnificent record in the Students’ Army Training Corps and in the Officers’ Train- ing Camps. They shone resplendent on battlefields. The self reliance, the resourcefulness, the incredible endurance, the unconquerable spirit of the West found full expression in their deeds of valor. r) - % And some sleep amid the scarlet poppies, in the land they helped to redeem, under the flag they kept stainless. % % Their brave comrades return to home and a grateful country. May those who return to the service of the nation and the great commonwealth of Idaho which nourished them, bring the same superb courage, the same fine chivalry and the same devotion to public duty which they exhibited in camp, on the march, and in the shock of battle. PAGE 67 SEM OF THECHOUTITATIE Memoriam To those brave sons of Idaho, who, at sea, on land and in the air, have died that liberty might live, we dedicate these pages. Stricken with our grief, yet proud because of their glory, we humbly tender this tribute to their memories, pledging our lives and all that we are to the maintenance and upbuilding of the cause for which they laid theirs down. PAGE 68 HSUTITALH: DUDLEY A. LOOMIS, First Lieut., Ex- 19 Joined National Guard June, 1915; Mexican Border Service, 1916; Joined Company at Lewiston, Idaho, April 6, 1917; First Officers’ Training Corp, San Francisco, California, June 2-July 16, 1917; First Lieut., June 2, 1918; Transferred to School of Aviation. Killed in aerial flight, February 7, 1918, at Hawton, Ohio. CONRAD LYMAN OSTROOT, Ex-'19 Enlisted December 10, 1918; U. S. Navy, Radio Electrician, Second Class. Died on board H. M. T. Caronia, October 10, 1918, en route England for France. FREDERIC SHERMAN GREGORY, Second Lieut., Ex-'16 Enlisted January 6, 1918, Field Ar- tillery; 2nd Lieut, April 19, 1918; Battery Commander at Biernie, Texas, from September 7th to time of death. Died of disease October 13, 1918, at Fort Bliss, Texas. PAGE 69 SEMOF THEMMUNTA WILLIAM H. BOOTH, Corporal, Ex-'16 Enlisted April, 1918; 362nd Infan- try, 9Ist Division, Co. B. Made Cor- poral in July and sailed with his di- vision for France. Killed in battle of Argonne Forest, September 30, 1918; buried at Gesnes, near Verdun. JOSEPH PEARL RICKETTS, S. P. A. Enlisted August 5, 1918; Machine Gun Company 62nd Infantry, Camp Fremont. Died of disease August 24, 1918, at Camp Fremont, California. JOHN WEBSTER RHOADS, Second Lieut., Ex-'19 Mexican Border “Service, 1916; Ist Sgt. Enlisted March 26, 1917; Infan- try; 2nd Lieut. November 12, 1917, with 146th M. G. Bat., France. Trans- ferred to 18th Infantry, Company lI. Killed in action, April 28, 1918, France. PAGE 70 SEM OF TRE HOUTTALRS LOYD ALVIN ELLINGTON, Ex- 17 Enlisted January 5th, 1918, Mos- cow, Idaho; 3rd Officers’ Training Corps, Camp Funston, Kansas, Depot Brigade; Am. Dept. Died of disease June 14, 1918, at Ft. Riley, Kansas. HOWARD WESLEY HOLADAY, Ex- 16 Enlisted May I1, 1917, Officers’ Reserve Corps, Camp Funston, No- vember |[4th, 1917; Aviation School, Austin, Texas; January 25, 1918, Fly- ing School, Kelly Field No. 2, Texas; Commission to have been granted the day following his accidental death. Killed in aeroplane accident, March 14, 1918, Kelly Field, ‘Texas. WM. HENRY PHELPS COLLINS, Captain, Ex-'19 One hundred and third Aero Pur- suit Squadron, Signal Corps; (Lafay- ette Esquadrille) A. E. F.; May 26, 1917, Aerial School in France; on October 14, 1917, brought down his first Hun; was made a Corporal in Lafayette Esquadrille; made Captain in American Army November 7, 1917. Won the following honors: Two cita- tions for bravery; three palms; Croix de Guerre, and the Stock Decorations. Killed in action, in an aerial battle March 12, 1918, with Hun planes, falling 19,000 feet; seven Hun planes to his credit, but only three are offi- cial. PAGE 71 SEM OF THE oHOUTTALNS HOMER SMITH YOUNGS, Capt. Inf., Ex- 17 Second Lieut., Apil 1, 1918; Ist Lieut., June 5, 1917; Captain, Janu- ary I, 1918, Co. E, 116th U. S. In- fantry; attended at British Army Scouting school in Flanders; was then made Regimental Intelligence Officer in the Ist Division of the Ist Army; was in the battles of Champagne and St. Mihiel; authority on reconnaissance work. Died November 24, 1918, of wounds received in action; buried in Brizlaux Village, South of the Ar- gonne Forest. JOHN FRANCIS HAYDEN, 2nd Lieut. Ex- 14 Enlisted January 7, 1918, Camp Funston, Kansas. 2nd Lieut., Came Funston, May, 1918; !st Lieut., Camp Dix, N. J., August, 1918; Wieut. Hay- den volunteered to go as escort for colored troops to France and was placed in Co. F., Automatic Replace ment Draft; was then detached to Co. G, 163d Inf., 41st Division. Died of wounds, Octoer 28, 1918, received in the battle of Argonne. CAPTAIN OSCAR FRED CARLSON, Inf. Enlisted first week of war; over the top five times; wounded the third time, and came back to company; wounded fifth time and gassed while unconscious; recovered at hospital; killed in railroad accident on way back to front. Died December 5, 1918. PAGE 72 CHARLES HENRY WILBUR, Professor of Law, University of Idaho, 1910-1913 Enlisted in August, 1918; Field Ar- tillery training school, Camp Zachary Taylor, Louisville, Kentucky. Died of disease, October 15, 1918. at Camp Zachary Taylor. JOHN CECIL COX, Ex-19 Enlisted April 2, 1917, at Nez Perce, Idaho; Co. E, 2nd Idaho In- 116th Engi- neers, Co. E; to the 2nd Engineers, Co. B. Killed in action, June 7, 1918, at Chateau Thiery, France. fantry; transferred to ERNEST DE HAVEN, Ex-17 Mexican Border Service, July to December, 1916; Infantry; recalled to service March, 1918. In Utah from May-August, 1917. In training at Camp Greene, North Carolina, Sep- tember to November, 1917; 116th En- gineers; sailed for France November 26, 1917; transferred to 2nd Engi- neers. Died of wounds, July 30, 1918, France. PAGE FRED ARTHUR GRACEY Enlisted August 14, 1918. Auto mechanics S. A. T. C., Sect. B, Uni- versity of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho, 2nd Contingent, 1918. Died of disease at Warden, Wash- ington, October 26, 1918. LAFAYETTE MARSING S. A. T. C., University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho; 3rd Contingent, 1918. Died of disease November |, 1918, at Moscow, Idaho. PAGE 74 PSUTITALHS ROBERT BENJAMIN CROSS S. A. T. C., University ot Idaho, Moscow, Idaho, 1918, Wyoming Con- tingent. Died of disease, Moscow, Idaho, Oc- tober 28, 1918. CHARLES STONEWALL WILKIN S. A. T. C., 3rd Contingent, 1918, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho. Died of 27, 1918, at Moscow, disease, November Idaho. SEM OF THECHOUTTALNS | at Moscow, Idaho. FRANK JOSEPH PATERKA, Ex-'22 S. A. T. C., University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho, 1918. Died of disease November 16, 1918, RALPi| JAMISON GOCHNOUR, Ex-'21 5 S. A. T. C., University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho, 1918. 1918, Died of disease November 3, at Moscow, Idaho. Moscow, CLARENCE SYLVESTER Private, Infantry. Killed September 29, in action, Argonne Forest, 1918. ee Y EWING CRESWELL ALBERTSON, Ex-’22 S. A. T. C., University of Idaho, Idaho, 1918. Died of disease November 29, 1918, at Moscow, Idaho. PAGE 75 SEM OF ‘THI CLARENCE ALBERT SYLVESTER, Ex-'16 Enlisted September 12, 1917; in charge of first contingent from Wal- lace, Idaho; 36Ist Infantry, Co. C. Killed in action, Argonne Forest, September 29, 1918. ROBERT JAMES HENRY S. A. T. C., 3rd Contingent, 1918, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho. Died of disease, October 30, 1918, at Moscow, Idaho. WM. F. HOWE S. A. T. C., University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho; 3rd Contingent, 1918. Died of disease November 12, 1918, Moscow, Idaho. HERMAN RICHARD GREASER S. A. T. C., University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho; Wyoming Contingent, 3rd Contingent, 1918. Died of disease November 7, 1918, Moscow. KENNETH ZUCK S. A. T. C., 2nd Contingent, 1918, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho. Died of disease, October 26, 1918, at Warden, Washington. PAGE 76 “MOUTTALAS IRA ARCHIE HAWLEY Entered service Oct. 6, 1917, in 166th Depot Brigade, Camp Lewis. Transferred to Co. C, 162nd Infantry. Across Dec., 1917. Transferred to Co. B, 28th Infantry, May 15, 1918. Missing in action in Battle of Can- tigny, May 28-31. LELAND ERNEST EDDY S. A. T. C.. University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho, 3rd Contingent. Died of disease November I1, 1918, at Moscow. DAVID S. HUBBARD S. A. T. C., University of Idaho. Moscow, Idaho, 3rd Contingent, 1918. Died of disease October 20, 1918, at Pendleton, Oregon. MILES JORDAN DAVIS S. A. T. C., University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho, 1918, Wyoming Con- tingent. Died of disease October 14, 1918, at Moscow, Idaho. GEORGE WM. SPARENBERG S. A. T. C., University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho, 3rd Contingent. Died of disease October 28, 1918, at Moscow, Idaho. Lf Arm Statistics Gil EoMSUTTAS Lieutenant Ronald E. Everly Claimed by all who had to do with him in camp and on the battle- field as “courageous, loyal, abso- lutely unselfish and a man of true merit’, First Lieutenant Ronald E. Everly is one of the Idaho men who so valiantly won his place on the Honor Roll of his country as a soldier and as a commander of men. Enlisting in May, 1917, he was commissioned from the Presidio, and later assigned to Company L of the 36lst infantry, leaving for France in June, 1918. He was the only Junior Officer to stay with his company from the time of leaving Camp Lewis until reaching the front. The most popular officer in his company, he gave himself wholeheartedly and unselfishly to put his men in shape, and they fol- lowed him in battle with absolute trust. “His intelligent use of com- mand enabled him to gain objec- tives many times,” says his com- mander, ‘“‘with a promptitude and paucity of casualties that surprised everyone.” Assigned later to the school at Gondrecourt, he secured his release when his men were “going in”, and working his way to the front, “‘in- creased the morale of the command fully 50 per cent’. After the second day in the Argonne he was forced to assume full command of the company, operating it effectively. Later, he was severely wounded, a one-pound shell hitting his helmet, then bursting behind him and wounding his side and leg. Everly was cited for the Croix de Guerre and recommended for promotion. His new role as assistant Commandant at the University of Idaho gives this unit of Reserve Officers Training Corps a man who has al- ready assisted in increasing the status and will work under his new commander with the same earnestness which he led his men to victory in the Argonne forests. PAGE 79 (SEM OF THECHOUIITAINS “For Valor” Corporal John W. Cramer will long be remembered as one of the valiant Idaho men to win the “Distinguished Service Cross” for gallantry in action “Over there’. He was a member of a patrol sent out to reconnoiter the town of Audenarde, Belgium. His detachment discovered several enemy machine gun emplace- ments and sniper posts located in buildings, from which the streets of the town were being swept with lead. With but one companion, Corporal Cramer dodged from building to building under this intense fire, entered one of the houses containing a machine gun and captured the two Hun gunners who were man- ning the gun. Cramer was a Senior in the Law Department of the Univer- sity. He entered the service in the summer of nineteen seven- teen and was sent to Camp Lewis. His ability was soon recog- nized and he was sent to a small arms school in the East. Afte- intensive training he was again returned to his division and soon afterwards was sent over seas. He took part in active service along the Belgian front. It was here that he displayed the bravery whic!: won for him the highest honor awarded to America’s heroes: the Distinguished Service Cross. PAGE 860 SEM OF TH Otto F. Brunzell George J. Downing William A. Boekel Joe M. Braham Loren L. Brown Oscar F. Carlson Clyde E. Chaffin Walter B. Clarke L. L Corbett F. C. Erb H. J. Adams Lester F. Albert C. M. Ankorn G. B. Appleman Harold Barger Lee Bennett Clinton F. Bessee L. W. Bonneville Adna Boyd Earl Brockman Chas. S. Brown Loren L. Brown Robert O. Burns J. O. Case M. J. Davidson Charle N. Darling Thomas H. Dingle Chas. Downing Colonel J. L. Galbreth Lieutenant Colonel Herbert A. Wordsworth Majors Herbert C. Fooks Donald Henley Captains Milton Emmett Ralph French A. H. Jessup William Lee George L. McMullin C. B. Micklewaite E. H. Perkins First Lieutenants D. A. Eaves Arthur Egbert E. W. Ellis R. E. Everly Charles C. Fields R. R. Groniger R. G. Harding James Harris Ira H. Hawley James Hawley C. J. Hayden Sam D. Hays McKinley Helm Norman E. Holden Homer Hudleson C. P. Humphries E. E. Hunt Arthur S. Jardine Alfred B. Kettenbach TMSUTTALHS Army Statistics James McNabb Lawrence Stone R. W. Rowell G. A. Scott Walter P. Scott Fred M. Shields Herbert Wadsworth Herbert H. White A. L. Williams Homer S. Youngs R. D. Leeper P. V. Lucas F. J. Martinson Jewett Matthews J. H. McEvers T. S. Morrison C. H. Owens Carl G. Paulsen John S. Phillips J. W. Rhoades V. W. Samms Roy W. Starr Frank P. Stewart Otto Stillinger A. E. Van Harten G. H. Wyman, Jr. Donald Yates E. G. Yates PAGE 81 QUIT | 2 i A OFT 2 PAGE 8 SEM OF TRECHOUTTALNS Army Statistics Second Lieutenants Jack Adams Milton E. Hart M. E. Mulkey W. R. Adelman Vestal Hockett W. A. Murray R. H. Aikman J. Lawrence Hodgins Oscar Munsen Fred J. Babcock Chas. E. Horning J. W. Nordby Kenneth W. Bently A. L. Hyde H. Nuffer Francis M. Bistline Tom Jackson Don S. Numbers Stanley T. Brown Talbot S. Jennings L. E. O'Neill C. R. Buffington R. E. Johanneson “L. W. O'Neill Andrew F. Christenson Ambrose Johnson R. B. Ott Rollo V. Crater George M. Johnson Felix A. Plastino J. Cecil Cox Victor E. Jones Paul T. Peterson William B. Dingle C. Kriesler Floyd R. Quinby George Donart Stephen S. Kroh Wolford Renshaw Tom Doyle Virgil C. Lamb Clive Roberts Donald H. Eagleson B. Lehman William E. Robertson Grover Evans Howard L. Lewis F. C. Robinson Clarence E. Favre E. K. Lindley Robert Robinson Hallard W. Foester F. G. Laéndstrom R. R. Rosinbaum Frank Fogg A. J. Lyon R. Safford Marvin Fry M. S. Manhard Clarence Sanberg Robert Garber R. J. McClanahann Alexander T. Schick Claude Y. Garber J. H. McCrea D. G. Scott Jean P. Gerlough EC. MeDonald E. C. Simpson Tillman Gerlough H. B. McGirr C. R. Stillinger Virgil M. Gilchrist Carl E. Melugin George Sylvester Fred Graf R. R. Miller V. S. Taylor Sherman Gregory P. C. Mitchell Jess Wade Clyde Hallam L. N. Moe Charles Warren G. M. Hammond J. R. Wheeler Army Y. M. C. A. J. G. Eldridge F. M. Erickson PAGE 83 Sa : ih 9 84 PAGE SET OF ‘THI Ray Agee David Albert Elmer Almguist James Almquist Paul Amos Gustav Anderson Emil Anderson Glen Anderson M. W. Angell A. T. Atwood P. H. Atwood Harold Ayers Arved Baltzer John B. Barr F. S. Barrows Hugh Barry George Beck Alvin Beckman Robert Beckwith Jess Bedwell Jesse K. Beeson Wilbur L. Bohn John M. Booth Wm. H. Booth J. D. Boyd Ray Brookhart Paul A. Broxon Otto Brunsell Leonard Bullock Virgil Bullock Harry Burke Grover Burnett E. B. Campbell G. C. Campbell O. H. Campbell Charles E. Cane Giles R. Carpenter John D. Case Army Statistics Enlisted Zack Cassaday OUTTA LHS John E. Gillman Horace L. Chamberlain Herbert Glindeman Charles Chandler Elmer W. Chapin Arthur Chapman Clarence Chariton J. Henry Christ Walton B. Clark Hume A. Cleland Phelps Collins Kenneth Collins Alfred Cooper Herbert Cox John Cramer R. V. Crater Gradon C. Crawford Charles Crump Russel Cunningham George H. Curtis Miles I. David Paul Davis Ernest DeHaven Lewis Dening S. K. Dening J. Earl Duthie Leland Eddy J. Harry Einhouse Lloyd Ellington Hall B. Finke L. J. Fogle Ralph B. Foster James Fox J. B. Gowen Ralph Green Robert Hale Clyde Hallam Clarence Harsh John Hasfurther John F. Hayden Harry R. Hawley I. Archie Hawley Clarence K. Herr T. L. Hills Robert Holes Rowe S. Holmer Arthur C. Horning Charles E. Horning William Howe Henry M. Howard David S. Hubbard Edward Hughes S. E. Hutton J. ler Frank W. Illingsworth O. L. Inman Harrison Ison Irving Jensen Oscar J. Johnson Jerome Johnston Ralph Jones H. A. Kambitsch James J. Keane George V. Frederickson William H. Keane Jess Fuller T. C. Galloway Fred I. Gavey Cleveland Gee Robert Gerlough Homer G. Kendall Eugene A. Kelley Merton Kennedy Roscoe C. Kipp G. W. Kjosness PAGE 85 SEM OF Thi Frank Koch C. G. Koelsch Oscar Knudson Ira Elmore Largent Herbert Lattig Reginald Leonard Tom Lommason K. L. Magee Leo Maguire Harry Malmston Guy T. Mangen Frank Marsh I. G. Martin J. Frank Martin L. G. Mason W. T. McCall W. H. McCallie Walter F. McCarty Gilbert McCormick Samuel McConkle T. M. McCurrie William McDowell Cameron McEcheron Stanton McLaughlin Cc. J. Miles Marvin Monroe L. F. Morris McKeen Morrow R. E. Mullarky J. B. Mullen E. N. Murphy Donald Nankeutis Oscar Nelson Oliver Nesbitt Louis S. Nettleton Enlisted Kenneth Newland J. E. Nordby Burton Orr Z. B. Parsons Jod M. Pond Cecil Parsons Jarl Pauls W. C. Perkins A. M. Philleo Orrin Phillip E. W. Poe John Portlock Frank Price A. E. Price A. J. Priest E. N. Provost Chase Raney F. A. Rapp J. Charles Reeder Edwin C. Rettig Albert Rice Charles A. Rice Preston A. Richmond J. A. Ricketts TNUTTATHS Army Statistics R. L. Schoup Henry R. Schuldt C. A. Scott Sigmund J. Sieler Lloyd C. Stenger Blondell Stookey Fred C. Stoos Frank Sutherland Arthur Sutton Delmar Swan Carl H. Swanstrom Clarence Sylvester Glen Taylor Frank H. Thomas Walter Thomas Arthur Thompson George Timms Ray E. Tingley Samuel E. Vance Wilfred Vaught Chester L. Vincent Lorenzo G. Wade A. J. Wadsworth Victor Wainright Robert R. Ridenbaugh Andrew Wardrobe Palmer D. Rodgers Otis Ross Paul T. Rowell J. Clark Rush Cecil Ryan H. E. Samms Philip C. Samms Harry D. Sharp John L. Shields John Wardrobe Theron Warren Charles Watts Fred Wehr William I. West Ray Williams Cartee A. Wood R. E. Wyman Ralph York Francis O. Youngs The foregoing statistics, though compiled with great care, are necessarily not complete. Any omissions or errors should be reported to the office of the com- mandant, Captain Luther Felker, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho. PAGE 86 SEM OF “THE HHOUTITALHS Navy Statistics Lieutenant Commander R. E. Ghormley Howard T. Lewis Ralph R. Brashears Carl P. Lewis Kenneth Anderton John Barton R. Bennett Wilmer Bolles G. C. Calquhoun Donald K. David H. H. Eberle Allen G. Eddy John Paul Evans George Fahlquist R. B. Felton Charles O. Fohl Paul Foster Orvil D. Garrison Daniel Hannah R. L. Morse L. S. Gerlough Nelson V. Lloyd Junior Lieutenant T. C. Lynch Ensigns Paul G. Ostroot Harry Soulen Enlisted Men Eugene Hart Fred A. Hauson Lake Hill Keith Horning Kenneth Hunter Don Kennedy C. F. Keithby Emery T. Knudson Harold Lewis Vaughn Lewis Glen Lowe Parker Lucas Ennis L. Massey Alvin McCormack G. W. McKeene MARINES Captain R. M. Montague Enlisted Men Ross E. Rowell Otis Laramore Odin M. Stromm Garrett Whitbeck R. D. Moule Alfred Nelson Harold Niles Conrad Ostroot Verne Patten William Pechanec H. W. Stoutenberg T. A. Swanson William P. Turnbow l. E. West Dean A. Wilson Edwin B. White Oakley Wiley Newell S. Wight Lloyd Young Stewart Ross E. W. Chapin Alfred McConaughey PAGE 89 SEM OF THE HISITITAINS SEM OF ‘THE SH Earl David Wm. A. Hunter Nathan Barnard W. A. Bonneville L. N. Blackmer Logan Bowman S. L. Bloom William J. Gowen W. T. Barnard Horace A. Bashor Hugh Berry Lawren Breneman Henry DeWald Charles H. Ficke Paul H. Gerard Rowe S. Hallman John Barton M. M. Carnahan Charles C. Gray DOUALA ne Aviation First Lieutenants A. J. Lyon Second Lieutenants Howard Holaday H. E. Hosier Dudley A. Loomis V. T. McCurry A. A. McLeod H. S. Purdy Non-Commissioned Men Harry Hartwell |. Herrington L. W. Herrington R. L. Kennedy A. H. Knudson I. Mangen W. R. McClure Naval Aviation Daniel Hannah Fred A. Hansen Loran W. Kitch Harry O. McDougall William Schofield Gustav Rierson J. T. Ross W. Manly Ritchie R. N. Largent H. W. Staples Dwight Spofford Leland Orwin Leon Owings R. S. Rierson William Larson R. O. Smith Leon B. Taylor Fred Varnum A. R. Wooley Patrick L. O'Brien Hugh F. Swan Robert K. Stubbs PAGE 91 Scie Lieutenant Harry O. McDougall When a man is unwounded after having had his goggles and shoe soles shot away, the gas tank of his aeroplane shot on fire, and many other such experiences, we say he had luck. First Lieutenant Harry O. McDougall, ex-'17, Croix de Guerre, Distinguished Service Cross, did have luck, with a lot of nerve and real courage mixed in. Lieutenant McDougall received his commission in the infantry, then transferred to the aviation branch of the signal corps, and received a First Lieutenancy in that branch. He landed in France March 13, and graduated from the flying school just in time to be with the French aviators at Chateau Thiery. He participated in every fight in his division from then on, making over 30 bombing expeditions. He was made a flight commander, and was decorated with the Croix de Guerre after his 14th flight into enemy territory. He received the D. S. C. for “leaving the center of a squadron formation and going to the aid of a brother pilot, who was being at- tacked by three German planes, and shooting down one plane and putting the others to flight. He was recommended for a captaincy. His machine was disabled five times, one time landing 50 feet behind the front line trenches. His clothes have been riddled with bullets and his observer killed. Lieutenant McDougall was there with the luck—and with everything else that makes a man a hero. PAGE 92 ? 4 ts a iJ istaliese PAG 93 _- eS eee eee MSUTTALHS The Students’ Army Training Corps at the University of Idaho The University of Idaho S. A. T. C. ranked highest in the North- west division, and far above the average in its military, medical and academic departments. If any S. A. T. C. may be ranked a success, the University of Idaho unit certainly was a success, and had it been given but a few more months to “carry on , it would certainly have accomplished the ends originally planned. Its story is one of harmony, and not of discord, as in many other units. The first step towards training Idaho's men was taken in June, 1918, when the University was assigned a quota of drafted men for two months’ intensive vocational training. On completing their training, they were replaced by three hundred men, now known as Section B, who continued the same line of work. Section A, collegiate section, established October Ist, inducted men having at least a high school education, and began at once the difficult task of combining military and academic work, with the end in view to produce men who could enter officers’ training schools as well prepared men. These men, barracked in fraternity houses mostly, seemed to enter into the serious aspect of the necessary work, and fell into the well defined channels of work earnestly. The greatest battle which the unit had to combat was the influenza epidemic, but she emerged with flying colors, with a record as clean, and as well fought, as any similar organization of like conditions. The valiant struggle which the medical corps launched against the disease was one which will always bring them honor. Although well prepared to do so, this unit had no chance to furnish men for officers’ camps. Well officered and commanded, these men had reached as near a state of perfection possible, in the short time allotted to the military department, and though this unit of S. A. T. C. was unfortunately disbanded before its aims were accomplished, it did much good, in that young men from all parts of Idaho were given a military experience that was of infinite benefit to them, and proved that the educational institutions of this country are back of the govern- ment with all their available resources. PAGE 95 AS Student Army Training Corps Staff Captain Luther Felker, Commanding. First Lieutenant Earl Cook, Commanding Section B. First Lieutenant F. J. Kotalik, Medical Officer. First Lieutenant Clarence Kimball, Dental Officer. Lieutenant Percy Hansen, Tactical Officer. Lieutenant Lyle Meehan, Adjutant. Lieutenant Frank Burlingham, Company A. Lieutenant Roy Turner, Company B. Lieutenant H. E. Blomquist, Section B. First Sergeant W. H. Abenroth, Staff. Sergeant Major, Ronald Romig. First Sergeant, Charles Darling, Company A. First Sergeant, Hugh Richardson, Company B. First Sergeant, A. A. Kinney, Section B. Color Sergeant, Neil Ivring. 97 AC P. SEM OF “Thi Adams, Roy Ray Aiken, Edwin Herbert Akins, John Vivian Albertson, Ewing C. Albinola, Marion Albright, Fred D. Allard, Charles S. Allen, William T. Anderson, Eric G. Anderson, Reuben E. Annala, Fred W. Antrim, Earl B. Archibald, Wilson Ashton, Allen W. Asmussen, Harry Aston, Rolland L. Baack, Myron C. Bahler, Alfred S. Bailey, Benjamin N. Bailey, Clare A. Bailey, Elmore R. Bailey, Rex Raines Banbury, Leigh W. Barnes, Rex S. Barrett, Lynn M. Barry, Harry W. Bartlett, Francis E. Bassett, Walter G. Baymiller, Ray A. Beach, Kenneth C. Beattie, John F. Beery, Ralph M. Benson, Henry W. Bentley, Ronald Charles Berryman, Carl W. Blackinger, Frank J. Bolstad, Bernard Bonham, Karl W. Boro, Walter A. Bowers, Russell D. Boyer, William H. Brigham, Alfred C. Briscoe, Emery Lloyd Briscoe, Jacob W. Briscoe, William S. Blackman, Blaine Brockway, Alex. G. PAGE 98 Brown, Frank A. Buck, Charles L. Buck, Philip W. Buckingham, William E. Buescher, Leo H. Bull, Clarence V. Bull, Elmer A. Bumgarner, Charles G, Burbidge, John R. Burghardt, Esper D. Burgher, Charles C. Burke, Carl A. Butz, DeWitt C. Cable, Guy B. Cayd, Louis C. Campbell, Albert C. Campbell, Charles A. Canter, Virgil R. Carder, William H. Carlson, Gustave A. Carpenter, Giles R Casey, Paul V. Chamberlain, Gale B. Chapman, Marshall B. Chariton, Clarence W. Chatburn, George A. Chod, Joseph E. Christenson, Earl M. Clark, Hassel Claycomb, Donald C. Cline, John F. Coleman, Leon G. Cook, Jacob M. Corbett, Frank P. Cornelison, Boyde W. Cory, Earl W. Cossitt, Floyd M. Costello, Wayne J. Cowen, Harry J. Cox, Herbert L. Cozier, Robert V. Crozier, Thomas H. Curtis, George H. Curtis, George V. Curtis, Walter Darling, Charles H. Dart, Harold A. HOUTTALHS Section A, S. A. T. C. Daufau, Lucian J. Daugherty, Charles I. Davis, Carl A. Davis, Ralph J. Davis, Thornton J. Davis, Walton H. Dawson, Oliver Painter Denecke, William A. DeVaul , Ayelett F. Dickie, Arthur B. Dilley, Joseph C. Dissault, George C. Dodson, Adren Dole, Robert E. Dorman, Henry Dotson, Vernon L. Dryden, Lynn A. Dworak, Ernest M. Earon, Walter P. Edmonds, Tracy D. Edwards, Kenneth D. Eldridge, Thomas H. Elhart, Carlton Emerson, Harry E. Empey, Wayne Erickson, Frank M. Evens, Albert C. Evans, Thomas L. Farrell, James W. Ferguson, George W. Fish, Lionel D. Fleming, Guy H. Fagle, Lewis J. Fox, Richard A. Friedman, Gerald W. Fry, Benjamin I. Furbush, Harvey C. Gaffney, Clyde A. Garrett, Morties C. Gault, Dewey D. George, Roy E. Gheen, Evan P. Gilkerson, Lawrence W Gill, Gerald J. Goetz, Walter V. Goff, Abe Gorow, Merl L. SEM OF THECHOUTTAINS Section A, S. A. T. C. Graf, Ronald L. Kane, Walter T. McDougall, Lloyd A. Green, Adolph T. Keith, James R. McGhee, Walter L. Gregory, Lee B. Kenney, Norman A. McKee, Robert D. Gribble, Ernest F. Kenney, Russell A. McKissick, Joe C. Grim, Owen C. Kerby, Francis E. McPherson, Claude A. Hall, Harold H. Keyes, George W. Meeker, John G. Hale, Robert I. King, Richard W. Melick, Harvey lI. Hamilton, Richard A. Kinkham, Fred J. Miles, Paul E. Hamilton, William H. Knipe, Hubert B. Miller, Chester O. Handlin, Roy L. Kollenborn, Clarence R. Miller, James E. Hart, Irving W. Kullberg, Regner W. Miller, Robert A. Hastings, Earl H. Lackey, Eugene F. Miller, Silas W. Hawk, Norval B. Lamb, Erwin H. Miller, Vernon Haynes, Gus Langroise, William H. Miniely, Howard J. Heer, Harold H. Lanning, Ruan Mitchell, Milton B. Hege, Theodore H. Larson, Cecil J. Mitchell, Ralph G. Genderson, Glenn W. Larson, Eric H. Moore, Latham D. Hinchliff, Paul Lavender, Thomas C. Moore, Austin C. Hjort, Fred K. LeClair, Titus G Morris. Herschel E. Hobson, Chester V. Leighty, Christian R. Morris, Lew E. Holman, Alfred W. Leitch, Robert B. Morrison, Frank B. ‘Holman, William J. Lemon, Orange W. Mullarky, Jean R. Holsclaw, Dugald S. Lewis, Eva n Mullen, Eustace E. Hood, Robert E. Leitzke, Albert M. Murray, Harold E. Howard, Nelson J. Lipps, Homer H. Myers, Emmitt F. Howe, Dewey Little, Earl W. Nagel, Carl Hoyt, George C. Lloyd, Francis E. Nagel, Ray H. Hubbard, Howard W. Long, Rolla F. Neal, Edgar H. Hull, John K. Lowell, Wade H. Nelson, John W. Hull, Paul H. Luebben, Harrison D. Nero, Edward T. Hunter, Elra L. Lutes, Jacob E. Nettleton, Edwin G. Hurley, Charles R. Maberly, Thomas E. Newman, Wilfred E. Irving, George D. MacDonald, Kenneth L. Nibler, George E. Irving, Robert N. Malige, Marcel E. Nickel, John W. Jackson, Maurice B. Manthey, Archie E. Nixon, Earl L. Jacobson, Norman J. Marler, Frank M. Noland, Earl B. Jacobson, Ralph S. Marshall, John H. Norton, Reginald R. Johnson, Alfred P. Marshall, Howard Oliver, Ernest R. Johnson, Ewart C. Martin, Curtis C. O'Neill, Allen L. Johnson, Frank V. Mason, George W. O'Neill, William B. Johnson, Ray A. May, Harold F. Ormand, Richard L. Johnson, Reuben F. McCallie, Norton W. Ownby, Clarence C. Johnson, Robert Ww. McClaflin, Donald G. Oylear, Clarence Johnson, William A. — McQuaig, Howard M. Packenham, Ivan L. Johnson, Elmer E. é lease, Sak te McDonald, Jay C. Parish, John T. Jones, William N. McDonald, Joseph B. Parrott, William E. Jordan, Lloyd C. McDougall, Daniel C. Parsons, James M. PAGE 99 Paterka, Frank J. Pederson, Arthur R. Pense, Jack R. Perdew, Grover G. Perrine, Leon Peterson, Lyle R. Peterson, Sam M. Peterson, William C. Phililppi, Stanley I. Pierson, Waldo W. Pollard, Cecil P. Poulton, Edward E. Priest, Joel L. Proctor, David T. Prout, Louis L. Quick, Harold E. Reddington, John A. Reiman, Ervin C. Richardson, Hugh Richmond, Preston A. Roberts, Buena E. Roberts, Cyrus E. Robinson, Sidney W. Romig, Ronald C. Rose, William E. J. Roseboro, Loy L. Rugg, Frederick C. Rugg, Merville D. Russell, Raymond E. Sampson, Sigurd L. Sanberg, Linus W. Sandelius, Walter E. Sanders, Ray S. Sarvis. Howard C. Sawyer, Arthur I. Schetzle, Ralph E. | Schrecongost, James Schroeder, August Schroeder, George L. Schuldt, Arthur R. Scott, Russell T. a r yy Scott, Wililam L. See, Fred H. Sherry, Thomas E. Shrontz, Thurlyn Silene, Frank A. Simonsen, Clinton E. Smith, Carl M. Smith, Charles G. Smith, Earl B. Smith, Giles P. Smith, Hoyt D. Smith, LeRoy A. Smyth, Marion O. Soderberg, Palmer S. Space, Allen F. Space, George C. Speedy, Thomas E. Spencer, Donald W. Spiker, Emmett E. Stalker, Donald D. Stephens, William L. Stewart, Fred D. Stutzneger, John C. Susewind, Nicholas Sutherland, William W. Swodener, Robert B. Swanson, Boyd Tate, John P. Taylor, Clarence J. Teater, Fowler A. Thomas, Russell S. Thometz, Michael A. Thompson, Albert N, Thompson, John O. Thompson, LeRoy W. Thompson, William O. Tietze, Paul J. Tifft, Carl R. Toevs, Ernest W. Torsen, Henry L. Turner, Edward L. HE HIOTTITAINS Section A, S. A. T. C. Van Antwerp, Fred D. Vannice, Nerwin L. Vogleson, Charles D. Wakelin, Robert C. Way, Eugene I. Weaver, Arleo I. Weaver, Oscar R. Webb, William M. Weber, Bartle J. ) Weber, Brooks D. Weisgerber, Chris B. Wernicke, Charles W. Werry, Ellwood R. Westover, Richard M. Whitcomb, Joe M. White, Charles E. White, Harold E. White, Leslie M. Whiteman, Clyde F. Wicher, James W. Wicks, Joseph C. Wiks, David L. Wilburn, Charleton C. Williams, Bennett L. Williams, Wayman J. Williams, William C. Williamson, Maxwell W. Wilson, Eber M. Wilson, Loren N. Wilson, Oliver C. Wiseman, Claude C. Witteman, Walter E. Wholschlegel, Albert L. Wood, Arthur G, Woodhead, Gladstone E. | Wyland, Elmer E. Wyman, Thornton D. Wyman, Ward P. Yennor, George E. Yost, Leonard J. Total Sec. A—407. PAGE SEM OF TI . TNUTTTALHS Section B, S. A. T. C. Albinola, Fred Alderson, Arthur Allen, John Anderson, Charles Anthony, George Averett, Arthur Burner, Adolph Bath, Harry P. Brummett, Stanley Ballantyne, Julius Bellingher, William Bell, Harold J. Bauer, Emmett B. Grass, Gus W. Bailey, William V. Bills, Julian Baldwin, Russell M. Boosinger, Charles F. Bell, Thomas R. Bovee, Roy Brown, J. H. Bloxham, Lee C. Berquist, C. E. Brough, A. V. Bump, G. B. Browning, G. W. Baum, Harold J. Bills, Ivan N. Baudino, A. Bunten, D. A. Baty, Fred Brigham, Boyd L. Burhans, Alvin Burhans, Edward Berg, M. R. Bowman, James Brooks, Geo. C. Barnes, Warden O. Baird, Ralph R. Chong, George Croco, John Christensen, Frank Cooper, Earl M. Corn, Everett E. Cheney, Rolla G. Crawford, Henry C, PAGE 102 Coffin, Charles .J Cunningham, Charles Cotton, Ralph E. Cato, William F. Caldwell, Joseph Cotton, Roy Craneall, Frank Crum, Paul Christensen, V. E. Camp, D. B. Cobb, Lester Cloptin, Leslie B. Cassidy, J. R. Cannon, John A. Casey, James Clifford, Ray Cross, Robert Davis, Thomas H. Daly, Walter Davis, Orson Davis, Miles Donahue, Dennis Diamond, C. C. Doonan, E. Duncan, Howard W. Dixon, E. E. Dewey, Lenand Dalton, Edward D. Donahue, Jackson E. Fabrisius, Hans Fish, Charles F. French, Robert S. Fort, Antone Fox, Fred H. Franks, Walter Fry, Claude O. Ferguson, James Fry, Roy A. Fernandes, Frank Fanning, Willis R. Fogg, Admiral D. Frazer, Boyd K. Garrity, John W. Garman, Russell H. Gansen, Magnus Gerlough, Charles Griggs, F. G. Gochnour, Ralph Giachino, Joe C. Groshong, N. N. Hansen, Orland Heathershaw, Earl Hansen, Addison Harland, Albert M. Headley, Seth H. Holyoak, Joseph J. Hunter, Wm. A. Hartmen, William F. Heinemann, W. H. Hath, Riley Hemper, W. B. Horton. David V. Hogan, Ervin High, Tom H. Hayes, Russell Hatfield, Howard Hubbard, E. Hale, Walter P. Henderson, Henry T. Healy, Gerald Howe, William F. Huff, Lavell Hanigan, Frank Henry, Robert Hudspeth, Dell Ingram, F. L. A. Justice, Arthur W. Jones, Cyril Jordan, Fred Jansen, Stewart Jones, C. Jenkins, C. Johannesen, Julius A. Johnson, Dearle Kane, Francis C. Kennedy, Ralph C. Knox, Marion Kelso, Lenwood Kinney, Alfred A. Kuhns, Buford E. Lore. Frank E. Lindsey, John M. Langhead, Neil C. Loveland, Harold Lynik, James Lindstron, Maurice Levin, Archie Lindgren, Paul E. Logan, J. H. Litton, Roy F. Larson, .H. J. Lingreff, Harry Larkin, W. R. Levander, Leroy Lawrence, Albert Lyke, Earl E. MacGregor, Ralph McGuse, Robert E. Marshall, George S. Mackay, Herman T. Malone, Carl W. Matzdorff, Ira A. Moss, John W. Mendenhall, Darius H. Moore, T. McDonald, Ray A. McGee, James J. Morrison, James R. Miller, William E. Morgan, Farrell B. Madsen, L. M. Miller, Jay W. Manhalter, J. D. Molen, L. B. Morgan, Joseph Mandrell, Cooper McBratney, S. R. Matthews, William D. McRea, Edward Martin, John McKenna, Pete McMahon, Thomas E. Martinsen, Learmon Marsing, Lafayette Morrison, Floyd B. Murray, Ashel P. Marmon, Henry B. Moore, Lancelot Middleton, Joseph B. Marsh, George L. Macomb, Irea Mills, George Mitchell, Harold V. McDevitt, Bernard A. Nicholas, Dewey Nickeson, Burrel E. Northrop, A. P. Nelson. H. W. Nelson, Oscar Northrup, Anderson P. Newman, Marvin A. Ord, John O'Neil, John M. Otterson, Vern N. O'Shire, Ora R. Otter, Charles M. Oakley, Sterling A. Olsen, Wm. G. Olson, Morgan Oaks, Edward Ohman, Carl R. Perhan, Eugene Peck, Muron Parson, Gardner B. Plant, Ezra Pickett, George H. Peterson, Rudolph Payne, H. Peterson, F. T. Parsons, Geo. P. Parkinson, Ambrose A. Phillips, William E. Peterson, Edwin D. Reeder, Guy E. Roberts, W. M. Ruehle, Lee A. Rockwell, Jack Richie. Earl W. Rude, Herbert C. Reese, John M. Robey, Donald L. Rosen, Robert Russell, Chas. H. Ruffing, Joseph L. Rhines, Frank SEM OF THEMOUIITAINS Section B, S. A. T. C. Robbins, Charles F. Rutledge, Crady L. Ripley, David R. Smith, Irving Sullivan, Ralph O. Sinclair, Hugh Sieczkowski, Joe Saltz, Frank Smith, Douglas J. Strong, Arthur Salisbury C. P. Swanstrum, C. O. Smith, Samuel Skinner, Ralph E. Spalding, Allen Schulze, Carl Smith, Roscoe J. Stewart, Glen F. Sickafus, Walter Sewell, Penny A. Spence, Edgar A. Shipman, Eugene A. Speath, Robert G. Sutherland, Carl R. Strain, Robert E. Sable, Robert R. Sabo, Albert Thielman, Mike Tippets, J. A. Thornton, Robert J. Taylor, Floyd F. Tobin, John Thiel, Frank Taylor, L. F. Thatcher, Eugene W. Taylor, William A. Tharpe, Arthur Tingleff, Harry W. Underwood, Roy H. Upton, Ewart G. Vinsen, Raymond Wight, Clarence L. Williams, Griffith Wilson, H. O. Wiks, C. H. Woodmansee, Harvey PAGE 103 : By . - Shera Le - ‘ NN 1 eS | i gy aC) }{ | ey | . oe. ee a é j = y, eo wy hae’ Section B, S. A. T. C. Wilkins, Charles Welch, James Young, George Wolfkill, Tom Watts, Audress J. Youngkin, Walter Wicklund, Ervin A. Woodward, Grant Yager, Frank Weedman, Jesse Waitley, Otis W. Young, O. O. Williams, Morgan L. Worrell, Henry A. Ziebarth, John A. Worst, Albert Watson, Dewey Ziemer, Irl F. PAGE 104 PAGE 105 1 SEMI OF TRECHQUTTALR: The Reserve Officers’ Training Corps at the University of Idaho The history of the R. O. T. C. at the University of Idaho may be called one of ups and downs, with the present status certainly on the “up side, and with the brightest prospects possible lined up for the future. At times the student members have looked upon the re- quired drill merely as time wasted, but the ending of the war, instead of lessening the morale, has increased it, and with a greater military knowledge, the R. O. T. C. is, and will embark upon the more difh- cult and advanced problems of work. Athletics take an active part in the training, and company and squad competition are taking im- portant places. This year the government has furnished a complete outfit, including packs, regular army rifles, with more than 200 rounds of ammunition per man, putting the R. O. T. C. on a better established army basis. Besides the more complicated company and battalion movements, ex- tended order and field problems are being featured, and many of the available hil ls around the campus have been captured. A large percentage of Junior and Senior men are taking R. O. T. C. work, under the new provisions for compensation, in which by attend- ing camps in the summer, and completing the University course, they are made Reserve Officers of the U. S. army. Colonel James G. Hannah made the annual Federal inspection on April 24th. He was unstinted in his praise of the work, especially the way in which the cadet officers handled their command, the well worked out extended order formations, bayonet drill, and the exact- ness of the review and parade, saying that he could rank this R. O. } T. C. among the two or three best units in his inspection. ) After the Federal inspection, work on the target ranges was begun, all men getting well started in firing practice, and some ready to com- pete for sharpshooter examinations. The addition of Lieutenant Everly as assistant commandant has in- creased the chances for the University unit to be placed in the honor class. First Sergeant Abendroth has ably assisted Captain Felker, managing the routine office work. With the strongly evidenced neces- sity for military preparedness and with a staff of such exceptional qual- ity, the University of Idaho R. O. T. C. is well on its way to a high standard of perfection. PAGE 107 Captain Luther Felker Captain Luther Felker came to the University of Idaho in the summer of 1917, when his predecessor, Captain, Cummings, was put into active duty. His appointment here followed a re- quest by Dr. Lindley for a man who would be able to work with college men, and comprehend the conditions surrounding a University atmosphere. Captain Felker comes from a family of scholars. Serving in the Spanish- American war, he was later put on the retired list on account of poor health. Besides having a desire for college work, he was praised highly by the war department as a man who could well handle the situation at the University of Idaho. Starting on his new task, he built on Captain Cummings’ work, and worked in sym- pathy with the former commander's plans at all times. His success is indicated by the fact that this R. O. T. C. last year ranked highest in its class, and this year contends strongly for a position in the honor class. With the advent of the S. A. T. C., he rose magnificently to the task, and at all times worked with the civil, academic and military authorities to rank this University unit high. His ability to smooth over all conflicts with the other departments of work was one reason for the high commendation of this unit by the staff of the military de- partment. He was well pleased with the response given by the men, officers and other authorities. Eager to make the unit excel, the University has backed Captain Felker to the last minute. With another term, the University of Idaho S. A. T. C. would have been a big succese. On this man’s discharge, a document of superior quality, is the statement, “This man showed exceptional bravery in the battle of San Juan Hill”. Captain Felker is at all times a practical soldier, with a scholarly mind, and possesses the individuality to wend his way sympathetically PAGE 108 SEM OF THETHIOUIIAINS into the hearts of his men. At all times, Captain Luther Felker is the embodiment, and strives to further everything that represents the best for the future of the State of Idaho. Commandant CAPTAIN LUTHER FELKER, INFANTRY, RETIRED Assistant—First Lieut. Ronald E. Everly, Infantry. Assistant—First Sergeant William H. Abendroth, Cav., Retired. Assistant—Sergeant James M. Murphey, Infantry. Cadet Commissioned Staff Arthur R. Thompson, Cadet Major Commanding Battalion. Howard W. Staples, Captain and Adjutant. Earl B. Smith, First Lieutenant, personal Adjutant. Richard H. Westover, Second Lieutenant, Quartermaster. Cadet Non-Commissioned Staff Boyde W. Cornelison, Sergeant Major. Edwin D. Peterson, Battalion Supply Sergeant. Alfred A. Kinney, First Sergeant, Athletic Instructor. Frank Erickson, Signal Sergeant. Carl Burke and R. Neal Irving, Color Sergeants. PAGE loo Freee ee Et ESA eager ee — a ee a pom Tr 5 194 MY uosdiunoy | 19a dey fQL9AW Nery] soydeis anus puouryporny ULUEMON {reqdury JIAOISO AA Furpsuc] ULI PAC | Vi (| I | “= ts hao Rad suoqoy “JD 19HO “YD ‘puepeyins ‘yuRe31Ig ISIL] POOAY “DH AINYyYY wenlAy ‘weysug 8 | pAtog ‘NO2g 1 “Y ‘yueusynery] 4silj ‘Tjeqdures H 2940 ‘aula “5 ‘f[f ‘ZwoeIySIg ] Gq = :syURes19G ‘ueUsNer] ysILJ ‘URUIMEN! P2zjTIA ‘urejdesy ‘Surieq “py sepreys y Auedwoy 111 PAGE iT % | has ‘ LOF 4) ‘Broqpueg “A “] ‘PAO “YA “5D ‘sueydayg “7 “Ay ‘juRes -12G yS1lJ ‘uospreyony Yy8nyp{ :syURasIIG q Aueduiosy “queusjynery] Pucveg “yuUg z@) ydjey ‘yueuoyNery] sity ‘ouIeg UOT] ‘ureyded ‘puouryony “yy uojse14 PAGE | bom ‘PIN ‘soley unig ‘staeq “f ydjey = “f weIIA, 4xTeIG UOSqIn :syURaBIIG ‘uepee'] hm 4 ‘uepisnyy jediouug ‘sddry “fy 19uopy pue uenisny jetyd ‘uostiaNy pusreg . d ‘ . = ureyde y ‘saqayy ‘q syoorg — ames: a: 8 A | i’) | 2° ; - 4S 113 AGE Pp PAGE 114 An MOU TTA LH: SEM OF THE HHOUTTAIIS The 1918 Football Season The restrictions on time for practice and leave of absence for trips by the S. A. T. C. placed a handicap on the football season that made the chances for a winning team dim, but Coach Bleamaster succeeded in turning out a scrapping aggregation in the time allotted him that turned an apparently hopeless season into one of history. The Old Idaho Fight triumphed over Washington State College for the first time in five years and the two games with Gonzaga counted one victory for the Silver and the Gold and one tie. The University of Idaho filled an engagement against the Mare Island Marines in Spokane with the sole purpose of bringing that crack team to the Inland Empire and though overwhelmingly defeated fought gamely against odds that were not to be overcome. The men who participated in the games were awarded the athletic sweater the same as the Varsity with the exception of the letters ‘U. S.” in red on the “I. Although these men are not considered officially as “‘l’’ men, their efforts to keep Idaho on the Athletic map are none the less commendable and to these with Coach Bleamaster we are in- debted for a successful continuation of fighting traditions. Five Idaho players were given places on the mythical all-S. A. T. C. team—Irving, Corneilson, Meehan, Hansen, Perrine. The Schedule of Games IRD) See 0) Mare Island Marines______ _ 64 Idee 2j525 sess ae 13 Gonzage: oe 12 LGR ve ag ell oo) oo 7 Gonrage) et ee 7 Idaho: oak Ss Washington State College____ 6 PAGE 116 TOF “THE oHOUTITALAS VICTOR PEARSON Moscow, Idaho Captain and Tackle “Vic was fighting leader of the warriors and a factor in every play that came his way. A _ good field general and a thorough student of the game. Played his last game for the Varsity. LEON PERRINE Nez Perce, Idaho Left Tackle A moose on both defense and of- fense. Smashed up play after play before it got started and never had an inch made through his side of the line. One more year on the Idaho gridiron. RICHARD FOX Nez Perce, Idaho Right End Makes up in ability what he lacks in size. Great on spilling the inter- ference and very few plays got around his end of the line. Has three more years to worry the opposing quarter- backs. LOUIS STEPHENS Blackfoot, Idaho Left Guard A consistent performer in the line and one of the heaviest men on the team. Possesses fighting ability and never gives way an inch. Two more years left to play. LYLE MEEHAN Spokane, Wash. Left End The best punter on the team and a good defensive man as well. Sta- tioned at Idaho during S. A. T. C. and returned to Gonzaga. PERCY HANSEN Salt Lake City, Utah Right Halfback The fastest man on the team and Got away great on an open field. with a couple of long runs from in- tercepted passes. Fr THE BOYD BRIGHAM Moscow, Idaho Quarterback Good at picking the right play at the right time and kept the team or their toes all the time. A dangerous man when bringing back a_ punt. Two more years to serve. EDWARD OAKES Twin Falls, Idaho Sub Center Dependable when needed and could be counted on in a pinch. BENJAMIN BAILEY Twin Falls, Idaho Sub Tackle Had hard competition, but always fighting for a regular position. PAGE 119 DAVID WIKS Coeur d'Alene, Idaho Sub Center Another man that was hard to keep off as a regular and helped to develop the team to its season's record. BOYD CORNEILSON Moscow, Idaho Left End One of the men responsible for the victory over Pullman. Played in the one game but was in it all the time. Two years left at Idaho. CARL NAGEL Genesee, Idaho Left Guard Powerful lineman and fought all the time he played. Will fight for three years more on the Varsity field. PAGE 120 JOHN GARRITY Nampa, Idaho Fullback A wonderful line plunger and can always be depended on for yardage when it is needed. Also strong at backing up the line and caught all that sifted through the middle. WARREN BARBER Boise, Idaho Left Guard Unable to be out the entire season, but was there with all kinds of jazz for the W. S. C. game and came through when it counted. Will be on deck for another round next year. NEIL IRVING Rupert, Idaho Left Halfback Long suit is end runs and his build combined with his speed make him hard to get. Possesses a knack of picking the holes and always gets through for good yardage. Will be battling for two more years. ALBERT GRAF Coeur d'Alene, Idaho Sure on his passes back and big enough to fill the pivot position in the line. Fights all the time. Has two years left to fill his place. PAGE 121 1 SEM OF THE MONTTATIS COACH BLEAMASTER The Athletic Season Idaho's athletic season as a whole was very successful. In basket- ball Idaho won the all-northwest championship. Idaho's eleven trimmed W. S. C., 7 to 6, making the football season more than worth while. From advance indications the track year will be good. In the conference meet the eight winged “'l’’ men are expected to rank high among the northwestern college track men. Baseball was the poorest of the four sports. With only || eligible candidates Coach Bleamaster made up a good team under the circumstances. Lack of enthusiasm for this sport has long been a drawback, but prospects for next season are quite bright, since this year several Freshmen showed real class. Moe, Hunter, Campbell, Romig, Lindley, Carder, Perrine, proved too much for Washington, Oregon, W. S. C. and the rest of the con- ference colleges in basketball. Idaho won and well deserves the north- | west title. Tennis may develop into an important spring sport in the near fu- ture. Both men and women took an active interest in the clay court sport this spring, and Idaho will be represented in the conference meet at Pullman. The Freshman rule limits Idaho's possibilities somewhat, but under a regulated system of Freshman athletics the first year men would not be at a loss as to means of demonstrating their athletic duty to their Alma Mater. PAGE 122 SEM OF THLHNUIIAINS SEM OF THESHOITTAINS Basketball Season The University of Idaho Basketball team for the second time in two years annexed the Northwest conference championship with a record of ten games won and two lost. The Vandals scored a total of 582 points against an opponents 335 during the season and the crowning feature was the overwhelming defeat of Washington State College the last game. The personnel of the team was the same as last year with the exception of Captain-elect Hyde, who did not return to school, his place being filled alternately by Romig and Carder. The record of games is as follows: Idaho, 51; Spokane U., 19. sag a5) beg a : o, ; itman, ° Seige ai ee Idaho, 44; W. S. C., 24 ert eee 20 Idaho, 26; Oregon, 27. Idaho, 33; Whitman, 26. idaho, 26: Ww. Cc: 31. Idaho, 36; Walla Walla “Y , 31. Idaho; 31: iti 28. Idaho, 39; O. A. C., 13. Idaho, 30; Washington, 23. Idaho, 50; O. A. C., II. Idaho, 38; W. S. C., 20. Non-conference games. Final Northwest Conference Standings. Won Lost PCT Idaho, nascpees 10 2 833 Wreron ee 10 3 .769 Wes Sin Cra 1 9 555 Whitman —______-_ 4 5 444 BLifoh Wee ret. 5 9 357 Oo VAs ‘Cyecnaess 3 12 .200 | The Team ee | Re ee eS Se ee ee ee Captain and Center OE a a ee Pe Res OE Oe NR Ef re Forward RN a meee ed Forward USNS U8 |S a ihe l Captain-elect and Guard Ronaldsehomig= © oe oe) ee ey Guard Dwiliamn (Carder. 2) ee Guard PICONSIVORNG 0. ot ee Sub Center Bovds Bugham= = eo Sub Forward PAGE 124 SEM OF THESHMOUTITALIRS W. C. BLEAMASTER, Coach “Blea’’ took “Hec’’ Edmundson’s bunch of basket-shooters, and developed them into a team that guard and play the floor as well as they locate the ring. “DROM™” CAMPBELL Captain and Center All-Northwest Center last season and invincible leader of the Vandals this year. Pivot for Idaho offense and a dangerous man under the basket. Scores as regu- larly as clockwork. Two seasons to play. “PREX” LINDLEY, Guard Captain-Elect Mainstay of Idaho defense for two sea- sons. His ability to get in the air and take them off the backboard started many Idaho plays. One year to go. PAGE 125 SEM OF THESHY PAGE “SQUINTY” HUNTER, Forward Last year’s captain and best field goal shot on the team. Repeated with inter- est this year, and got 126 out of 198 free throws. Always there with a score, and has two years to go. “BO” MOE, Forward Last year All-Northwest Forward and can't be kept off this year. The fastest man on the team. Two more years to come as a Vandal. “NUTZ ROMIG, Guard Played his last game under Idaho col- ors this season. Shifted from center to guard and immediately made good. Work the floor well and kept the oppos- ing forwards to few baskets. EMSUTTALHS “WILD BILL’ CARDER, Guard Broke into the game late in the sea- son but fought like a demon every min- ute he was in. Lived up to his name and was a big factor in the beating handed W. S. C. PAT PERRINE, Sub Center A power in defence and a dead shot under the hoop. Rolled in several points for Idaho. BOYD BRIGHAM, Sub Guard A fast guard and will put up a strong fight for a place next year. SEM OF THE HIOUTTTALNS } ENUITAU SEM OF THE CHOUTTALNS The 1918 Track Season Although the University of Idaho track team participated in but two meets during the season, both of which were dual meets with W. S. C., the season was more successful than the scores would indicate. Coach Edmundson started the season with one letter man as a nucleus and turned out eight first place winners, but a scarcity of second and third place men made it impossible to annex enough points to win the meets. The suspension of the Freshman rule for the period of the war allowed the use of a number of promising men and of these Moe, Irving, Howard and Luttropp made good. Captain Richmond won the 100 in both meets; lost the 220 at Idaho, but won that event at Pullman. Moe won both low hurdles and took a first and a second in the broad jump. Irving won both shot puts; took a first and a second in the discus and two seconds in the javelin. Perrine won both javelin events; two seconds in the shot; first in the high hurdles at Moscow and two thirds at Pullman. How- ard took the hugh sticks at Pullman; and McCallie took two seconds in the quarter. Luttropp placed in the half mile and two mile in both meets. All these men with the exception of Luttropp are in school this year and chances for repetition are particularly bright. One Idaho record was shattered when Irving set the shot out for a distance of 42 feet, topping the old record held by Buck Phillips by six inches. The University of Montana called off the meet scheduled at Mis- soula and the inability of the other Conference teams to get in the field made it necessary to cancel the Conference meet at Pullman. The Idaho track team was composed of the following men, who competed in the events as noted: Captain McCallie Thompson Smith Quarter Pole Vault Mos... Hurdles, Broad Jump Perrine Hurdles, Weights Schedule of Meets May I1, 1918, at Moscow May 18, 1918, at Pullman PAGE 130 7 Z z z Z - = 5 x McCallie SEM OF THECHOUTITAINS Idaho Track Records 100-yard dash—9:4_______________ James Montgomery, 1909 220-yard dash—2 13325 Sam Morrison, 1916 440-yard dash—50:2___________________ Ennis Massey, 1915 880-yard run—2 min. 00:]___________ Hec. Edmundson, 1905 Mile run—4 min. 32 sec._____________ Hec. Edmundson, 1905 Two miles—10 min. 14 sec.____________ Oliver Campbell, 1915 120-yard hurdles—16:]_______________ James Lockhart, 1914 220-yard hurdles—25:0____________ James Montgomery, 1908 High Jump—5 ft. 10 in.____________ Wallace Strohecker, 1911 Broad Jump—22 ft. 6 in.__________________ Hal. Tilley, 1903 Pre melee) Hye ees Zack Cassidy, 1916 Deacie—-129 ft; 9 fn: Tom Lommason, 1916 Javelin—186 ft. (Conference record) _______ J. L. Phililps, 1914 POC Pen: fhe oe Neil Irving, 1918 mbm ened Sam Morrison a Ernest Loux, 1914 Ennis Massey | ie ee ik A ( eae eee Hedley Dingle PAGE 132 SEM OF THE HOUTITALHS SEM OF THECHOUTTAINS Baseball From the standpoint of games won and lost, the 1918 baseball sea- son was the most disastrous participated in for some years. The team looked good for a start, but injuries and hard luck combined to make it necessary to shift the lineup a number of times and a winning com- bination was never effected. The team was without the services of Captain Almquist most of the season, due to injuries received in the first Washington State College game, and the loss of his assistance around the first sack and with the stick was keenly felt. Rettig was not up to form in the box, his arm still bothering from its injury of the previous season. Coach Bleamaster was confronted with the task of developing an entire new battery and turned one out that performed creditably, though not up to previous standards. Moe played a good game at third and starred at the bat and Largent did well, considering his lack of experience at first. The team lacked most of all heavy stickers who could hit consist- ently in the pinches. On several occasions lack of opportune blows lost chances to win. The schedules of games played is as follows: At At Pullman At Moscow At Pullman At Moscow At Idaho: Won I, Lost 5. The Personnel of the Team Captain Almquist, Largent Second Dase=q 2 eo es Stage Hunter, Fox Short Stop Outfield PAGE 134 Barber Perrine Moc Ilunter Lindley Thompson Pearson The Athletic Board The Athletic Board is composed of seven members of the A. S. U. I. elected at the annual Spring election to serve for one year. While there are no restrictions as to service, the custom has always been that it will be composed of men who have made their letter in some Varsity ' sport and it is the policy to have each branch represented. } The Athletic board has charge of all matters concerning the major and minor sports and is, in addition, empowered with the granting of letters as specified in the constitution. The officers and members of the board for 1918-1919 are as fol- lows: Presidéntsaie en =.2. 3s ee Warren Barber Secretary: 4 So ee Victor Pearson Leslie Moe Kenneth Hunter Ernest Lindley Roy Thompson Leon Perrine SEM OF THEME Wearers of the Varsity Football Victor Pearson Warren Barber Tom Jackson ony?” Roy Thompson Leon Perrine Harry Hartwell Basketball, 1918-1919 Howard Campbell (Captain) Leslie Moe Elra Hunter Ernest Lindley Ronald Romig William Carder Baseball, 1918 Elmer Almauist (Captain) Edwin Rettig Homer McDonald Lorentz Wade Marvin Fry Clarence Hyde Track, 1918 Leslie Moe Francis Bistline James Fox Kenneth Hunter lra Largent Preston Richmond (Captain) Leslie Moe Leon Perrine Dutch Luttropp Nelson Howard Neil Irving Horton McCallie Football, U. S., 1918 Victor Pearson (Captain) Lyle Meehan Warren Barber Louis Stephens Albert Graf Richard Fox Boyd Corneilson Boyd Brigham Neil Irving Percy Hansen John Garrity Carl Nagel Edward Oakes Leon Perrine PAGE 136 | As.0.1 Aw we .C. A. AN f PRE MEDICSS A ECONOIICS } LNCLISH CLUB 4 ASSOCIATED MINE Glinderman Davis Sandelius Rettig Prof. Lewis The Executive Board The organization known as the Associated Students of the University of Idaho came into existence in 1903. The purpose of the organiza- tion is to enable the students, through their executive board, to carry on the work of an organized student body. The executive board is composed of representatives from the various activities—the student body officers and a faculty member. This board has charge of all the disbursements of the students’ funds resulting from the registration fee and transacts all general student body business. This year for the first time in the history of the University the publication of the ‘‘Gem ‘a the Mountains’ has been under the supervision of the Executive oard. The A. S. U. L. includes every student in the University. A fee of three dollars per quarter is collected from each student for the support of the student activities. The fee entitles the student to all the privi- leges arising out of all the various student funds, and also the privi- lege of voting. The general election of student officers is held in May of each year. Officers President A. S. U. I....----- E. Rettig Athletic Board Warren Barber Secretary A. S. U. |. Walter Sandelius Argonaut Manager Al Kinney Treasurer Ann Glinderman Athletic Manager Boyd Corneilson Debate Manager Walter Sandelius Glee Club Manager Ralph Davis Faculty Advisor Prof. H. T. Lewis PAGE 137 C) Byrns Smith PAGE Swarson Badger VOCE slirhiecrman Reed Glind pyesi¢iente see es) oe ae Gladys Duthie WicechresGente- 1 4 Helen Douglass IK VEEN Sete a Pt ce ns Minilla Reed WYCRMNN@E 2 aso Se ee Eula Badger Cabinet Marrorievvietoren eee Social RMargaretsbiyinie 9 0 ee Finance eevinven Calactennany ©. =i . oo eee Publicity [EOE gS eR a oo a Social Service Ethie owanson 3c oe War Fellowship 138 Jones Frechafer Richardson Smith Buescher Lipps rm Economics Club Buescher Roscoe Jones Ferol Richardson Julia Smith Homer Lipps Marie Freehafer Sarah Nettleton Cora Salter Walter Sandelius Josephine Brown Ruth Chapman Brooks Weber Roscoe Jones Julia Smith Marie Freehafer Katherine McCormack Miss Grace Ball Camille McDaniels Ernest Lindley Hollis McCrea Harold Decker Kenneth Newland Mary McKenna Norma Dow Ellen Waring Jean Kendall Anne Glindeman Jeanette Sholes Abe Goff Stella Nelson Elra Hunter Charles Vogelson Clyde Williams Leo Buescher Ferol Richardson Homer Lipps Prof. H. T. Lewis Edwin Rosenberg PAGE tio SEM OF THE oHOUTITAINS The Pre-Medic Club The Pre-Medic Club is composed of all University students taking work preparatory to the entrance of medical college. Their meetings are mostly social in character and the two chief events in their social calendar are the Pre-Medic Smoker and the Pre-Medic Dinner-dance. Prof. J. E. Wodsedalek is the faculty member. The members are: : Faculty Prof. J. E. Wodsedalek. Seniors Hatfield E. B. Smith Juniors Carder Newman Sophomores N. Howard R. Scott Al Kinney G. Wood Sutherland Freshmen Prout Gilkerson Kerin Watkins C. Westover Burbidge Nichol Turner Creelman Soderberg McDougall Wedgewood Wagner Brandt Jimerson PAGE 140 PAGE SEM OF THE i QUTTALAS MeDaniel Oliver nilerson Burns Secretary-Treasurer______._____— Program Committee Membership Committee Dramatics PAGE 142 Jeannette Sholes Sholes Kowers 3 Oliver _Bernice Bowers Helga Anderson Angelina Burns Eula Badger SEM OF THESHOUTITALHS English Club The English Club has existed under different forms since 1906, when Dr. Moore first brought together a group of students interested in the drama. In October, 1913, with the encouragement of Dr. Moore, Miss Brashear and Mr. Lehman, the Club reorganized under student control and adopted a definite constitution; its chief aim, how- ever, continued to be “to stimulate interest in good drama, to create a theater in which to present examples of the best English plays, and to uphold the high standards of this form of entertainment and in- struction”. In 1917-1918, when Dr. Miller came to the University as head of the Department of English, he called a meeting of the major students in English and suggested that the Club should be so organized as to coordinate all student activities in the University which might legitimately look to the department for help or encouragement and to hold out a reward to those students showing special interest and ability in English work. The suggestion was received with enthu- siasm, and a constitution was proposed and adopted to enlarge the functions of the Club by providing for a membership from the major students and instructors in the department, the debating teams, the editorial staffs of the “‘Argonaut’’ and the ““Gem of the Mountains’, members of the casts and of the producing staffs in college plays and others showing dramatic ability by successful try-outs, and all other persons who give evidence to the Membership Committee of a perma- nent interest in the purposes of the Club. In its practical aspects, the work of the Club is two-fold. Through standing and special committees, it helps to develop and foster the various student activities represented in the Club. An example of this phase of its activity is the successful production of plays last year and this. Then the interest of the Club as a whole is focused in the regular meetings occurring on the second Wednesday of every month during the college year. It is always the attempt of the Executive Committee to make these meetings wholly enjoyable. The Club was not reor- ganized to provide additional class room lectures. The talks of its faculty members and the addresses of persons of distinction coming from outside of the University are never merely informatory or “high brow'’—they try, rather, to add to the enjoyment of the members in the various extra-classroom phases of writing, of speaking, of dra- matics, and of literature. Not the least part of the regular meetings is the enjoyable social hour that follows the program. The enthusiasm of its members for all phases of its life and work promises for the English Club a permanent and increasing place among the student activities of the University. PAGE 143 SEM OF ‘THE CHOUTITAINS The Associated Miners oe Affiliated Junior Society of The American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers Miners of the “‘Mucker’s Club’, as it is nicknamed. The club meets twice a month for business, professional and social purposes. Papers are presented by students, faculty and visiting en- gineers. One of the oldest organizations in the University is the Associated on ee ere Seo Horton McCallie Waermeeremntent 0 Russel D. Bowers Secretary-Treasurer___________ Charles M. Otter Muckers Jonte Briscoe McGovern Livingston Brockway Leitch McCallie Davidson Weaver Bower Sargent Bonham | Dean Thomson Otter Burgher | } Sampson McDougal ' PAGE 44 Dean Thomson Jonte Livingston McCallie Bower Sampson Otter Briscoe Brockway Davidson Sargent McDougal turgher McGovern Leiteh Weaver rome ti Bonham PAGE 145 SEM OF THE HMOUTTALHS The DeSmet Club The DeSmet Club was organized in September, 1913. In Novem- ber, 1914, it became a chapter of the National organization, Catho- lic Students Association, of which there are sixty-seven chapters in the United States. Meetings are held twice monthly. Officers President.) ee B. A. McDevitt VicesPreaident 2 2 J. B. McDonald Secretary and Treasurer Mary McKenna Faculty Members Mr. J. J. Gill Miss Isabel Stephens Miss Permeal French Miss Celina Goethals Members Barry, Betty O'Brien, Patrick L. Hull, John Blackinger, Frank Schott, Lena Kerin, Raymond Fox, Richard Tecklenberg, Nathalie Malige, Marcel Boro, Walter Thomas, Hilda McDevitt, Bernard Burbidge, John Weller, Marie McGovern, John T. Creelman, Clifton Kinney, Al McIntosh, Katherine Friedman, Gerald Dermott, Virginia O'Brien, Percy Graham, Mabel Davis, Lucie Sweeny, Mable Jones, Frances Fleming, Evangeline Thomas, Esther Keane, Clayton Buescher, Leo Wall, Madeline McDonald, Kenneth Calloway, Inez Weisberger, Chris McDonald, Joseph B. Gill, John Thometz, Michael McKenna, Mary Gill, Gerald PAGE 146 ee Sp en a = 7 me ; = = ca = 5 Sc a ea i | 1 ‘ ) ; i t i i || f vi Dermott McGovern Calloway McDonald Weller Fox Malige Baugman McDevitt Fleming Blackinge Shott Buescher Davis Thometz Thomas G. Gill Friedman Tecklenberg Kerin McKenna Burbidge Jones Weisgerber Sweeny Kinney E, Thomas Hull 1. Gill Graham O'Brien Barr Creelman PAGE 147 Anderson Sabin Salter Home Economics Club Helga Anderson Cora Mae Jones Pearl Morgan Effie Swanson Esther Thomas Ruth York Ruth Blomquist Virginia Dermott Sarah Nettleton Sylvena Pechanec Miss Leiby PAGE 148 Members Manilla Reed Gertrude Sabin Leta Sabin Ruth Scott Gladys Clarke Margaret Denning Cora Salter Pearl Snyder Francis Wylie Freda Augustine Freda Core Associate Members Miss Hyde Helga Anderson Gertrude Sabin Cora Salter Norma Cowsgill Irene Johnston Francis Jones Dena Lower Margaret Munro Harriette Neaville Bessie Newman Pauline Riech Polly Thomas: Verna Wilkisson Mrs. Goss McClure McDevitt DeVault The Associated Barbs The Associated Barbs, an organization of all non-fraternity men on the campus, came into existence in the fall of 1916. The object of the organization is to promote a greater fellowship and solidarity among the non-fraternity men, to act upon matters peculiarly concerning non- fraternity students, and to assist in unifying the student body of the University. In the three years of its existence the Association has become a power for good in the University and has promise of becoming one of the leading factors in the University life in the future. Officers President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer PAGE 149 SEMOF THE oMOUTTALAS Co-operative Club Founded 1915 Seniors William R. McClure Juniors Bernard McDevitt Henry King Gustave Carlson Sophomores Floyd Cossett Alfred Nelson Freshmen French DeVault Lewis Prout Walter Toevs Charles Sargent PAGE 150 McDevitt PAG F. Brown Staples Cassitt Associated Foresters This is an organization of the students and faculty of the School of Forestry, having for its purpose the promotion of good fellowship among the members. Meetings are held weekly for the purpose of reviewing current literature on forestry and lumbering. The club is frequently addressed by men prominent in forestry and the lumber industry. The officers for the current year are: Howard: Ws, staples..o— 25 President Fioya ims Coseitt__ =. _ Vice-President Frank A; Brown.____._. Secretary-Treasurer mee; Langroise Ont McClure ec el LO Ln Bench and Bar Association The Bench and Bar Association was organized in 1912. Its mem- bership includes all the students regularly enrolled in the College of Law. The purpose of the association is to effect a unity of action among the students and faculty, and to preserve and enrich the tradi- tions of the law school. It is responsible for the publication of the “Law Argonaut”, the staging of the “Lawyers’ Court’, and the main- tenance of the ‘Honor System” in the law school. Through the asso- | ciation prominent lawyers and judges are brought to the school to speak before its meetings. In this way the law school keeps in touch } with new developments of the law in the courts of the state. Officers Chief Justice... eee _Richard B. Ott Associate Justice_________- — William R. McClure Clerk... SS eee William Langroise PAGE 153 Ridenbaugh Hall Faculty Helen Wegmann Senior Elso Voss Juniors Leta Sabin lulia Smith Ver! Oliver Sophomores Eula Badger Gertrude Sabin Judith Olson Brownie Haynes Thelma Hofer Anna Sund Freshmen Phyllis Orford Irene Johnston Mable Graham Zora Waters Stella Nelson Clara Kitto Eva Neil PAGE 154 Wik Sylvena Pechanec Evaleen Kerr Katherine Stryker Freda Augustine Genevieve Dartt Harriette Neaville Norma Cowgill Cowell Wegmann Tohnson Nitto Calloway Peasley Boise ““U”’ Club Secretary______ Treasurer____ __ Adelmann, Julia Allebaugh, Florence Anderson, Helga Blair, Marshall Brown, Frank Bauer, Miss Nettie Burns, Angelina Calloway, Inez Curtis, Joseph Darling, Charles H. Davis, Lucie Davis, Ralph DeVault, Aylett PAGE 156 Officers Members Eberle, Herbert Farrel, James Gerlough, Charles Gilkerson, Lawrence Johnson, Irene Kutnewsky, Ruth Maberly, Thomas Macey, Marshal Meacham, Violet Neil, Eva Orford, Phyllis Packenham, Ivan Payne, Donald Inez Ruth Kutnewsky Henrietta Peasley Charles Darling Calloway Peasley, Henrietta Phelps, George Phillippi, Stanley Roberts, C. Elmer Schell, Miss Mabel Simonson, Clinton Smith, Julia Tate, John Thompson, Arthur Williams, William Wyman, Thornton York, Lorna York, Ruth SE 6 ae OF “THE CHIOUTTALRS MeCallie ss Frechafer Women’s Association The Women’s Association of the University of Idaho was organized in the Spring of 1915. Its membership consists of all women registered as students in the University, while its object is to develope an intimate, friendly and efficient co-operation in all school activities. The chief function of the organization is complete man- agement of the Campus Day Celebrities. Officers Annette McCallie President Marie Freehafer Vice-President Alice Bessee___Secretary and Treasurer Executive Board Evaleen Kerr Marie Anderson Bernadine Adair Pearl Morgan Lillian White ° VAGH 157 SEM OF THE HOUTA The “I’’ Club The “‘I’’ Club was founded in March, 1919. The mem- bership consists of all persons having been voted the insignia for any branch of athletics. The purpose of the organization is to bring the “I'’ men closer together in a social way and to afford a place where any matter concerning athletics, which is of interest to the athletes as a whole might be discussed. It is proposed to give a banquet at the end of this year and to have other minor social gatherings throughout the year. Officers Presidents == eee J. W. Barber Vice-President E. K. Lindley Roy Thompson PAGE 158 o PAGE 159 SEM OF Thi Beta Theta Pi HOUTTALHS Founded August 8, 1839, at Miami University Number of Chapters, 79 Gamma Gamma of Beta Theta Pi installed September 19, 1914 Colors: Francis Jenkins A. C. Horning P. A. Richmond Brooks Weber Russell T. Scott slie Moe John S. Gill Leland W. Scott Paul H. Hull D. Vernon Miller Robert B. Wright PAGE 160 Shell Pink and Light Blue. Fratres in Facultate J. G. Eldridge -Fratres in Universitate Seniors R. C. Romig J. Roscoe Jones J. Henry Christ Juniors C. H. Darling Sophomores Linus W. Sanburg Robert Neil Irving Freshmen Lyman Whittier Russell M. Parsons C. Edward White Abe Goff Fred M. Veach A. P. Johnson, Jr. Flower: The Rose Tillman D. Gerlough J. Hollis McCrea H. L. Hatfield C. W. Gerlough Herbert H. Eberle Thurlyn Shrontz George V. Curtis Karl W. Bonham Ivan L. Packenham JI. R. Davidson Joel L. Priest — a a “ I — eee Th yo a =v _ u“ SSu.c= - toe § mAxae 16 PAGE SEM OF ‘THI Phi Delta Theta . THSUTTALA: Founded at Miami University December 26, 1848 Idaho Alpha of Phi Delta ee ae at the University of Idaho, Colors: Argent and Azure. Flower: White Carnation. Number of Active Chapters, 84. William Denecke Boyd Brigham Robert Cozier Harold Decker Nelson Howard Raymond Burbidge Clifton Creelman Ralph Davis Kenneth Edwards Adolphus’ Greene Eugene Hart PAGE 162 Fratres in Facultate Ronald Everly Seniors Vernor Clements Juniors Clayton Keane Sophomores Alfred Kinney Gerald Meeker Frances Lloyd Elra Hunter Elmer Roberts Freshmen Kenneth Hull Maurice Jackson Raymond Kerin Homer Lipps Harold Murray Fred Murphy Dan McDougall Roy Thompson Hugh Richardson Presley Turnbow Walter Smith Lewis Stevens Harold Simon Albert Thompson Michael Thometz Charles Vogleson Joe Whitcomb Chris Weisgerber ?] } if ————a | ——— a ae ——— Ame PAGE Smith Floyd Burbidge Decker Murray Kinney 163 Sigma Nu Founded January |, 1869, at Virginia Military Institute. Number of Chapter, 93 Delta Omicron of Sigma Nu, installed May 22, 1915 Colors: Black, White and Gold Flower: White Rose Fratres in Universitate Seniors Richard M. Westover Juniors Kenneth Newland ’ Lew Morris Kenneth Hunter ' William Carder Sophomores Boyde W. Corneilson A. Garde Wood Orville Garrison Titus LeClair H. Theodore Hege |. Gipson Stalker Carl Nagel Verne Patton Freshmen Tack limerson Clayton Westover Harry Emerson Gail Chamberlain Howard Hechtner Jack Hasfurther John Watkins Clarence Hechtner PAGE 164 R. Westove Hunter Jimmerson Watkins Westover 165 PAGE SEM OF THLMUNTAINS Kappa Sigma Founded December 10, 1869, at the University of Virginia Number of Chapters, 86 Gamma Theta of Kappa Sigma Installed 1905 Colors: Scarlet, White and Green Flower: Lily of the Valley Fratres in Facultate E. M. Hulme T. D. Matthews Seniors J. Warren Barber Juniors Ord G. Chrisman Patrick L. O'Brien Sophomores ‘ Francis E. Bartlett Ralph Jacobson David T. Proctor Frank J. Blackinger Leland Johnson Cecil Ryan Russell D. Bowers William H. Langroise John Sampson Leo H. Buescher W. Horton McCallie Ralph Schetzle Howard L. Campbell Joseph B. McDonald Dean Wilson Robert Hibbard Latham B. Moore Freshmen Frank Brown Jay C. McDouald Wayman Williams Virgil Canter Claude McPherson Clyde Williams Henry Dorman Frank Morrison Thornton Wyman Dugald Halsclau Edgar Neal Ward Wyman Charles Hurley Ernest Parrott Gus Hays Hubert Knipe George Phelps Frank Marler Howard Knudson Philip Tolman Percy E. O'Brien Kenneth MacDonald Henry Torson PAGE 166 ee are — TR Williams nD Wilson McDonald O'Brien by Torsen ‘ Bowers Buescher Hays Langroise Matthews Sampson Phelps Wyman Ryan : , Barber ot. Hibbard MeCallic Proctor Chrisman Blackinger Knudson PAGE 167 SEM OF THECHMOUTITAINS rg Tes Alpha Kappa Epsilon Founded June Ist, 1913 Colors: Orange and Black Flower: Chrysanthemum Fratres in Facultate James J. Gill Post-Graduate C. R. Stillinger Seniors Tom Jackson Edwin Rettig Frank B. Thomas Richard B. Ott Clarence J. Taylor Juniors Howard Staples Wilfred E. Newman Harry Hartwell Sophomores William W. Sutherland Carl A. Burke Ralph R. Rowell Freshmen Marshall B. Blair Buford E. Kuhns Edward C. Turner Marshall M. Macey Orange W. Lemon Stanley C. Phillippi Albert S. Daniels John W. Nickel Paulmer S. Soderberg Richard A. Fox Edward E. Poulton Philip W. Buck Gerald Friedman William E. J. Rose Leo A. McGowan Gerald |. Gill Hoyt D. Smith Tames A. Farrell Glenn W. Henderson John P. Tate C. Ross Leighty PAGE 168 — TE - a Sg fa ee i ee = = Colors: J. E. Wodsedalek E. B, Smith Leon Perrine J. Fredrick Cline Marcel E. Malige Elmore R. Bailey George W. Wedgwood Louis W. Cady Leroy W. Thompson PAGE 170 Founded November, Red and Blue Zeta Chi Alpha 1916 Red Rose Flower: Members Fratres in Facultate Percy Messinger Seniors Oliver Campbell Juniors Lyle Colburn Edwin D. Peterson Sophomores William C. Butler Clyde Gaffney Fred D. Stewart Freshmen Oswald Thompson Fred P. Brandt Willow E. Buckingham Richard W. King Sigurd L. Sampson Harry J. Cowen Lawrence W. Gilkerson Williams Wolfenden Fred N. Holland PAGE (171 SEM OF THE oHOUTITAINS Phi Alpha Delta Professional Law Fraternity, Founded at Northwestern University, 1888 Number of Chapters, 34 Membership, 2,800 Kent Chapter of Phi Alpha Delta Installed 1914 Colors: Old Gold and Purple Flower: Red Carnation Fratres in Facultate Cc. G. Miles James J. Gill Fratres in Universitate = Seniors Richard B. Ott Clarence J. Taylor Juniors Patrick L. O’Brien Bernard A. McDevitt William Robertson McClure Sophomores Carl A. Burke William Langroise Dean A. Wilson Latham C. Moore PAGE 172 PAGE 173 4 %, Ti af SANTA se CLAUS R Faverite. 1 a $j 4 = vA 4 F4 An Ear y Risen® 2 SEM OF TRE HOUTTAINS Kappa Kappa Gamma Founded at Monmouth College—October 13, 1870 Beta Kappa Chapter Installed February 26, 1916 Active Chapters, 55 Colors: Dark.and light blue Flower: Fleur-de-Lis Fratres in Facultate Gertrude Stephenson 1919 Helga Anderson Gladys Duthie Pearl Morgan Norma Dow Annette McCallie 1920 Myrthe Gano Marie Weller 1921 Lucie Davis Virginia McRae Margaret Friedman Cora Salter 1922 Marjorie Albert Gladys Putnam Evadna Roberts Gladys Malloy Pauline Rieck Inez Sanger Carol Sternberg Mable Sweeney PAGE 176 PAGE 177 SEM OF THE TNUNTAINS | Nu Chapter of Delta Gamma Founded in 1872 at the University of Mississippi Number of Chapters, 30 Installed Delta Gamma September 16, 1911 Colors: Bronze, pink and blue Flower: Cream White Rose Sorores in Universitate Seniors Ruth Chapman Cora Mae Jones Anne Glindemann Ruth York Camille McDaniel Kathryn McCormack Juniors Gail Taggart Margaret Byrns Jeanette Sholes Ruth Blomquist Sophomores Francis Wiley Jean Kendall Ellen Waring Edith Dingle Josephine Brown Marian Chubbuck Lois Parson Beatrice Blomquist Freshmen Thora Jackson Octavia Gowen Ruth Kutnewsky Lorna York Tulia Adelmann Frances Meacham Norma Langroise Betty Barr Lorine Tavey Inez Calloway Nathalie Tecklenburg Nadine Sims Marjorie Smith Henrietta Peasley PAGE 178 ————— Gamma Phi Beta Founded November |1, 1874, at the University of Syracuse Number of Chapters, 24 Xi of Gamma Phi Beta Installed November 22, 1909 Colors: Buff and Brown Flower: Pink Carnation Sorores in Universitate Seniors Bernadine Adair Bernice Bowers Angelina Burns Juniors Mary McKenna Virginia Dermott Maude Bauman Sophomores Marjorie McCrea Olivia Chapman Mercedes Jones Edna Capps Margaret Denning Harlene Satoris Gladys Clarke Ferol Richardson Freshmen Florence Allebaugh Eleanor Faris Helen Bloom Daisy Crump Ruth Coffey Nell Cornelius Verna Wilkinson Margaret Knipe Marjorie Lyons Bernice Harding Marguerite Yingst Violet Seely Bessie Newman Lyla Harsh Fay Morris Geraldine Nusbaum PAGE 180 Neha r doit rat E M. Jone s Vanman Cromp Coffey Morris Harsh N € ; f Dermott Nusbaum Knipe Yingst ewnan Faris | McCrea Scel Rowers Cornelius Lyows MeKenna cm Burns Denning Harding Chapman Capps Wilkinson vw ‘SEM OF THETMOUTITAIN Chi Delta Phi Founded December 13, 1915 Colors: Lavender and gold Flower: Narcissus Sorores in Universitate Seniors Marie Freehafer Effie Swanson Juniors Manilla Reed Ernestine Brown Lillian White Alice Bessee Evangeline Fleming Sophomores Lena Schott Pearl Snyder Edith Anderson Alice Edgecomb Bertha Hoffman Freshmen Lottie Smith Helen Cochran Ernestine Rose Gladys Beach Irene McKay Pauline Thomas Madeline Wall Gertrude Christen Phyllis Orford Ruth Lee Ellis Georgie Oylear Margaret Munro Mable Smith Olive Zimmerman PAGE 182 ) } 4 SEM OF THEoHOUTTALS Phi Upsilon Omicron Founded at the College of Agriculture, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minn., February 10, 1909 Zeta Chapter Established at University of Idaho May 22, 1918, by Bess M. Rowe and Esther McGinnis Active Chapters, 6 Alumnz Chapter, 3 Colors: Yellow and white Flower: Violet Cora Mae Jones Ruth York Honorary Members Miss Cora Irene Leiby Miss Hallie Hyde Miss Jessie M. Hoover Miss Amy Kelly Alumnae Charlotte Lewis Dorothy Taylor Seniors Cora Mae Jones Esther Thomas Pearl Morgan Ruth York Helga Anderson Effie Swanson Juniors Manilla Reed Leta Sabin Ruth Scott Gertrude Sabiu Sarah Nettleton PAGE 184 nae 185 PAGE Burns Anderson Reed Gano Freehafer R. York McCormack MeRKRenna Sorority Panhellenic Panhellenic was first organized in 1912. Since then it ha s regulated all matters of common interest to the sororities of the University. This year it has adopted a constitution similar to that used by National Pan- hellenic. Officers Peremicenite. (= 2 Se ee Ruth York WA Git teen enit oc he Angelina Burns Secretary-Treasurer____________ Helga Anderson Members Delta Gamma Ruth York Ruth Blomquist Gamma Phi Beta Mary McKenna Anelina Burns Kappa Kappa Gamma Helga Anderson Myrtle Gano Chi Delta Phi Marie Freehafer Manilla Reed PAGE 186 mS) Qt i February |, 1919 PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Pres. E. H. Lindley Mrs. Lindley Prof. H. T. Lewis Mrs. Lewis Dean French Mr. Rolston Butterfield February 8, 1919 PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Pres. E. H. Lindley Mrs. E. H. Lindley Dr. Wodsedalek Mrs. Wodsedalek Prof. Livingston Mrs. Livingston Mr. Butterfield Dean French SEM OF THESHOUTITAINS Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Miss t, February 22, 1919 PATRONESSES Felker Lindley McConnell Truitt Miller Lewis French 5 PATRONS Capt. Luther Felker Pres. E. H. Lindley Ex-Gov. W. J. McConnell Mayor Warren Truitt Dr. G. M. Miller Prof. H. T. Lewis SEM OF THE HOUTTALES | February 15, 1919 PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Dean French Dean Gill Mr. and Mrs. Thompson Mr. Hulbert Miss Goethals PAGE 191 SEM OF THE oHMOUTITALES February 28, 1919 PATRONESSES Miss French Miss Hyde Miss Leiby Miss Zeise Mrs. Goss COMMITTEES Esther Thomas Pearl Morgan Helga Anderson Frances Wiley Refreshments Effie Swanson Programs Ruth Scott Reed PAGE 192 SEMOF THECHOUTTAINS Timber Beast Hoe Down By the Associated Foresters March |, 1919 PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Dean F. G. Miller Prof. I. W. Cook Prof. D. C. Livingston Mrs. Miller Mrs. Cook Mrs. Livingston The Lawyers’ Court By the Bench and Bar Association April 12, 1919 PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Richardson Dean and Mrs. F. A. Thompson Dean James J. Gill Miss French Prof. Miles PAGE 194 PAC SEM OF THE oHIOUTITALHS Midsummer Night’s Dream Oe Presented by the Graduating Class on Tuesday Evening, June 4, 1918, at the Theatre-under-the-Willow Theseus, Duke of Athens Bertha Povey Egeus, Father of Hermia Ralph Stone Lipander Burge Buzzelle Demetruis Alvin McCormick Philostrate, master of revels Eunice Keller Quince, a carpenter Verna Johannesen Snug, a joiner Louis Nettleton Bottom, a weaver Nona Faris Edna Herrington Helen Fallquist Belle Willis Oberan, King of Fairies 7 Velma Spaulding Titania, Queen of Fairies Frances Bailey Burke Harry Williamson Grace Parsons Pauline Bridge Courtney Carey Catherine Collins __.-Harold Livingston __._Catherine Heddon Grace Eldridge PAGE 196 Arts Ni A Midsummer PAGE 197 SEM OF “THI English Club Plays OWS “The Best Man”’ By Elinor Maud Crane Mr. Richard Ford Maurice Jackson Mr. George Brodley Ralph Davis Miss Margaret Gibson Mary McKenna Miss Marion Gibson Nathalie Tecklenburg “The Pipe of Peace”’ By Margaret Cameron Mr. Joe Terrill Abe Goff Mrs. Gladys Terrill Jeanette Sholes Georgie Oylear “Y ' Hut, Friday, February 21, 1919 PAGE 198 SEM OF THE oHMOUTITALHS English Club Plays ‘‘Helena’s Husband” Washington Square Play Helena, Queen of Sparta Florence Allebaugh Isumu, her slave Clara Kitto Menelaus, the King Analytikos, his Librarian Paris, a shepherd “The Glittering Gate” By Lord Dunsany Jim, lately a burglar___- hock des an Michael Thometz Bill, lately a burglar___ ( Garde Wood Presented May 19, 1919 Auditorium PAGE 199 SEM OF THEoHMOUITTAINS “As You Like It” . —_— +. 6. ———_ Sac Presented by the Senior Class Commencement Week, June 11, 1919 John Q. Biggs Richard B. Ott Henry Christ Clarence Taylor Angelina Burns Ronald Romig Camille McDaniel Swanson Lords, Pages, Foresters: The remainder of the class PAGE 200 | if iT] I’) | - 201 PAGE SEM OF “THECH The Robin’s Lullaby Sleep, sleep, sleep, Darkness is falling, my babes; The glorious sunbeams have sunk to their rest, Gold-spangled curtains are hung in the west; Sleep, sleep, sleep. Sleep, sleep, sleep, Black night is o'er us, my babes; Up in the tree-top your cradle is fast, Rocked by the breezes and swayed by the blast; Sleep, sleep, sleep. Sleep; sleep, sleep, Safe in your cradle, my babes; Under your mother's wings, cozy and warm, Safe from the elfins that ride on the storm, Sleep, sleep, sleep. On Originality For heaven's sake don’t try yourself to be, Adopt some othe r man's philosophy. Here individuality is sin; It must be crushed to save your worthless skin. A teacher's only task it seems to be Is to arrest originality. The Sands of Time are asphalt, they believe, And so try not your footprints there to leave. T'wards learning facts must we our efforts bend, Not as a means, but in itself an end. Learn all your books by heart and understand Nothing is good unless learned second hand. Try only to accumulative be, Tis more needed than productivity. Burn midnight oil and rise at break of day. Study incessantly—it’s sure to pay, You'll be rewarded with a priceless “A”. PAGE 202 SEM OF THE HOUTITALHS The Treasure The rain beat against the window panes and the pines without sighed and moaned in the wind. Mrs. Lockworthy shivered and crew the covers closer about her. The creek that ran underneath the cabin sent up a draft of cold air through the thin floor. Mrs. Lock- worthy was thinking that summering in the mountains was not what it was “cracked up to be’. Hard at work back in the hospital, she used to dream of going to sleep to the sound of murmuring mountain streams, but she had never imagined a shrieking, rattling night like this, and she yearned for a comfortable bed and a little steam heat. Overhead in the garret woodrats thumped their tails against all possi- ble objects. ““Woodrats’’, Mrs. Lockworthy repeated determinedly, as if trying to convince herself that it was not the restless tapping of de- parted spirits. She tried to become reminiscent in order to overcome her nervousness and go to sleep. She thought over her years of hospital work, but no pleasant memories returned to her. On the contrary, the faces of the dead and dying she had seen there rose before her with startling vividness. She clutched at her pillow and wished the doctor would hurry home. Dr. Lockworthy had gone up in the mountains that evening to look after a wretched old pioneer, who, according to rumor, was dying up there with no one to care for him. He must have found the old fellow in a bad condition, for it was now nearly ten and he had not returned. She hoped he would find his way down the mountain safely. There was no reason why he should not. They had spent their summer ex- ploring the ridge and they both knew every turn and path of it. Suddenly, Mrs. Lockworthy sat up in bed. She thought she had heard the telephone bell ringing above the noise of the storm. She sprang up with the promptness characteristic of a woman of her pro- fession and groped her way into the next room without even waiting to light a candle. She took down the receiver nad listened. ‘Hello’. There was no answer. Only the humming of the wires in the storm. She was about to hang up when she was stopped by the sound of her husband's voice. Clear and distinct it came across the wire. “‘Can you come up here , he was asking. ‘Yes’, she responded, and listened again. There was a moment's silence, then the voice said again, “I need you’. It was her husband's most professional voice and she responded to it without delay. In a few minutes she was dressed and held a lighted lantern in her hand, ready to go out into the night. As she opened PAGE 203 SEM OF THECHOUTITAINS the door the wind blew the cold rain in her face. She started as if from a dream, and a sudden doubt crossed her mind. “Il am dream- ing’, she told herself. “He could not have phoned from up there. That old fellow has no phone’. For a few minu tes she stood unde- cided as to whether she should go or stay, but the clear voice of her husband rang in her ears, and she obeyed. It occurred to her as she hurried up the mountain side that the old man in question was a wild, romantic character. ‘The Jesse James of Red Spur Ridge”, he had been called, and there was scarcely a crime he had not been accused of committing. It was rumored that he had stored away in his cabin enough gold plunder to buy every mine in the Ridge. In her heart of hearts Mrs. Lockworthy believed that this rumor had urged the doctor to make the call. Professional men are likely to be mercenary. While nursing, Mrs. Lockworthy had learned the art of closing her mind to all but the case in hand and giving no place to her sentiments and emotions. She struggled now for this state of mind, and in a measure regained it. She spent an unmeasured while in climbing. The wet pine branches which overhung the narrow mountain path struck out at her in the darkness. The underbrush caught at her skirts. More than once she thought of turning back but that invincible something urged her on. At last a light shone before her and she recognized her destination. So desolate, so deserted-looking was the shack that she felt afraid to enter. She paused at the door and listened. A low creaking sound reached her ears. Then she tiptoed over to the window and looked in. A fire was dying in a disorderly hearth. A bit of candle sent a faint light from the mantle shelf. An unmade, unoccupied bed stood in the center of the room. The doctor's open case and a basin of water lay on the floor beside it. There was no signs of life. She flattened her face against the pane and looked into the farthest corner of the room. Something was moving there. Out of the dusk rose a white- haired man. His face was contorted with pain and he moved with great difficulty. He staggered to the bed and fell face downward upon it. Her husband had gone somewhere to phone to her, she thought, and had been delayed. At any rate the old man needed care, and she was on duty. She went in to him without further hesitation. Ever so gently she turned him to a comfortable position and bathed his fevered brow. His eyes were glassy, but at the touch of cold water a light of consciousness came into them. She felt his pulse. It was fast PAGE 204 SEM OF THE CHISUTTALHS and beat heavily. She turned to put some wood on the fire, and when she came back he was trying to speak. It may have been her imagina- tion, but she thought she heard him say something about “money”. Very indistinctly she heard it, for he was very weak, and his lips were blistered with fever. She smiled a professional smile and stroked his thin hand soothingly. Powerful hands they had been once and more powerful arms. She gazed at them half fearfully even now, though death was fast overtaking the old man. An occasional glint came into his eyes, an expression that made her wish the doctor would hurry back. He was trying to speak again. Mrs. Lockworthy listened. This time she caught the word ‘‘money’’, and something more about “‘in the closet’’. It was his last utterance. Traditions of Red Spur Ridge tell how at his death seven devils ran forth from the shack. Mrs. Lockworthy did not see these seven, however. She closed the staring eyes, covered the blue face, and stood gazing alternately from the bed to a low door in the corner of the room. Then she tiptoed_over to the door and opened it. It flew back and a heavy something pushed forward on the floor. She bent down and touched it. It was soft, cold and damp. When she drew her hand away and held it to the candle light she saw that it was stained—stained red and sticky. Then all was revealed to her, and she let the door swing back and rushed crazed down the mountain toward the town. u —A. B. ‘18 This is a world of multiplicity and change, And in each little bluebird drifting o'er the green, We see a shining vestige of our fairest dream. Without beginning,—yet without end, It wings its pathway through this world so strang e. —J. B. ‘21 PAGE 205 SEM OF THE HMUIMAIS Retreat A bugle note across the campus sounding, At evening, when the ruddy sun is low— A half a thousand khaki figures pouring From out their barracks, forming, row on row— A sharp command, “‘Attention! ’—Each man stiffens And stands stock still. The bugle sounds again. Old Glory slowly lowers, while the echoes Blend in a sweet, harmonious refrain. Old Glory, ‘tis a tribute we all give you, This sunset homage—a salute unsought, Yet given freely, by your sons who love you— A glorious promise—loyal, fearing naught. Old Glory, when our Captain calls “Attention!” At sunset, when our life’s small work is done, May we have been true soldiers, ever faithful, Courageous, truthful, manly—every one. —C. H.N., °22 PAGE 206 SEM OF THE HMOUTITALAS A Postum Fable | hardly knew where | was, and | did not care much. I remem- bered being in the army, and going to France, shooting at a few Huns and getting shot at, and that was all. But then, | was having a pretty good time now, so didn't bother about remembering. It was a weird place | was in, though richly furnished. . . Here, I lived on, doing nothing in particular, just existing. | enjoyed the evenings most, when everyone gathered round a huge fireplace and spun yarns. The weirdness, the sobriety and variety of that assem- blage was appalling at first. Though the members of the fireside party changed, from time to time; there was one man who seemed to stay on forever. I shall never forget him. Rather emaciated, sallow, anemic; his seemingly visionless, far-seeing gray eyes gave him a most weird expression. His part on the program appeared to be fixed. Each night, before our company disbursed, he would tell a story— a story that in itself, was of no especial interest; except that it was the same for every evening; word for word; even his gestures and his in- flections never changed. He would tell his story, a rather strange one to be sure, and the meeting would break up. That his story had some bearing upon us, | was sure, for each night after leaving the fire, someone from our party would be overcome with curiosity, go to him, and ask him what the mystery was about this tale. Once told, they were never seen by us again. This is the story: “A man and his wife lived a married life of exceptional beauty and comradeship for many years. They were so wrapped up in each other that each looked with fear toward the day when they must finally part. This extreme love brought about the sad part of this couple's story. The fact that this man was a coffee fiend was the cause of their jolted love dreams. After worrying for many years, his wife consulted a doctor about her husband's craving and the doctor, upon due consideration, gave his verdict: this man should, by the aid of his wife, be relegated to substitutes for the vile bean. “So the wife began her tedious task. In the morning, she so diluted the coffee that he received one drop of the substitutes in each of his seven cups. Day by day she increased his portion. At first, all went well, but finally his constitution weakened and gradually, slowly, he lost strength. He began to look emaciated; he became sallow, and he continued to grow more so with the increasing substitute. In a PAGE 207 SEM OF THE HISITITAIN: few months, with only three drops of coffee left in the substitute, he was weakened until. . . until . . .; well, my friends, that man died when the last drop of coffee was taken from him. They say that the man went to heaven.”’ Though the man's tale was queer to me at first, | took no special notice of it until the continued performance completely unnerved me. Finally, after | had heard it for many nights, | gathered up enough courage to brace him on the subject. After the meeting one evening, I demanded of him: ‘‘My friend, what is the purpose of your story, and what is it that makes it so queer that makes it pertinent to us? Who was that woman who so lost her loved husband?” _ Then in a short sentence, came from him, the terse answer, the an- ewer that ended my existence in that place, and sent me to——, well, I am still going. “That woman”, he said, ‘was my wife.” And so I found out, | had been killed in that last scrap, and I was in heaven. —M. J., ‘22 I, who goodness only knows Could never write in aught but prose Am asked for English to compose Some verses; But curses! The Muse descends not on a maid So I must go to class, I'm afraid And get my customary grade. PAGE 208 SEM OF THE CHISUTTALHS A Weed I think there is a bit of the weed in me. | love to be out in the rain, to feel the drops pelt against my face and head in all their dear fresh- ness. They seem to put new life and vigor into me as they do into the drought-burned weed. They make me feel like standing up, unafraid, with all the proud disregard of a weed for the feeling provoked in mere people by its presence, and fulfilling my own mission in life with- out consideration of passing demonstrations and unpleasant expressions of opinion. —V. W., °22 “The Snake” Like a treacherous, coiling enake, a green, eddying river twists its tortuous way through vast lanes of sage brush which stretch monoto- nously into the purple distance. —G. N., ‘22 “‘Shirts”’ Wool shirts are a machine of the devil. They scratch you on your neck, arms, and on a hot day, your shins even itch. The hair on the back of your neck stands out straight when someone puffs by on a hot day, with a sweaty wool shirt on. After a day of torture in a woven file, when you pull the shirt over your head and throw it on a chair the feeling is indescribable. You rub your arms, abuse the place that itched most, and feel the little cold shivers chase each other around your neck and shoulders. —J. G., °22 PAGE 209 SEM OF THE CHOUTTALHS Ode (Owed) to a Debt That you, bill, can never be paid Is a fact which | oft regret, For you must wait till my fortune’s made— I sure feel sorry for you—debt. Tis once a month that you come to me With a passionate plea, | know, But you'll run on anon, till gold is free And | push lilies through the snow. And, debt, though you strive extremely hard, To sever a part of my poke, You'll get your reward—when I'm under the sward, For | am, and always will be, broke. —M. J., °22 On Hurry-Ups There still is at this University A relic of ancient barbarity; The grades of those whose grades are very low Are on a public board exposed for show, | That mocking crowds may laugh and jeer at you As at the pillories they used to do; So if you've leanings t’ward stupidity Don't fail to enter a fraternity; For if a hurry-up should bear your name A brother's snatching it will save you shame. PAGE 210 SEM OF THE oHMOUTITALHS College Philosophy When Spring exams are hov ring And you burn the midnight oil, And you dream of dear vacation Free from literary toil; Then your home town seems enchanted, Filled with magic unexplored, And you wish that you were “homeward bound” And were safely ‘“‘all aboard”. When the summer sun is sweltering And the bees are droning low, And the butterflies are lilting “Mongst the flow'rtips; soft and slow; Then you wish that fall were nearer, And ‘twere registration day— And you'd paid your precious five And were back at school to stay! Mourning Doves Mourning doves in a row On the eaves lowly coo; Graceful forms of dull hue Against a sky of deeper blue Cooing, cooing low. Mourning doves, why mourn you? Is love untrue? What bitter brew Drink you? Coo, coo! PAGE 211 ae Ae poh a ae Ps Kees | EZ Dont Want Te ; Dont Naot Te Tn the tree es SSS EE SE Ee z — a = «te OS oe eS = - 4 =; =.= Ter - (SENSE TRECHUNIATIS) (SEM OF THECHOUTTAINS PRESTON A. RICHMOND ANGELINA BURNS Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Gem of the Mountains The Gem of the Mountains is an Idaho publication which portrays in a more or less kaleidoscopic fashion the events characteristic of the whole college year. Heretofore it has been edited by the Junior class, but this year it was managed by the Associated Students and the many points in favor of such a system may establish a tradition. The publication of the annual is a great task, but it is surely worth the effort if it succeeds in handing on a link that will connect with the books of former years and in forming a continuous chain of Idaho's activities. It is one of our oldest traditions and perhaps the most popular and beneficial. RICHARD B. OTT CLARENCE J. TAYLOR Business Manager ssociate Business Manager PAGE 214 Hibbard tw = 2A exes ¥sZss “OAe@ B68 Se — EE ——— —— a a — a SSeS ake a ea PAGE 215 SEMOF THESIS The Argonaut The Argonaut is the newspaper of the students of the University. The editor and business manager elected by them are in complete control. Last fall the Argonaut found itself without a staff. But under the direction of Mr. R. D. Jameson of the English department and Helga Anderson, acting editor, a staff, composed principally of girls, was organized and the paper published in spite of the S. A. T. C. and the influenza quarantine. At the beginning of the second quarter the Ar- gonaut reverted into the hands of the staff originally elected for 1918-1919. Two important advances were made by the Argonaut this year. The news-gathering was placed upon a more efficient basis, through cooperation with Mr. Jameson's class in newswriting. This re- sulted in the development of a large staff of capable reporters, which, together with the capable business management of Alfred Kinney, ena- bled the Argonaut to become a semi-weekly publication during the third quarter. The Argonaut began its career in 1899 as a monthly magazine. The staff is now planning for the day when it will be a daily. Ernest K. Lindley Editor-in-chief Alfred A. Kinney Business Manager Helga Anderson Acting Editor, First Quarter Homer Lipps Assistant Business Manager PAGE 216 SEM OF THECHOLTTAINS Traditions We are living in an age of progress, but while we are aspiring to always move forward we must not forget that, certain old customs are emphatic representations of wisdom and learning. On the campus we refer to these old customs as college traditions. We desire to perpetu- ate our college traditions because the y are the rituals which remind us of some of the best things we learn in college. Our foremost tradition is that by which we show our respect and ) veneration for the President of the University. It is with pride that ) the sons of Idaho doff their hats to him. We salute him with the same feeling that a true soldier salutes his beloved commander. During the first real spring weather of every year the Senior class exercises its traditional privilege of absenting itself from one day's classes out of its four years labor and takes to the hills. It is to be very much regretted that recently the underclassmen have misunder- stood that this is a Senior privilege coming only after long years of work and have attempted to assume this Senior privilege for them- selves. As they become advanced in college they will realize that they have been in error. We hope the underclassmen will not again be guilty of such sophistry and spoil another “Senior Sneak’’. It is now well established that no classes at Idaho should ever en- gage in hazing. As a substitute we now have the Annual Freshman- Sophomore scrap soon after school opens each fall. After the scrap come the “Bury the Hatchet’’ and the “U pperclassmen™ dances. The upperclassmen generally invade the “Bury the Hatchet’ before the evening is over. Freshmen always begin wearing the ‘‘green postage stamp” with the pearly button when school opens and employ that headgear till campus day in May. In contrast with the obligatory green cap on the frosh is the Senior privilege of wearing a cane and cowboy hat. The evening of the last day of the interscholastic track meet is always celebrated by the stunt fest and song contest. This has resulted in the production of many beautiful Idaho songs. Tradition makes it the job of each Freshman Class to build the bonfire on the eve of the annual football game with W. S. C. On Campus day the men work in the morning in snprocing the campus. In the afternoon comes the procession of the May Queen and the Seniors in Cap and Gown from the University Gardens. It is on this day also that the graduating class plants its ivy. There are various other traditions which should be mentioned, but many of them are so common to every ne campus life that they are an inseparable part of that life itself 2 PAGE 218 SEM OF THE HOUTITALHS NOTE This section is dedicated to the JUNIOR CLASS PAGE 219 AG StYYgZe re ‘ € DAVIE WOLET pao SEM OF “TRE SHOUTITALHS Gem of the Mountains Published by the Junior Class Editor in Chief Kenneth Newland Competing Editor Charles Darling Assistant Editor Jeannette Sholes Business Manager Lew Morris Assistant Business Manager Roy Thompson Society Editor Bill Carder Athletics Literary Mary McKenna Ernest Lindley Because of the high cost of covers, peanuts, paper and photography, the staff regrets that they are unable to print a picture of the above group. QO Junior Class Motto: “We give up.” Signed, Patrick L. O'Brien, President. The only way that we know that the Junior class is here is by the space given up to their overdue bills and class meeting notices on the bulletin boards. They realized that their talent was very limited, and so gave up the annual, also their hopes of a modest class president. They gave up the custom of paying bills after the Junior Prom, and gave up the ghost when the sophs gave them h for giving their wild vest show. Much given to looking up to Seniors; they tried to act tough when the Seniors gave their sneak. Prexy gave up the hope of being a heart smasher when he ran the Argonaut onto the Sholes, and the whole bunch is given to showing the Frosh how important a Junior really is. They were also going to give a play, but they gave up when the Seniors gave them the idea that they would give up anyway. Their colors are black and white, the white giving way to blue in some cases. One reason that they gave up the annual was because they had a Darling editor, and a Morris chair for a business manager. O'Brein would have made a good president, but he didn't have enough Ginger. Newland is the only notorious member of the class, being in the English club, and Keane has the best “‘line” in school, although Brooks will blow on forever. Thompson majors in a : course. This class has a first class vampire, and a cupid, the cupid posing for Rose O'Neill's pictures in the Ladies’ Home Journal. Bill Denecke has accomplished his aim in life. being Vice-President of the Ag. Club. The girls have all joined the “I Wanta Frosh” club, as the upper classmen know too well. PAGE 221 SEM OF TRECHOUTTAINS Senior When this scintillating, dazzling crew of sheepskin chasers were poured into the mold, the Lord’s cauldron was teeming over with his most supreme mixtures, making the resulting candidates for life much superior in all ways to the common run, with the exception that he tried to mix blue blood and red blood, from which emanated canes, cowboy hats and chewing tobacco, making the result ludicrous to some of the real men on the campus. What they lack in college widows is made up by many “‘twosers’’, the girls preferring under class boys, so they can sling a free eye when they graduate into the world of keen looking males. They had a sneak “flu”, and the girls knew about it, so it didn't leak out. They had it early, hoping to catch some worms to sell to the Zoology department, but all they caught was h from the under classmen by not having it when they didn’t have to study so hard, although we admitted that the school couldn't run without them, and also ran. However, the gown wearers have many good points, the main one being that they will soon leave us, and they believe that “we also serve who only sit and wait’, and are, therefore, very valuable on committees where they furnish the decorum. Their athletes are many; Ott bing the best kicker in school, and McCrea all-Northwest center of attraction. Rettig is a runner, having run the A. S. U. IL. into the ground. Richmond comes from West Point, and the staff of the an- nual wishes that he had gone West when he pointed out the mistakes in this annual. When a man goes West he Burns, if he has lived such a life as some Barbers. However, all Pearls are not Pink, and Helga hasn't ruined many boys lives. MOONS ONS PAGE -222 SEM OF THECMMIITAINS Sophomore Motto: We don't smoke and we don’t chew, And we don't associate with boys that do. Honest, girls, this is the’ keneest bunch of youngsters who ever be- longed to our Sunday School. The boys are not at all rough, and they foxed the Freshmen, by not fighting them, and let on that the Frosh razooed them, but they were only fooling. The president, a large, ter- ribly rough child, uses guns to guard dates, so is very popular in fires, which are always started by Wood. The whole class goes by the name of Kinney, although a one-time president did dress .up like a girl and camouflage like a D. G., so, the boys call_him ‘dere’ Bill’. Upper classmen Endeavor meetings are held’ Sunday afternoons, with the object in view of becoming as“ good as everybody else combined, and have succeeded in becoming the best dancers, but that is because they are lightheaded, and dance all the specials. The girls have had experience as jail birds. It was a bright moonlight night in the late spring and the very air seemed to breathe a sense of romance. She, a pretty young thing, was a Senior in school as well as a decided man-hater. She had never been kissed and never was going to be (she said). He, also a pretty young thing, and also a Senior, had been courting her night and day since his Sophomore year. As they stood, close together, he gathered her in his arms and breathed these words close, so close, to her: “‘Dearest, | love you , and then, while the very air breathed a sense of romance, he, of course, kissed her. Late that night he collected $3.95 from the fellows who had said it couldn't be done. PAGE 223 G0 TO IDAHO? . | | : | SEM OF THEHOUITAING Phi Delta Theta Beta Theta Pi Motto: Be a class officer, or a sergeant. | Motto: We love all our brothers— if possible; if not, be something, even To H—— with all others. if you have to be in the Boise Club. SON Se ee AR ee Se This is a very select bunch who were | put in puttees. Brother Hollis McCrea elected for their ability to chew tobacco, | has estimated that if all the leather put- fuss, argue and boast; and also they are | tees owned by the Betas were laid to- the best dressed bunch on the campus | gether, there would be enough hide to with the exception of the Short Ags. | cover cows enough to furnish milk for They fall into two classes: those with a | the entire German Army. Dean Eldridge 14-size neck and those with a 1514 size. | wishes his puttees included. These Each class owns two silk shirts in com- | would at least cover another cow. The mon and the men who sit next to the | brothers are noted for their singing Phi Delt guests wear these shirts. It | power. This exercise has broadened was impossible for all of the Phi Delts | and expanded their chests; one may rec- to dress up at once, so they gave a story | ognize a Beta by his immense chest and book costume ball; the Phi Delts _were | girth. One of their broadest chests be- very natural, all of them looking simple | Jongs to Happy. According to this, he and childlike, which is the reason they | js their best singer. The brothers are gave this kind of ball. The brothers are +--envious of the Kappa Sigs’ reputation expecting to build a house sometime in | and are trying to see if they cannot be the next decade and for this reason are | tougher than the Sigs. Judging from all pledging as many fellows as possible to | reports they are succeeding very well, help work on the house. The Chapter | and sometime may be awful tough. house is conveniently located, for bor- | While there is life there is hope. The rowing from D. G.'s, Betas and Kapvpas; | Betas cannot abide quarantine rules and this accounts for the good eats they have. | due to their love of the weed, are the Al Kinney says that if all the good look- | only bunch on the campus who have ing Phi Delts were placed on top of each | had the thrills of an arrest. other, the top man could kick a duck, if Poosey did the kicking. Poosey looks all right from his ankles up, if it wasn’t B Sigma Motto. “Cakes, women and wrist- «% watches.” Sigma Nu The Kappa Sigma fraternity is the Motto: Grab dates with the new giles only aristocratic and blue-blooded bunch on the campus, according to Dean The Sigma Nus are the most exclu- | Hulme. They may be recognized by sive sorority at Idaho. The men are | their loud collars, ties and their vaseline very refined and ladylike, good exam- | hair. The only Sinn Feiner in College ples: Ken Newland and Ted Hege.. The | is a Kappa Sig. Their reputation is es- upperclassmen ray that the Sigma Nus | pecially good among the Moscow High have the most exclusive bunch of girls | School girls. Cecil Ryan was the Kappa on the campus. 5S, A. T. C. life was | Sig heart smasher before he fell in love very hard on the sisters, for it brought | with the cook. They are the only fra- them in contact with so many rough | ternity on the campus who can afford and uncouth men. The Frosh say that to keep a dog. This is really economical, if the S. A. T. C. taught them (S. Nu's) | for the dog takes turns sleeping with the one thing, it taught them to shoot. | brothers and thus saves the purchase of They are a very home loving bunch and | new blankets. Their house is one of the have not yet severed connections with | most picturesque Spots on the campus the traditional apron string. The Broth- | and is fully as new and as modern as the ers are very afraid to go home in the | University Barn. It has been estimated dark (most girls are) and for this reason | that if a brick was taken from the walls feature Gamma Phis at their parties. | of the Kappa Sig house and thrown at One may recognize a Sigma Nu by the | every bill collector who called there, the dainty way which he picks his way | house would be totally demolished in- across the campus. ++ side of two days. for his face. Their illustrious red-headed Kappa President is looked up to by everyone under six feet. PAGE 225 Alpha Kappa Epsilon Motto: The Akes are not a pill, but are one of the seven wonders of the world, the wonder is that other people let them live. They are noted for their big feet, due to exercising them so much on their long walks across town. They are also notorious for their dancing, both esthetic and- otherwise. Kewpie Newman, one of their broadest men, who earns his way through college by posing (who's your tailor and Rose O'Neil) and lives on parafine (cheap), is one of the best examples of A. K. dancing. He dances all the time and all over the floors. He is the inventor of the New Man wiggle. The Akes can very prop- erly be called “George Morey'’s Sunday School Class. Their strange way of dancing is due, no doubt, to George Morey's choric song and dance. Some of the most notorious men in College are Akes—men like the A. S. U. L President, Ott, famous red-headed law- yer, and try Hartwell, matinee idol. We take what we can get. Kappa Kappa Gamma Motto. To be, or not to be, does not matter, but not to be a Kappa is a failure in life. Very, very exclusive in numbers, dress and false hair. However, if any high school girls wish to join they may write to the registrar, as all petitions are care- fully considered, requirements being that she play the piano, dance, giggle and scream. The D. G.'s object to the Kap- pas using “swell”, “kid, and kindred words, and are trying to reform them. Brother Red Smith is the Kappa house father. Next year it is expected Walter Smith will fill the place. The Kappas’ prehistoric party was one of the main social features of the year. The Betas are keeping very quiet about what they know about it, all they say is they wish it always was prehistoric times, and maybe they'll give one sometime, too, and have everybody come and _ climb through an upstairs window to get in. PAGE 226 Zeta Chi Alpha Motto. We take the rest. They originated and developed in the Devonian Age (age of fishes), during a lost interval. They are noted for many usual and unusual things, one of which is the place they hold in scholarship. The Zeta Chi membership was sadly de- pleted after examination, when a bunch of the brothers found it necessary to pack their carpet bags and take a vaca- tion. The Zeta Chis hold the horse- shoe throwing championship of the Cam- pus, and also hold the record for red hair. Pat Perrine, Junior, is due to wake from his twenty-years’ sleep some- time next year. The brothers are distin- guished for their cast iron nerve. They are petitioning S. A. E. The Zeta Chi barn (where they keep their goats) is always full. They say ignorance is bliss; if this is so, the Zeta Chis must be awful « happy. Delta Gamma Motto: “Pledge ‘em all.” The Delta Gammas are a very relig- ious organization and go to Sunday School every Sunday. They ve a creed composed of seven points to which they religiously adhere. They are: |. Cop a sweater even if you have to be a corridor girl to do it. Fuss all you can, and all you want to. 3. Stand in the halls as much as possible. 4. Sit at the select D. G. table in the Li- brary. 5. Serve eats to the calling fraternities. 6. Always have a bunch of fellows conveniently near when you are on a rushing picnic. 7. Remem- ber the highest aim in life is to get a fraternity pin. In order to accommodate all the sis- ters (the conditions of the chapter house were said to resemble a tenement, ten or twelve D. G.'s crowded in a six by ten room), they rented a shanty, or as the Kappas call it, a shack. ey are firm + believers in a lot of quantity. SET OF “THE ifl Gamma Phi Beta Motto: Look out for the Dean. The Gamma Phi's are, strictly speak- .ing, a very English bunch. They strong- ly believe in English jokes, clubs and brains. They have one of the most famous and catty lines in the world. Just as the D. G.'s are composed of blondes (peroxide, strawberry, etc.), the Gamma Phi's specialize in brunettes. One of the darkest women is called the Vamp ; no one seems to know just why. Besides the vamp, one of the best attractions at the Gamma Phi house is their furnace room. fond of it and have many tete tetes there. The sisters maintain they have the best looking bunch of girls in Idaho, but we asked the Zeta Chis who had the best looking bunch of girls, and they said “there ain't no such animal” e Sigma Nu’s have contested the sister's beauty assertion and declare they are the cutest bunch of girls and we cannot ase but believe they are right. he dear Dean occupies a command- ing position, overlooking their cute little house and tries to maintain the strictest The frosh are very vigilance over the front door. DG r SUTTTALH Chi Delta Phi According to Charlie, the Chi Delta Phi papa, this is the best group in the world. The chapter house is situated well back from the street and in the eve- nings the sisters play pop-the-whip on the wide, spacious lawn. The sisters (those who accidentally get a date) sit by the fireplace and fuss until late at night, because Miss French is so sure that they never have any dates, that she thought it would be useless to tell them the rules. Charlie Gerlough had a new dress suit, so they decided to give a formal. They invited all of the young swells of the campus and asked a bunch of Thetas to come over and see all the good-looking men who fuss at the Chi Delt House. The K. A. T.’s are very particular to whom they give chapters, but McClure, the famous lawyer, says he believes the sorority is all ready for the Thetas, because they sure are Katty enough. PAGE 227 SEM OF THE HIOUTITAINS Personal Advice to Students My freshman year is drawing to a close. The desire comes to me to share with you bits of wisdom gleaned during this long and observant period of colleg= life. First, | would speak to you on a matter generally uppermost in our minds— examinations. One should begin early in the semester to prepare for this occa- sion in order to create the proper atmosphere of anxious interest and thrilling suspense. Make it a point to omit the preparation of part of each day's lessons. This habit of procrastination is a delightful one, giving a daily sense of ease and an opportunity to acquire culture and to advance socially. During the week of ; examination it is very wise to have one’s trunk packed and a plausible excuse on hand should it become necessary to enjoy a leave of absence. Leaving the topic of exams, let us take up one closely akin to it, namely: col- lege professors. There is an amazing variety of them. I would advise that you act as if you were conferring an honor upon them by entering their classes. This will enable them to apprehiate your importance and they will treat you accord- ingly. Always wait for their advice and suggestions in regard to the amount of study you give each subject. Another thing, in regard to rec'tations, college professors are usually sticklers for the old adage, “Silence is golden”. In conisdering the social side of college life we must remember that judgment of our success or failure, socially speaking, rests chiefly with the college men, if you are a woman. Of course, in this matter we must move with due caution. of our success or failure socially speaking rests chiefly with the college men, From observation the average college man seems to be gifted with more than the usual amount of inconsistency peculiar to the male sex. If we attire our- selves gaily for his pleasure and strive to make ourselves charming for his sake, he bewails the fact that college girls are frivolous and care nothing for the serious things of life. Then if we dress comfortably and sensibly, and act in a natural, honeet manner in his presence, he asserts boldly that we have no charm, no pep, and seldom marry. The latter way, however, is perhaps the wiser of the two, since this critical creature is so absolutely honest and immune to flattery. Now as for belonging to fraternities or to sororities or what not, my advice would be with all apologies to the Father of his country, keep free from en- : tangling alliances, In this way sororities will never lose their charm, but will always appear havens of perfections and delight where music and dance and loving sisterly companionship abounds. As for cocial life in general, one should make no advances. Everything comes to him who waits. Dates for dances, Orpheum, and the Palace of Sweets will come in due time. Be individual, and prove your theories: show that, you believe in the emanci- pation of women—for example, by walking down Main Street smoking a cigar- ' ette or by dropping in on dances without a tiresome escort dogging your foot- steps. In conclusion, get all the advice you can and then do as you please about taking it. —A. H., '22 PAGE 228 SEI OF “THE MOUTITALHS Dedicated to Our Three Lawyers Denman: Every time | hear a wandering footstep fall, And they stop before my door sill, While my hopes will rise once more, till ah They inquire about some fellow across In an attitude suppliant, the hall. I just wait here for a client, But I'll try to be persistent, And | listen for footsteps on the stair. If I still can be insistent, Oh, I sit and wait and ponder, And | figure and | wonder And sometimes | am inclined to tear my Maybe some fine day in the future times Taylor: I'll try to see, Without any hesitating, While my heart is palpitating, Some good client looking in the door for me. Eveiy time | hear a creaking, And a ray of hope comes sneaking, And I think three is a prospect of a fee, In there walks a bill collector, Me to worry and to hector, So I'll k n a plugging, But a client I do very seldom see. cep on a plugging To my hopes and visions hugging, Just assured that everything will come Ott: out right, On my trousers there are patches, And I'll keep on a working, On my desk are bills in batches, Always busy, never shirking, And | have a gaunt and lean and hungry And Ill wait and smile and grin with look: all my might. On the stairs | hear a patter, And | think of legal matter, But an agent calls to try and sell some book. And when everything is humming, And my clients in are coming, And success stands at the threshold of my door, 1 won't have that sneaky feeling, Sort of come to me a stealing, Oh, those stairs will drive me crazy, And the creaking steps will bother me And my brain is faint and hazy, no more, All together: The wind she blew, and blew, and blew, And, oh, the awful things she shew; Petticeats old and petticoats new, Yellow and green and purple hue; Bless the ladies! What could they do When the wind she blew, and blew, and blew? SEM OF TH Sub-English Club Professor Miller George Miller Secretary-Treasurer____Dr. G. M. Miller G. M. Miller Executive Board Chairmen and Members of all Committees Morey Miller Active Members Professor George Morey Miller Honorary Members Mrs. G. M. Miller Constitution and By-Laws The purpose of this club shall be to expurgate, felicitate and demonstrate to the English speaking peoples of world, new ideas in the choric song and dance, as portrayed in the lectures of the officers and members of this Club. Signed by the Secretary. es To C—— Now must we part with dear C The fairest of the fair, Who bored us with the same old “spiel”, With artless eyes and hair. We billed and cared and turtle-doved, Till lo—the Truth stole o'er us: She was the girl our brothers loved Some five good years before us. So fare you well, our dear C——, Things do go so confoundedly, It well may chance our sons shall kneel And pay you court unboundedly. 4h Phi Delt No. |: pose is the matter with Pat O'Brien? Phi Delt No. 2: He looks like he had lost his pep. One who knows: Naw, he lost his “Ginger”. i — Kappa Kappa Gamma. What hap- pened to your cook? Did she quit? Gamma Phi: She abdicated. PAGE 230 What do you sup- . TINUTITALH: Men Who Fail The man who tries to make George Morey Miller keep his mouth shut. The man who tries to make us be- lieve we have a baseball team. The man who says Fat Stevens can run the hundred in 10 flat. The man who eaid Clayton Keane was a Swede. , D From an English “I ’ theme on the basket ball with Washington: “For the first time the boys discovered the Indian clubs, and then for a while panorama reigned.” —. ‘ ? When the Phi Delts were calling the Gamma Phis last fall, the following con- versation took place: Ann Burns: Clements, you and Keane can sit out here in the Hall. Keane: Yes, we would feel just as much at home there as any place in the house. = 4 STOP! “Oh, stay! “Stay by my side” And the stay stayed, cor-set did! = 43 = Christ got a bum bunch of ham at the Pastime one morning. “That ham is bad, said Heinie. “Forget it,” granted the pancake maker. ‘“'Twas cured only last week.” “Probably had a relapse,”’ retort- ed Christ, as he beat a hasty re- treat. —¢ “We're in a pickle,” said the Frosh. “A regular jam, added the Junior. “Heaven preserve from the Seniors. us, ’ —this ««s ONE 5.25 | University of Lraho show hy Alo: Established in 1889 THE COLLEGE OF LETTERS AND SCIENCE THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE THE COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING THE COLLEGE OF LAW THE SCHOOL OF MINES THE SCHOOL OF FORESTRY THE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION THE SUB-STATION OF THE BUREAU OF MINES THE EXTENSION DIVISION mos COW ——.—__—_ + SANDPOINT, CALDWELL, ABERDEEN o- WEY GO TO “IDAHO”? The choice of a university or college to be attended should be based upon four prin- cipal requirements: Ist, a high purpose and broad field of work; 2nd, a competent faculty: 3rd, a sufficient equipment; 4th, a student body of high ideals. The University of Idaho fully satisfies these requirements. + 1. PURPOSE AND FIELD—Its purpose is to serve the people of Idaho in develop- ing and training students; in advancing the entire State educational system of which it is a part; in assisting toward the solution of economic and social problems; in furnishing expert knowledge in Agriculture, Engineering, Forestry, Mining, Home Economics, Law, and Educational matters not only to students in residence but also to all who desire it throughout the State. 2. FACULTY—tThe faculty is made up of eighty-three teachers of thorough train- ing and efficiency attained by years of study and experience. They are deeply inter- ested in the progress of each and all under their instruction. They know the State and its conditions and give their best efforts to its development. In addition there are sixty- five workers in the agricultural extension and county agent work. 3. EQUIPMENT—lts equipment is ample. It has a library of over 40,000 volumes, excellent facilities for teaching literature, philosophy, and the social sciences, and well provided laboratories for the natural and applied sciences and for the technologies. 4. STUDENTS—lIts students numbered 1309 in the school year of 1918-1919 and were earnest, wide-awake, and democratic. A large number of them earned their own way. Its alumni now occupy high positions and will be the future leaders of — in professions, the industrial vocations, and in the building and maintenance of omes. The six colleges and the central agricultural experiment station and the co-opera- tive work with the U. S. Bureau of Mines are located at Moscow; the main agricultural extension office is at Boise, and the agricultural sub-stations and demonstration farms at Caldwell, Sandpoint, Moscow, and Aberdeen. For information apply to THE UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO MOSCOW, IDAHO PAGE. 232 Does He Look Distinctive? That is the kind of Merchandise we carry —DISTINCTIVE An, Exclusive Shop for Men and Young Men Where the. Oe Noes PAGE 233 PAGE 254 QO ————————————— . : Next SAMM’S Furniture Store ‘ Jeanette: Of course, he's tall Complete Line of and thin and not very old, but he HOUSE FURNISHINGS adores you.” FROM A TO Z Camille: “| haven't turned him H Sd @ . Always Something New in down altogether; I've just put him PERIOD FURNITURE in my deferred classification.” SEE SAMM’S Before You Buy ” CORNER FIRST AND MAIN Prof. Wedsedalek: ‘‘Mr. Tate, —————__ et Cry asia cequitrel such: ‘a: large tail?” Fi. O. FIELD Tate: ‘Sticks it up in the air and leans against it.”’ . CABINET MAKING . - and General Woodwork Fob: ‘Who won the ball game ar Sra today?” GLASS SOLD AND INSTALLED Slob: “I dunno. I took a girl. Repairing Done With Skill When the game ended | had only MOSCOW, IDAHO managed to explain things as far as 497 Washington Street Phone 122-L the fifth inning.” o- IPar lExcellleace IRed IRiblbom IPure Food IProdwucts MASON, EHRMAN CO. Lewiston, Idaho O- - : PAGE 235 Make your Home Attractive by Using ORES J DD) Bseee- PAINTS, STAINS, WALLPAPER, EAC. We carry everything in the line to dec- orate and preserve the home inside and outside. If your dealer does not have them write us. Jones Dillingham Co., LEWISTON, IDAHO E. C. YOCUM Company a MANUFACTURING JEWELERS Makers of Badges, Medals, Class Pins and Fine Jewelry Complete Stock of DIAMONDS, WATCHES, CUPS, ETC. Factory and Salesroom 3 Post St. SPOKANE, WASH. —@ he thought they seemed to be get- ting into some sort of shape, so de- cided to test them: “Right turn!’ he cried. Then, before they had ceased to move, came another order, “Left turn”. One hoodlum frosh left the ranks and started across the campus to- ward home. “Here, you! ’ yelled the Ser- geant. “Where the devil are you going?” “I've had enough,” replied the Frosh; “‘you don't know your own mind for two minutes hand run- nin'! HEADQUARTERS FOR SIPPALDING ATIBLIE LUC GOODS WRITE FOR CATALOGUE WE MAKE ALL KINDS OF EMBLEMS, BANNERS, AND PENNANTS TO ORDER x Ware Bros. Co. 125 Howard St. Spokane, Wash. Sd rf The HOME. Beautiful Raraennt Abendorff won trying to drill a lot of new recruits and AMERICA’S GREATEST ASSET after working hard for three hours Without the home good government is impossible. e « PAGE 236 SC ® Fate First Kappa Sig (despondently) : he. ae “What's going to happen to us, old fi ees | PA RISTAN Second Kappa Sig: There's no help for it—We'll have to MOSCOW’S EXCLUSIVE spend most of our time over at WOMEN’S WEAR STORE the Chem Lab.” Jean Hart: “Of course, there's We have the very latest styles in WOMEN'S COATS, SUITS, DRESSES and FURNISHINGS res ; d at all times at the very least possible Hart: A botanist is one who price consistent to good business. a big difference between a botanist and a florist. Sister Gale: ‘Is there, now? Well, what is it?” knows all about flowers, and a flor- ‘. ; x ist is one who knows all about the price people pay for them.” We solicit a part of your patronage. o-- —. GREATEST “STORE RIVERSIDE. MAIN AVENUE, AND WALL STREET Che SPORT SHOP : : Fourth Floor ONS 2 EVERYTHING for pas EVERY GAME Indoors and Out Baseball, Basketball Track, Tank and Gymnasium PAGE 237 : he ee Each copy of a letter should be as clear as the original HAT did you write Jones, and what is Wilson’s number on insurance policy for renewal just received, etc., etc.? Have you a clear record of these things in your office files? To obtain perfect carbon copies use MULITNKOIPY Carbon IPaper It gives clear, clean-cut and legible copies that reflect the perfection of your original letters. There are three weights, each meant for a special purpose: STENOGRAPHERS' SUPPLIES ; Star brand Typewriter Ribbons, Type- Price 5c per sheet, or $4.00 for a box writer Desks and Chairs, Typewriting | of 100 sheets. Papers. Note Books, Cushion Keys, | Chair Pads, Etc. Light weight for manifolding, medium weight for every-day office correspond- ence, and the regular billing weight. Phone or write and we will send it. Office Supply Dept. First Floor (ohiW Graham Ce 707-709-711 SPRAGUE AVE., SPOKANE @® Victor When you think of MUSIC, Think of Pipe Organs ‘ls SHERMAN, CLAY CO. ?=%l Steinway Sole Pacific ae Representatives Pianola Pianos 808-810 Sprague Avenue SPOKANE, WASHINGTON Pianos eS EO ROE ag ak Ase os ies SAR EREACRO DSO 1 KORE ABE OYTO Cant me iS ay TE RELOAD Dar LISA IR BRASS, - - 4 — E IRE EY? S ALL SEEDS TESTED For Purity and Germination Book Store OO { —-— The Home of Mark Meams Co. EASTMAN Kodaks WHOLESALE AND RETAIL “and SEED MERCHANTS Victrolas | LEWISTON, IDAHO = PAGE 238 “2 ¢ An “‘Ag’s” Idea of Law The law is a collection of rules W and precedents so arranged that M O S C O nobody is protected from anything except those who do not deserve Barber Shop to be. The machinery of the law has grown so cumbersome that the THE FACIAL UPHOLSTERER expense of running it is immense. and FEATURE DESIGNER As the poor cannot afford to pay, tel the matter devolves upon the rich, O46) who, in turn, receive immunity. Thus, the law, originally intended Whiskers trimmed in all languages. to mete out justice, is a reservoir Automatic hair cut and hydraulic sham- of delay, debt and despair. If poo. No charge for ambulance, gas or there were no law, there would be EAA tee no precedents, and without prece- dents mankind would flourish, so x much that law would not be neces- sary. To mitigate the incompe- HOSPITAL IN CONNECTION tence of the law ought to be: the st duty of everyone except lawyers; ee but inasmuch as everyone includ- ee St ee ing members of congress, is a law- C. L. JAIN, Pro yer, the prospect is not rosy. = ge ; ri 2.3: 0 ee ? CREIGHTON’S M Hotel Moscow THE HOME OF Hart, Schaffner BILLIARD Marx HALL Clothes @ o- @ MUNSING UNDERWEAR GOSSARD CORSETS HANAN SHOES QUEEN QUALITY SHOES GOOD MEATS QUALITY—Best Always SERVICE—That Satisfies PRICE—Always Right Complete Variety of Fresh and Smoked Fish, Oysters and Sea Foods Received aily INLAND MARKET CARL F. ANDERSON PHONE 124 PAGE: 239 “0+ ) Branch of Chicago Established 1855 Crane Company Manufacturers of VALVES and FITTINGS For All Pressures Jobbers of Pipe, Steam and Water Supplies of Every Description HEATING and PLUMBING SUPPLIES Irrigation and Power Plants a Specialty OOo Oe OO Oe ewe SPOKANE, WASH. South 126 Post Street bal é °. PAGE 240 Frosh No. | (waiting with guns outside Lewis Court): ‘‘Fire at will.” Frosh No. 2: “Who is Will?” a Ye Ballade Canto I O Students Army Training corps You army of real men, I'll honor you when my locks are hoar And childhood claims me again. Refrain O 2 say, 2 say I—S. A. T. C., I'll honor you for aye; In the great melee—you fostered me— You're the apple of my eye. Canto Il With my discharge hanging in the parlor And my khaki suit in the vault— I'll speak of you with the ardor Of a sailor bathing in salt. Spokane’s Cash Store for All the People CORNER MAIN AVE. AND POST ST. EMPIRE HARDWARE H. KALINOWSKI, Proprietor Shelf and Heavy Hardware J. I. CASE AGENCY O. V. B. TOOLS AND CUTLERY DOMO CREAM SEPARATORS MONARCH MALLEABLE RANGES FAIRBANKS-MORSE GAS ENGINES SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS MOSCOW, IDAHO City Phone 67 Rural Phone 12 “+ AUTO BUS STRICTLY MODERN intel Moscom T. M. WRIGHT, Prop. ONS GRILL IN CONNECTION EUROPEAN PLAN MOSCOW, IDAHO We give S.GH. Trading Stamps on All Purchases A HOMELIKE STORE FOR ALE ane PROPLE You'll feel right at home here at the Big Cash Store—everybody does WE OFFER YOU A FRIENDLY SERVICE Merchandise of Staunch Quality, distributed in thirty com- plete departments, on six selling floors When in Spokane Lunch in our big Restaurant and Lunch Room Trade Here : Save Here PAGE 241 — “4] Sa = 3) P AGE 24 a. A Politician’s Point of View Rob some of the people all of the time or rob all of the people some of the time—if you can’t rob all of the people all of the time. Look, Abe! “Why does that young man stay so late?” Camille: us father.” “Well, you will save me a lot of don't know, trouble if the next time you have a caller you get a self-starter.”’ His Suggestion Jeane K.: myself down to one man.” “No, | will never tie Homer: ‘Perhaps, if | organize a syndicate, you will consider our offer.” e- Stella Chocolates ... She... Cuorur D Alvue of Spokane, Washington THE HOTEL WITH A PERSONALITY S HARRY F. GOETZ Manager OUR RATES ARE LOWER THAN THOSE OF ANY OTHER FIRST- CLASS HOTEL IN SPOKANE o- “sti cccecee. Krause'’s B r ' JAILIK, Ghocolates PAGE 243 o- . An Eye for Business i“ First Co-ed: “‘Have you made Say lt With Flowers. Oe all arrangements for your mar- riage?” Second Co-ed: ‘Well, not quite FLOWERS. WE ALL LIKE all. | have got to buy a trous- seau, rent a house, get my husband TO GIVE HAPPINESS AND a job, buy him a good suit of WE SOMETIMES FORGET clothes and get some “‘washin' ’ to HOW EASY IT IS TO DO do. When that’s done, | can name SO. A CLUSTER — OF the REDDY aay.” FLOWERS OR A POTTED ON EVERY OCCASION USE “N Th Ns er PLANT ALWAYS BRING A ow, ompson,”” sai aptain Felker, “you have the battalion in RAY OF SUNSHINE, A quarter column facing south; how THRILL OF PLEASURE would you get it into line, in the quickest possible way, facing the i a northeast?” “Well, sir,” said Thompson, af- ter a moment's fruitless considera- Roselawn Greenhouses tion, “do you know, that’s what I've often wondered.” Phone 289 N. Main Street © qe your graduates have sons old enough to wear men’s clothes send them to. us. R. J. HURD CO. will be running then as when your father graduated, because they are founded upon the principle of honesty and intelligent appli- cation. Neither man nor business fail when based upon that simple formula. Why not start trading with us? Riverside Avenue at Stevens Street SPOKANE The Hot-headed Youth, ‘Nutts’’ You see, he had a lantern jaw to begin with; and so his whole face lit up! His cheeks flamed, he gave a burning glance, and then, blazing with anger and boiling with rage, he administered a scorching rebuke. First Upperclassman (watching Poosy walk down the sidewalk): “He comes from a good family, doesn't he? Second Upperclassman: ‘Yes, but he’s been such a long time com- ing. Rube Everly: a divorce; my wife hasn't spoken “ “I'm going to get to me for six months.’ Sergeant Abendroff: careful; you'll never wife like that.” “Better be get another o- TRUE, PAS TIMIJE LUNCH COUNTER OPEN DAY AND NIGHT CONFECTIONERY BILLIARDS Wh@sas0. Kenworthy MOSCOW’S LEADING THEATER --@ | O oD Established in 1882 MG W. L. PAYNE, President CHAS. W. SHIELDS, Vice President J. S. HECKATHORN, Cashier A. H. JOHNSON, Asst. Cashier RON CISIENN ELECTRIC RANGE and WATER HEATER Your Tank Always Full of HOT WATER Without Heating Up Your Kitchen SOLD ON EASY TERMS A little then, a little with each light bill. down, Do It Electrically The Safe, Clean, Economical Way The Washingtom Water Power Company | MOSCOW, IDAHO e PAGE 245 GEM OF Tide - ¢ ; The bunch was all sitting around the fire-place with their mouths PERFECTION wide open, leaning forward—so as OUR AIM not to miss a word. A man was doing the talking, reciting tales; SERVICE yes, tales of his many battles in the air. He said, “Why, | have seen OUR MOTTO so many planes in the air at one time that the birds hadito get down out of the air and walk.” l f It was only Tuffy Staliles fla are 0 During a rally of the students Siuprts down town, an old man was an in- terested listener. His daughter, who accompanied him, turned CANDIES around and said: ‘Well, Father, how do you like it? ’ ‘Fine, fine,” ICE CREAM said the old man. ‘‘I'm half witted LUNCHES myself.” A bum date (as the clock struck 12): “Is that an eight-day clock?” Girl: “Why don’t you stay a Party Orders Our Specialty little longer and find out?” e¢e—ei= | Wholesale Butchers Right OUT OF the Oven and Retail and Packers Fresh, Fragrant and Delicious You get the goodies here. MEATS ; Try patronizing The EMPIRE BAKERY Main 250 We Deliver 9 OO Oe OOO U. S. Government Inspected re) Establishment No. 811 VamnTilbors « Oalkes “ Groceries and Notions Hagan Cushing Phone 94 Company 3 Established 1885 Incorporated 1909 219 Main Street Moscow, Idaho Fraternity and Sorority Phone Main 7 Patronage Solicited o- PAGE 246 Denman (Heard in the criminal law class, speaking to Prof. Evans): “Suppose that while | am _ sitting here, | should try and see how close I could shoot to you without hitting you, and that | accidentally hit you; what would I be guilty of?” Prof. Evans: ‘‘Murder.” Red Clements: “Aw, would be just a misdemeanor.” 2 no; it Poosey Davis didn’t have any more romance in him during spring vacation than he did during initia- tion week. With his good looking, dreamy-eyed friend beside him, entranced by mystic music, Poosey wanted her to come to, and start in on the eats. Touching her hand to wake her up he murmured, “Will you have a little shrimp?” “Oh, Poosey,”” happily the fair damsel; “this is so sudden.” cooed Changes are Expensive Make one more change to Mark P. Miller flour and no more changes will be necessary. Our “Bluestem” flour is made of the best local wheats and is the so-called soft wheat flour. Our “Very Best” flour is made of the Montana wheat and is the hard wheat flour. Try Them and Good Bread will be the Result ¥ Close prices on all feed, grain and hay MARK P. MILLER MILLING CO. e : ee o oe “Western Made for Western Trade” W. P. Fuller Co. Pure Prepared Paints Successfully Manufactured Wk) Years SPOKANE, WASHINGTON Collims Orland lardwaire Co. GENERAL HARDWARE MOSCOW, IDAHO Oe Auto-Oiled Windmills, Worthington-Ingeco Kerosene En- gines, New Holland Feed Grinders, Eagle Hay and Silage Cutters, Worthington Farm Electric Light Plants, Quicker Yet Power and Electric Washers Aermotor COMPLETE STOCKS RIGHT PRICES Distributors for Idaho and Eastern Wash- ington BUTTERFIELD-ELDER IMPLEMENT CO., Ltd. MOSCOW, IDAHO Established 1896 PAGE 247 ¢ ? : Rollefson’s Cash Grocery Quick Sales Small Profits Quality Always % | Let Us Supply Your Wants = A. I. ROLLEFSON, Prop. aie -o e e +a Witter Fisher Co. K.KT. ; use L Plumbing ei | = Heating % ire Tinning THEY oh SERPS SEN wito Welding A bachelor is a man with enough ce confidence in his judgment of wo- men to act on it. 412 Main St. Main 230 o- ° ee For The a lramcy ILumch ST DAO BRING HER TO Will Harvest Your Crop for Che: Bon: Ton ONE DOLLAR AN ACRE and Give You the Dollar Dainty Confections and Fancy Sundaes Investigate K 3 Idaho National Harvester Company Limited MOSCOW, IDAHO ° - PAGE 248 @ WILSON Sportimg Goods and Adi Ek = TRoyall Club? The Name of a “BRAND” The Name of a “HOUSE” Baseball Toc . Tennis Golf Focus Football Lewiston Mercantile Company LEWISTON, IDAHO SPOKANE DRUG Company Be ik SPOKANE, WASH. | e— $ $___ ________—_ The Owl Store WM. I. WALLACE S. L. WILLIS, Prop. JEWELER AND OPTICIAN y A Full Line of JEWELRY DIAMONDS, Etc. MOSCOW, IDAHO Eyes Tested Free High: Class: Lise @f Leseaas es tiwaniee Broken Lenses Duplicated and Davenport's Mission Sweets STATIONERY AND SUPPLIES THE HALL MARK STORE OO o- Lewiston Flower Shop | Parifie Music Cn. Flowers of Finest Grade SPOKANE, WASH. Mail Orders Solicited WW STILLINGS EMBY GROWERS AND RETAILERS Music Teachers’ and Students’ 1147—PHONES—394-L | Supplies - a, = PAGE 249 o- “Prex Lindley made a_ great speech at the club last night, didn't he?” “What about?” “Oh, he didn't say.” Private Kinney, doing guard duty: “Who goes there?” Voice from out of the darkness: “Man, and eight children.” Kinney: “‘Man, advance twenty paces and be recognized; squad halt.”’ What estate does a wife have when her husband dies _ without making a will?” Taylor: ‘‘Intestate.”’ ; Deposits Over ¢ ° One Million Pardonable PRIDE This bank has a pardonable pride in its organization, in its strength, in its service and in its growth. You have a like pride in your business and your suc- cess. Let us get together for mu- tual benefit. First Trust Savings Bank Security and Better Service e- @ CATERPILLAR REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. The Holt Manufacturing Company SPOKANE, WASHINGTON PAGE @ SSS ee ee Correct Weights and | Moscow Creamery Accurate Tests Manufacturers of . Moscow Brand Butter and Our Policy lee Creams CE) Me OS) ate BRICK AND BULK ICE CREAM IN COLD STORAGE We operate cream receiving stations s throughout the State of Idaho, and will MOSCOW, IDAHO appreciate your writing us, with request as to prices we are paying for cream Sad delivered, either at our factory here or at Caldwell, or any station near to you. Auto Electric Supply Co. Opposite Postoffice Moscow, Idaho Sy) | RY) Hazelwood SERVICE STATION Cou Ltd. Starling, Lighting and Ignition Work Batteries, Magnetoes, Starting Spokane, Wash. _ Caldwell, Idaho ; Motor Generators Willard ee ov? What makes a BETTER GIFT than a STERNER for your ‘Friend, Sweetheart, Mother? PAGE 251 So ; ¢ ie y j REAL ESTATE | @OCTA@@O@leT1© FIDELITY BONDS RENTALS OTT TAYLOR a DENMAN Veatch JRealty : Company, Ltd. ATTORNEYS AT LAW 2 . INSURANCE in the OLDEST, LARGEST AND BEST COMPANIES University of Idaho in the world @ic=ZAN@|@|@icz1@ MOSCOW, IDAHO ————— | 0 ———————eee Farmers Union | Taxi 5] Taxi kK | evator Hor (Goad Serives Company MOSCOW CAB TAXI ae COMPANY aaek (i F. NEELEY SON Fancy Groceries Livery, Cab and Auto Service Light Hardware ee = sho Standard HAY, GRAIN ‘ oo Lumber ‘Go. FUEL COAL AND poo LUMBER MOSCOW, IDAHO ¢ ® 8 2? PAGE: 252 QO — . With or Without j When the Glee Club was away To rsen’s . on its last trip they were obliged to Millinery pat up at some dilapidated hotels For STYLE in the small towns. Down South they stopped at one called Puke- and Quality a-munga. After all the fellows had iy gone up to their rooms, one of W he ‘Frock tt them came back down and said to ps i peck ee the proprietor: ‘Is there any wa- |@ —————_ ter in my room? ‘There was,” me as replied the proprietor, “‘but | had Hugo Buick Co the roof fixed.” BUICK AUTOMOBILES | G. M. C. TRUCKS 3 Accessories, Tires, Tubes, Oil and Gas +4 a = = lies | oman Counts - That’s why the Connoisseurs of oe Candies and Confections Go o Childers The Sugar Specialists Hi’ ic NQMC a Fn se UA HI ll (NH WA i] WABI It’s the RESULT that Counts ESTABLISHED 1890 We SPECIALIZE in The Leading Supply House Everything that has to do in the Northwest for :: :: with Printer’s Ink. Counties, Municipalities, Banks, Business and Pro- Catalogues, Booklets fessional Offices. Circulars and ma Blank Books Ra a Loose Leaf Outfits No matter how small or Office Furniture how large the job, we Filing Systems can handle it in Architects’ and our own plant Engineers’ Supplies })) THE NORTHWEST BANIE | [!' _oFFicE GUTFITTERS : = T= ENGRAVERS, BOOK STEEL and Eastman KODAKS COPPER PLATE and KODAK Supplies Everything for the Ama- ab cin ea teur Photographer Die Sinking .. . Plate Printing and We develop and print your pictures by the latest and Embossing 8 most up-to-date methods in Wedding Invitations and our well equipped Dark Announcements Room. Society Stationery Mail Orders receive our In the latest approved prompt and careful forms attention Everything Everything for... STATIONE ERS - PRINTERS “ENG RAVERS - you desire the Office in Printing oe o- e New Process Engraving Co MAKERS OF COPPER AND ZINC PRINTING PLATES THAT PIcTURE tes AFFECTING A SUNNY SMILE, SMILE sHows ONLY ON CNE Si SE CF FACE DESIGNERS AND ENGRAVERS 816'2 Riverside SPOKANE FoR THE ANNUVAL a) te . TO Look sEKV0VS AND INTEC” LECTVUAL . (us uCCESS FUL) Cott ” PROFILE. CAVGHT OFF YOvuR GvaRD ¢ o-. Things That Never Happen |. The D. G.’s fail to hold a mass meeting on the second floor of the Ad building at 10 o'clock Monday, Wednes- day and Friday. 2. The Seniors make a clear get- away for the hills on sneak day. 3. Anyone to squelch a_ roomer. (Whether good, bad or indifferent, we like to boost them along.) 4. The baseball team to win a game. 5. ALL of the fair voters exercise their legal right at municipal elections. 6. Quiet in the library. 7. The “Campus Roomer™ to leave the “Bench and Footrest’ alone for one week. 8. The Annual comes out as per schedule. 9. Dean Little doesn't feature in the stunt-fest. 10, Pat is satisfied with the system (political, athletic, educational, fraternal and ecclesiastical). Foolish Questions |. Who is that rather large, bald- headed man over there who is doing most of the talking? 2. Can't we elect A. S. U. I. officers upon merit? 3. Doesn't the wind ever stop blow- ing in Moscow? would ask this.) 4. Is it too late to get my picture in the Annual? 5. Who's at the head of the English department? 6. Who's going to be elected A. S. U. |. President? (This is the most fool- ish question in the bunch.) 7. Who is that tall, dark complex- ioned fellow with horn-rimmed glasses who stands in the halls so much. 8. And, what is he looking for. 9. Who is that good-looking fellow? (This makes a strong bid for first place.) 10. What's the Y. M. C. A. building for? Il. May I have a special permission date? 12. Where have | seen you before? (Very foolish, and it might introduce complications. Better not ask it.) (Only a total stranger PAGE 256 a rr $ Did You Ever See— 1. Camille when two or three of them were in town at the same time? 2. Pat O'Brien when wasn't wrong? 3. Ruth Chapman, Esther Thomas, Ann Burns and Norma Dow on a picnic? 4. Dean Hulme tell a joke without laughing first? 5. A T.N. E. pin on the campus? 6. Bill without Ellen? 7. A good sized crowd at a track meet or baseball game? 8. A Home Ec. student who liked her course? 9. Hollis McCrea have dates with the same girl for longer than two days in succession? 10. Everyone perfectly satisfied with the judge's decision of the Song and Stunt? 11. Gail and Red when they weren't fighting? 12, An A. S. U. Ll. meeting when one or two didn’t run the whole thing? everything 4 Snap Courses Instructor Botany 55-5 Daisy and Violet Campustiy.. f=) Camille French_______ Mademoiselle Schell Attractions For the Young Men Pre-historic Parties The Wind The New York Cousin For the Girls 10:30 Dates Dances at Pullman. x On the Stunt To the Seniors and Sophomores —congratulations. To the Juniors—consolations. The Gamma Phi's are in a pre- carious physical condition. They have to have two Doc's in regular attendance. 4 = Ever-ready Red was there with cigars when it came to voting. “What's the matter, Red, are you feeling seedy? asked McDevitt. “No, not exactly that,”’ replied Red, of late. “but I'll admit I'm worried You remember | hired a man to trace my pedigree.” “Yes,” replied McDevitt, “hasn't he been successful? “Successful! | should say he has, ’ said Red, “but I'm having to pay him hush money.” oo Mr. Jameson: ‘Somebody is handing in papers without signing his name.” Sargent: “I don’t blame him.” If the physics Prof. is Angel, is Heinie “Christ” ? Hodgin’s Drug and Book SCHOOL AND COLLEGE TEXT BOOKS EASTMAN KODAKS and PHOTO SUPPLIES - SIX-HOUR DEVELOPING AND PRINTING DEPARTMENT EDISON DIAMOND DISC AND AMBEROL PHONOGRAPHS o STUDENT SUPPLIES Students’ Headquarters -— Drugs, Stationery Ice Cream and Confectionery ——— ) Economical Pharmacy A. LINDQUIST, Prop. City Transfer, Dray Storage Company STUDENTS’ TRADE SOLICITED Office at Jerry's, Third Street ——% CARL SMITH, Proprietor Office Phone 11 Res. Phone 332 Frank Kelly Waterman Pens Fraternity Jewelry MOSCOW, IDAHO PAGE 257 ¢ : THE GASEBALL o- Catty Russell : “What makes you think Bessie loves me so desper- ately? Hollis: Oh, a thousand things! She always looks so pleased, for instance, when you sing.” the Frosh Chem Lab., had an ammonia generator going full blast. Mr. Shapiro asked him why he didn’t put it un- der a hood. “Oh! I'm nearly fin- ished,’ replied Davidson. “Yes,” “and Davidson, in said Shapiro, holding his nose, so are we.” o- o eo TE An's UNIFORMS Too Sensitive for Science Happy in his class in physiology put up the question: Happy: ‘How many ribs have you?” Gladys: “I don't know; I am so awfully ticklish, I never could count them.” It don’t always mean I'm a Kappa Sig If | do shine a little too bright; For there's many a star in the heav- ens afar, That does all its shining at night. —S, -@ ‘« BLEA’S™ WONDERFUL ONE HOss SHAY PAGE 258 Prof. Rosenburg, in accounting class: “Mr. Buescher, | want you to go over the accounts at your house for the last ten years.” “Who shall | turn it into, George Morey Miller?” Buescher: ee If the Gamma Phis had a nice lawn would Les Moe? No, but Garde Wood. o Poosie: ‘“‘All women like to be loved.” Mary: “Yes, and all men love to be liked.” - Ralph York, Ruth York, New York. P. S.—And Cora May? - Is Ellen Waring a Kappa Sig pin? Is Permeal French? Go Derey Cop 197 BUSY. niet BUSY STORES df U. of I. STUDENTS: Economize on your Expenses while in College. Do it the J. C. Penney Way Practical—eane—habits formed early in life are not only Immediately Construc- tive, but yield rewards in later years. Let us mutually co-operate with you while going through College—to econ- omize on your expense. Inclusive of Men’s Furnishings, Men’s Stock Suits, Men’s Made-to-Measure Suits Ladies’ Furnishings, Ladies’ Ready- to-Wear Garments SHOES A SPECIALTY Both Ladies and Men's. Let Us Serve You ‘The Moscow Steam Laundry We Clean Everything Your Character Excepted Moscow, Idaho Telephone Telegraph Cablegrams MOSCOW TELEPHONE TELEGRAPH COMPANY IT’S THE SERVICE Call Following Numbers Manager's Office.___-_---- - Phone 98 Complaint Dept.____.-_---- Phone 298 Collecting Dept.......---- - Phone 296 informatoncn- 2) .J.-=s a= Phone 297 Cc. L. LANGDON Manager Latah County Title Trust Company peas of Title MOSCOW, IDAHO C. L. Thompson, Pres. S. R. H. McGowan, Sec. and Treas. PAGE 259 @ 2.6... ee - . ? Wrong Diagnosis A Checking Account with this Dr. Wodsedalek: ‘The trouble Bank will help you keep an with you seems to be that you eat accurate record of your col- too much.” lege expenses. Fat Stevens: “You must be mis- taken, Doctor. I dine at the Phi Delt house.” mm We are Always Ready Prof. Evans: ‘‘S’pose we were and Pleased insured in fee tail reversion to my to Serve You right heirs, remainder to my heirs in tale male, what estate would my great grand uncle have?” Keane: “‘D—n fine estate, sir.” +o —— Jean Sholes: “Have you never thought seriously about marriage?” | , Prex Lindley: “Certainly not, he M OSCOW no man ever thinks seriously about marriage until after it has hap- State Bank pened.” Dutton’s Candies a A well conducted Hotel, | ior{ ? catering to a substantial class of | je rry bs people, at reasonable prices ...... 3rd at Main Moscow, Idaho Our Fine New Lobby and other features of our com- mh pletely Remodeled Hotel ‘ Pe Se Ae a Plummer 5 :: Cafeteria Comp eer WE CATER TO an ce... UNIVERSITY TRADE You, too, will call our house “Another Name for Home”’ PACIFIC HOTEL ws SPOKANE, U.S.A. ORGANIZATION BANQUETS OUR SPECIALTY ° PAGE 2060 Che Sashion Shap IS ALL THAT ITS NAME SIGNIFIES Ladies Apparel De Luxe THE FASHION SHOP Moscow, Idaho ? THOMPSON INSURANCE AGENCY Automobile and Plate Glass Insurance, Fidelity and Casualty Bonds J. G. Vennigerholz, Prop. Moscow, Idaho 6... BOYS IN TROUBLE COME TO ME GEORGE MOREY MILLER Dean of Men Fire Insurance, WHEN Star Dray Transfer Company Office Phones 16—Corner Drug Store 89—Hotel Moscow Students’ Trade a Specialty 1. G. WILLIAMSON, Prop. Residence Phone 108-H Hardware and Groceries | LH A’I’S of Charh Exclusive Agents for THE GREAT MAJESTIC RANGE AMERICAN FIELD FENCING Fuller's Complete Line of PURE PREPARED PAINTS MOSCOW HARDWARE CO. e- The Students of Idaho . Built Baulding .... Jewelry Store AT MOSCOW a SEND US YOUR MAIL ORDERS Northwestern Marble Granite Works Established 1892 and Distinction TRIMMED and TAILORED HATS Moscom Millinery ? GEORGE H. MOODY, Proprietor Dealer in Monuments and Tombstones in Marble and Granite ARTISTIC CARVING AND STATUARY Pp MOSCOW, IDAHO PAGE 261 Have your Photo taken when in College Remember there’s a Photographer in your town HGGAN A Real Artist... : XO)} Oke spies ae IO) 0-6. —_—_—______. “It is oe Se ioe im- Corliss Miclelroy portance, and at this present min- ° fg Ler PLUMBING and — ‘I m very glad to meet you, I'm HEATING sure. (everyone says this. ) x o 612 South Main Street Does Ernest Kidder? . Why, who? Office Phone 12 Well, almost anyone if Ken Will Honter. MOSCOW, IDAHO 2 | — OO Hotel tdaho YOU Mier A. J, SIMONSON ASSORTMENT MOSCOW, IDAHO Steam Heat Hot and Cold Water in Rooms QUALITY SC SEIRVICE O. H. SCHWARZ Wh ‘ ¢ MERCHANT TAILOR ED KOR DEY PONe TUeeeee OC The Spokane Trunk Grip Co. Maker of Clothes F Fae tholMan ‘whol iGaows Sprague and Washington er A eee a Cn ae PAGE 262 ee 6 DAVIDS’ Made known throughout the State as The POPULAR STORE for Students You can easily find the reasons why it’s — The Very Best Place to Trade Top Notch Lines Snappy Styles Unusual Service DAVID S’ THE STUDENTS’ STORE PAGE 263 — FINS Pee ei And this is the end of a sorry tale, For which you spent your hard-earned kale. If you think it’s punk And made up of junk, Just can that bunk, ‘cause we've hit the trail. —tThe Staff. PAGE 264 es Zee, Pe e: “8 wie te ne
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