Washington State University - Chinook Yearbook (Pullman, WA)

 - Class of 1908

Page 1 of 264

 

Washington State University - Chinook Yearbook (Pullman, WA) online collection, 1908 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 264 of the 1908 volume:

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' . . f 2 ' ' 1 - . , C' ' 1 A ' NY- ' X ' H1 Q A ' --M - , xy A, A -' L' X. Q X A i X . x - K K A kr 4 K .V A :K 1 W N M i Y n F i X , ,-A , s . . , K ,K x f-.V-Q, .u W , ' X ' x .K f h Y A -' I p x X -. X- S -fy,-,-1.-,..,., 4 ' ' ,J .4 - -.--..-.V 'r ,f -. ,, V ,H 1- f,,.. '4 ff 4 f, Q P Q Q 4 as .J Q O . - ' o ' , QMZLQLVKMML ff8'5'wf-f'7f74f,1V45 Oimffwh PM M24 ff'-07, ., NM, ., Ib-'fin 6-PCE!-3109 PR INTC R5 STATIONERS ENGRAVE SPOKANC 'ffBoR0 -oy, 71 s line. - g Q, . Q- Q 1 A -- 'hw -.,. .4 ,. . ..a,.. 'IS'- L+-- 1 ' 4- 4 y -N.. -..R .,, . -s-9 ... Q -'..,. 'Will' f ,, , :L-.. Q : 'tf'ZT'4-Q A- --v--...B-f ..a 4.-4--- -- - ---f-.Q in-U. . '11 -5 es.. ...-.A-...ln A-7 ...P ---4 .. ..-qf ,, ---O'.u Cb ...,-.....w.....,..4u wi -5 -N -,V A' .... -Q 4 ..r'b' - 'o--.f-- h - -Q -- -qs Q A--f . .,...a..iv -' -L-14. lf 4' 'S L f- fw. V0 u 3 '51 I ,.-. ' -' al Q ,f--1 1- -.' --.. I Chinook 190 VOLUME VIII - ,i -I . --'+ IN f- 1' l f I' N. , 7 gzvl ' 5 .. ' , 4, 'C 5 1 ff? r f 21 , 0,1 - , --A - -1,4-1 , ' - - ' L ' ' ll f-?-'.-- g jf 'x.x 1, 'f' 'J' 2 Xmqlx I 'thx Q H I 'N 1 'Q . PUBLISHED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS OF THE STATE COLLEGE OF WASHINGTON Apprvriating the innpiraiinn nf high ihralz Uhr 0112155 nf IHIIH rvzpnrifullg hehiratez thin hunk tn walter CE. Meath ' ' 'A f ' ' . I . j ly'f4.l'J ' + Smgioihe calors1ha1flaa1 anihe breeze: fi ,4A, . if if ' , 1 lu Hurrah inrfhe cmmsan and qraq! 3 WV QX , ' figgffg l , Crrmsonlhe sireaks an1he sun-pamled seas, ., ' fy ' e - A h , I ea Q Thai rallaiihe elosmq ofdaq. Ti ' ff? W6'Z2fZQQL 5', h a fl u! Crnmsanihe hewaflhe rlch-Howmq bloadc A57 ,:.' 1 lm 1.9, S fiffwi---f'f'f Q Rnd qraqareihe foam-caps on afd oceans . Fif a- Q H Q 'Wistar ', , ai I- ., jf V 'MS , J' he e , f e ' dis 'fa - 'H-fir? -' .'f., le-'gsfff'-Zii14'.f flzi.. . HU!! . . . I -A .Q A' N I ,tx il: ,512k,5gg,?i,:j2?-it-E15T an 10 calars mlm 0n1he hl'E'QZ3, I A Q-355.4355-:?,g' . I ff I .L L 5f7gif.jZ?QC. -yfggr I Hurrah ,Tarjhe crimson and qraq. - E. ,' 1 If M jg 7 w.f3f'if,zfQeg f ' e, . z.1 i :iff J r,- ' ' 3- 'cf ,Ll 1445375 fix--,. xy xj 5? 2, '13 , ,1 N 67, ' Q-' - , 47 ' . . . 2 - J -':if:?fA:'.! il :'l -'f1'v3'?f-ff.. : -,- -Q A , 2 , 'gf ,I , Crimsonlhepoppseslhalblaam m1he qlade, Ifeyx ' T, e- 1, ' '- : 1' :,1es'f:.. .- ' ' ' ' . ' ' .7 'fn Y' af- . A ,egmiii -' ' A -' - L .251 ,'Q4A I fp 3 While Naiure beams downefram abaveg A-35 gage-5,, fe e I-1,1-gr 1: ..e- .e : Q Crimson ihe blush omhe cheeks af1he mam' Jr' - '- ' ' f ' - H5Sh6lIS1Sf01hHS1Ufu of love. :ik fx a- ' ffl-Q, .QQ g Graq are 1he cloud-Hacks ere hreakmq 1,53 , '1- q .ggi - . -: , 5 d . 5 1 , ' , .L--21 fire. Q fig-1?,1 afgpfa-A gh 21- 1 e- Q ' U' - 2 if he Z 57 gg 'R'li5:f'lff' H V w if 1 Har!1a1hes1reamers1ha1Halure has wave- ' V5 ,fy GJ: Q f i' J ' fe ' ff W -' Hurrhf 1h C G 1 6-' 5 ' 'p ' f u- - -- LA U 0' C mm and ml- ,Wi ' Q ff a- If fi :. ff, f 6.442 'Ll ,, f I 3 ' 2.1f,1:eff2f ' .. . M ' - 9233? 'ii ff ' Q' U4 - M See - 'if-'A X Q L. I v,wQ,WWm -54., Heres iaihe calleqe 1hm glands Un1he hill, ' ' ' ' H f 1 - a i Heres iaihe smrns mm wave wnhawdl! , h , A e ,, 1 -yxg' e , ia 1 q h igjfwji j? Here'51a1he5prr:Is1hol wave wah aww! jf 4 A h I A ' - ' jjf14i1'1 53 The banner of Crimson and Gmu e I' j was a A fi, Lonq maq1heu Hoof aer 1he fafr and me bmve! . a e f jg i f eff ,ii g 'x ,, .-in Flndlonqmaq1hefrs1andard1o vfclorq f In f M , :Q - 'lg W 1 e- QTL Wave. la a i a A: ' 5 J 11 'I +3 4 iff-1 H p e -..E' ' e a - Ei A -' 1 ' 15 f e 'e:'a ax 0'- B? ,, - 'S .4 jg 15.4551 ,' ' j ,Qm lea - 4, J il , 551 l'1chHo1hecolIeqe1ha1 STGHGS omhe hilla- rg Y A -X ' , 15 5 ,. X . .. ggstb- I 4' ' v :gli f , ' X 7 ,, A- I , Q-F f., Hurrah for 1he crfmson and qraq. -. - ef-The-.,a J x 5- F -:P 2 Q i -Me e' e- if? N: e ' nf fg E' f - ,. ' - V rf' ' V .2-if I X1 ' ' fy- '4- n1 ,.. l His E5 Hoe I Fra k Dr. V. L . Eu. :h f4ff'o,06'0 , Jfada Board of Regents His Excellency, GoVERNoR A. E. MEAD, ,... - ..... Adifz7s01'y MC71ZbC7' Ex-O199cz'0 Hon. Peter McGregor, Pvfcsideni' .........,.. Frank Barnard, T7'COSZl7'C7' ...... .. ...... - Dr. 1. S. Anderson ........... -. I. Browne ........ - ...... -----.-..-- Hon, L. A. johnson ......... ......... , Enoch A. Bryan, SC'C7'CllU7'j1 Ex-OfHci0--- Olympia - .... Colfax - -. -- -Seattle - -. -Asotin - - - - -Spokane Sunnyside - , - Pullman 7 Yell RAH! R.-KH! REE! RAH! RAH! REE! WK-XSHINGTGN! XYASHINGTON! XV. S. C. P ' ' 'x v :zz ...elfj 'R gas 'O g -j ' 'A sff ' 1' ' A-1' 3 L 9 423' Y'Kf0' My Chinook Stain 1908 H. E. GOLDSWVORTHYI, Ed1'f01'-z'11-Clvief. Q. L. A. .LEVVIS, B'1lS1.11I'.S',S' .7lfUlllUgC's7'. Assistant Editors Bess Vermilye. Retta Roberts. Leah Bean. Beryl Flood. Myrtle Boyles. N. Jesse Akin. M. I., McCully. Eugene Logan Harold Davis. R. P. Cowgill. li. 'llVarcl. W1 CoLL1Ns, Associate Edirol . Harold McLeod. ' I. H. Brislawn. Floyd Rader. 7 4 YT' xx 1 1' Q --4. Q. Tv- - UK. 2. B5 DQ,--7: . N. T 1.1 s 34 FR jr,--J-f 4716.1 XY -fx q-V b...1.A -4. X f -x Q RC ,.- XX' New Members of Faculty I. P. HEXVITT, University of Nebraska, L. L. D., '04. 'liracls Coach NV. S. C., '06. XY. T. SI-IAINV, B. A., University of Minn., '98, B. S., ,991 M. S. Michigan, Agric. College, ,OI, Instructor in Zoology, XY. S. C.. ,O7. BERTHA SEABURY, Graduate under Harold Plowe of Peoria Conservatory of Musicg student in Berlin. Instructor In I zolzn. IN. S. C.. 'o6. FRANCIS A. THOMSON, .flcting Professor of Illining Engz'necrz'ng. B. S. Colorado School of Mines, ,O2. XVILLIAM OTTERBEIN CLARK, A. B., Acting Profes- sor of Geology. A. B., Union Christian College, 18993 A. B. Stanford University. ALBERT G. CRAIG, B. S., Inst1'ncto1' in Hovticnltnre. B. S.. Michigan Agric. College, 'o2. NV. V. GLAZIER, D. V. S.,.Honsc' Surgeon, '06, PEARL JOSEPI-IINE CASSELL, A. B., Instructor in Latin. A. B., Univ. of Indiana, '03. HOVVARD R. WVATKINS, M. S.. Assistant Station Client- ist. A. B., Coe College, '02, M. S., Iowa State College, 'o4. SAMUEL VVILLIAMSON COLLETT, M. S.. Instructor in Botany. B. S., Moorels Hill College, 18865 M. S., ,942 Fellow in Botany, Univ. of Ohio, 1900-,0Ig Fellow in Botany. Univ. of Iowa, '04-'05, GEORGE HENRY IANTZEN, A. B.. Instructor in .Vod- ern Languages. A. B., University of California, 'o6: Reader in German, Univ. of Cal., '05-'06, I JOHN RHINOLD BENDER, A. B., Physical Director and Coach. A. B., Univ. of Nebraska, '05, Graduate Chauta- uqua Summer School of Physical Education. VVILLIAM N. PHILIPS, Instructor in thc School of Bnsfiness. Graduate of Massey Business College. iQ5. i 5 4 A DELLA ELIZABETH TNGRAM. Born about as far back as she can remember in Dayton. Wfash. Came to us a modest Freshman, kind, docile and lov- able. Her research in botany is complete in every stage except campustry. Her ambition follows the ,unselfish vocation of teaching. ' Thesis: Notes on the Compositae of Washington. JOHN IVAN HESS. Jack is a lover of music. He has been a constant mem- ber of the band and orchestra since his first days at the Washington State College. He has served as assistant in- structor in the physics labratory and in Mechanical Drawing. Jack's fad is originality in hat wear. Thesis: The Development of an Alcohol Motor. IC EE PH Mini isota daught rs. T and cli lling. xvwn son 2 mail birth ai an ea green State O7 s 2. the Age-: .St rig sion-T 'ats. lsome. ?l'3rCf Strong. Cou Thes' : P Domesp : SCI ington 1 tate 4 Tire lie T of 3 Tlie R11 d. the The he 't. xrl' I2 -kid L 5 that JOSEPHINE ETHEL McCANN. Minnesota numbers Ion among her daughters. Unaffected by its bleak winds and chilling frosts she grew into a gentle, Winsome maiden. Leaving the place of her birth at an early age she came to the Ever- green State and eventually joined the O7iS at the Washington State College. Age-just right. Ideals-Ditto. Pet aver- sion-Frats. Ambition--To make an ideal home. Heroes-Dave Lewis and Professor Strong. Course-Domestic economy. Thesis: Plans and Specifications for a Domestic Science Building for the Wash- ington State College. The light of love, the purity of grace. The mind, the music breathing from her face. The heart, whose softness harmonized the whole, -Xnfl Oh! that eye was in itself a soul. JEFFERSON HENRY FULTON. A man with a brilliant past. Has held many offices of trust in the student body. Is the Hrst graduate of the four-year Phar- macy course. Is the only four star basket- ball man in school, and has been captain for two seasons. Is colonel of Captain Kim- mel's army. Promises still greater things, being over- Flooded with ambitions. Thesis: A Study of the Papavar Som- niferum and Products. 13 JOSEPH W. BRISLAWN. Joe was born in the United States. He is both the smallest and the largest man in the ,O7 class. Perhaps it is due to both these attributes and that truthful, yet deceiv- ing, visage that his class adopted green. Other characteristics of this peculiar gentle' man are that he is bad and yet good, great and yet a farmer. He can move the masses with his eloquence, pet prefers to be a common tiller of the soil. To enumerate positions of honor and trust held by this double man would not tell half. Remember him as '1 vital force in student matters, and as a little human being unable to swell under the greatest pressure. Course-Agriculture. Thesis: A Comparison of rlarvesting Methods. A T T. OLGA TGDD. , Born in Cheney, Wash. Came to 'Wash- ington State College and in due time was graduated from Prepdom. Has been active incollege affairs. President of the Y. W. C. A. Member of the ,O7 annual staff, so- ciety editor of the Evergreen, and has starred in several college plays. Is a charter member of the Pi Delta Phi. It is possible for her to be happy, but not gay without being married. Noted for her pen- sive moods. Course-Latin. Thesis: Caesar's Conquest of Gaul. All compliments to her are trite. She has adorers left and right. LOYD C. Wlrll'l'E. Tall, straight, fair, handsome, single :mtl youthful. Gentlemanly, quiet, reserved. in- dustrious. genteel and truthful. He's major 11 of a batallion and proud of the practice of war. The subject of his thesis is: Lead and Zinc of Coeur d'Alene Ore. 14 ElJXV.AXRlJ Cl-IENEY. Palouse contributed Eddie as her do- nation to the '07 class, He has been with uw six years. During that time he has risen from a shy preparatory youth to a com- petent and popular tutor in physics. He has won honors in his class track teain. He is studious, but can be jolly when occasion cremands. It is evident from his mathemati- cal turn of mind that he has marie no mis- take in selecting engineering for his course. Thesis: A Universal Instrument Sus- pended Coil Type for Measuring Volts, Am- peres and W'atts. D. C. or A. C.. I, 2 or 3 Phase and Any Number of Cycles. Came prentices u i h. tered the Prep. 4 -L ,. college yet- Chinook Widow tion. H green st track ma ics. -l 6 Il Ii lxll6riiI ,-,- CL- of 'Waslun X L- or ri HZ U1 1 1 13 :ei 1 R. te IQ? CLARE OCKERMAN. .Came from Indiana. Served an ap- prenticeship as country schoolmaster. En- tered the WVashington State College as H Prep. As clown of the tumbling team, college yellmaster, Serious Mann of the 'o7 Chinook and Bub Hicksn in the College VVidow he gained a college-wide reputa- tion. He has also served on the Ever- green staff, track team and is at present track manager. He is majoring in econom- ics. Thesis: Railway Legislation in the State of Wasliington. REX HUNT. A true son of the Palouse. He watched the college on the hill grow from the infant crib into a quadrangle of many buildings. The VVashingtonians will always remember him as a faithful member. His smooth career has been interrupted only by a single attempt to fall in love. Unsuccessful in this, his sentimental nature found solace in the study of the tomato blight. He will work in connection with the experiment station after his graduation. Thesis: Cross Fertilization of the Sol- anaceae. 15 VVALTER JESSE ROBINSON. Spent his tender years in Pomeroy, Wasli., and came to us as a Freshman. Was a member of his class debating team, and served on the ,O7 Chinook, In his senior year he handled the business of the Ever- green and acted as commissary officer dur- ing the Cadet encampment. Says his life glided smoothly along until The light that lies In woman's eyes Has been my heartis undoing. Course: Electrical Engineering. Thesis: Ai Study of Commutation and the Inter-polelMotor. NELL VIOLA JONES. She first greeted the old earth with the sweetness of her infant smiles near where the Silvery Colorado wends its way. Thinking the best opportunities were to be found among the bluebells and spring lilies of the Palouse hills, she migrated thither. She aspires to great undertakings in her work. Plans to take a post graduate course for the remainder of her life, presumably in company with a VV. S. C. student. Charter member of the Pi Delta Phi. Favorite ex- pression. Worn to a frazzlef' Course: Botany. Thesis: Contributions to Morphology of Vifashington Flowering Plants. R. EDVVARD TRUMBLE. Last but not least to join the class of '07. Of great force of character, developed by a life of trials. Was reared near the peni- tentiary at VValla Walla. Attended Cheney Normal, but made his escape unaffected by feminine influences. Taught school two years at Klickitat Academy, Goldendale. Is now a tutor in our Zoology Department, but is never seen without his sunny smile. Is making investigations on the Coddling Moth. Thesis: Reciprocal Relations Between Flowers and Their Insect Pollinators. ' I6 ROY E. BR YANT. Known in his preparatory years as Stubby. Selected the Palouse country. from the world's opportune spots, as the best place to be born. He does not remem- ber the date. but is sure he is twenty-four years old. VVill always be honored and re- membered as having organized the Farm- ers' Club. Sought to satisfy his literary aspirations in the congenial atmosphere of the VVashingtonian's hall. Course: .Agriculture Thesis: Possibilities for Commercial Seed Production in Eastern XVashington. , JAMES Built in IS high. three t thick: covere His existencc having his pz part of the 0 broke the disc ors in hammf ball three seas Athletic Asso O. A. C. Dt year. Course: M1 Thesis: Lix JAMES LAURENCE THAYER. Built in 1882, four and one half cubits high, three cubits wide, and two 'cubits thickg covered inside and out with pitch. His existence was almost terminated by having his parietal cracked and loosing a part of the cerebrum. Upon. recovery he broke the discus throwing record, won hon- ors in hammer throwing and played foot- ball three seasons. He was president of the Athletic Association and a member of the O. A. C. Debating Team in his Senior year. Course: Mining. Thesis: Lixiuration of a Silver Ore. SOPHIE LAURA ORMSBEE. Was born in W'aitsburg, Washington, in 1898. She was graduated from the Waits- burg High and NVaitsburg Academy. She enjoys the distinction and honor of being the first young lady to represent W. S. C. Q - F. FRANCIS RICHARDSON. He is the only student of the College who is known to have been married more than once. This in itself bespeaks a romantic career. He served his country in the hos- pital corps during the Philippine insur- rection, and as a sailor under Captain Sigs- bee in the Spanish-American war. He is an enthusiastic veterinary student and shows in debate, and was a member of the team that defeated Montana last year. Charter rnember of the Pi Delta Phi. President of the Columbian Society first semester of this year. Course: Latin. Thesis: Classical Mythology in Shakes- peare. I7 a strong record in his work. He plans to complete an M. D. course after leaving us. Thesis: A Comparison of the Germicidal Values of Some of the Better Known Coal Tar Disinfectants as Compared W'ith Bi Cholide of Mercury. N WALDEN LERGY MALONEY. A part of his time is given to the study of a CThesisj Design of Concrete Arches. The remainder is devoted to college life. He has no sympathy for poor old Job, because he does not think Boyles should cause any one to mourn in sack-cloth and ashes. He is one of the four-star trackmen, also played basketball three seasons. Was captain of basketball in '06, manager in ,O7, won his track W ' in 702 in the one-half mile and one-mile race. Born in Michigan November 18, 1883. Course: Civil Engineering. GUY H. HEBERLING. A Spokane boy. After tasting of intel- lectual life in the University of California, he entered the ranks of the 'o7's here as a Sophomore. President of both the Civil Engineering Club and the Websteriaii So- ciety. Also president of the Senior class. Thesis: Some Notable Defects in the Waterworks System of Moscow, Idaho, and the Advantages That Wotild Accrue by the Construction of a Reservoir. 18 VVA LT ER LEC LA R H L' B BA R U. He attends class occasionally and works thesis when obliged to. Has had the honor of being head man at the Hotel de'Prexie, but says he was canned on April 6, 1907. His life has been more eventful than he cares to make known in this Annual. He especially requests that no mention be made of his love affairs. at least until he is mar- ried. Thesis: The Design and Construction of an Instrument for measuring Electricity and Calibrating Sound. 1 l ART In iowa in mune .ne careei age C ten he l kane. He enti Has een Exe green served and, rith Krel the 1 onroe Di bate. Made l Night Off' 'ar Marti fd in 19? ed by his famil Thtses: Cil for 1 academiz trical- -The Sf' ARTHUR HOOKER. In Iowa in the fall of 188O'began the mundane career of Arthur Hooker. At the age of ten he brought his parents to Spo- kane. He entered the W. S. C. in 1902. Has been Exchange Editor of the Ever- green, served on the Dicipline Committee, and, with Kreager, settled the question of the Monroe Doctrine in the U. of M. de- bate. Made his stage appearance in UA Night Off' 'and The College Widow. Married in 1910. Died in 1940 much mourn- ed by his family. Theses: Civil-Plans and Specifications for Macademizing Pullman Streets. Elec- trical-The Series Transformer. ELBERT DAVIS STEVVART. The year was 1882. The day was April 7. The article was a lump of Palouse soil in the hands of a great Magician. The product was Elbert Davis Stewart. In the human stage he is a man, large, noisy and good natured. He played football four sea- sons, being captain in the fall of 1905. Thesis: A Study and Test of Flaming Arc Lamp. 19 MAUD PUTNAM. She was given first to Oregon in 1882, but the wise man thought it just to take her from the state that had only one talent and give her to the state that had ten tal- ents. She is a typical western girl, hence the atmosphere of Cheney was too femi- nine. After a sojourn of one year in the Normal she came to us. The class of ,O7 was glad to welcome her to their midst. She expects to enter the profession of teaching. Course : Botany. Thesis: Content and Material for an Ele- mentary Course in Botany. ' RFQ' K MYRA ELVENIA PRIEST. Does not know the date and place of her birth. Wfhen still an infant she crossed the plains in Zl dusty mule train. She en- rolled in the Freshman class with the iO7'S. She hrst chose English as her course. Then she thought Chemistry afforded greater op- portunities for happiness, but after a bril- liant bundle SllOWC1'H in her Junior year she made a final choice of Domestic Econ- omy for her life's worlc. ' Thesis: The Study of the Nutritive and Economic Dietary of the Dormitory Stu- dents of the Nlfashington State College. EARL G. CLEMANS. Hailed from the cow plains of Asotin in the fall of 'o3. and has been the youngster of the '07 class ever since. Has cut all but his wisdom teeth. VVhen mature years have BARNARD SMEAD. First saw the .light .of day in St. Paul. In 1899 entered college as a thirteen-year- old junior Prep. He strove quietly along until he became ra Senior. Then he felt the thrill of cupid's dart, and he added cam- pustry and tennisito his course. He has crowned his ambitions head' he expects to plead the cause of the criminal before the Bar of Justice. Course: Economic Science and History. Thesis: Immigration Restriction. 20 wont his VV in basketball. Has accepted a position with Vlfestinghouse Electrical Company and will enter upon his duties next autumn. ' A ' i Thesis: A Study' of an Interpole Motor. MILTC Q Show him! republican by order. and at stant work. I1 dent of the O11 resented the tc bate. XYill I Mater as having torical contest i: anxiously awe 3 yers welcome it Course: Ecu: Thesis: A S Legislation in 1 and Steel. MILTON REED KLEPPER. Show him! Hel is from Missouri. A republican by nativity, a Websteriaii by order. and an orator through long con- stant work. He has been a capable presi- dent of the Oratorical Association and rep- resented the College in intercollegiate de- bate. Will be remembered by his Alma Mater as having won the intercollegiate ora- torical contest in ,o6. Columbia University anxiously awaits his coming, eminent law- yers welcome him to their profession. Course: Economics. Thesis: A Study of the Existing Tariff Legislation in the United States on Iron and Steel. J. P. HUNT. VVas born some time in the last century in Tennessee. After finishing an acedemic course he decided to come to Pullman for higher education. Tall and handsome him- - 11? self he won a prize in judging good look- ing stock since his entrance into the VV. S. C. Was a first lieutenant in the cadet corps and president of the Farmers' Club. Thesis: Corn Production in the Inland Empire. 21 ARTHUR B. COATES. Otherwise known as the Uncus of Ames. He ran at Ames and ran away from Ames. The date and place of his birth is unknown, even by himself. The hard knocks of the world do not baffle him. The civil courts have no records of even a di- vorce case against him. He finishes his engineering course and leaves as a capable man in his line of work. Thesis: Coals of the Northwest Consid- ered From the Steam Useris Standpoint. : 1 win 1 h l . EARNEST ALEXANDER M'KAY. His early years were not interrupted by periods of Sky0logy, but the habit has developed to an abnormal stage in his Senior year. He was graduated from the Elementary School in 'o3. Has done class stunts in football, basketball and track work. VVas business manager of the ,O7 Chin00kf' and has been heard from in many other capacities. Course: Zoology. Tliesis: Economic Relation of Our Com- mon Eirds to Agriculture. E. LIONEL GLAISYER. Married resposibilities have not retarded his ambitions. Received his academic train- ing in Minnesota. After attending Fargo College, North Dakota, he demonstrated his knowledge in the practical world. He de- cided that good can be improved upon and enrolled as a Vet. in 1904. He has proved a studious and capable man in his depart- ment. Thesis: Planning Sanitary Stables. 22 R. JAMES ZELL. Upon his arrival he discovered that he had inherited the rich legacy of a farmer's station in life. Fortune smiled upon his sedate brow and placed him in the Wash- ington State College in 1900. He estab- lished his sincere citizenship by serving in the Military Department. Member of '07 f'Chin0ok staff. Course: Civil Engineering. Thesis: A Study of the Sewerage Dis- posal Works of' the Citv. with Plans and Estimates of Cost for Betterment. .2 c EDXY- .RD The ge-1 eratii were man '. V ond genezation still retail ing I. He ws gi High Sch 0l in college as a in was a mer ber 4 our Colleie. Conrsei Ele ilihesiez Cu EDVVARD FRANKLIN GRIMES. The generations of Old Father Grimes were manv. When traced to the forty-sec- ond generation We find Edward Franklin still retaining the characteristic of Grimes I. He was graduated from, the Pullman High School in '98, and this year he leaves college as a member of the ,07. class. He was a member of the first basketball team of our Colleofe. ' Course: Electrical Engineering. Thesis: Current Transformer. JAMES DENEFFE. Came to us from the Cheney Normal, al- though a native of Minnesota. Has been a faithful, sober and conscientious student. Wfas College Electrician in ,O2. Thesis: Secondary Storage Batteries. 23 ALVA ARTHUR HAMMER. Known as one of the famous W. S. C. convicts. Made the track team in ,O2. He runs the 100 and 220-yard dashes, and has tied the College recordiin' the high hurdles. He is one of the four-star trackmen and has an exceptionally good record as a stu- dent. Course : Geology. Thesis: Geological Reconnaissance of the Mica Peak Region CSpokane Quadranglel. CHARLES ALBERT CRAXVFQRD. Solemn. serious and sincere, quiet, con- tented and home loving. He walks the earth unknown and unnoticed by most of the human race. He came, enrolled as a farmer, and worked as one should who studies the productivity of Palouse soil. Course: Agriculture. Thesis: A Basis for the Improvement of XYIlSlllllQ'lOll YVllCIll. EARL D. ICKES. In days gone by a farmer, but now a would-be consulting engineer. Has served as treasurer of his class for one term. Al- ways talking piston rod, Hy wheel and gov- ernor. Is in constant company with grease and soot. . ' Thesis: The Development of an Alcohol Engine. 21 IRA E. CHURCH. Was born in Ellensburg in 1882. Began life at the Washington State College in 1900 on Latin. Suddenly jumped from antiquity into 'electrical engineering. As a result he has tried to soothe his shocked nerves ever since by the sweet Muse of Music. Hobby, the girls. Ambition, to build an electric railwavfrom Spokane to Seattle Thesis: The Lead Accumulator Y. MABI The year L spring the wk phenomena W Sarah Baker Elementary S College Her Charlie's Au: has made her class as its vii Assembly as i ber of the Pi bition is efficic Thesis Ti Chemically P: of Bread. MABEL SARAH BAKER. The year 1884 is famous for having had spring the whole year through. The strange phenomena was fully explained when Mabel Sarah Baker was born. She finished the Elementary School of the Washington State College Her stage career in A night Off, Charlie's Aunt, and The College Widow has made her famous She has served her class as its vice president, and the Students' Assembly as its secretary Is a charter mem- ber of the Pi Delta Phi. Her highest am- bition is efhciency in domestic emonomy. Thesis The Approximate Effect of Chemically Pure Yeast on the Digestibility of Bread. AARON STRAUCH. Ein Deutscher, aber not born in Deutsch- land. In search for greater opportunities he left his native state, Ohio. Thinks there is no better place than Washington. Is homeless now,. but doesn't expect to be al- ways. Ach nein. He used to be everything in the Columbian Society until it died. Course: Electrical engineering. Thesis: New Methods of Charging for Electricity. 25 ROBERT E. GAY. Robert came all the way from Pike county, Ill., where he was born in 1882. We have enjoyed his hearty laugh since the ten- der years of Prepdom. He believes in un- selfishly doing the best you can for the other fellow. He has run a good race CM- mileb. Is a strong orator, and defended the Inter-Collegiate Football Question in the VVhitman debate in 1906. The chief trouble of his Senior year has been rustling for the Evergreen , Course: Economic Science and History. Thesis: Study of the Agricultural Re- sources of the. State of Washington. BERT L. JONES. Has wandered far from the place of his birth among the rugged hills of Pennsyl- vania. Two ranges of mountains and the Mississippi river were not sufficient to stop him. The Washiiigton State College was E. RAY PICKRELL. The subject of this sketch came to us from the Palouse High School in 1902. Familiar- ly known as Biz. Has been class treasurer and president: subscription manager of the Evergreen: athletic editor of '07 Chin- OOli1H manager '06 championship baseball team and vice president of Athletic Associa- tion. Contemplated establishing a carrier pigeon line to Pomeroy while railroads were crippled. Thesis: A Comparison of Analytical De- terminations of Chalcocite and Chalcopyiete Copper Ores. his goal and he reached it. After graduat- ing from the School of Pharmacy in '03 he was proprietor of a drug store in Spring- dale. Wfash., for two years. He then re- turned to complete the four years' course. Thesis: Pharmocopoel Test of Drugs Found in Open Market. 26 OLTAR ARNLIGT THOMLE. Norsky was born in Norway in 1882. At an early age he, accompanied by his parents, migrated to the United States. Providence destined him for a member of the Washington State College student body. He has played on varsity football, Won honors in track work and been captaincof the track team. He is majoring in Mining Engineering and Geology. A Thesis: A Study of the Rock and- Clay of the Mica Peak Region CSp0kane quadranglej. W I must be a very fascinating young man: 'Tis not my fault, the girls must blame heaven. ' THOMAS OLIVER MORRISON. The subject of this sketch is too well known to need a lengthy description. Had Christy come to the Washington State College to look for models he would certainly have sketched Morrison. But he has been a model in other ways, and in military tactics he rose from a private to rank of first lieutenant. He sang in the Glee Club of '06 and '07, Course: Agriculture. Thesis: Control of Soil Moisture. WALLER B. CHIDISTER. Also known by the name of Chid. He came from Tennessee in 1891 to Tacoma, but preferred to watch Pullman grow. Once he warbled in the Glee Club and ran in the mile race, but nature fed him too well and put an end to such gaities. By a renewed spurt he made the varsity basketball in his Senior year. Thesis: The Assay .of High Grade Ores. ANNA KIMMEL. Is a native daughter of Iowa, but has spent most of her life in the west. She was graduated from the Waitsburg Academy in the class of ,02 and has maintained the record of the many good Waitsburg students. She has been with us four years. Thesis: Notes on Distribution of the Plants of Wash- ington. A WALTER M. STEPHEN. Migrated from Illinois. His boyish intellect was nurtured in the Seattle High. Developed into maturity in the Wash- ington State College. Member of the '06s for three years when he sought to cool his ambitious ardor by a year in Alaskan mines. His chief recreation, walks in solitude, yet not alone. His chief care-Thesis: The Design of a Metallurgical Labratory for the Washington State College. 27 Q E!1.TITT'1 The sun I sat by The brig That the And Silei Clothed class And. thex all, From ,Tal I rember How we high. I thoughr Silently. 1 The Juniors The sunset glory was fading gently away into night, I sat by the open window and watched with a calm delight. The brighter colors had vanished, and night advancing told That the only ones remaining were those of gray and gold. And silently, ere I knew it, memories came trooping fast Clothed in those self same colors-those of the naught eight class. And then through the evening twilight I saw them one and all, From Jap, so short and happy, to Slats, so happy and tall. I rembered the many things we had done in days gone by, How we held a place 'mong the students, a place secure and high. I thought of our victory in football, and in oratory and glee, Silently, calmly, fondly they all came back to me. I could plainly see the heroes we had given to field and track. Goldie and Zeke and Ralph, Rader and Brown. and Mack. And there in a halo of memory were three of the 08 class, Who, when they were plucky Juniors, each won a debater's pass. . The evening breeze gently whispered, 'Tis brain and work ' that wins e While to and fro it waved the ghosts of the Whitman, skins. Then there Were fair young faces, maidenly, kind and true, Eyes as brown as the berryg eyes of gray and blue All beaming forth a purpose to build for eternity I I On the cornerstone of the '08 class 'besides Time's rest- less sea. . I thought of the banquets and parties and trips to the mountains, too t . And within me was stirred a longing ,to tell it all to you. But the faint, sweet thrill of music caressed the departing, day, lTwas a note from memory's harp and the vision faded away: Faded into the past, with the tender Sweet, refrain, . But perhaps some other evening it will all come back' again. I turned away from the window, but the sunset sky had told That the class out-classed by no class is the class of the gray and gold. f fzfity' - 4 ' 5:2-2:1 . , - 4 Y , ' Y fa jx v 3,22 1 . x ,-i1f5.f,:'i 1 ' we 4.. Q ' Q31-i,-i,zg,w -1-+2 ' - ' f - , - ..N:3:'5'1i.' EQ353 ,-3, 'Xia ' J K ' A 'Z':5i::5i : ,1V 2 f 1 ' .11'5f?S?3'5:f15' .ii ' ' ,, -' ' 5 x- , ::,.,., fi N i ': Q25 - w'-Q ,A - , V ' - .. 1-.P - ,-:Z-:smf-3' V ,. ::3': 's -.1 . ff f- t , Tw' 4 'f if , Wx x.-5 ' - '1 ,, x .---', . . .. -K k- X.- .. .. X., ,, Eh Six: 3, Q iq 9 ,. ' K - if R, . xf- . - . bggiqgfg f 5335 x ' 1535 AQDQX 353 ,- K :Xi -. . - s - 1-AC ' X X 1 SY. 'X ' VN. -LX a - -. 501 lx SX QNX f .Ax xxx .AQ S, wx FM . 111:-I7 1 fm Q0 1, V U 121 A is Z g 3 Q ' -1512, 'K lol - 35,8 Y it l ' 3 Q itil ,-gp! XXL , J - fi F? Q i ' If 'YQ t iss-A e s vt t l t is ' af v l The four tribes of the Palouse were assembled in council. Grave and reverend the great sachem of the Green and VVhite, tie oldest tribe in the confederation, arose and addressed tie assemblage. The time has come, oh warriors of the Palouse, when the tribe of the Green and Wliite must depart for other hunt- ing grounds. A new sacliem must be chosen for our con- federation. Today we must decide between the warriors of tie Orange and Gray, the Yellow and Black and the Black and Crimson, which is the most valiant in war and the most eloquent in council. From the tribe that excells shall tie sachem be chosen. For two years have I watched the warriors of the Yellow and Black. Many have been the trophies which they have brought to their wigwams. . ln times when, as is the custom of our people, we have met in friendly combat the warriors of Montana, VVhitman or Idaho, then have the warriors of the Yellow and Black exhibited their prowess, winning victory for our confedera- tion. ' W'hen the tribes have assembled in council whose elo- quence has excelled all others? Have we among us' those whose eloquence equals that of the warriors of the Yellow and Black? It is from their tribe that a member goes to the supreme council of the tribes at Corvallis. From their tribe went a warrior to the pow-wow with thetribe of the Mon- tanas, and to the pow-wow with a tribe of Oregon. Warriors of the Palouse, shall not this tribe direct the other tribes? Have they not proven themselves worthy? Wliat is your answer ? There was a pause then a great cheer burst from every throat in the assembly: i 'lVVigwam, Wigwaiii, hi, ki, ack! War Paint! War Paint! Yellow and Black! Wahoo! Wahoo! Mox Klamine, Hiyu-skookum, 1909 3 J. ,sf :Si - fx.. X . gi, 3. i ws X x ., ...,. ,, . K' ,.,.,,W- -Q - sex! X. . .- -A 3 X x yl J gl 4 X ,Q , X X , 4 ,X 4 2 f X X' . , , X.,X . , , W' bm fi-,. 1 4 5 if A F 1 1- 1 - X651 xx 1 Mk 4 , I , 1 I E ! gs 1 s 4 ' n 'xYel1. 20111 ui great Cl. few thiz we wen We I baskethz them u meuage' 1 ,ur pa-5 loaned i had mu' whole Q take it knew tl rillared zle th-ei Ynraius. XYhe :20iSe . The Freshmen Wfell, weire here. VVe landed in Pullman on the 2O'El1 of September, 1906, in due time to join the great class of 1910. We decided we would take a few things in theiway of laurels, just to show that we were not dead ones. ' W ' B VVe beat the Sophs at football, we beatthem at basketball, we beat them in the yell contest, we tied them up in Ferry Hall and exhibited the whole menagerie to the Juniors and Seniors, we put up our posters with their good paste which they kindly loaned to us for the purpose., And besides this, we had our IQIO pennant floating in the breezes for one whole day, and the Sophs were too soft-hearted to take it down until after the sun had set, for they knew that the brilliancy of the pennant as it scin- tillated in the softening summer sunlight would daz- zle their eyes to a frazzle and puzzle their buzzing brains. When it comes to a class of stars we are the big noise. we have live men on the varsity football team and representatives in every branch of things interesting. That's not slow, looking at it from the front. But it is the concerted effort of all, work- ing in unison that has already made the class of 1910 a strong one and will continue to do so for three yearsmore. . It was we who lirstintroduced class athletic rela- tions with the University of Idaho. We won at basketball, but lost theeiieidg meet, and later on in the spring expect to 'make it two out of three by winning from them in baseball. We expect to graduate so-me day, and if we should hold' our commencement exercises at night the sun would certainly staybehind itself just to watch the show, and wouldn't set that day until it was sure that we had been properly launched on the world at large. VVe aim to stand so high in the Hall of Fame that we. shall have to duck our heads to keep from knock- ing the plaster off of the ceiling of the universe, and 'to keep from getting twinkling stars in our eyes. 1 I 6 F..-.-. . Q , : i v Q A E . 1 : lu- 'i ,.,, ,ax , fi - ,A .NL,,,J,Q,y K , 5-nw ,- V. . Q, mx J Q 1. lg: ff, V2 1- -a J , 3' X, x,,....p.sx 1. 5491 Q ,QR E - N65 J . S., f I x 32. A , , 49 7 5 , ., .W ,.,. V ,4 X , ,, P,1, I x is S x N 'Q Qi 5 'fgwW,W,,,M WW N A Wxxwwxyxkwsg V - - 1+ W1-m,. ... .,.Q.,:-f ,Q , W? .L ,,,, wwww ,W fkq, ,W fg ' Q at ,Q . v' ,J Q1 The def founded in was offeret Pharmacy tered for t of the C01 The sd' tion until ful in the for severaf mands on For the been engag immediatel than four of the pr: work as st 1 S 1 4 4 1 G v: 1 ' '-1- 1 - X :'2 -- - l X . '- -e w .V.. ---..-1' I ?,gf,:.f5f. 'w41 1 , - f -- ' if , .,l: X gl ti :...f IVI, f,. V ,. fg 1 , if ,A , MMVJX, ,QM X X. I K f ff, ,A A, A Xp ' 1' 7 I -Q is . :X A 'i hhQ S ' ' ' ' tiff 1 ii 'Q ff sf? ff ' be f is 1 ,-.. -... , ff ' mf 'H ,, ' f ,, - f , K t l Qi Q .. ' ,., . 1 ,, 3 1 ' I - ---' 1 .. if ffl ,M fl Vmj' ,MWV KK 4 , 'fl u 'Ji' 55 Q,. A ' t i f A i , .- 1 . 1 A , - , 7,1 ' , - .. , , .', 'V'2 P - ' rf' ,V I 9 A LVVV . i 1 I ' Q 2 if ,.Xk xi .I ,l X 1 ,ri be ,.., 5131 A. ,f,, f i K I Za, ,V 9 evneni, Remix I , ' .V ,,Mwv..,. L ,x,, ,N ..x,yf,Afv x.,j9:,:v,,, N Milky: 1 The department of Pharmacy of the State College was iirst Forty-six students have been enrolled in Pharmacy this 7 founded in 1812. at the o eninv of the College. No wOrli vear. and the total number raduated to date is sevent -four. , D 2:1 .. . l was offered from 1893 to 1896, when the two year school of The success of the Alumni has been marked. Of the seventy- Pharmacy was established. The four year course was Of- four graduates, three are practicing physicians, five are stu- fered for the first time in 1905, and was made a department dents in medical colleges, two teaching in medical colleges. f of the College in 1906. one teaching pharmacy, twenty-seven are proprietors of drug ' The school has steadily grown in equipment and reputa- stores, twelve managers and twenty-two clerks in drug stores, ' tion until it is now recognized as one of the most success- six are members of the State Association and one of the ful in the VVest. So much has its reputation spread' that American Pharmaceutical Association. for several years past it has been impossible to meet the de- Two degrees are granted to graduates-the degree of Ph. mands on it for trained Pharmacists. 1 G. to those completing the two years' course, and the degree Q I 5 Q I For the past three years all prospectlve graduates have of Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy to those completing the , been engaged before completing their course, and began work four years' course. 5 o v n a s u ' immediately after receiving their diplomas. There were more The State Board registers all graduates without further i than four requests last year for every graduate. Several examination. The school will be housed in a new building 1 pi of the present Senior class are already engaged to begin work as soon as they will have graduated in June. next year and from present indications there will be a very large enrollment. A FT s X- -L '-- N Q53 'IK N., ! 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V 0 ofara - ivavaawes-ara, 45' P4P4P 4r 5- sr- p , y 4 We are tary studei members c Fir ever 5 the early 9 and in it I no monarc But alvv have been joyous smi cap and gf bers comin the Prep S legiates ha pier, gave judicial It forever. Wie hav no collegiz we on our XVe are fOOtb3.H. il number o' The Elementary School P y NYe are the Preps trecently rechristened Elemen- tary students, but the new name is too long for short members of the oldest department of the Collegej Ptr ever since the founding of the College back in the early 9o's the Prep has had his own little sphere, and in it has been monarch of all he surveyed, and no monarch has been half so happy as he. A But always, since the beginning, the youngsters have been growing older, throwing away the gay, joyous smile of Prep-dom and longing for a dignified cap and gown. However, we have had new mem- bers coming in as fast as the others disappeared, and the Prep school life has not become dry. The Col- legiates have more dignity, but the Preps are a hap- pier, gayer crowd and many a solemn Senior and judicial junior thinks with a sigh of what has gone forever. VVe have a literary society, the Roosevelt, and no collegiate society can have a more lively time than we on our House of Representatives nights. Wfe are greatly interested in athletics, and have football, baseb-all and track teams, besides having a number of representatives on the ,V3fSi'Ey TCSIUS- N o department of the College is more loyal to old NV. S. C. than are the Elementary students. We yell for her when she wins and yell just as loud for her encouragement when she loses. ' Wfho are, who are, who are we? We are, we are, we are the -P E O P L E Preps ! Preps ! Preps ! ! ! f f Hai? 'ire 7 1., ii if 1.1 ,f .4 -5 r' ' ,... - -X . Zi 5,55 NX QXX wx QW N xx Q AQ N xx XX X N -Q f 1 r I 1 X., , Q X df, fr X .. ,.,., .,,,. .5 .I ff? .. w - N: . . GX . .. x x . -.-. . 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Q. xv. x mx. .- -.li -z f .Q ' ff -N. 45v.p wx. iamq 1 . .. v .' 1' . H .-.. X. Q .i..kA1.r rag. .V Q.. . Y f XX .X .S X315 ' - . .x 5 .A X f .. X ! .4f: Y dv Q.. -M. ? ,. Q . . iii-1. XT. gi-fjf wgfvfi ' . 'U ...MX .. ...T 5 Q .... .K .gig . X . , . . .4 .-. X. . Q .aw .- '. 5.1.x- wg..-j3.5 -. Fa-Q, .1 .4 ,. .1 :-.. . imm l I 1 5 2 4 3, f l X y I 3' .--I VETERINARIANS X, . The artisan course, though short, is one of the most practical in the Col- lege, for young men, who for various reasons, cannot take a College course. here learn foundry work, blacksmithing, traction work, and every year these men go forth to accept better positions than they occupied b-efore. This course is aimed to me-et the desire of boys who wish to study a year and then demand a higher wage. Not only is this accomplished but their eyes are opened to a larger and broader field of learning and 'many artisans later complete their college courses. 50 if a E i 1 5 The courses of instruction given in the State Col- lege are organized into departments. These de- partments may be conveniently grouped as follows: Six departments of technology, those of civil, electri- cal, mechanical and electrical engineering and archi- tecture. Eight departments of pure. and ap-plied science, those of chemistry, botany, Zoology, geology, agriculture, domestic economy, pharmacy and vet- erinary science. Four literary departments,.those of English, economics and history, modern languages and Latin. ' In each department a four-years' course, leading to the bachelor's degree, is given. The general plan of the various departments is one iff inajors and minors. It is believed that a student on gradu- ation should have a professional knowledge of some one line, and in addition thereto as wide a knt iwledge of related lines as he can master. Know every'- thing about something- and something about every- thing is the scheme on which all curricula are planned. As the shop and laboratory method is almost uni- versally employed throughout the institution. eacn department has its own workroom. where scientinc problems are worked out or manual skill is de' veloped. Thus, the engineering departments have their shop-s, lab-oratories and lecture rooms. To those of pure and applied science a large number of labora- tories. operating rooms, lecture rooms and 'offices are devoted, as the pictured pages' which follow graphically portray. In every 'case in which it is practicable the material about which information is disseminated is itself used as theib-asis for study and investigation. Textbook methods are only employed incidentally, or -in cases in which the laboratory method is not practical. - I ' D P The literary departments of the College must, of course, depend very nearly entirely for instruction on textbook and classroom work. Cf course, the library is an important source for material alo-ng these lines, but very few features of literary instruc- tion approach the laboratory plan.- The department of economics and history, under the leadership- of Professor W. G. Beach, and with Dr. Chas. E. Stangeland as instructor, has b-een raised to a high degree of proficiency and importance. lts headquarters are in Room I7 and the library, b-e- tween which sanctumand the library a deep-ly-worn path may easily be traced. . The department of the English language and literature is presided over by Dr. Egge, and -.his efforts to-.instil into the minds of State Collegians a lolfepfor the ' ' 'Hvigorous English, Wortliy the poetfs pen, fit for the speech of man- are' ab-ly seconded by such men as Andrews and .Iohnston. By'them the principle that the best sen- tence is the shortest distance between two periods is first driven home by precept and practice, and after that all literature, from job to George Ade, becomes bit by bit their everlasting heritage. C The department of modern languages and Prof. Barry are synonymous terms. The latter may be found almost any time in Room 2 5 of the Adminis- tration building, surrounded by the b-ooks, verb charts, and students for all of whom he has a cheery and patient affection. Mr. Iantzen, Mr. Andrews, Miss Siemens, and Miss Cassell assist the good pro- fessor in his chosen work. ' From this sapient group there flows continually wave- after wave of Romance and Germanic. lore. The department of Latin, newest of literary group, is a likely youngster. Prof. Charlotte Ma- lotte- is at the head of the department, and by her rare qualities of scholarship and tact makes the rich classical ages, with .their wealth of choicest literature, live again in these latter daysj 11' 51? jf y12411f 511111 fffew W in 19' 124177 1972? - lad Ah My ,sph JYSZZKYJZW 061, 110.1 .fwffi W f1'11 175211 f-1151+ .nmgf I -5-WIC? 15 QXYYXQX W7Z7f?F f?f76?f 1f1111,,?i...I. 715115 Q11 ff-1711! 1'?'ff4,A1Cgf1a,f1'1'11f 17,71 I K flfflf fif ifyfif af 1' 111 af 119 1111 A1 K7?f5J if 17511: X2 af ,f!f!0'H' 6111! 11w177a ada' We 12711191.11 67 1 IIIIIIIIIIII 5' Hi . ,1- Ig IIIIMIII I IIIIIIIVIIM 4 um Iruumnnv--III 'IvEI?'M. 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X '- x 4 , fn JN' A324 THE f3PUI'lL,5PEW5 Tvs'-y for! Jfor H19 gmd of fhw We :mf iAf?F?'i fhey mf dm 14 mr wa bsf ef clav wzffwrm and HH fro TJ fha fr: e QUT' 'fha ffliifgfxli' 'Hvev' haw, 5725205-'Iff!V6J mm power Wire? :grow :nib fha 4 EPIPTUVJE , Croce ,fiefrd whw ekfrfh fmii basiider was ended 5115 hour Mnofher .aff?pJ mio 211.1 fact 'A in AA fha builders Q16 ffmuqhi Ewa I2 Dnfff mor'ff2! day, T V 1 , A V' -J I' f -3 , to I 1 I C' ' -' EA - I t A Z ..3 ,-A, ui all ., , I , L 1 h ,I ' J 2 . 5 ,' z Q , S, f . I ,f i I 3 '-1 1' 5' ff , A A :-. ' ' f' 4, , g P ,, 'Ti K va , 'C' ' D I- 1 1 A K P - -.Q - Hi 1 QI' , f f I K ,I ' X. ll I,-X ff ,ff fu Xe x . ,, f X 4 I Af N f . ' .,5x.N-A-.'.--7 .A x- K N fl Xl, . v kv. . -,Q4:f?q.2,x:s .,- lf I, . 1 -4.,Q:'- 4.1.1, ,-,:.:. . '5 Q x I ' 3-,Q ': 14 ', .. .Fl -3Z 'X' .1 1 :' --.- .. '-. 1 .iq .Ly ka g.- , V-:,.-.u . 1 .. ...gi . . pa r A V ' x I-5-' - Q 'J.'-J. n!.bQ51, 4 f s , f f 4 , .4 . -,M 0.5 ,.,, ..1 - . , f- V - .. vb. ., 4. ..', f ai , M f . FN ' wt, T- A- 1 -.L ,y ,, ' jf 'Z-.:' . 4-'-' IV -.irz i-Li ' 4 z ff! f-5 ' r 1 . :'?7: Jf?f2 , il. 4, ,-. . -X I , 1 1 In ICI.. ,V ,, 1 I u . , w . - ' I 'L V 'Q .-wg'-Jrg,. . - ' -- f- 'f .- . , -. -.1 - 4' -' NE.. I n E 5 '. ' 1 1' . 5 ' .. , , ' ' - Sf- 'W EX,-4 '. - 4' Y I fl- .-.-,' '.-.- ..- . I Q. , ,.t Q. Lf. ' : ' , .---. - , ?-17 Ly V. j 'Q N Ly' 'T X 'K Y - H' , 1 X ' 7-' -' N . . ,. if i . Q: al f 1' , U .' , 'Af' ,, -' 9,1 5 Oy'-'f' .. n.- ,. .fy uf ,w s-.-r . - . 3 -V . , - . . . . K. . , , I R77-alibi? -Qin M. f, 4 X ff f V, j f , ,I t f ,, f f I fffjffflll f f f f kf .,fQ L ff! f 5Q9f4?jfff , ,1,AQ5Xl'N if X f ' X 1' ', ' I ,, 'I 7' f iff? if 1: Z A f X 'ffff i fg, lf! M225 ' X ifs s?:1QSi4f p'iJC5QEi?fe-Ji 4517 ':.2.. srggfs S Q p- s-', - . s..r2E5efm.:ss ro- Scenery of Switzerland, as seen through the eyes of Mrs. L. G. Diven. W. S. C. baseball team loses to Spokane League. . II-Defeated again. Score, I to 0. The wind blows cold, but Sassy Sapp and Towsley Toodles seem not to mind it. I2-Tennis season opens. Herr Grmsbee and Fraulein Bris- lawn play a love game at 5 a. m. i I3-While Kreager peacefully sleeps and iidreams of May Belle she walks up from the station all alone-alone. I4-Seniors give Juniors a run for cup at the track meet. Thomle gets a new pair of shoes. 15-Clo and '4Blue Eyes go squirrel shooting armed with a parasol. . 16-Be Chivalrous, Loyal, Courteous and Munilicentf' 'Rev. Curzon. I7-The abbreviated trousers brigade begins training. I8- Six days shalt thou labor, Prexy. IQ-Victory at last in debate. We defeat Montana. I-Iorrah for Sophie, Kreager and Morgan. ' -Wk?ff'x N 1 l 11. l .AN K sf gli. .. pw: h fl I :lm ' f X11 ff 1 , .L I N l x, n l l '1 in A I I 'I f' 4 clillifxilm X ll if llfliliiifl lfljyglill iAl'AW f,fnnlnAOful ' Jill 5 l?A6QwdAIy A it ll A il i ,ffn,AnAAAf Xf 65 llwhllll Z 20, THE JUNIOR Paoitg, This was the night of many wonders. A few favored Olncf entered what they supposed to be the Armory, but, l0- f CY had entered the Palace of Dreams. ' The very atmosphere seemed -permeated with the unref... the eyes were dazzled by the brilliancy of many lights and the sparkling snowg the sense of rest and coolness was ex- plained by the presence of snowbanks andcrystal columns: sweet strains of music reached the ear luring one to happy forgetfulness. Slowly the lights faded away and the silvery moonntioatef' over our heads, while from somewhere came a song or greet- ing to My Lady Moon. Giving ourselves up to the influence of the Crystal Palace and its 'wonders we found ourselves led through a labyrinth from which there seemed to be no escape. lfVhen the Fairies had led us out of this bewildering maze, we floated through the Palace in dances known only in Fairyland. We were children once more and played the games of children and Fairies. XVe gave tlowers to those with whom we wished to dance. A snowstorm came up bring- ing snowballs, which we threw at one another: and then we were given queer little things which looked like serpents when we threw them. lust as we had become convinced that we would be allowed to remain in this beautiful land forever, the moon sank slow- ly lout of sight and a chorus of rich voices bade her fare- we . fllhen we heard a melody of haunting familiarity-the air of Home Sweet Home. We began to feel the drifting awav of the enchanted clouds and, as the last note died axnay we found ourselves on earth again. 'Q W. S. C. defeats Blair in baseball. All the cozy corners in Tanglewood taken. ' W. S. C. sends two carloads of provisions to the San Francisco unfortunates. Final tryout for track team. Annual inspection of PreXy's army. O, be joyful, we win from Idaho in baseball. Track team leaves for Missoula. Election of Students' Assembly officers. Mable B. refuses the secretaryship unless Io is elected president. He gets the job. Bad news from Missoula. Atmosphere too highg track too heavy. We lose. Preps and School of Business do stunts on Roger's Field. O, why does Polly look so bright? Have you not heard? Clare came last night. -Un a Sunday afternoon. Walkiiig where the flowers bloom. Ma1'cus found a dainty Blossom. -Big May festival-Departmental concert. Glee Club sings. Happy and Squirt try for place in high tenor. Squirt wins out. Sunday baseball players are ad- monished by Timblen. 3 W 15,6 ,' ii il W ,Q l l' pf' ,, 5 :gait , .' 235,-I , , ig, Q' g I :il 6 . f ,zz 'AL af' 55 . a QA' 7 at-5. ae A I 5 Q' - - rf- 951 Ili' ,GY :hy .- 22' '. Y' I 1: QQ, Oi' :sa g,f,:' ff'.:s..L .- li-'Q ur, fk 'Y 4 QS'-e' , ff' ' ' 'fn 9' : 1.16.9 N avg' if 10. X I I- I-Band concert in afternoon. Messiah chorus in the evening. 12, 2-AftiStS7 concert in afternoon. Visiting choruses in the evening. W. S. C. defeats U. of I. in baseball. 7 to 0. 3-Visitors leave. We act natural again. Preston or the track team, en route to W'h1tman, is eusnared by the I3- Siren Minerva at Colfax. I.- 'T 4--Our track team is defeated by Ylfhitman. The glorious '06s give a party and their muse msplres divine verse- to their fair maids, e. g. TO oR1LLA. K, O, maiden fair T-- With dreamy hair, ' And eyes of golden brown: Look in my eyes, X CThey're just your sizel And forget that awful frown. . -XYalden. 19' 5-We defeat O. A. C. in debate. Rah! for Kreager, '1'..,1.1 and Chapman. gn- 6-Too windy and dusty to be called Sunday. 21-The weather grows warm and as a result the bacilli 7-Captain Kimmel tells Chid he is not the whole band, and orders him to go to-the Conservatory for practice. 8-Sophie goes home to mamma. Baseball team leaves for the land of the web foot. . 9-Timblin does stunts in Hi schools of Eastern Washington. Io-Our Gay friend is elected editor of the Evergreen, while Walter Robinson is to look after the shekles. II-The preliminaries of the interscholastic start the ball rolling. Declamation contest in Gym won by Spokane. Later, a reception in Stevens Hall. I2-Morning. Everybody acts as guide and tells what,' and why', concerning everything on the campus. Semi- finals on Rogers' Field. Afternoon. Finals won by Lewiston Hi School. Visitors begin to leave. 13--Visitors are all gone. Reaction! R-E-A-C-T-I-O-N-! I4-KfC3gCf,S novice meet between collegiate scrubs and prep scrublets creates a dust storm, followed by a heavy rain. A 15-On this day our Charlotte departed, and left our Virgil broken-hearted. I6-Bobbie and Slats grow old in a night. I7-Wise Prexy insists that people who live on the sound and in the sound are necessarily fishy We lose track meet with U. of I. 18-Time: 7:30. Place: Christian Church. Cause: Wash- ington Society Banquet. Effect: No frogs left to croak in Lake de Puddle. 19-The class of '08 enjoyed its glorious sunshine on the gentle slope of Moscow Mountains. 20-Our championship baseballteam returns. Campitus gets in its deadly work. Many are bitten. Ice cream the antidote. Reverend Mr. Stewart entertains the Y. W. C. A. with readings from The Bonnie Brier Bush. . V v Z-tif 1 I, V W i ' l gf, , ,fg?,Ea'H5!5iEfEl' ' ,4 l lf' :Il r':ZIlI'i' 5 , ' ' l5:::.f:' f ' ', 1, Y HZTLI I EE 'af' Q ff! - 1575.651 . Ax A M ' Z 'V i- V if .... 153 1-I X auumin m., , -Tw: p - fel i. F 4 Ei- A K L.. ge - -. u-.Ef.:- afojfzf - i iz. - - bL -h LF, i- -1 -I , ,L ,Y . . -- Q-5--'Pail -M M - at 2-'ef-2 ' 312'-ist 'ill' K2-if Q . There once was a sawed-off professor, pinkie and white and dear, R 1 Who knew more in a moment than most people know in a year. , c. A ' So he came to our College to tell usjust how things ought to be done, But he met his waterloo, children, Prof. Barry wouldn't be run. Finally things came to a climax. This dear little sun- ny-haired man, 4 n Because he was smarter than others, bethought hlm H wonderful plan. He would march into room 25 and frighten the stub- born old goose, Who taught the young student of language in ways so exceedingly loose. But out blue-eyed, mysterious Barry was not to be beat in the race. So the dear little, bright-faced professor decided this wasn't his place. Now whenever I see a brother too bright for the common lot, I lift my eyes to heaven and thank my stars I'm not. 23 Chapman's art exhibit. 24 Professor De Walsli discloses to German IV class all the .awful and mysterious secrets of the workings of Christian Church. Miss Frances Gage, Coast Secreg tary of the Y. W. C. A., addresses students in chapel. .xx y b g 'Y' .. jf' , ' 'T' JE? .. i ,- .aff l 'r 17 If Q. ' iq ,-,,,,. ,-W, ,. ,. .... . -V. --....i,..,..?-AWN 2'--KlCppC1' talks Folk and Graftersn to XYliitin:in :intl v-fr: do the Intercollegiate Oratorical lcolllcsl. H ll-1 gf 'ln gives party to Seniors in which Daunte lla-rg:-ll i- tr troduced into society by 3111151 W. 26-Glee Club dance in Armory, Freshit-s int-et for fir at Sir Wonald's home. 27- Doc Rehorn, '05, plays tennis with Kiztrgarci li : 6 a. m. Gene loses his appetite. I.,ater-fient- I in :i c-tr fidential moodb: I have the plans nr my ziztzt. career all settled. Doc: Stes, and they are gn-z tra same as mine. 28-Prexy fires the gun for the last lap and reminds ts- ti the finals approach. 29-The latch string of Professor Roberts' liomc wa- tzvrzii pulled by a bunch who found it the lrcrt ext-r. 30-Memorial Day. The rain prevents picnic planm-fl by til scrub faculty and many other young pcwplc. ,l-41 Jones and Anna Clemans are married. liiii -I-mt 'kisses the bride naturally. 31-KICPDCT gives in chapel the spiel that made his fam- ve ru-1 'uumlfullw M ll t h ,u li miwlfulil - 'ii g LL ,.'f, . . gif- a i' ' P f 4 K- N -i -Stearn's medal contest, won by Akin, '08 Goldsworthy and Morgan make the team, with Davis alternate. Prexy on theses- Seniors, beware! -Honorable Web's banquet till the stroke of I2, then yell the rest of the night. -Prexy gives a mild, fatherly talk to those sneaking, sly- ly snooping, ill bred boys who made this earth an un- comfortable place to abide for one-a reporter. Brown and Cowgill, 'o8s, elected captains of baseball and track, respectively. Announcement of Summer School. Proctor Waller an- nounces that 2135.00 deposits will be required on rooms in dorms. Professor Fulmer entertains Senior Chemists at dinner party. Baseball, '08 vs. '09. Score, I3 to 1. First Frat banquet takes place at Christian Church. 7-Professor Andrews lectures in chapel and adorns his lecture with ancient jokes. Professor Barry: Stuht is a 'wonderful manif' and the class laughed to ,see Myrtle blush. 8-G. A. R. encarnpment. Old soldiers are entertained by Prexy's army and band. W's awarded in chapel by the I af A wmv.. i fjzf f fax isis? 'gf anguish Q4 132- fr 7 '-'1l l--if .4 .y.lf.-- fp-.af f rib-npil .af 1-rl-W. l NNN ff ma - J-'l xl3fQx.' x. Q.,-f ff..- H 1111 1 ff 'H' --- I V .1 'C' Z U f Fxgwweirai Yfflfe IVX41 fl 'W7 ob Sapient Sapp. State Farmers' meeting. 9-Dance at,Gym. ' ' Io-Sunday. Olga: Say, Robert ! Ockerman: You mean Clare, don't you ? Olga: Oh, yes. I was thinking it was after supper. ' II-,O7 Chinook appears. Senior class night at the Opera house. The Seniors are wise and otherwise, but sure- ly after this experience they will be much at home in Hades when sojourning in .those regions. I2-Miss Malotte returns the annual to the staff and I could not blame the girl, could you ? . i Last chapel. Prexy bids farewell with sad face- and glad voice. Senior-Faculty baseball. Won by Carpenter. I3-The Faculty entertains the Seniors. Annual competitive drill. The freedom of Slats and Bobbie. Lombard Oratorical contest won by Lee Lampson, lOQ. I4-MT. Irish Vlfalsh has for several days been compelled, as a result of a forcible collision with a movable por- tion of the post tertiary strata, to carry his nasal ap- pendage in a sling. We all extend to friend Walsh our heartfelt sympathy, and hope for his immediate recovery. -Stuht to Malony: Pat brush the flour UH your coat. Pearl Darling, tinclignantlyl: l'isn't flour? lts tal- cum. The baseball bunch eats strawberries and cream, and then Brown leads the grand march. Joe rejoices that Mabel wins a prize in the dollar dress contest. Gertrude M, wins one. too. and who shall rejoice? Party for May Belle at the Hall. -lllrl girls. Commencement week. -Sunday. Baccalaureate address given by Reverend Mr. H. C. Mason of Seattle. after which the Glee Club renders a selection, followed by a round amen. -Xnntial address to Christian Societies in the evening by Mr. Mason. First day of Summer School. Grasshoppers desert. Pri-- fessor Sampson introduces Prexy to scliriolinakns and pedagogues assembled in chapel. Dr. lVoodburn gives lecture on Monroe Doctrine. A tardy bunch of intellect and sagacity is heard iniiuzr ing for President Nalder's lattice. Reception at Stevens Hall. Chas. XYaldcn is seen tails- ing to a group of SCll0OllllZ1-INS. Sir XVonald enrolls in Summer School. The grztssliiip- pers come back. f -Chas. Walden takes two schoolina'tns to see their first opera. Q L25 , I6-Remainder of Facultypicnic lunch comes and is de- 5122 l'?l -U-' T T it fe ' . I Q WI- if voured at Tanglewood. e ei-. ' E sl Z 7 .. 1 4 I ' ' S If T U W an wwf- ' We.-aiifig . up I EY qt ' I i ' -'- - ,QL f. I -Sapp makes a hit. g g ' - any .-- Sapp makes another hit . ' 41.522 f? , 411525-. 5 X 1 iff Vote in chapel not to have school on the Fourth. Party -Ttf,kQ5: .Q.s-132 - at Tanglewood. Stevens Hall celebrates the Fourth at Tanglewood. Swimming in the tank is all the rage. -Professor Beach delivers the lecture of the day. Topic: The Right Pursuit of Happinessf, -Byron Walsh does a day's work. -Nothing doing. Too hot. ' V II-Summer School students enjoy a dog and pony show. ' :F m f 14 W 5, l ' S W I 13-Facu ty gives ummer ki SChOol a picnic at Tan- sf Z, Ofle ood A delicate in- Xrf ' 11 D W ' -til i ff sufficiency 1S served. at X vnu-V I' In I - ' 7 ,QRS E .ik j : I4-Myra Priest gets a letter. Ci. e 1- ,. . f-jjifiiif QC, 15-Myra Priest gets another , A-Q 5 ,., ' letter. i S mizllifsgii- 1 fl: u'.'-'ful' fg f ., ,--El'-4 l'l E'1::.7' .9' ' ... f?:1- 54.1 n' u ve14,':4 ' ' 5 7,4 :' f fQ-f 437,11 f 5'1- ff , ,,,.:.-.1-' 18- I9- Anna Kimmel swims around the tank. Rumor reaches Pullman that Della Ingram is sitting on the cellar steps to keepncool. P 20-The West Side. students give a reception in Stevens 22- Hall to Summer School. 'They show up splendidly. Hazel Browne and 3Myra Priest spend the day on Mos- cow Mountains. ' They say its awfully lonesome up there. ' 24-East Siders decide to give a reception to 'West Siders. 27-E3St Siders show up to advantagef . 28 -Miss Wilmore and Melvin Lewis plan to have a feed. Lewis furnishes the water melon. 29-Myra Priest is seen eating the melon. Lewis thinks it 4 Joke ? 1 1 1 ,f v 7 f. ff' 1' Q5 N776 bbw T915 - 1 x XE, ,. --,. .4 HA. . -N,.f-.. -5, W ' -. 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Nalder's troubles begin-Registration. , Dignified Sophie, overcome at the sight of her class- mates, falls prostrate at their feet. 20-First chapel. Prexy gives that ever original spiel to new students. Biscuit Shooters of Ferry Hall hold an indigation meeting for the good of the order. 21-Rook to Old Timer: Do they sell tickeets to chapel? Old Timer: Certainly, season tickets. And so the graft begins. Annualt Crush at Stevens Hall. Glad Hand extended to the Rooks. 22-Shorty Stewart et al the 'pigskin' chased. The Tale of a Tubi' or Pull for the Shore, Rook in a wash- basin was the tune of initiation in Ferry Hall. iomcsick Sunday. The -l-gy pilot- fix' il. consolation. Big Zeke rt-turns. hut tyrant Of l'Cf'JCflh. HC:llIlL' 'lU'ilK'- iill' V about being windy. -.t'1H'l'i:iHL.:v :waz Shaks. ' 2 A l G 6177236 i' it 3 ' l'ft' f l'l --it i i-im.-.f I JS 1 J 4 6,'pQI,g4? J5, is 24-SCNIOI' cm ing, usa par i .. . . 2 - I ,lf 43 I a il f Q ,r 1 1 2 T - I I I df ' X KTHE.. Evenanecns ' NEW T n n . Niiiio Fo UNTA IN. Zz' N lf' -A 'ue ROCK, fo' we 00 'E ST-v . ' 4oVEyQKeSN A 'I-K f irq!! ' nv . s K 0 g fgfbwiii.. A' mf, X I I W 'I W 25-Pfexy announces that thc '05 Ifvcrgrccn stair? wx l X A 6 I If leave a monument in thc form of a drinksnq fozzn f:-a ll 1 ' ' Ch nef l NI'll1 S' - ' f -- Q Jr , --U N , A -a -g C 3 ant i 1 cr sing a dint in thaptl, .-Xl! me i -gf ' 5 fi? 'F': iBfSL. sheep have gone astray. 4 1 , . 1 76 'KSee the Conquering Hero Comes, Hess leads the pro- cession of Seniors in cap and gown. Evergreen appears in a new head piece. Queries- Why doesn't Sapp enroll? Are the new Faculty rul- ings only a bluff? Freshieg and Sophs practice foot- ball in chapel. V At Stevens Hall the old girls entertain the new and 'manfully', perform their part. Football scrimage between varsity and scrubs. W. S. C. day at Interstate Fair. Nissen's refrain- O Where, O Where, Does My Little Girl Live? . On a Sunday afternoon- Just a Frog in Lake DePuddle, But his brain was in a muddle. y For he'd seen things he couldn't understandg While swiming with his daughter 'Q Through the clear and sparkling water He espied a couple walking on the land. They were talking, talking, talking, And so slowly they were walking, That Froggie wondered if they ever would get past, He would grin, and she would gi-ggle. Froggie's heart began to Wiggle At a rate that was uncomfortably fast. He was short, she was tall, But that made no diff at all, So Froggie thought he'd follow up the rearg x S I 522: '?-21:31-A V' TTS - S t f if ,I , -,l--Q-Ef?1.Q4..i,, F-Q' fr 2 ,A if if: J k 4 il-1 .Y Jl i i S X X 1 72424: -mf f E F , K- j-,Zl4? 2 ' f'T'W - ' S , ,riff -f' ' . - 1' Y ..-- , -f V .f-f- .rn-J . . e . 3 . T 14' rr' E 'f n' E? -' '::... -f I 'Iii ' ', .- ' ..- 2 ,', an-gg, M, 'ggi-59..- ,il . 1,- ' . . 1- ...-gi. -7-K - - - ll Qs I-. -j' . 151251:-y - ,'-' ' ,.,.,. 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' .,, I - Then he had another thougl , things were getting rather hot The man called her something awfully queer. I- Froggie hopped along the shore, b Getting puzzled more and more At the action of the couple on thelandg So he thought he'd swim .away, g 1 And come back another day, , . , For he'd seen things he eouldn't understand. -Mass meeting .in Ferry Hall. Subject- Your Face and How to Feed It. p A . L...-... A f e f , I , .1465- ,-! . S. has ,gen Q.:-3 ii ,. ' 'ff a 1161 1' XV yi ' 2. v sp ft ffm' rf' QB? 1 .1 , if ff. 3,4 4 f 1 Prexy spake wisely and saith: Yesterday was Sunday ! IQIO pennant decorated the Flagpole until Shorty Lund stretched forth his hand and cried: Enough! 'Tis a dirty, old rag. Q Farewell reception to Captain Kimmel in Stevens Hall. Another fire in Gym. Cigarette, thou are the root ol all evil! Solomon. ' -Beattie has a rival. The wind blows. The Freshies in regular class meeting assembled adopts Mellen's as class food. - An old classmate of mine, Said Prexy, as he introduced the speaker. Captain Kimmell trekes for Cuba. K ' I 7-ixllll ual Rook guard mount at the Gym. .X 1 -Q X . , . 1. V . , 2 -'-- f 14 X 17 1 vw 0-x' sf' 'lf'1 4 'X 1 Q ,AW Van D1ssel lb wounded, a f r1 ghtened 1 . , - X . ox.. 1 f ' . 1 1' 3 V 1 Rook 5331 Chgs Stevens fgr 3 . 5 . 1 7 ,Q X , , doctor. 1 X 1 X 1 l 5 . . 1 , . , , , ,. . W K I f T 1 1 2 ' ' 1, 8-Shorty Stewart and M acKay before the Q 1 A Xp , A 1 4 - 1 Rq4,fv,fWv,y- ,X f 1 , M' bay Sentelqce-01153 black Q Q 0116 f 7 M f ' . Xp! X . - . 1 4522 . - ' y , I sf Q X, 1-y'.:5gXX.gf5-1 'X fguw ,gs 5 -V Q5 Sklnned 11056, fegpgctlvelyl Eng111P EL i E X 2 5 E I ' l , -1 tX ' 1 I 'lt the DOWCF l1OL1SC 111115 Wlld. U f . A 1 , 1 Yxo A i i Cf - vw - X ' 1 e' 3 1' ofa? ' 51 9-1903 Chmook rece1111S 011 Sale, 3101 ' 1 F ---- ' ie - 'N ' l1'1? V55 1 - - I 'Emu :1X.H ' 1- d th am 15 A A x, , Z , X V.. ., i 1 X, ,W X, X NX, W, A, , , 1. 1 ., pe . enlor ass a Ofns 6 C DL . E X,. 'fs Sv? M X , A v . 1 XX31, .XX-1 , 4 X fXQvXg ,g . , gms' 2 X -X-E Q-.meg aw X' X X9 Xw. -pod S , SVS 655553 XM? g- k g s, ,XWX,,gXX5iJX,,Xg4X-Ni,Xit, .!V,-QXQNEXZ tf,Xm6,.,7w5Wf.,XL N5 ! , XQ5 Mb ' 5 ff ' I sl. .1 W1 nea S1 ns ee o IC rass ,..,,,1:, . . .... , A X X. 1.1 mama , X ..Vt X X ,, . ,. 1 1 . , 1 ' , B k b H b - HS et 3' eg 1115- ' 4651? 1 ' ' 2 9: 943. if 1' 'fit IO-PYCXY W2l1'1tS tl'1C pl'1yS1C3l Shlfk. ICH' 2 , . , , n1e Douglas plays IH chapel. Sophles h D b i it' 01 d i Nl Qfbesfml 5114i1w1A1f11 6N5 i HVC 501116 JO P1111 1115 0116 111 OS- COW. ' Q- ,,,- ,1 1 ,ag 3. t A X X, gp-, V4,X,.,g-Q Q 53,5 1 ffvwfq MXN-X bfX,f.s,-11 it NW -vXwX'sQ-X-Q0 navy.v3.sy:f,'fx?x,gL X4 ' 4 , . X 3 Ixwkgiawx J , Aj 17 .w p x, M. . X 1? XX, fX, ,YJX 5, XX51, I XE I I-S 011110111016 P1065 Hdvfn College W111- : W dows. Fresh1es t1e up the b1'HVCSf 11 ' 11 '1 45 1 'L . X JX., W Y . 1 153 1 I ' 1,1 ' . ' l I2-5 H15 15 HDDY 1 16 151 86 0111111911 - +1 ' ' E232 Freslfnes put up counter Procs. FITSIE fi 9 - 51 I X X V . .1 9 U 1 :E 1 X1 -1 1 'wfmr K - Q f 1g1s1 .1mzf.1x1 mf.. . sw 1'-PM XX YYNNX YM 1 fs ---1 - . fs. wswwwe 11 13-FOOtba11-varsity vs Blair 1 1 to 0 1 1 - - , - X ' X WX '11 1 . ' - - 'ily q sQwfg2X.XwfAfg..,sX. I QXXQQX f f2'3sil? 'X 1,X,,1f,,!1,, -y-,A..XXr V ,Xs,gXvgsyxg1wg e X:s Wf ' ' 1-.1 ,T f ' 'iq ix N .1 X'-. J 11 Grace Ickes recelves 3 telegram lhat a i re ., . K , X 1 1 ' ' XX, VW ..X,1 ,,,fX1f CX W. 1X. .aX,X.,., .X - 151114534 EX fx., X .X ,.,, 12490, ,, H5547-5X Q? X151 ,Xi X L5 f-9X -XXX R 1 X1 - ' 1 -X 1 X - X .X... 1 XXX. 1 I4 ST -Sunday. Klepper pleads for more wind for the Oratorieal Associa- 16fEVCfYb0dY Works but 121111613 tion. Prexy speaks of the evils of posting procs 111V I7+Va1'sity leaves for Missoula and take in The College buildings. Widow in Spokane. Soph1es feed at Chaprnan's. 79 awe . f i, of -A 6' 9 6 1 ff S - Q mimi' 5431+ s- S 9 it I foe 0 .r-,4 , I, , D -In . , - . I , . f4.H.',W! 2, V4, X.. li la, 1, ,--.- - ::- 6395 lllfl f if 'll ffffg jj ,li if . s ep ,tl li-.if -fl! t','ff1'W l w e S E Q S A if ' . F N 'ae F R I t if- iw 0 an A -t ea i x t Y L lhiltkxkx ' R B E fe? l ,- iii!!!- ,' I t Hiilllwllll it . i R Illllllllllll ul i ' 0 - - ll' ff 'alll . lllllllll I wi ll. . . rw 4.1. S u 7 'il S 21952539 .,- llli lil A lt - 'leg-is i2a4esi+:i agfg:QSS:+s 5522-f a W -ixgxliji P- ,,- Q , ! Y lf- ic5+Rev. Marvin speaks in chapel. I9-Hail! The first sign of snow. Novice track meet. W. S. C. wins from U. of M. and college spirit gets, loose. 20-The band welcomes a victorious team. Preps lose to Spo- kane Hi. Philharmonic Concert a Hltoxvling succef-. 21-McCrosky and Fullerton join the lfrats. Mi-s flagr- addresses Y. XV. C. A. Fulton succeeds Sxveely as guardian of H. Brown. 22-Seniors cordially invited to attend class meeting. ,lot- Brislawn elected president ot Dorm. Governing Coin- mittee. 23-Roy Gay Adams leaves for 'XYaverly. the girls weep, XYeli+ and Sophies accept challenges of XYashingtons and Freshies in debate and football. respectively. 24-The preacher Roots for chapel. Thats all. 25-Cadet commissions granted in chapel. In the same 7 words' Prexy did the stunt. 26-Everybody and his sister go to Moscow to see Gregori defeat Idaho. Vet. Banquet. 27- Fancy Dress ball in Stevens Hall. Freshmen Girls. Squirt arrives. Sapp and Toodles rejoice, 28-:EVERYBODY Goes TO CHURQH. 29-Stevens Hall bunch. chaperoned by Mrs. .-Xttflre-ws, sere- nade their neighbors. NYhat possibilities for t'o-ttball rooters. 30-Prexy invites all to hear the Senator. Macl,t-od elected Yell Master. 31-Hallowe'en. 1908 Chinook staff party, S.,-ninr goelmm party. Freshmen-Sophmore hop. mg. fy 'egg it . AT V 'E . Ni h '!'??'ii! g -. 0 1 W Y-J , i I il 4 w S . I-McCully leading Ir. Prep. yell Now altogether three cheers for McCully. 2-Fulton marches Prexy's army down to Athletic field to practice yells. Webs entertain other societies. 3-W. S. C. vs. S. A. A. C. at Spokane, score, 4 to 0. Prep hop at the gym. 4-Jeff's and Goldyis pictures appear in the Sunday Spokes- man. They order 1,000 copies each. 5-McLeod elected varsity Yell Master and holds daily prac- tices in chapel 6-Election W S C students honored over' the state 7-McLeod Cexplaining yell in chapelj : Its just like a big dog talking to a little one. Pick goes to a slr ow mit ein frau. A 8-The Freshmen by dint of much hot air prove their right to the bigvmegaphone. Big rally at night. Excite- ment! Enthusiasm! Hot air! Yr . C L Nw? Mfit Li f - 7715 DANE naive: mf ceo man my 1: I -V Y 1 . A 5 3 fiff' ' . r . 1, --r Wm 313 9 X S i f Q - 6 l'- 9 f X J at ,112-2212: A2 - X . nk Q 1 :r 1. 'S Q J X -945 A 1' X 9 , 'ff,l ug.: A . 1 't'z C- - - C 9? A47 fr-. 'f2E??f,,Q.1 fi 12: Z ,fgffff ff: A W-5 9-Great day at Pullman. Moscow defeated. Jerry A U runs 80 yards Vfor a touchdown. 10-Frat dance. Professor and -Mrs. Strong entertain. 11-Sunday. ,Reaction . P i A 12-- MH party in Stevens Hall. ' 13-Orchestra play in chapel. Lund elected baseball manager. I7-MT. and Mrs. Johnnie Turner show up. is l v Vriii iii' s gig. I . if' x. 1 -Duet by Manager Sapp and Cook of the S. .-X. fx. C.. fill' titled, I liJon't lVant to Play in Your Yard. f-:ltr Hb, Hnomer nofch I9-Sleighing coming up. ' form 9,07 H 20 Professor Issacs in Ma. 1: XX ill the members uf the cla-N A 'lj -5, please take the same seats each day so that I may -ev: 'r L- q, you when you are ahsentf' 21 Snowhalling, the favorite sport. XYaller say-: lie -ure , -. to hit the fellow von throw at and not a wmriflox-.'. I uf' ' 'N . . . I t '. 22 Strong Sll'lgS solo lu chapel. Much applause. and we are H7 1 called down lor xt. Mud st-nu-sters on tor better or --' iii 3 'l i ' X worse. fpfffr fuffl FQ In ' 'ZZ555'-','1N O X .Q . A , 1 . l f 57. x - 12444. -- . ' fa .- - ' 5 1 1- 2 --- 44-, 1.7-gi .F -li 2 X..- ef We :i . 1Y DOG DAYS. Onl a dear little do ie, owned b a bri ht haired lass. Y Y . . . . g . . Riding with her in the buggy or frolicking over the grass. Only some other doggies that came and went at will. But they got too close to Earnie and the big house on the hill. Only a sweet faced laddie, proud of his handsome gun, Standing there in his backyard and shooting the dogs for fun. Only a quick shot given, aimed at someone's pet. Only a dear little doggie, but Earnie remembers yet. Only a few less canines to gladen the face of day. Only dear, sweet faced Earnie, did shooting the dog- gies pay? 17-W. S. C.. 8: S. A. A. C., 0. Bender shows the dandies the real thing. 23- 1.-5 x s Dr. X!VlIlSllllD talks in chapel un :U-fl-tu-.1 ,im-CE..pN1wq Mgt, - S93bUl'Y l7lflYS the violin. lov li. and 'limlwiin -crate the coming game with XX:l'IlllNI'll1. i s 1 W, H , . VVH IT M ANJS VVATERLOO. THE HEIGHT THAT FAILED 24-NV. S. C. and NVhitnian clash and the score is 6 to 0. We 70M iw' ylmh 5, I ,W - 8-John G close the season without having been scored on. Our 4,2 455 ECW' g visitors entertained at night in Stevens Hall. Mmm 4, 4 Q 25-FOLII' inches of snow and coasting good. A IO'-preside 26-Band plavs in chapel. Z' A 2 Z W 5 I f ' 3111 . A , Q 4 f Qahr l Q Q ,, Q I-Waiters entertain at Ferry with a ball, and the llmlr i P just like glass? 9 2-Effects of rl l1Z1l1liSglf'lIlg are over. XX c stop eating and ' f - get to classes again. .3 ' X 3-Sunday. vig: - ' ll N -Sir Wonalcl elected editor in clnet or Ql11mmk.' vu-112353 --I . Jw- ,' 0 r 54 - ., - - -. ,-fmtggizggsztye 0,1535-3 Pew, 5- Phe connng out party ot the P1 Pln s. t 'ff' aims sspivl-4. N 1 - - - . , v is Qissaegp X 6-'1 l1l11gS movin some at Stevens Hall. Q ' kfff 'W .QSTX 0 I: . ' 1, - :ze-fE?.'ie,2:.f:s5e:ils-f' 3 .2 fe-: xg -'fe'-ew me: . , ' g SLZAQ- V M5555 PEEN: -N 'fihiiiihne-zifftfxkf' f ,. ' ?'-- 'XXX - iz? , -, uttivffai -' Tr-'tag-T ' f 'f -W - R 4-14-.- - - gl ngffg Q .- .-.- ll,....'.v.mnn.455.5,,,.. 1 f . X , . fi'l'Z2Z'3 ' ,f 1-' lll':'!iF2 fiat . 744 991'-Z-f1:. '73?555E5i5fQI425352Zg - - ' 117- -- , . ' 42 . - ' 2:1 161.1111-. ez' X w - .. -LJ - ,, giaaii . 12--'52 .-2. , f- ffff-Tisif,-gif- , ' ' H ,,-M,-mu -V .fi 31-715 . at -- ' ' ,s X 2555 9-.,. ti 231125-7 f 1 -it--,-,gg----.-.s.11at ,:'flf.'-315351 -4 ' e' 'M ' 'fl e QQ ', Z Q, ,-' . gjf ':'5i :-:1.f:,qf.-'T. :- - H Y, V -44,4 till. .-- -A -- ,I '7 X t , ' W 'P 2-,fl-411'-'f L1-21521.-Egfsta--1' ' -E M' ,r::E55,.f., -fa 't '5 A ' 4 K '-T-5J,eg2 : : ' T. L--1-Y . X, -. A' a . H ' ' Tal- - 'Q 1--ii , N ...1- f' Hilti 2X..Cf.? f H N ' N 27-Skidoos and Microbes don the rnoleskins and hit the War yr' r ,ifgii ,125 . f - -' 'A ' ' ' . . . 0 wi ' D.: ,. .u 2. vi trail. Freshies victorious. Varsity ball at gym. '? .igiflfg W -- 1 , - t, W . . 9 ,xv .,. ' . ei . , A , , '- . Spy. 1.3 -,pt , . gp:-.:- .ag--Eat, drmk and be merry for today 1S Thanksgiving. -T-.1-- 'qf?A'f'2' as Y' ti-' ' N N, ru Q ,.. - - 1 -.4. - . '17 ' t'--- --. - - if u 30-Ye Waiters' hop in Ferry Hall. 34 baskett I I-Present I-'reel rootb I2-All wc 13-Studen todag at th clam: I4-J1lUlC'T I5-Miss 1 a str I6-Tl1C'IHl His I7-Post-sc To Col. S. XYe her to be play: XYe beg game niusz I. Ga 2. XX' XY this ye 4. W.-i f Q . H-I lf li- II ---I va -. -F V7-A ..-...- ,,.-,... , ,., W.-.--.w,.l ...---..... wil l ,M M Q -John Griffith in chapel. S. H. S. basketball vs. W. S. C. Score, I3 to 25. S. H. S. girls play W. S C. girls. Score, 7 to 6. Reception at Stevens Hall for basketball girls. - 7 -President Bryan speaks on the negro problem. Interclass basketball. Juniors vs. Seniors, I3-I4. -Presentation of Ws by Thayer. Finals in basketball. Freshmen winners. Thomle imagines he is playing football. . 1 -All work for the 2ooo club. 4 -Student of Prof. Barry's: What is the Spanish lesson today? Next Student: Oh, show your notebooks at the door. The same lesson we had yesterday. De- clamation contest. First, Burns. Second, Miss Todd. -Junior banquet. Prep party. -Miss McDermott honors football men with a art . What 3. The time of halves to be extended indefinitely, to suit the convenience of your players. 4. Positively no time to be taken out during the game. 5. Important. Fowl tackles and off-side plays will be allowed. 6. No umpire or referee will be used. 7. No linesman -will be used, as the goal will not be placed at any definite distance. A 8. Cur team will all be on the field at the first lineup, and your players will be allowed to tackle any of them at any time after the game starts. 9. None of your players are to leave the game, but we reserve the right to put in new players any time one of ours is put out of business. ' 6 IO. You are expected to kick if you are not supplied with plenty of players to tackle. II. List of our players will be submitted immediately be- fore the game. - . Trusting that the date will be satisfactory, and that all your men will be in the lineup, we beg to remain, P Y a stunning widow McLeod makes! 'E I6-ThOI1il6 discovers Myra wearing his 440 medal ! lg! ! ! l ! ! ! His next letter is addressed to Palouse. I7-Post.-season game. To Col. S. Sapp, Manager W. S. C. football team. We hereby challenge the W. S. C. football team to a game to be played at our home on Friday, January 4th, 1907. . We beg to submit the following rules under which the game must be played: ' I. Game to be called at 6:30 p. m. 2. We want all your men in the lineup that have won a W this year, and also Manager Sapp and Coach Bender. ' I Yours very truly, MR. AND MRS. IRA CLARK, .Managers of the Other Team. -Glee Clube quartette sings in chapel, and Monte appears unannounced. A 1 . - In vacation time. i -Athletic ball in Armory. -All who havn't gone go. el -West Side boys give girls of Stevens Christmas tree.. Clare Ockerman and Shortie Thompson say it was jest like old times. . 1 He gave Prof, Barry a sugar plum because he loved mg, Q .13 h' so. , ..i3 J Drdlliigge he left a copy of a dear little. lullaby song. ' 4' X And they say that now he sings it to his class the whole ji., .1-1, X f day long. k ' k, 1 'F ,gf Prof. Johnson he gave a curler, the cor screw inf. 5 Ju 4g5,4f:L,f fiu 'L 'IZfL1771:,.rg::,1f know. . Prof. Beattie got a talking machine, warranted al- A ' wa s to go. , Yes, he gave them each a present from his perch on the mantel shelf, , vi. 1 X --W If you want to know any more youll have to ask Q1 them yourself. x s A f Pi X N . p df ' 25-Everybody eats. 'f-F'- ix , in ff Sk ' ff X 4' --5 A' R PE . fax:-All X 0 I' rf' 23-Candy party in Stevens Hall. Mark Ennis gets the -5Ez5?:' 35 ', rf . 5556 7.5575 CZIII Earl Its only the same old story that you have heard before How Santa Clause came down the chimney 'cause he couldn't get in the door. I met him on the hillside and asked him to let me go And see what he gave the Profs from his pretty pack, you know. H So he took me up beside him, and straight to Prof. Watts he went. Azad left him a red tin rattle with side all dinted and Ent. He gave Prof. Waller a comb for his front hair, you know. - ll A ..... -.-W ses- . .- ,..-..,.-.-----W... Mc.- - --.ss - W.,- :. -15 I 9 5-1 Y 1 A sr: ' f. P f 'fi f P rg- S ll'1- PSY- ext, - s- -g --l Uergltuh 26-Everybody eats what's left. 27-Norska and Minta go down town. i- ,A .- ,-4--.,. ..,... v-'----- . -I.. f -nl AI- '-I - .- ' ' - - - -- - -- ev- - I I 29 President Bryan and all the rest of the mighty Faculty go-Minta and Norsky go down town. sat well dressed, E , Beside the fire, while the rain came down, As if it intended the earth to drown, When out of the darkness came a shriek, Lake de Puddle has sprung a leak. And each one ran his level best CI wasn't there, I only know What little Prexy said was so.D President Bryan yelled, UI-Iurry there. Prof. Pulmer gasped, You do your sharef' While the air was filled with good advice As to howto plug the leak up nice. Each one was sure just what' to do Each one wanted to boss the crew, While each one grumbled it wasn't fair. CRemember now, I onlyknow What little Prexy said was so.D Next morning where the leak had been Nothing was found but a solemn grin On the face of the lake as it thought it o'er, The awful scene of the night before. How Waller alone did all the work, I-Iow all the others would boss and shirk, While he stopped the leak ,mid their mig CLittle Prexy said 'twas so And that is how I come to know.D hty din. ff . xxx - ' X IW ' Q g f i7 'lf 5 - b V I . -. f tJ J it lf! - 'b fi fi I il f 5 ,Q a I V ff CF , 45- I i : L:-P f?Slf?7ZEff'ED L- : .alIIl1T.ii-m ' f ' -5: R- S, Q fr ci f ,M lu r E W 31-Klepper has a ripping time. f'N V nu , . .if R , s ' .1 17 - 'I ll -' fl if 4. I ' xx W Q-yt f' , Tl 6'-'P A li ' uf I X 6 al ,,,P',i' I' gn ff., 21.1.-1 s . I . xl if HSI? Z I 1 ' U fl if 1 I . glovff ' . X , . :' 2 - l' Z 'su l aws tw .I k D av 1, 5 1 ,,. J? , l I , ,riff 1. ' as l x ,X S-4 eva X 1 As sung by Miss Seabury, O, Where, O, Whe1'e, Is My Little Ted Gone? Zona plays with fire, and after gazing in a mirror sighs and says: S'Gee, I'm glad the Glee Club boys are gone. Students are back from the holidays and Nalder is busy again. Everybody needs a boat in which to go to classes. Mabel B.- VVhat fine sleighing! Why don't Jess Bur- gan put his auto on runners P Kreager shows up for a visit and talks as well as ever. Party in Stevens Hall for Miss VValsh. 0. A. C. Basketball team is entertained in Stevens Hall. Basketball game. VV. S. C., I4Q O. A. C., 30. Glee Club makes usual hit in Pullman. Small boy in audience, as lalbot, as statue, is pushed on the stage: Gee, dat statue needs a shave badf, ..,....., ?.-- -Y . .,.... - .vt . i-..-. . A, - .,. --.,- Q , .,,.....,. WN. h.............. 4' 9-Coasting is the popular sport. Io-Orchestra plays in chapel for the wheat growers. I T 1. ejf N -: '1'f.i in X' d,,..D'f'? 'N-.g,FQ'-fx 'Q .-- . iw. N 9 .5 V C ss' ,c f-Q.: -.-it A X'-is-N 1 if fzm l e-. -..J-ffebfm aa is , '- '1 iilva'Q1'E'l ':'a-nwswlk . J i -1- 4.' i'g3'.i:?fl5' 1 P J: P Em it II-Senior Preps take a sleigh ride. Some walk back Prof. Isaacs. I2-Basketball. W. S. C. 30, vs. Colfax High 6. I3-Eighteen degrees below and going down. I4-W. I. Bryan. Mme. Schuman-Heinck in the evening. I5-J. Bender, in Physical Culture- Will those girls who are chewing gum please take it from their mouths and put it behind their ears P ' I6-Mrs. Andrews tells Bessie not to I I l'i' 'lli I ' ask again to go down town on jiftigft- naa . I llw. J., WL ll- A Ngxul U i HHBLJ I? ',' V. uri Q ,,., ,', .'u Y 'N M ' if-3.Pl f' f '- . ,. lllllu .14 -I All CHQ 'V In N D I-ids., .xfflnli Hilti M31-v K-I '1ik ,..3i2Eil'iJ. if li ig,g.Rvr,1!V 'b 3, 'V ,I A ? ha mi b' 'v-, 'lQ2'::j'IffF -t-i, , lilnifitilllimill. -e 4 I li 'i27i-l I lun xv 'in 'KW' dk mei? lim Q 'l 'llillw' '1' Ili! W lfiwmi l 'Ju ' iixfnuih if i llhx iiilil 'N 'i liii Ill' Ile 'iilf' i ilin we4m'w rlil J I lllwlgx i 5...:.4 2 I I I .1 5 igxld' liin il!!! il i indlmn I il l lei Iliiuin PQWI FIB il ri rl will - iv, .. - 23- a study night. Bess d0esn't. Found in a Senior's note book- S65O+S5O:SI3. Kind friends moved Nealy's trunk to Stevens Hall. Prof. Isaacs goes to judge a de- bate at Colfax, but returns to inquire when it comes off. -Shorty Stewart smiles at girls leaning over balustrade and falls upstairs. -Willis Knight visits VV. S. C. Same old Bill. Irish emphatically declares that he wouldn't kiss a man that 3 ti chewed. 24-Collins in chapel: These are the convictions of Presi- dent Bryan and President Brislawnf' 25-W. S. C. downs U. of Idaho in basketball. 26-Zona's eyebrows can be seen-the Glee Club is back, too. 27-Beattie and Timblin, representing' the Athletic Committee for interscholastic, work good graft. 28-All classes work on penants. 29-A few hours of skating on Lake de Puddle. 30-Exams are approaching. Everybody trying to look wise. 31- Shorty Stewart decides it is his duty to tell Nalder how to run the institution next semester. I -- V--as --I 5 B? B? ...V I il! :. .5 I -li Q tb' ' i-i:'.'L X 'i--- ..- im FJ- N-,, ,:,' 1 - - - X W 4? 5EZ??jEEE?EQilf-: ilu 155 -Exams in sight. Hay is ordered for the ponies. 'let your honesty be high in the spiritual thermometer. - Prexy. W. S. C. girls play Cheney. Score, 0 to I. 2-We play the Missionaries basketball. Score, 26 to 24. The girls' team returns from Cheney with evidences of the scrimmage still apparent. Ground hog day. . 1 'in -r-....--- Nl , p f w.,ff f7l .- 1 ' J' , . - ' f' f . .' Nl QA lf .,r .Nfl A Q.. XP iff' iii j, - .IW -F IMI ,LM - if f l - v it ' 'lr fsfar' ,ky ,Nl VW A I' g ' dx. 1 Nj, J , ft. ' ' I : all Te 5-Il. 3-Sunday. Prof. Sampson talks Y. M. C. A. on What Is Worth While. Otherwise this is a quiet day. Bill Miller and Shorty Stewart attend church for the first time this year. I if ' E X .54 I X 0, Q' . '9 ' , ' I ' if X , nur. rf' I I J h 1 ' v. N-urn I ' f '27 I Q-9' 415- , , 4 H 0 fi gb My FJ 13 . 1 i s A 3 Rell' ,CilH,l,. f Chem- . 4--JOll1l1llC Bender, young and tender, gives Miss C..'s German exam, and rounds up enough horses to begin ranching. 5-Profs. Waller and Elliott leave for.Olympia to advise the legislature as to our needs. Miss Edna K. in Eng- lish exam: A book is divided into three parts, the covers and that which is between them. 6-Felton, yelling across the street, Hey, Miss C, did I pass in Latin ? Miss C.-- No, Mr. Iielton, you got a D, but I intend to let you go on. Felton joyfully grasps his own hand and shouts loudly, Oh, Miss C, you're a brickf' Miss C. faints. 7-PTCDS frolic at Pipers Farewell to Arnett. 8-Y. WV. C. A. reception. '1..A.:-,,,.-+..,..,.+-phi: Ei- 'l ..m.,E 1:44 6? Ts .lil if-1 1 1' QM WZ n.'+lll'fu.Sml AML, --eL.::..f-ff I Q ir . . CII-Y ., K ALL.. ,I xv.-I dw- in - - ' 4 '-:app 'Nw-,eg V 0' 1-.:- .L- -' A . if ff argl! is , F .ll . -. 1 1 ,.s.,, . ar we-I ,W 1 5- , , A -s 'if T7 wi ,if in 1 K .n-- . I -. '- ' --'- 1- -' 'll li l ', 1 ll. Z ' il.-H ITT' . 5 X 'A -A ' .- ' - F ' W' 'Y . V11 XAX Nw 1.1 . Rl 1 1 if I i' 1- in 'ill xl? rr In Q-VVS defeat Idaho in basketball. Score, 21 to 19. 10-Sunday. Resolutions, drawn up by the Sporty Thfeefi read: We,, the undersigned, do hereby promise that we will go to church every Sunday night for two months, and will endeavor to get others to do so. To the latter end We will each invite a girl from Stevens Hall. If turned down, we further agree to go alone. Csignedp COL. S. SAPP. ALVA A. HAMMER. Later-They go alone. II-Tl1C second semester is launched. 12-Our girls show the Cheney schoolma'ms the game of basketball. Score, 16 to 4. Likewise our Freshies do things to Idaho., Score, 34 to 19. I3-PTCXY returns from Olympia with a S5oo,ooo smile on his face. Gene Ormsbee, '06, shakes hands with his friends. 14-Hearts are trumps. Hunt, '07, entertains his classmates. 15-The Missionaries gather us in at basketball. Score, 24 to 6. The Freshmen have a hot Cpepperyl time at I. O. O. F. Hall. Talbot stars CPD in public school'5 pre- sentation of Cinderella. 16-Our second teams defeats Palouse High, 28 to 16, in . basketball. 1 -Missionaries get us again. I5 to 14. Preps make merry at Stevens Hall. If Sunday The Sporty Three go to church alone Jo Halm calls at Stevens Hall Everybody and the chestra put on their best bib and tucl er to impress the committee of Spo kane Chamber of Com 1nerce Prexy We are delightedf' I9-Pick concludes that didnt want to go Pomeroy anyhow. so comes back and goes work again 20-Things look squally at the legislature. Nothing do- ing at college. --The Artopho did not take a picture of the chapel. 3 gl SW Q4 - I.. .MQ vf, , 1239- w . ,,',:.'::, I V -ti-Em! ' . 552' , ...Nm ,, :7'Y'Pi' 4'-'jffll . f.-ZZ: f-Ju r L -11. 5555- ' 355: Q N. '-XXYS -143 22-The Literary Societies en-'H 1i'T -- ' Ig . tertain the College. An- -Q 6 I- ffoigfrxmln..-5 nual war dance. fm., 'g. Ill'- , I . L. if X-,fu Skidoo IS a month older and our guests of the M1l1tary Ball are homeward bound Sunday The Sporty Three still look lonesome but stay by their resolution L5--S. H. Blalock, 'OSQ wins the Rhode s' scholarship. 26-Stevens Hall-Mrs. Andrew s puts ua tax on tacks. 27-Mr. Johnston sends out invitations for his English girls to call. Four 28-We welcome our new track coach, Reddy Hewitt. . X X N O X X XXX X M TCU X XX Xp. XX N X 5 X X 5 X I lmffvl 8 N X i:l,,- 1 , Q X tml! tx M s pfti flttt.. IO Y-pr., -Paul Gilmore pleases VV. S. C. students, and is pTi6SeUf6fl with a W cushion, . II The Sophomores win the Freshman-Sophomore debate. - Sunny Sunday for Strollers. Miss Cassell takes Bender and Hewitt to church. Hammer, of the Sporty Three',' begins to look cheerful. I2 Have you seen the 'KMastadon? S . . . 92 -Prexy gives a spelling lesson. The Webs and Freshies profifthereby. I ' g A -The juniors win the indoor track meet. -The Junior girls entertain the Junior boys. -'WVhere wasthe College Widow when the lights went out. Q Bub P ' -Sunday. Bread Poultice for dinner. Hammer of the Sporty Three breaks his resolutions and is on Hess's trail. -Who, with that sticky dope did smear The chapel seats, we needs must fear Will some day very much lament, And suffer eternal' punishment. -We take off our hatsl' to the College Wfidow. Have YOU hfiilrd it? Miss Mac has gone to Spokane ' tor a new hat. THE COLLEGE w1Dow CAST S S Q, .- X - X I PZ' O .S f . Q uni Q fl 2 ,P Z 5 g 5 V :i.- I Y 'lun' S Q ,ff v f 9-' if ri lf'- , ,.. fy - Wfffffffffffflfffff. I 41 , f ,fy .mfr 2 X vi .P C f P' '123E5- ,, - L0 - all , ff- LQ- Illg ..f- - Frizz x , -an X 1, X 4 . 9 i A 'N 'F ll 3 ll? ll ,ig i ll , l . - ' re I3-Prexyis 35001000 grin won't come off. The legislatu passed the bill and adjourned- ,fx- , ff l'7 fl -.- - . X- a- ' ' H my sf '- I T-T' ,,. -5i5'i?Qi 1' 1-559' 'P ,SQTI-'51 .f1'7:3'Z'h:r:Qb 4,-,.. .- iv. .- . 4 A .wa 1- 1 ..-., ,,.f qv. gg I , Q: 1: i 0,2 , 191:15 v:f,: ,L 'mis' !,:.E . :1.1':F' ' '.'u'u'igl ,Mill . f'-'va 1. '-3 115' ' 4:-.wh I- 'd5'l'i,' X - JU: ' vQh,Q,'s GW- 'QM , -115' .- Kg:-'DQS' ,sf 'M0'f'v'- .--' 'M '--::: -- - N-Tkyng, .4'.!.fiii. n0'vfv6?'- ,. ,H.'1.v,5'Q- .fini . 1. :fi '- T.: VGf?,,'f-7 'fhfufg ea-g.1,2'-151.1 ::::g' 5.115 5. 1' 2.-4 -7,-14-:.ssz.f:,',, - ' 3 L..- x'i1h'f2i5' - .fill 3 F,':':'. -rf' 571 ' If5:lfEf5'j 57. -,jfi , I 91,3 2' -j 'A . , -Jfg-,Qif 'f ff, jlhfgfg-193'-:Sififugi . 5 A ! M75 'ffl fl' A - 'x ,f---f 'ff' , ' 122 gif'-'-' :H1mc4cceii'Z'.'y,f5i-.v :en an -, .-QL? ff, ,2':f,-i',' 'N. WEE, X ' as sri' g. if -. 4-v ' . -:::' ' .' 1-0 P ' 7 - . -. ,.,g':. ?::' .'ff ' 'e '- 'T' I 'Y I ' ' ms' WN! ,L if Sufi- vy5m::::::.::::,q - ,-, LEA 21- 2, .,:-New ui q nl Chg: fuuumnuulg-H 5 ' : 563. fe 'fi iff mi- fifnffiefuei-zsffegrefi - :- - .ac-sgff' .--. muln1lnni2 'llhi::.1-' Q' f 1' v' ,if ,' ' lhWHil::f: 'i 'iiffiggi 0 , rgsfi ' f'r!.- 'H , i:l5iii I '-- ' . ' fm-':': , . - u umm ., '- ' - 1 rx gifs: :mn runny mllliiz-I px . ' ' ' 4 gpg, ,inf fulllllllllllgr nllli-3255: 1, - A ., Q I -,, nllulm! IIIII '-eg! . y 4 . . ll 'H 1, isfl. ' 'F5fffflliffl::g ::::::lfvSzEf .. QI ni - 35 ......lln::::55E5gia Q4 2 E?' :13i , . . F 0 ' .J gigsfixi- 7-Z55',iiEl l'i'f.gf- 1,-:Q.f:,. fl s 4 .. .- - ' .:?4-b',,-Lig-:' A' '3- ,'f::: -i - - ' 25 --if 5' ees ' Q iq-: f- i - S o -f 4, If -5529 - 1--,Q -1 F F .pf.5- 'e-fgq:i? l'5i,,-- . gn- . -..-v. -.4---.-65? J f 14-A Senior sits in the Freshman row. 15-Burns wins for the Sophomores in the Freshn1an-Sopho- more Oratorical. 16- 3o9 gives a dinner party. Freshmen attend U. of I. Glee. I7-Hurrah for Ireland! Norsky declares that he has for- gotten all he ever' knew about Julius Shakespeare. 18-A startling break in the regular routine of daily exercises! The Freshmen fail to have a Class meeting. Io-Matinee by College Orchestra. 20-We defeat the Missionaries in debate. Rah for Akin Davis and Goldsworthy, 1908. v 21-As usual, vacation begins the day before school closes. 26--MCCl1811lC3l Engineers install their time piece in MCCh3H1 22-Art Hooker destroys the faithless alarm clock. cal Hall. It is not a striking affair. i 26- Io hasn't any the best of me, quoted Thayer, my sister xwcg has the mumps, too. . . Q iffy 'I . ,ff -'-4.3. 28-JOl11'l1116 Bfs big show at the gym. li or Q10 . ig f as 29-The Weather still feeling bad. . '.i X 1 1 . , 4 9 rw - - Q Q fkli Il Y.: ,s f if, , 1 1 V1 N I ' A x N- GQ. dv. - -. 1Qxy': S- , . - f ,N . ' 5 ,- ,-- Q X , K Thar 11 C Q' ff ,X ri . . ff I V -F, TE, Rn-3 , 23-Calendar Reporters sick. Skidoo has the mumps. a s . . . 1 ff' . . X! f 'A X 24-The boys, attired in dress suits, attend a swel a our IH X 'Z . X 1 V Stevens Hall, where they meet the girls attired in glllg- .4 A A ham aprons and Sis Hopkins curls. VV. S. C. Booster , A 1 -T97 'Si 395221, . . . h d t. 0. W - -af., Y Linh ffzgvfffg ff .V 55g3-:!,7V,ZEg,,.,,qf,97j- if Z Club in Spokane gives a reception to t e gra ua ing V - class of the Hi. School. A 30- House cleaning in Ferry Hall. C7 , - 95 :lin Pmnrmm How pure at heart and sound 111 head VV 1th what drvme affect1011 bold bhould be the mah whose thought would hold X11 hour s commumon Wrth the dead Anil 152 tank them In Qui arma sinh hlwneh ihrm lagmg 1515 hanha npnn thvm MRS CHAS TIMBLIN aged 24 years NIISS EDNA CHENOWETH aged 20 years JAMES GARFIELD BURKE aged 23 years HORACE WIILIAM KING aged I6 years J State College of 'Was-hingtoh Tune- .Ma1'yla11d, M y M avfyland . VV e love the College on thehill, State Colle-ge of Washington! ' We'll guard her name from every ill, State College of Washington! VVe love her crimson and her gray, W'e'll sing her praises every day, W'e,ll love her ever and for aye, State College of Washington! From north to south, from east to West State College of Washington! Thy sons and daughters love thee best, State College of Washington! The Senior, Junior, Sophomore, The Freshman, Prep--all thee adore, And sing thy praises ever more, State College of Vlfashington, No matter what they chance to meet, State Collegeof Vlfashingto-n! .. T Be't victory fair or foul defeat, State College of Washington! Thy sons and daughters ever true, VVill loyally give praise to- you,- Till death shall hush their last adieu, , State College of Washington, The dearest College of the West, State College of Washington! Of instituions, loved the b-est. State College of Washington! VVhere'er thy sons and daughters roam, In mountains Wild, on ocean's foam, In War, in peace, their thoughts come home To State College of Washington! Here's to our Alma Mater dear, State College of Washington! VVho points us honorls Way so clear, A State College of Washingto-n! And where so e'er We chance to be,' Upon the land, upon the sea, 'We'll give our loyal prayers to thee ' State College of Washington! ' I MILKING TIME AT W. S. C. ' If ll bucket is 1z0f awlilalvle any old hat will do Svnrivig Commencement, 1906 Commencement week of 1906 brought to a close perhaps the most successful school year in the history of the College. Dr. Woodbtirn of the University of Indiana gave a brilliant and inspiring commencement address to the members of that distinguished band, the class of IQO6. Rev. H. C. Mason delivered the baccalaureate address in such commendable qualities, that the departing class were each thrilled with enthusiasm and desires for great advance- ments, as he goes out to proclaim his knowledge to the rising generation. The President's reception brought the students and faculty together in a different association from that of student and The Opening 1, The first social event of the school year is given annually by the Young VVomen's and Young Men's Christian Associa- tions. Cn September 2I this informal reception was held in Stevens Hall. The purpose of this reception is to reunite the old students. as well as to make welcome the new ones. All were joyous and overflowing with enthusiasm. The reception rooms were tastily decorated with Howers and autumn leaves, and as the stream of students, faculty ICO the school year. Musicals, of various nature filled the teacher, for the last time of banquets, dances and f6StiVi'CiCS week. All too soon came Class Day furnished much pleasure, yet in The acting of the players was the class of IQO6 were soon to be separated from the College. from us, and from each other, each to traverse his or her own path in life, leaving their friends to remember them by their monuments of merit, at the old College we all love so well. exercises, which in one sense another sense, sadness. splendid, but we realized that Reception and friends came poring in, there was no occasion for any one being lost with homesick feelings. The punch served by the fair .maidens was tempting, indeed, and as the members attending this first' reception of the year wended their way homeward each decided that the Washington State College was the most democratic, the most loyal and the most hos- pitable college in the Northwest, and that he was truly thank- ful that he had been guided there. . , x Fraternity Ball It is said that springtime is the time to listen to songs and music and dance to their cadence, to omit suppose there is no other time. There are other times and to illustrate, allow the writer to tell you about one of the best of those times. A It was on the evening of November Io, 1906. Everything was as perfect as is possible for a November evening to be. Not a cloud was in sight and a myriad of stars studded the dome above. Not a breeze disturbed the quiet, not a sound except the doleful peals of the city bell. Then about 9 o'clock there were waited out over the deserted streets the soothing strains of a dreamy waltz, and two score of young people glided away in the first dance ever given by the Ophites. A fraternal spirit prevaded the entire ball room.- The floor was iineg the punch was equal to any ever madeg the music was excellentg the girls-well,rfew that equal them exist. But time is ever the same punctual old personage, who never waits for either pleasure or pain. So, true to his habits, he struck the hour of twelve, and as the last notes of the 'fHome, Sweet Home died away each one present was sorry that such evenings are so short. So ended a little social affair that will long live as a bright recollection of College Days to those who were present. p IOI ' W' ' Y .Va ! I ,L iv. J 1 , lg' I 1 .,f J I . ? I s .41 v-A . Q 6 5 W I s ' 3 l 5 I Y I A .s'fi Ms, U A , V . , The Military Ball When life grows dull in heaven, and things too smoothly run, V We take a trip to earth to see how things areadone. And that is how I happened to be watching all unknown The many happy faces that thro' the glad night shone. ' The light that filled the armory of the College on the I-Iill Was asclbright as the faces that beneath them beamed at wi , I And the Hags were all about me-the Hag I loved so well- .jgv . pg: i Y 103 With the Stars -and Stripes I had fought for-for which so many fell. i And draped up in the middle was hanging the Union Jack. In fancy I traveled backward and further and further f back. W . I saw the rushing' river-the Delaware black and .deep- Those nights at Valley Forge too long and cold for sleep. And all across the west end was a shield, red, white and blue, Q k 'p e And it thrilled my heart with a joy-a joy none' of them knew. I I, , And the soft light that floated iacross touched all ,with Aa tender caress, f And bid them be glad and merry with a kindly happiness. But I heard the sound of bugles and my heartbeat fast and high . ' I As the boys in uniform in march passed slowly by. I Thereqwere-swords and bayonets plenty, but it wasn't quite the same, I For each brave soldier I noticed had a lass of another ' name. I - Then there were other couples from the common walk of p life, J A I But all seemed very happy, all -free from care,and strife. And then began the dancing, thetwo-step, and the 'three- step and ' waltz, V . And Ihyyondered as I watched them why Old Time never a ts, - I But you know its true that he doesn't, and hence in a few short hours V ' The band played the '5I-Iome, Sweet Home that song that has long, been ours. . ' When all had gone and left me, I turned and walked away, While in my heart I had resolved to come again some day. I il . 5-GEORGE WASHINGTON.,- 2 J , , fu M. gf' -- X -. 0-S1 , f f 'D fig- 61 '3.Dn G' 'GFX 3 fd' H 4 I, 1,7 V, V' NJ . Q fx F A X .X 191, ' J 1 . .- M TT VPC T A fx Viv' P A L I. f' .31 vJ,'F ' Q iznuzfiifl P-1-Vx-, ' 'X 0 ,tf I B Q .T C ,4gf1:..:,l ,554 A . J , ' 1 , kr I o . 5 , ff ..lg 0552 C, .. .,, b ' , ' F. :if W- f Qi! - H My-W' ' N A L, if 4 -4. A Q1 I X ,710 Q99 U37 ffm, Cgjfmf? cyfflwffi xx- V X - ,AV: Q.IETLqi 6 lair' I I ar' I 1 Anwwx i f A fgjfmsaa cdfmf? , Nffrv-'PT Q5L61cf1fz ' ' , - .41 ', 'fj fffgf fi 1 'f 5 ff f, 5Pf1f1f11f CQUW irwm f m r Q W W A RWM MH ,.4 f W ,E-1:29 WNY, 1, 1 , ff C-WN U'fL'5 gd f 'f1 . ' .fQ, f l fl I F I f 7,4,f5g2,L w f u mfg X Q55 ' , wx Q Li I.. 'H 'W K I Q- 1 f 1 ZJq'7f'a Q'fm'75 JfWffJWff5 ' iff TM V '11N f J' JJ Q! I x Q , flu I ,EVP 'vw' gl I . F .. 1 4 1' .f it IW, -,A' , XX 'eivil Q6n!.2UA EIYXSZYY, i?7g1,3f ' Km - U , , ' ' -IX' xrvi , -! J X- N ' 1 ' ' in , 4, ' . S9 - I1 ffxxxx N Xw fl l+ f17!57ffffl WZ-'31?gf9r7 wTc:.7r1Qf l:117!1frL2i1 X- Ml? 1 ff 1 f 3 ' v L , W, f 1 11 R--f X 1,326 IMP, ,zo Wffjj. ,. 1+ , -4g y X I 55 Q.'xQ.,Q,' 4 C, fx dba vf!1r'G1 9520166 'N 5 W' ' fXQfz w W' 'K AJ , .+L ' 'ff ZH! WSW xfwme flfwevf' x 'Z F- ' A' Ni ' 7 I ' f ,Ni 7 N , A 1L f3 J 'f1'Y Qcgwffffif-f! was Riffs xg ' -4: Saba? M gun 'FR I rf' 0 -M ,J 0 U mf fm ., ' X, X XXX L - ' Q E ? The Freshman-Soph-omore Glee, With the wonderful classes of 1909 and 1910 as hosts, what could the most pessimistic mind forecast but the best Glee in the history of the College? Nor would the even- ing of April 5th have disappointed the most optomistic hopes of pleasure, for the reputations of all the classes were amply upheld. And, curiously enough, the talent was so evenly divided that each class was well satisfied that it had 'won the much coveted penant. And no doubt each class was right, for even the judges got mixed in their votes and the tellers became so confused that it was finally decided to give the pennant to the Freshmen because, as they themselves protested, they had clearly won it. Following the songs, which displayed the musical talent, came the display of art. Projected upon the screen were scenes of college life and college celebrities, among the more notable of whom were Squirt and Toodles. Sir Wonald also appeared with a HIOH sweater tied over his manly form and a heavy blindfold tied over his swollen head. Bogus Bill, another prominent Soph was displayed as an Africanbcuri- osity this attire having been kindly provided by the Fresh- menj. Three Freshmen convicts next stood before the admir- ing gaze of the assembly. Little FreXie, Paul and Welsh having had the honor of being photographed in the Sophomore den at Home Croft. All rivalry and partizanship was finally put away as the IO strains of a grand marchushered- in another feature' of the program. Those who enjoyed dancing glided over the floor to the rythmic music, while those who didnit, glided upto the balcony to the' ice cream and cakef Any one who wished might have observed Fat Farris bravely attacking another dish just as the I farewell melody of. Home, Sweet Home prevailed upon the air, while half a dozen souvenirspoons already protruded from his pocket. And as the last sound of music died away he voiced the sentiments ofthe entire. assem- bly when he murmured with at ,sigh of satisfaction, VI have enjoyed myself. ,- jTr1f'.1'.i-1: Q-N'3.jlRfB j?m-'31-qilxf ' 1 7i'r j 'ln f.. ri' 1' .flip lj l za 1 ,. fL1 7, .1 if . q ,f',:t 'y'?3'l 5 'Uil f' ' H . M i f fl 'l l' MF 1 7' ii izrfstf mem 'frm-.i..:..... lffmflflf 'A'-'--ui:-2 lf .. .Ill F' fy ru fu HY ' -nnwf' 'Q I F. .23'f'v's 5 vw 5 N, Q 5 as 4 g Q 51.8 'fkzg tl P9- s, - -3 5.fTiMfczfiQ5 .----14's -- ! IA, -fg ' . . . -7 if . S .. Nnl. , .1 Y ff 1 s fl-I g Mens All things are conquered by the high resolve, ' 'Tis action's essence, actionis soul and core, So doth the captive wheel of fate revolve That genius gathers what it won before. Wl1oe'er has heard the notes of fame, and felt The twisted leaflets press his weary brow, Was victor when beneath the stars he knelt And told to heav'n ambition's early vow. Let torrent streams oppose their noisy wrath, And thunders bid Ambition's voice be still, The mountain shall be crumbled in his path, And storms retreat before the human will. Omnia Vincit Not, like Mazeppa on' a reinless steed, Is nian bound captive to at hopeless state! For destiny he spurs, or checks his speed, And vaults to. glory on the back of fate. The heav'ns are opened to a daring soul, The clouds are parted by the eagle's flight, The zenith is alone rnan's worthy goal, And stars are but to serve his path with light. He builds too low who roofs his temple in, T He builds too low who builds but to the stars And he who rests content if heav'n he win, May find the golden gates his prison bars. VS Ei. If T 5. 1 vm 'I ,EEA 109 Merrily, Oh! YVl'1at can compare to a day in spring, g Gone is the time the heavens shone blue, When the wind of the south, to the northward flies, For over it's face the dull clouds scurryg And the trees and the flowers with laughter ring, As the face of a sea of emerald hue i And all Nature smiles dovvn, through blue, blue skies. Is lashed into foam by the north Windls flurry For that is the time that 1ife's Worth livingg So heavens are lashed by the cold cloud mist ' When the heart goes out in cheerful giving, I And the streams and ponds with ice are kissed And the heart beats merrily, oh! But the .heart beats merrily, oh! io . lx , I L l 6 x 5- .le 4 Bmw A Z --ir c : i f . H J 'Imax A ' ij f -Tutti? f , HQ 4 I -, ' - i' ,gg ,' '-- flilf 2 r at f ee E ., f . tgm,,.o.,,,,h IOQQ .-4 V. , P 4 iv L, M. R. KLEPPER I V1i7'liIlC7' of Intcircollegiiate Oratorical Contest. 'A I N, if if wil' ,T pg '11 X r . 5 5 5 474 5 IIO Folk and the Grafters N THE legends of long ago we read of a J Q king who caused a magnificent palace to be Lzzg erected. As he viewed the massive rock- structure his he-art swelled with pride. Une day the b-uilding tumbled into ruins. What great treason has been committed here ? exclaimed the king. But a wise man said, Great master, tnere has been no treason here .3 the palace has fallen because the build- ers used mortar made almost Wholly of sand. Wliat was true of the palace may be true of our national life. ' The cementing mortar in our civic structure is defective. Qur democratic institutions are threatened by a mercenary spirit in ofhcial life which expresses itself in what is popularly known as graft Those vital principles of morality and respects for law that giye stability of structure to Ll state are Wanting, Graft, although a new word, a coined word, ex- presses a trait of 'character ancient, perhaps inherent. in mankind. f'Graft caused the fall of the classic cozr citic lish to C look T1 We have Pro' sive zen. of la XY. Sain arou comi rathi right tion polit F. or c Gov a ma taxe g'21ITl We -...,-....,-,tw - - W- V Y Y 'Y V U commonwealths, brought dissolution to the free cities of the middle ages, and forced a leading Eng- lish statesman, at the close of the revolution of 1688, to declare that In a democracy there are none to look after the interests of the pub-licf, In our own country we see graft everywhere. VV e have fought it many times. And many theories have been advanced for the solution of Thea Graft Problemf' but paramount, today, striking a respon- sive chord in the heart of every true American citi- zen, stands the Missouri Ideal, the enforcement of law, as illustrated in the patriotic fight of joseph VV. Folk. Mr. Folk's wonderful work, affecting Saint Louis, stirring the entire state of Missouri. arousing the attention of our whole nation, was ac- complished not through abnormal methods, but rather through a simple warfare in the cause of right. And in view of the former corrupt condi- tion of that state this work stands as one of the great political reforms of historyf For thirty years Missouri had been at the mercy of corporate influence, of forgery and of bribery. Governors and legislators, .nominatediand elected by a machine, acted for the machine. The people paid taxes to a government controlled by defrauders and gamblers. III It was through one Ed Butler, a man who for years managed the legislation of Saint Louis, the center of the corruption, that franchises worth mill- ions of dollars were stolen, fraudulent contracts were drawn, money was lent 5 the city was complete- ly bargained away-its streets, its wharves, its mar- kets, and all-to greedyibusiness men-to b-ribers. Concealment was unnecessary. Back of the corrup- tion stood men of wealth, men of high social posi- tion, the most influential in the- city, some drugged by special favor, others silenced by. fear. There was no man to take a definite stand for law. Thisdeplorable condition would have remained unchanged but for the accidental elevation to office of joseph W. Folk. An' accident? Yes, Butler and his machine, looking about for a district at- torney, chose vita Folk. I-Ie was little known, b-ut being a good lawyer, ,young and ambitious, theiwas co-nsidered bythe boodlers as a desirable- co-worker. Mr.i Folk's answer, however, to the offerof the nom- ination, was No'! They insisted. i At last he con- sented, but not until he had told them, that if elected, he would enforce thelawll-'50f coursef' they replied. But they assured themselves that he would yield to the influence of the machine as many ano-ther young man had done. - I Mr. Folk was electecf. VVithin three weeks, des- pite warnings, threats and proffered gold, he se- cured in open court tae conviction of eight men 'for bribery, for the simple buying of votes. As the coming of Mr. Folk was providential to the people of Missouri, so was an incident at this time apparently provicential to Mr. Folk and his warfare on graft To pay for the passing of an ordinance favorable to the Saint Louis Sub-urban Railway, 375,000 lay ready in a bank vault. This did not escape the scrutiny of Mr. Folk. He sum- moned more than one hundred men before the grand jury-councilmen, members of the state legislature, officers and directors of the Suburban Railway, bank presidents and cashiers. He forced the con- fession of Chas. H. Turner, millionaire president of the Suburban Raiyway, opened the bank vault. obtained ,tlie bribe money, and thereby secured evi- dence enabling hiin to indict seven men-five city councilmen who had received bribes and two million- aires who had given them. Consternation reigned among the boodlers. Some Hed to other states, some to foreign countries. ' How should one chase a thousand. And two put ten thousand to flight, Save the course be that of right? II2 But the boodlers soon rallied. VVithin twenty-four hours a meeting, representing morethan 330,000,- 00o.of private Capital, Was held to consider this young giant of right. At lirst they sought to bL1Y him with office and money, then they threatened him with political destruction, and even with assas- sination. The police department, whose obedience was necessary if Mr. Folk was to carry out his plans, allied itself with the boodlers and sent word to the young attorney that henceforth it would re- ceive only written orders. iiOl:f1CCT,,, said he to the nianiwho brought the message, Ngo. and tell those who sent you that hereafter my communications with their departmentwill b-e in the form of indict- ments. Encouraged by success and led on by his ideal, he stood undaunted b-y direct threats and looked forward to the prosecution of the criminals. Defending the first of the indicted councilmen brought to trial were six of the ablest criminal law- yers in the state of Missouri. But Folk, the cor- poration lawyer, met them point by point, display- ing a knowledge of criminal law well-nigh phenom- enal and at once lifting himself into the ranks of the foremost criminal lawyers in the country. He convicted the man,and sent him to prison. Right prevailed under his master hand, which without mal: arm agai evid bers day. T rest of tl Butl aire, ernc elect grea the I Bette und: T tests est 1 been been was. his 1 pled conx malice or partiality, did its duty. Thrice is he armed who hath his quarrel just. Providence again intervened, giving Mr. Folk voluntary stateis evidence by means of which all the remaining mem- bers of the city council were indicted, sixteen in one day. Truth, as thus personified by Mr. Folk, will not rest until it reaches its goal. The center and soul of the corrupt council remained yet unpunished. Ed Butler was still at large. This man, a bold million- aire, had nominated and controlled Missouri gov- ernors for years. ' He had himself nominated and elected Folk as district attorney, and, during the greatest activities of the new attorney, had bought the passage of a franchise through the council which netted him a quarter' of a million of dollars. With undaunted courage Folk indicted Butler. Then came the trial. Fo-lk had been thoroughly tested by the other trials, but this one was the hard- est of all. Other boodlers and law-breakers have been b-rought face to face with the law, but few have been supportedas was this one. Defended as he was, by the ablest lawyers in the country, backed by his own colossal fortune, and by millions of dollars pledged by the most powerful men of the state, to convict him seemed almost impossible. AII3 The trial was held not in Saint Louis, but in a neighboring town where Folk had gone to find un- biased jurors. It was a memorable event, a splendid example of the triumph of constitutional govern- ment over bossism. The little old courthouse- was thronged. As prisoner, prosecutor, witness and juror passed through the door the eye caught this prophetic inscription chiseled over its portals many years before: O justice, when driven from other habitations make this thy dwelling place !', How appropriate! Unlike the hand writing on the fes- tal hall of Belshazzar of- old, this was no enigma. The wayfarer, though a fool, need not err' there- in. Every man seemed to understand. , The trial proceeded. Eolk seemed moved bythe spirit of those pregnant words. Never before had he pleaded so earnestly, so sincerely for the cause he championed. The lawyers on the defense were pleading for the millionaire, Ed Butler. Mr. Folk was seeking not so much to convict Butler as to maintain the rights of the state. .It was not the mere case of Butler he beheld, he saw before him the people of Missouri and of the great American nation. Search the time of Lincoln, Clay, Calhoun or of jefferson and Washiiigton, and you will fail to find men actuated b-y a more lofty purpose than that of joseph VV. Folk. Little wonder that he seemed inspired when he put forth his final plea. Missouri, Missouri, he said, with simple convinc- ing sincerity, I am pleading for thee, pleading for thee. He barbed this idea and made it stick in the minds of these twelve jurors. The verdict was Guilty as charged. During the four years that Mr. Folk was dis- trict attorney he indicted more men for bribery than ever had been brought to justice for that contempt- ible crime in an equal length of time in any other place in the world. This is his record: Forty indictments, twenty convictions, eight men now serv- in g in the state's prison, Then came that remarkable cam JaiO'n for the b governship of Missouri. The political machine leveled its most powerful guns at Mr. Folk as at a shining target. The State Central Committee, in league with the money power, opposed him with a vehemence hitherto unknown even in politics, and thus all the potencies of political achievement array- ed themselves in one solid phalanx against this lone standard bearer of truth and righteousness. But as David stood before Goliath, he won. How was it l P lX t lj ntrigue f Fulk l t N t cone. 'o J f i Q' g or c is iones . o by organizationg he was no organizer. Not by his TI social standing g for he was almost nothing in the social scale. Not by a campaign fund, he had little money. Not b-y oratoryg for he is but an ordinary speaker. VVhat was the secret of his success? It was his cause, his ideal, his sincerity. He had but one speech, though he delivered it many times. He went among those plain Missouri farmers and told them the truth. This is what won: Day after day, says he, I appealed to public sentiment until pop- ular opinion became cyclonicf' He made them see the value of the enforcement of the law. Far from dazzling him, success became an addi- tional weapon. He attacked the railroads, and forced the abolition of the obnoxious free passg he routed their lobbyist at the state capital, he ad- justed differences between labor and its employers: he secured the passage of a bill regulating freight ratesg he readjusted assessments and taxationg he made education compulsory, he enforced the Sun- day-closing law, he put to- flight the race track gam- blers, and he closed the Delmar track, the most notorious gambling place in the United States. And thus he proceeded on his course of the simple en- forcement of the law, until today Missouri is the one state in the Union without a single dead-letter law on its statute books. Fc tic OU dit GP tic tht caf Yr coi :IE ser the Xe ing CW cit for EC He OP int bv rie .dry .x ij, Now what does all this mean? From joseph W. Eolk and the people of Missouri the American na- tion can learn a much needed lesson. We have seen one of our foremost states in a deplorable civic con- dition, we have seen this one man, molding public opinion, redeem that state from bossism to- constitu- tional government. I-Iow? By simply enforcing the law. But Missouri offers not the only shocking case of corruption. Witiiess Pennsylvania, New York and Connecticut, states run for the insurance companiesgl' consider New Jersey, the traitor's state, and Rhode Island, the state for salegw ob- serve Colorado, controlled by millionaire miners and the railroad lob-byg and think of the land frauds of Nevada, California, Utah, Oregon, Idaho and ,Wasli- ington. Here are conditions which should cause every honor-loving, every truly patriotic American citizen to hang his head in shame and hesitate be- fore further boasting to the world of the Liberty, Equality and Fraternity of our great republic. Here are conditions which an aroused pub-lic opinion must destroy, for, though Folk himself intrepidly fought for the rights of the people, it was by the aid of public sentiment, after all, that he car- ried forth his efforts to a successful issue. Public opinion can do similar or even greater things, in any II of our contaminated commonwealths. Public opinion is supreme. Before it kings have bent the knee, and empires have fallen. In answer to its im- perative demands the world's greatest constitutional freedom has come-The Magna Charta, The Peti- tion of Right, The Declaration of Independence, and The Constitution of 1787. Enlightened public opinion forced Lincoln to proclaim the Emancipa- tion Act g it freed Cuba, and it brought peace to Rus- sia and Japan. I If only this mighty force may be so aro-used as to support the universal enforcement of the law, as this Missouri citizen has aroused it, then will boss rule ,give place to constitutional government. Qui' greatest need is not new law, b-ut the enforcement of the laws already enacted. VVe lack civic conscien- tiousness, and a dignihed regard for law, not only in public ofhce but in private life. Let the civil officer know the existence of every law within his jurisdiction and then let him execute, not ignore itg let the private citizen obey the law, even though it seem unjust. The best way to ab-rogate an obnox- ious law is b-y vigorous enforcement. Mr. Folk is an American citizen imbued with the highest of our American ideals, a man who has superbly demonstrated the value of the enforcement of the law, the power of public opinion, and the supreme fact that America has willing men to cham- pion the cause of right. He has proved that the American nation has men capable of giving to so noble a work a power courageous in attack, unsellish in purpose, and devoted in heartg men who are anxious to carry the torch of 'progress along the up- ward and the onward path. Let us, then, arouse that mighty force-public opinion. Let usfdevelop a wholesome respect for law, so that all menwill obey it. Let us select ex- ecutives who will enforce the law without fear. with- out favor. For, by so doing we shall array against graft and corruption the only forces that can des- troy them. V To perform this work- God give us men. A time like this demands Strong minds, great hearts, true faith, and ready hands, Men whom the lust of office does not kill, Men whom the spoils of office can not buy, Men who possess opinions and a will, - Men who have honor-men who will not lie, Men who can stand before a demagogue, And damn his treacherous flatteries without winking, Tall men, sun-crowned, who live above the fog, In public duty and in private thinking, For while the rabble, with its thumb-worn creeds, Its large professions and its little deeds- Mingle in selhsh strife, Lo, Freedom weeps, lfVrong rules the land, and waiting justice sleeps. p 2 -' mi -sU,g ij II Melancho The shades of evening gently falling, Slowly comes the night. The joyful birds have ceased their calling, Darkness veils our sight. 'Tis at this hour I love to wander In a forest glade, , Or sit for hours to muse and ponder, - And watch the shadows fade. I list-the murmuring hemlock sigh, f The fir trees sadly moan, The whispering pines, their heads on high Give forth a muffled groan. Then all is stillg the gentle ,breeze Has softly gone to rest, It now has ceased to stir the trees Ur fan the hill-top's crest. ly, Sweet odors come from all around: A balmy spot is this. - The night dews dampen all the ground, Each adds its share of bliss. VVhen in the shades of melancholy-,i Some lonely spot to own, To shun the things of mirth and folly, One seeks to be alone. In such a mood 'tis sweet to call The Muses of the dale, Seek out some lone nocturnal hall Within the forest vale.- The pines can chant the sweetest rhyme, Each one a story tells, The oaks their tender chorus chime In sofe melodic swells. In every life there must come hours, - When one so. lonely grows 9 - I Our inward sorrow always towers, No other human knows.. II7 ...4.... ,v,.. Q .....l+wQ-va-mf Q The Victor He wins in all life,s battles 'VVho is willing to pay the cost, He conquers who is not conquered VVhen the battle is fought-and lost. X!VilO will turn to meet the future i VV'ith a heart that knows no defeat, Who scorns not to follow the reaper, Though another may garner the wheat. Oh, it is not always the victor Who weareth the victor's crown, But the one, who with heart undaunted In the force of the battle went down. 51 : ... 'E l W . -4 I ' I - ' -- .. if-11rr'l -I .,.fuy.-.971-Mlmg.. 1 f IIS i The Sea Up from the depths comes the sullen pulse Of the tireless, treacherous sea, As it vainly dashes the rock-bound coast. And laughs in savage glee. And I gaze with awe on its broad expanse And it's shimmering dark blue deepg For countless fathoms beneath it's waves, The spirits of brave men sleepg Where fishes sport among coral bones, And tinny monsters creep. .ir V -f...h.,......-.1---..-.-1 ..1...........-, s .. W Y , , I I ,-, ,L I ,P Ideals Ideals? Ah, what are they? ' Phantoms, visions, foolish schemes gi Sirens luring us away ' To waste our lives in idle dreams, 4 p X And mock us when vve're old and gray? ' Q 3 VVhat are theylour high ideals? QQ Stars, that light life's dreary Way 5 , Calls to action-trumpet peals 5 ! Gleams of some Elysian day - , Q' That Faith's prophetic eye reveals, Ad Q K For which We live, and toil, and pray. A 1 , ,, 9- - K IS 'Mi 'W Q Q p f - i i 1 1 'WHEN 1 A -' 75 4 119 X - ' bb fifzwff l V74 A17 X' A X 1 X-vc X x sl- 1 Y fx i 1 v , , ,,,, f, W Y, ' . , Xxf-,i-63 I' ' X515 .. 1 ZS xvybuqgngifgur , Lg, X X fir? ', I T'- 'xl '-Q -t.'xyfn6ATl0'7 af 1. - ii-'4+w a.uoH9,-. N 1 HW' .s Q Y 4 Liga-'xr - 99' J f wg W- M FI bij, .. f. , 5 B f P v a X l il lu , g r R Ihqkx Z... ' xl ! am , SX 3 l . - um a' rg 7 if , NYIAS X 4, ,x x 2 A W. S. C. Football Team A - f I' , Blair ..... --o vs. W. S. C. ........ I1-at Pullman Montana ...... 0 vs. W. S. C.--- --- 5-at Missoula S. A. A. C. ..... 0 vs. W. S. C. .... --- 4- Spokane Gaines Idaho ......... o vs. W. S. C.---. ..... Io- Pullman S. A. A. C. .... o vs. W. A. C.--- --- 8- Pullman VVl1itn1an ...... 0 vs. VV. .S..C. ........ 6- Pullman Totals ....... 0 I22 44 vu --' Y v -- --'-- '--- Y---W Y--Y-. avr... Y... -,..,,.,. ,,., ,, Y avr vp coach -x xy r ,. 4 J Q 9 l Q I..-., I ,,,.,. - .1 1 N . 511-FP NGK? ' NISSEN L:H MINER L.-E enum fred' QEQQEQQQQQ Elementary School Football Team ARTHUR BETAQUE Captain CHAS. TIMBLIN Mazzager QQEQQQQQQQ nr- 2 - fr I .Iii H 1 , 'll 03 . 5, K. N ' W. S. C. Records . Standard Events IOO-Yard Dash, R. M. Godman ............. ..... 1 0-1-5 sec 220-Yard Dash, R. M. Godman ..... 440-Yard Dash, O. A. Thomle ..... 880-Yard Dash, I. B. Evans ...... I-Mile Run, W. C. Kruegel ........... 120-Yard Hurdles, F. T. Barnard ...... 120-Yard Hurdles, G. M. Hardy my .... 120-Yard Hurdles, A. A. Hammer C065 .... 220-Yard Hurdles, P. O,BI'1Cl1 ......... - --- High Jump, E. Person- ....... -- Pole Vault, Ralph Cowgill C'o6D--.-- Discus, J. L. Thayer C065 ...... Shot Put, Fred Preston .................. Hammer, I. L. Thayer .................... Relay, Cowgill, Qckerman, Coe,-.Thomle---.--.- -----22 4-5tsec -----5I 2-5 sec ---2 min.'5 sec 4 min. 392 sec -----4-I6 2-5 sec. -----16 2-5 sec -----16 2-5 sec -----27 I-2 sec ----6 ft. 7 in -----1o ft. Sin --1o5 ft. 6K2 in -----38ft.6iI'1. ----II7 ft. I in --5 min. 34 sec ll n Q 5 p Track iSeason, 1906 I . A , A ' W'. S. C. Opp. April 28. U. of M. at Missoula ...... .... 5 1 62 May 5. Whitman at Walla' Walla .... -- SQ 61 May 18. Idaho at Pullman ....... -- 52 72 Tearn - A Reading from left to right. Top Row-F. O. Kreager, Manager, Bloom, trainer. Second Row-Drew, McKenzie, Turner, Coates, Hubbard Love, Thayer. Lower Row-Moulton, Coe, Ockerman, Hammer. llalony Thomle, Capt., Cowgill, Capt.-elect, -. ......,L..-.a....f..A....u-..i. J Y--........f -- -n.-.- ..................... , - . I 1 lm I 9 I r V . I 5 f 1 ' t n 1 ' A . ,ii fag: ,pjtvgx NVQ ,lg- UM Wi -iii? v I 1 ,if ' U F I I1 31. 'I I 1 Y l 4 L l I i NE 5 3 i 5 . E E + 1 I '55 ii F K1 1 5 . L3 s ' i 1 L K 3 Q 3. g L Qt ll , fl f 5 N 4 Northlwest Intercollegiate Baseball Champions Team Brown Thompson WVeller I-Ialm McCully Triplett Worley Garred Nissen Meyer Fullerton A . W f y :Eh L 'W' I II? fe' 37' QR April 4. April 5 April 6. April 10. April II. April 20. April 21. April 25. April 27. May 2 May 5 May 9 May IO May II May I2 May I4 May I6 May I7 May 18 May IQ June 8 June 9 5 Total 222 22222222 22222222222 I I I I Wifi UJUJUJCDUJUJUJUJUDUJ : ' UD I P7 U3 2 F1 FJ l ' 34 VB Q Q vu E' P1 'FU 3, , K1 EI P-I O N -FU IT! F Mr-' 5 3 Q UQ 'S Q OOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO I I I I I I I I I I I Games I Lewiston Normal ...... Clarkstown ......... -- Lewiston High --- Spokane League .... Spokane League .... Butte League- ......... Blalr ........ --- U. of I. ........ Whitman ..... U. of I. .......... Palouse ............... I4 Willamette U. ---- Willamette U. ---- U. of O. ........... ,- U. of O. ............ Chemawa Indians--- Athena Yellow Kids Walla Walla ------- '- Whitman ---------- Whitman --- Moscow --- -- Palouse --- -- 125 Total ---- -----125 .134 FRANK BROXVN, Captain Battery W. S. C. lVIcCully-Thompson Nissen-Thompson Gerrad-Thompson lVIcCully-Thompson I-Ialm-Thompson McCully-Thompson Halm-Thompson McCully-Thompson Hahn-Thompson McCully-Thompson Halm-Thompson McCully-Thompson Halm-Thompson McCully-Thompson Halm-Thompson Nissen-Fullerton Nissen-Fullerton Gerrad-Fullerton McCully-Fullerton Halm-Fullerton I-lalm-Thompson lVIcCully-Thompson - N J . I 4 L 4 I .Yfg,'l . I ,I I I I m' 'fa 1 U I s I P E 4 i 1 5 ! Q , I 2 E 1 I + 1 A f xiii?-J I '-'I I I I ' I I . ix. I I : I I Jan. Ian. Ian. Ian. Feb. Dee. -8. Feb.. Q. Feb Feb I Basketball , Boys' Team GAMES O. A. C. ....- -- Colfax High ....- Cheney .... ---- Idaho ..---- ------ Whitman .....- -- Spokane High '- Idaho ...... ------ 30 6 IO 9 24 I2 18 Whitman' .... ----I4 eWhitman, Qnd g.- -24 .-..--Q Cheney .... --- 6 XV. 1-I I c, ::r' .Dv PU tid CD VUUPH7 F' 'sn':sQ,, 94 c:-.Q... M fbrbff' tv-fg U, . o Q :I Q-SL. rp? '1 1 14- EJ N . 4 5? :DOO -573 GETS ali 'SP- Qfzfri 2' 521 S'- ofm E. o :+I 14 :- 'S E E. U3 mmwmwm .C. .... . C.- .... ...-- - - . C. .... .---- - -- OSCOXV .C. ........ ---- V' . o o : 1 ' : : I I I I I U70 'UD' .OCD ?T',I3 mm 'C3'4 ra. I: I 1 . I, I :I 545' I mm ' , :HB . X311 I-1-U7 I Q59 ro:-' G an Q 'Q' In 'U ll 11 ' II Z. U1 I -0 wi-1 as 2 'NX1 .. an f' v-I 1 an min fig: I- 7i:O ' mm HD: .. fm-3' I I :Z ll 5 II ' I C UJUJ bi.. S. C--- I' Y X 1 U I 8 X .X W' K Bs . Mx i ' :QE I f l ' n 'x K 11. ,,4 - -- 4 Q 4 A I f 3 5' 4 1, f' -I I I n X . mx, 1 in . w 2 5 P Q I Z ,, 6 , ' Q A v if I- 5 FW T eeffi-1-X Q 4 ,II N Records Made in the Interseholastie Contests held under the auspices of The Washington State College Q3 Event 1905 1906 1 Event 1905 1906 Won by Ptenn Won by Penn ' Won by Williams qWon by Godfrey IOC Yard Dash Time: IO 3-5 sec. Time: IO 1-5 sec Broad Jump Dist.: 18 ft. IO in Dist.: 18 ft. 8 in. Won by Fenn Won by Fenn ' Won by Wills Won by Solberg 220 Yard Dash Time: 24 sec. Time: 24 4-5 sec. 120 Yard Hurdles Time: 18 2-5 sec. Time: 19:0 Won by Kembel Won by Solberg Won by Crocker Won E. Lockwood 440 Yard Dash Time: 56 2-5 sec. Time: 56 2-5 sec. 220 Yard Hurdles Time: 28 1-5 sec Time: 29 3-5 sec. . Won by Huxtable Won by N. Lake n ,, Won by Corbett W'on by Laird Half M116 Run Time: 2:11 3-5 Time: 2:15 W I2 lb' Haml Throw Dist.: IOS ft. 7 in Distance: 119.3 ft. - Won by Huxtable Won by Waldron i - - Won by Semper Won by Skidmore M116 Run Time: 4:54 Time: 4:54 2-5 A Dlscus Throw Dist.: Q0 ft. 5 in. 97.1 ft. Barrows, Osborne, Storer, C. Smith, W . . . Half Mile Relay Galbraith, Brower Thompson, Fenn 12-1b. Shot Poe D. QU by Smells. .WOH by LEWIS, Time. 1.39 4-5 Time. 1:38 ist.. 38 ft. 7 in Dist.: SQ ft. IO in. , Woo by Brown Won by Hood L W b Bl ' W . 1 -- e Heh Jump Height, 5 fb 3 in Height, 5 ff. 4lI'1. Pole Vault HeCigl1t,39ft.eg1ii1T Hecigl1tl?39E.ed1iiiD 142 First Inter-Collegiate Tennis Tournament W. S. C. Versus Whitman W. S. C. Team-Stuht and Anderson. A - Wliitman Team-Dodwell and Parker Singlqes. - First set-Dodwell 6, Anderson 4. Second set-Dodwell 6, Anderson 4. Third set-Dodwell 6, Anderson 3. A Doubles. First set-Whitma11 6, VV. S. CQI. Second set-Whitman 6, W. S. C. 2. Third set-Whitman 6, W. S. C. 3. V' 'ff' s Ta 4 I43 1 S f 1 Ia. 1 3 H034 ...Ng .M Q , I ,H , 14f'Ww7 f ,, ff , U '7,'f',!yf'W, WW :'f 117279 ' W,-, , ee ?HZ,Q-4313 0 , 2,51 f ff A. F7 ww M Ew- M, fm-. -, X N VAXX-51,1 1 5 , f . x wwsfR:.:5fz5N2XW,AW W xy :Agfa H A - Q55 Q Swag f-X 2-Q1 Q5 QXXNQX xky X- , W1 7, ' , W. mi, ik'-A 1 Jwwligrtlxlt ' -213 X W my 4 as ax as W X , ,L . M. A x..,.. , ,-,, W , I x gigqixi X try- . X . p ' 5 X A . Q 5,x,5R..x Us 1 ,L . ,, , X X gvogx X A A ,X Q .i Y. - l 1 l 1 THE BOYS DORM I , . l. li V E -n I H i gf 3 l 1 . 1' -is ,qffl ,L i - . S 1 Q I, ' - 5 :.::'.'.Z :EI-. 1 . o:.:::,o :Sgt E ---::g'::P::R 5 E , 4. Jr? :::::, -'LE 'V I - ink N 4 E E WSE? N 1 ' h- - ws - -s .say ah' X x 1' N NIXXX 1 .:.:, It-:gr 1 x ,, - l 1 P. - qi.. -1' , ' Q'-1 ..j:7'v ' A ,align f vii, , l ll' N: .W 3? Q X pi., ug: I.. -:J 1,31 I ,g 1 . - , ., . , I 4 i I - l 'I , N X if egg:-'FQ 1261 'vi' N S X LI, TA Max ,Em v ' h f Qs gr 1 341 V 'Q 11,11 MW ll - I iZ'f '? Q T l , -4 1 , 'lv I , . Q 1 1 1 - L , ' f f 10. 11vfltlt11'f 'l1l'1'g-:ll 'lw+:llilll '1l' r '- 1 1 1 M -rf' 111' l ., Y.,1I11q,1pL' .Jil 'ly fl f,I,'l bail. 14,4 V J I ,I I I 4 I4 'IW .I nh v . l?llll'1l,,1'-'lll..1f:li1:il.:l.:.ff1'l1 lfl'1:'1:an 1',1:lJi.,f ' X 4-J W 'il il Y 'Z9 'lilifll'i egg. L, V, 141.51-,,111.1--l.'ll,lll.1-' '11 -Q 'll' '1:1iw . --f-0' M - naar , km 'Q 1unlllllm.a'l1-1l'l1j' up ,m1li.11111l -4, .7 S Z' figs 2, 1, 1 .4 if 4 - 'il lmll lV1Alllllll' ll llll' ,f- ff - - 6? 1 2 - 7 ff - ff' - X . ,,, ' 1,'- 1l ' .4 7 37- T117 ' ' I 'ff' 7 '71 ' . fi 1 1'z'f11-,few ., -f 1 , - 4 11 , 1, M1 ' 1 -1 1- 2 , 4, .ffJfL ,f ' ff 'f 5:39. ff ., - 1 vl'Il r1n H , - ' 5 ,ff W' X 17X ' l?Z alum: Hug' 1r1uIlll 'l I ml' . ,- . , ' . 1 f 4,4 ,, : 4 ,. . A I ' sg' ' . ' .11v+'7Ffllll W'T5Z2Wl'lfll5ll'lf? ' ,-Q if f f .. 11... ..u11, ll' ll ' 3 'W ' 1 ' ' ' ,11- ,,,,,, ,af ff i 'T JA , fy 7 '. Q' 42 ' ' 11 ' . I, vp,-ltl U1 1 IW ,IL1v.1.1l.1s.1! -'Zh 255. Q! f ,j,g?'45Z,,,!2 ljif My lf, 7 df .,,,g,, hu, U' It qpmll vMs1,,1lU1 1 1 11uI l ff.' l ' ' ' H '. 1. WW X' ffff 'yxf . ' 1 ' 11.v'f 'lla 1 ,.. 1 up: elf-'1-111---. ,l1 'l ll f' , ' 'IKA77 'WC' 1-Hu. 4 l 'IIII' , 111- H' ' l .-. ,,, ,,1,, . ,111 'I I ,lui 1 9 9,574 . . Za 10 10 11 lilly, I 3 ' ' I HI ',..1M1.1....11-1 ' - I ,A V -1.1---1 14 ,W Ayn 111 f t 'vu' '1 '.1 '7llU ' 1Qll ' ' 111ifvrf'wf1.-m f-'20 1 f ft I nt:-:iii --1141 'vw' w - ' ....1.11w I -1 . 1 1 ' ' - s ': 's 4 , - M1111 1qlll1lnlll ulqup lflv. 1' Q1 JUII- 11. 11. N l laqsgizgggtzgz. v'll 1' IPI Illlllllp 'Hwy lllll Illllllf- l r The Associated Students, an association for undergraduates of botfa sexes Cmales and females mostly D, is by all means the most popular organization Cof its lcindj in the Wasli- ington State College. This year it numbers among its mem- bership every student in the institution: also several Vets. All persons becoming students of the College are extended a cordial invitation to join this excellent society. All are welcome. None need hesitate to ask for admission as no blackballs are ever cast. No one is excluded by rea- son of race, color or previous condition of poverty tprovided he has the pricei' when making applicationb. For the accomodation of members the initiation fee is made I payable strictly in advance. This is only One Dollar and its payment entitles the payee to all the benefits, privileges and immunities of the Society. But thereafter the members are expected to pay all dues and assessments regularly and prompt- ly at the beginning of each semester. Objects of the Association-Thus far undiscovered by any of its members. Immunities-Freedom from arrest during good behaviour. Also freedom from contagious diseases if you do not be- come exposed. 'S Special Privileges-Not any. Principal Benefits-None worth mentioning. S l ' l 1 l l STUDENTS, ASSEMBLY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE .. , 4 .94 - ,' '.-,gif-. -:Lt -. sg 7.4. - ...,. ha.,-.f 4 ,..,,, I ,I,I.., I.I.I-x9.I:,:iI..II.xy.,. , , .I... ,I-.-I. I Hun wII,N4.I I.. II 1. ,,. ,, 1: II I .. , ,.a1.-..'p,:'.:,i..,7.I fi 1. :Pr '. s ao.-sr 'sw 4 lh...:f..gv, wie. . W-,.a'ie'-.-vii--1-. 'f-1'.n.1r14xQqj.::-1:1 fs'-. -'s V 'ffffJ: -1'1 : ,'., :.- X.-F :f.rVp '--cQ.:w.'-1.1'-::.-' -.-'- gee- -1Ifgi.:ax3.r1.'..V. ,x'f.-- , '-12'--? .45-F 12-is L A '-' .. ,., ga- -,,.f-. V: .:-5: A , .. ,..,, -5. 1-..t, ,- , t an 1. . ',,1-an A -I ., f 4' V1.5 - - NV , S G.--' L Q','f,.r - :--- - fF 7A'Au4...-.,-,gflsz -'ivfnia' -,-.1g-g-.-- 7' 5 VII 1 :vp-1 'ig' : y -': F- --:I-.g . ':gf::- .N f V .A-...L .g. '- 1-YLY1-, a-:g.',-- 31 g.izZ231i:-11. -' 1'a'V-Fa, .gl -, X' . .1 V-5--if 1 -.L?1 '. '--if,-11? 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If -514 avg-L,-ff-.af--'vii-lf. .-Swvfziyl-:. .. ,t'f.reski?v:g- -:lb -te..?f- '- ' .----' --. . va.:-bv. - .. 'i1'- . f1z'4---E- : 1S1'a-5'-r. ifuf' 'J xt?-Q..-M '+V '-f-t2s::::- 5 'e 'v fvw - 'Ju' X ER. --4,S,1,-.f.x,.v - .wg :Q -1...-,x,:?,-.-,.Q.ga5-49 2. ,ff AI -,', 'Ave-th:-55 .fx-ws. N'r.:-...DL V ...q. - 5:-.-S.- -. 155.-.ul- .gubxis REM:-iff-'ui'3 31-1225.525-,.Q:r. lif.L s-ef f? - A - -ff:- -Q' mf? .4 sam .-lg - -. -'f ge fer- ..- -x -' ' ...c 1' map. 1- -4---.--L-T ' ' P7 - f ' 4 . LJ- , , -:--1-'I-:.V-.1-I its-wig 4-3. V I 51.59. I,iI,,,:IjfIIa.- I .. : .gift gr I4I. ,.... - I . . I JIM - ., M. +,I -5-.e4.5i5.f...-l,,7.gAf'g:3?,4gy,x.gI..If3. . ' -1 .' '-.. -5- - .- . --' - f , Q-.fer v-5-'ff-a-3-A .V v I . zilgrffzsapf- - ' W ' 4 f' -1 f Ewa When such men as Governor Mead express themselves as being proud of our military organization, we can take credit to ourselves that not only do the cadets present a splen- did front to the general public, but they are helping to pro- duce a well-trained and efficient citizen soldiery. This means: much to our nation for in the advent of war she must resort to the patriotism and ability of her citizens. Our department has grown from a small batallion of two companies to a regiment of seven, and each year sends out officers capable of commanding the units in the regular army. To the I Rookie, who drills here for the first time, great opportunities arise in the form of night guarding around the Armory or repelling imaginary attacks of some Htrumped up military source. Taken in conjunction with the company drill. these side issues serve to straighten and broaden the view as Well as the shoulders of the new man. He is taught to command and to obey, things indispensable in our future everyday life. Each year he is given a week in camp to be further initiated into the mysteries of army life and after be- ing tossed in the big blanket he is no longer a Rook, but a veteran. V . l i l . l N v 5 I I I I - , 1 1 V i l i ' l , W 4 I ,.... -.,..,,.-,-,-,--- ,f,.,-.,,.,..,-..--,,..,.-,-..g..-w,..,...,,,,.,v-,- . -.,,,,,,, - -, ,,,,...,,v,.,,,,.,m,,,.,,-.v ..- Y, . Tp ,off :- M ,Q Q I X Q, ww 5 11 ,.f'-gm X XFFEQ T:--' xx P. S Qiisx Xwx-xx , WM :-21 wi 1.. - ,,f,- 1-.4-551:35 M. v- g:-:g15q,.ff QA , .M-.1 9- - va ..f ,Q 2 S 11:91 1 cf .f . , . . Q if 1.-:Z-:-,eg.:.,Ftc. - 3 X x x3N 4 z- x bf. 'fl ci, 3 xxx 2928 N 4. '-ui ,... -4, .-....., my- F I .,.,.t l 1 , . V t N, B ' Q gg pr - 'f N g ' It would seem that the time had come when it is no longer necessary to call attention to the large measures of success attained by the majority of the graduates. Their numbers are such now as to carry far and wide the reputa- tion of the Alma Mater and their work speaks louder than Words. To those who are inclined to turn aside from their pursuit of an education we Alumni would extend the hand of en- couragement. VVe are able to tell you from experience that it is rare, indeed, when the obstacles are too great to be over- 152 come, that much of the value of an education lies in the pro- tracted effort necessary to acquire it, and that an important factor in the strengthening of character is the successful com- pletion of any set task. You who expect soon to go out from the old College with her certificate of approval in your hand we would urge to consider the effectiveness of concerted effort in securing good appropriations and gaining prospective students. Join or help organize a local association and work together for the good of the Alma Mater in all her various activities L Y X it xxe 5 Z 5.m.Q.H. The only organization in the State College which exists solely to be of service in developing the religious nature, in upbuilding the moral character and manhood of the men in this institution, is the Young Men's Christian Association. The men of this organization believe that in unity there is strength, and have, therefore, united and combined their energies in order to develop strength-strength of character. With this purpose in view, a systematic religious propa- ganda is carried out. Bible study courses are offered. Another most important phase of the work is the regular Sunday 'aft- ernoon service.i At these meetings, which are largely led by I older men of experience, and partly by students, the object is to bring the men into closer touch vvith the? life' of Christ and with the humanitarian, philanthropic movements of the day, and thus, in addition to making them better informed men, awaken in their hearts the spirit of altruism, of unselfishness -without which life is a mere existence-an utter failure. At these meetings the living issues of the day are discussed, and as a result the men who attend are forming higher ideals of character, of manhood, of Christian citizenship. The Y. M. C. A. is here to be of service toyou. Give it a chance. J . i-i,.e:e?..Vi1,i ,,i 7 um l ' IIIIIIII1 I.. 'snag' 'I' : 3 gl.. XY f l EEf.fIi1vi-:.':!:7i'JI-!..2'.LfE::: zesirei.-'i:::Z2:::':-E55 an E Q 5 I ml:-'-'l --- -- --g 'i::a:-- ..... .... ....---.I.:.' !l!EilEg....... -'gtggllriiiggh-,, I.---Eu mg., I ,gm l nnlilggglggnlnllunnuu Q Q - - .au L- --2-mmm: Q O19 ' 'fmt Qtr ,aw . ..... . ,.. ...,,. . , , . ,. , . .. ,, ,, -a ff it gf i kihp 'uHH'L59MJ7'r i? Q-' JJ N54 it fi RNA f., Q V rw . f gffff E ,O ,f cc it reflux X Q! ef tl 4 i..rf,f .M f or XX nf W N XQL, L ' a . ' ' - - n--:nun--un :nn--nu-gn-um--u: ::: S gnqmrauzlun m1 11 I Il ! :In ':': I'---'Il' I li nav: Ei: gal: gg Y -1 - : za- E 5.-1 gnc! ' Q - 5 ' rivals:-' .H - ni V -'I '---I ' '-.- -.--qhhq - H - I E Fi!!-.i::::.d.-..--.e..1.u .::::::--- vers' e. .-: .5 .-. ..... . , Q 5 . F I Am :gnmxmsjg S E1 -sstgynq E ' . , V4 N1 1' X ' 4 I 1 t J X 'xxx ,tsl , . 1 4 . f , M X- f 1 I xii. Q ' ff fy!! f .faq-,ii 'X g , pkg, QQ, fuf 7 E N . -XNV, lp, K ix? rijg f . T ' s Y 'fa' ' - -r,: - . 1'- uv -' 'r Wi: V if V 'A ' ' ' - I v. lid' -l , 'v - .... .. -' J QT gks 1' - -fhxiffgx X 'K ' 5 gc fs - 1 . gy ' ' rr' L ft 1 7 l at a t ,mi T if - X as if ,f Q . - ' 1 ,A f 'auf--A ,. X A . K c T -- 1- L 1 X , , W , , X' -K, 1 ., MII 'Ill II I at-f f' X V! Q X I '4g..+-' - . - 1. . 1 - , ,' Qs ,I I . ,-it I - , A 1 'I-...U ' ,,,. A ff W Xe, ' ,.fM 1 i ,, v Q:.,w. N 1 f I 1' . x I- , , - T is . , ' . ...H Q---...X I - V N -ti xr' , - X ' , , V F I ' 1 1-k.?:,: ln.., Y X L.:-'? AJ. I D I FT- TT I V ffxx 4 iii f f if . ' H' L r' f xl I 1 ill' R 2 ' ' ' 1-LE' '- - f' 1 X ' if f 1 - - ' rj , ,- -'g X A X -N Q? -fl I Yi Q 7x-,1 K f g X, I' p 1 lm 1... .AL -mn,-Tm - Q I j N1 A .1 1 .A ff it K Regularly every Tuesday afternoon the visitor may find Il group of Y. W. C. A. girls asesmbled in a Society room of Science Hall. Un every face is written active interest and real enjoyment, whether the leader be one of the girls them- selves or an outside speaker, who has come to strengthen and broaden their ideals, and help in the upbuilding of their characters. The same interest is shown by the Bible Study branch. which is always well attended, Then there is that other enjoyable side of the Young WOHlHI1'S Christian Association-the social life. Beside the annual receptions there are the l'At Homes. Crowds of I girls go to drive away the 'fBlack butterHies,', hear some- thing helpful and get a cup of chocolate. These quiet hours leave many pleasant memories to the girls. Indeed, letters are received fromalumni girls saying: The Association has left-more bright spots in my memory than any other one part of College life-- The growth and gain in popularity that has been made by the Association in the last year or two is the best proof that it means a great deal to the girls. And there's one thing that the Young VVoman's Christian Association is par- ticularly proud of-every Senior girl this year is a member. Mkt Q 449 W ,ji -------e----f-,W Y . --- . I Wfi ll l l The builders of nations are inconsequential in comparison with the builders of thoughtg and, under this premise, the Evergreen claims a right to exist in the student common- wealth of 'thetWashingtonp State College. When Guttenberg built the first printing press several centuries ago, and whittled his type out of wood, he little imagined thathe was beginning an empire, the most enduring ever buildedlq by mortal hands. Yet it was sog and the empire that Alexander built or the later' empire of Napoleon is. in comparison tothe empire of the printing press, as the candle- light is to the sun. It is the- mission of the Evergreen to transmit to the publiciiin- small measure, the thought and might of mind that exists Within the walls of the Wasliiiigton State College: and with each issue it hopes to add its mite toward making brighter the light of that empire which has civilized the world. l li ll tiitti wi f f 7 'W' WW' ,...f.-Muffy, ' ,, ,M ,. : '-f' .-i5:rsvsv'w' -' wP1,4y':f f - r ':w,f.'iy5. -' 4 'f -fini , WH - , : . 'l'1i'gzgi :.5 wwf-H.,hQ?f'rlfmf,ww z5-,fm-.-f,f,f, z E' -2' . I uf . ff-fm ' ..., ..x,. ,,,, . ,. cm... , -,.f A axr:':':1'- . , . ,..y::.::., ' H 4+-2 ---- , ,-Q- lam i na Qi?-fix - Nix X -is ,FX oc' -if i N I Q W T 1' I J x .ax W' Q This year the Columbian Literary Society took on a new lease of life under auspices that promise anything but another death, for a while at least, for the young ladies have taken up the reins of literary government and have banished the young men from the Columbian Hall for all time. Thus newly organized it supplies a long felt want in collegiate circles, as there has never been here a society for girls alone, that they might discover and develop their abilities along the lines of debate and oratory and parliamentary rul- I ing. And they have such abilities,'as numerous excellent pro- grams rendered this year have testified, Then, too, the only two girls who have taken part in collegiate debate in the past two years have come from the ranks ,of the fair Columbians. It is hoped that' the coming years will see this society con- tinually growing, adding to its membership those eager for literary development until we may sing: ' ' Oh, Columbia, the gem of the College. gd' '9 q v Time is the stuff that life is made of. It follows that when a band of young men devote an even- ing a week to literary and forensic achievements they mean to obtain the utmost good from the time so spent. This is an aim of the Websteriaii Debating Society, and the results fully justify the endeavors put forth. Debate and oratory have claimed a large share of en- deavor and the dramatic ability of the membership was credit- ably displayed in the staging of The College Widow. The training and culture received in the Society's room plays a 160 large part in fitting the new student for his activities in the larger field of College work and preparing him for the broad field of service open to him on leaving his Alma Mater. To the College Man are generally attributed different characteristics than to those less fortunate in securing an ed- ucation. And four years of constant high endeavor should produce its marked results. The Websteriaii Society may be commended as an efficient agent in assisting that transforma- tion which marks the College man. A I i 1 I i .nm ,SZ ,: 5, X C 0 sc ulz:1'Y J ,SI 7711101 I In 1776 upon that strip of soil stretching along our At- lantic seaboard arose a spirit that Americans love to look back upon and 'fondly believe still to be with them, though' some- times, indeed, it would seem to slumber. Among the creators of that spirit stands a group of men- the product of their age, who 'gathered around the high ideals of the Society of Wasliington .,.' V The ages. have come to name the Father of America, Wash- ington. By the same name the 'great American nation knows its greatest city, while the West, stretching out toward the golden light of the setting sun, laid its hand upon the best state in our Union and giving it to the nation called it Wash- ington. I62 It is then fitting that a band- of forty men, each one of whom isan intellectual genius, each an orator and mover of men. and' each, numbered among the Hrst patriots of the land: it is fitting, I say, that these, the product of their age. should have taken upon themselves that name which has become the shiboleth of greatness and Amqricwanism, and styled themselves the Washington Society. ' f N Gt 1:heir'merits We do not Wish to speak. It is enough for you.to .know that the greatest society of, men, in the greatest institution-'in the greatest state, shares with our capital and our nation, the common name of VVashington. I 11 ,E 3 1 1 .QI 1 9 .1 J C9 14 Pi Delta Phi Fraternity Organized November 5, 1907. A d C ha1fte1f Ilffembers. V Q Beryl Elood. C Sophie L. Ormsbee. Florence' Knepper. , Pearl M. Flood. . . Mabel s. 'Bekee Nelle Ve. Jones. I Olga Toddj New M embers. Edna Carmine. A Edna Kelly. ' Emma Harmeling. , Maud Putman. Pledged Member. 1 e Arminta Williamson. ' ' , ' Patronessesf C Miss Charlotte N. Malotte. Mrs. E. A. Bryan. Mrs. Margaret Andrews. Mrs. I. C. Abels. I. W. Brislawn. E. R. Pickrell. I. M. Lilligren. H McCroslcey M. E. Cheney. R. R. Fullerton. F. W. Thompson H. E. Goldsworthy. A. A. Hammer. F. H. Brown. I. B. Halm. I. H. Fulton. W. L.'Maloney. R. P. Cowgill. J. L. Thayer. Eugene Logan. C. S. Sapp. Arthur Hooker. Nis. Nissen. E. A. MacKay. 165 ji g I ' :. D '. 'FYX ryt Q S f 'i r fi ,J 'J f '- 4 - . f ' A ' - A J, , , N ., . X X 1 ww V ex K , ' 1' , -3 ' '- If 1 I fb y 1, HS4' 9 ' 'T' L-:Allyn , V . Q X- ' 4 ITWT' I - , ' . - I M - -- L Q . .. A .k T'1N vw- .H-vc --X -s V-Q-fmt' i yy 7 M67 7. W. t . an U q s X ' fl. K '-- I :yup Ilfil ll ,' vvti' tx is . 'XX' ' . A 'f An , - - . K I' in Q ,' , . , K '11 s s- at ,' 'Ts Q . 1 . - 'fy 'T.:, , , , A I v 1 xx NX f 'll , If g ,, 1 f X I X il ' , n fl li 133 xx si-K, X . ' .. - 'I XS E l-' X X tx f N I 9 1 ' K . ' . V X K X , 'R , 5 -, ,, X- - -5 f K X N . X ixxv Ii ' I, X I x I t T: X l F n ff is XT fl. l Xl Rv X '. ' lr I - . .. f.. 'N 1 K ' X X S , K 'Tx X, - I- I' gn- N I E, 'T , , x YQ f .- X X XX . v , X x Q ik f l 1 1 1, l 1 'gi is X X X ' I ' ,ff I 4 f K X w , , - f N l I 1 1 oz, H If 7 F: f I X n In X.N ll .11 4f,1, .ff f H 1.4 1 X f 61 ZX I ' I ' ff, f 11 'ff ' 1 ft lr WI! llffflfl ,fl , ' f ' ' f ff ix 1 X ' V I ' X i 'H-4 r K r - X ' - r- -- r X X , KX K ,N X A ll vb 1 ' ll l We are the only fellows who have a right to wear high top shoes and smoke big, strong, ugly pipes., Beware of imitations. Q i A An observant person can always tell a Civil Engineer. He has a quick, snappy air, and walks as though he were going somewhere and had a definite purpose in life. The ex- pression Ucheckv appears' quite frequently in his conversation. Everybody in the department takes an interest in the meet- ings of the Society, from the Freshman, cluznping awkardly .,, , , 1, mmw 'round in his first. pair ofvbig shoes, even unto the grave and sad-eyed Senior, worrying over steel bridge designs and reinforced concrete. H The meetings are not formal, they are friendly, brotherly rag-chewings. We are thus enabled. to learn a great deal from each other, for we have among our members experienced men who have travelled much, and can give interesting ac- counts of adventures in foreign lands, such as Alaska, Japan . and Idaho. i ' y 166 3 L X I n S V a Wgw gfv, Y A , HW , , , Y - - -.. w--- K Q-.,.-K--q,,1q,..Q W ff f Z X W -A4-gf! X . I I ., ' ,x I A D A ,' ,E I A 1 A I vs I F I A l Vx K A X, M -X . 4 X , , X . l X , X X , , , X . X . X, : -f , - -1 5 -. ., X5 X. x . , 1, .. ., X5 X. .. , . X. . .. X . -t 5 ,. . Q' , x 5 Q N Q l Q N Q N . Q N Q Q Q N Q N Q I Q I- - v- N IQ 7 W 7 S f I kkf 2 . 1 2 ' Ry' 2 1 I I 1 2 l ' 2 , ' 2 2 ', I . egm- - egkq .T aim. .ffl egkt. 1 qicgv X f egg, ,gikq eggs, mga, X., aim. GSM, 'l j,?gw'Q GSM. ft Gay ' V. ..'- 'li .h?f YI.. .::- 0, QF. U. Q2 v Ri: up Ji. U. fir. v. JF. U Ja- 0 'elif 0 37. X Qu O Q if Xp G 211' bf' fa' 9 ff Nfl 4.19 WNBA Q5 9 ANA Q. fix! 1. gm Nm 4. 3 ANA fr 9 fsxifi fs QJNB-fl eg XNA fs 9 ,ANA q..g,,fX, 'fQ q. :J ,fXNfQ 4. The growth of the Music in the last year has probably excelled that of any other department. The additional ar'- vantages of the new Conservatory of Music have been enjoyed by students drawn from all quarters of the state by the ex- cellency of this department. Such a department as this any school can be proud of, as it lends character to every social event and gives an accomplishment to the student which is a great diversion and a restful pleasure. Another feature of the department is the May Festival, by means of which, not only the students but people from all over the state have the privilege of hearing rendered the music of the greatest masters, by well trained choruses and visiting soloists. V i ' - Under the efficient leadership of Professor Strong, has been built up an Orchestra of 35 pieces and a Military Band . - 1. . .. - ., . . . E, X -v .s H . .5 . .. ,- s X . I of 45 pieces, also a Glee Club, known very favorably over the state. .Professor Kimbrough's department has grown till he now requires two assistants. A very valuable addition was this year made to the de- partment in the person of Miss Seabury, violiniste. Miss Se a- bury has studied under the best artists in Germany and is an accomplished' artist. ' Music is the great science of expressing the emotions. What is more sublime than to be able to express one's self by such a Godgiven quality? What is more uplifting than listen- ing to the expressions by music of the most noble and sacred thoughts? May the work of this department continue to advance and increase the sphere of its influence. 553' xl SV M' -.J VSV fl' 553' 53' 53' 53' sy 553' 5 QWNEP ' 1 ANNE' . ' GAME' 'P , PRN' I, i Sm! I . GPM' , X PFW? U EAN' 5 AAN' A .. Awe' .4 l Q9 N' 5 I GW? I I AWN' 1' L AAN' ' X fix ii 5 fx ii X fix .Hi 5 CJ 'i 5 Cn ' ' 'J fi' 5 C.x vii f..u 5 CJ ' X . f..s ll Cn l Cn is Ca i . N , . - , - -. . -.4 - r A i W Q , 5 .. il i X ' ' S s xfg 69 I . . 3:77 ff E a 5 I i 2 5 5 a S 1 I 0? ' ' ' ' 1 D 5 ost' 1 S- Q g,,.I K f 1 X f l v 511 QR C December 20. We hit the trail for Lewiston. Cline for- gets his suitcase and French horn. December 21. A full house at Clarkston. December 22. Ye old time stage coach to Asotin. Goldy visits with Jeff Fulton, where he has the best dinner everf, The Club bids Cline and Powell a Merry Christmas. I December 23. '4Skidoo', for Pullman and home for the holidays. December 28. The Club meets at Tekoa after a week spent with the folks. December 29. VVe journey to Cheney, the schoolma'aim factory. 'VV'hile en route the Buffalo Club is organized. After the Concert a delightful reception is tendered- us. 172 December 3o-Cline and Dud' are inspected by the old folks and their intention investigated. The rest of the bunch spend Sunday in Spokane. December 31. Arrive in VVilbur and sleighride to the hotel. Mrs. Strong gets separated from her trunk and as a result she sings in her traveling dress. YX'e dance the year out and the new year in after the Concert. January 1, 1907. VVe arrive at Davenport several hours late'-on account of snows. Miss Seabury says T Y Y Y and is 3 fined five cents. January 2. Coeur d'Alene. The audience makes up iii appreciation what it lacks in numbers. January 5. Colfax. Corbett on declc again and becoz t maid in waitingl' to 'cjapf' ! 5 E ' i . I Q 4 an it y The Veterinary Medical Society. of the Wasliiiigton State College is an association of students and alumni who are . 1 ' ' studying, practicing-' or otherwise interested in Veterinary Science. ' b h 5 A S. I Hln unionthere is strengthf, and here,i morethan in any other society, is shown a 'unity of interests. Meetings are held 'every fortnighthand subjects pertaining to Medical Science are discussed. The Association keeps in 'touch with similar organizationsthroughout the United States. and also with the' graduate members of this Association. In this way ideas and experiences are exchanged, which are beneticial to all concerned. ' , The Veterinary' Medical Society of the YVashington State College is increasing rapidly in interest and membership and bids fair to 'rank first among societies of its kind in the United States. T T 5 ': 15,-4 ' . My . fa J, , S' 3 , X1 A 3 f 1 1 . s 'ii ik I ii X . li 'ER ' l fi -an .-m,N. ,C h 1... a y m l u ll 5 rllrfipuuzlffgnr i T f llllu I 1 if fi T lU l'7' 'V 2 T ,Z SX ill! --ii Fi 5,g,:2'f , :Za--. I O - i , 1 it ,W 'll ,,. ,... fri' ,I li,,,,f' ' .ullill if Ky W, 'Z . hllal Wap. X! 'l i' 3 X Ml' jf I I 2 J -, f cfm - gy, if l '5 f J ' T f Ovv ' ffff QQ C if xx i s AO 4 f o it es fn we f f oe QQ? 4, Q T if ff g- 3 XVXBG QXQJ ssg IU TTR Sf QLCASX WZEV - A 1- Jfgnicfgkjfli ! 1 - I' The Farmers, Club, the big stick of the State College, is an organizationiofiithe faculty and students of they dual de- partment of agricultural and horticulture. Itfiis wielded in the cause of education, furnishing an opportunity forrsocial gs well vas practical, scientific and technical development. Under its sway the artificial barriers of class and of sta- tion are broken down and all mingle on the equal footing of fellowship. The training in public speaking and in the art of debat- ing, which it gives, is only one of the means which it affords 17 of hammering into form the well rounded man. Equally important in this 'development are 'the social advantages. The Farmersf' Club banquet furnishes the opportunity of breaking into society and putsiithe members in the pleasant, though often unaccustomed postionJof hosts, thus fitting them- to fulfill the social as well as the scholarly duties which must devolve upon the college graduate in after life. The Club then stands 'for educating of the broadest and best type, technical, practical and social, with a view to fitting men for life. ' I . 5 E, QA 15 E f The Mining and Geological Society The Mining and Geological Society, as its name indicates, has for its e Object the discussion of items of interest in mining, metallurgy and geology. U Meetings are held once 'g a Weeklandiinformali-talks are given by visiting mining engineers and geologists ashwell as b-y members of the faculty and students. The oflicersijarez A y ' ' c ' ' i- ' ' W. Step-hqenwg-- ...... President. A.yA. Hammer' -ni -Q-Vice President. N. W. Syveetser ---T-g,...--Q---V .... A Secretary. D uv The honorary membership includes, D. C. Botti-ng, the State Coal ' 'Mine Inspector. - V . 7 5 - ' ' s H . . . K -W Q11 J 1 in E- . ' '-52 9 .Q- A A - Ar. 178 Y 'm 5 5 7 5 ' ' ' ' - ' - Y ,..-,.1, .-, I, W' ., i. I 'T 4 '- Zgj ,Z ',Tl.i:gg,,' I I M'T'TVIi 'n ! ' -V g - 0 A 5 3 ZY X . ' r' Ng . M l' i I .kgs ss's N 2 ' K i :X . XXNX s Kiwi, ' U f ,l. Gi X 4 l :sw l - C? 9 1' ' Il H. 'T VN JV I ' I'- . 'A nl : 'QI P N 'III 'H 'Fil ill lllo ifilf: o Lpl llll lq I i ,I,ig i mill A 4 'y A 7'4 ' f M' A ' ' ' ' f ' 'A ' ' ' ' I' -ZQ Q' .?.-:-.:..-.....-2-...Az ,. -E - ,co ,. -'-EE A:: E - in L 1 E ' A f , ' A K Y A T- : -'S-Qi as as -Q AiiETllglYjf i 'fin YV-ff' 'V Y -Zi rl iyli lil ,-7 :iff-,i'Q?L' 'YE X if--Y -i'fQ'iYY?el .Z Til? -.ssfpf . as-iss:-:S :'s: '- - -'s-F it ,A-rm., A,,,., K .-- ...-I -. .El .E 'E -I: ----f' - l , : 1 E 5' :FE E5 5 sf f-1-,if ei , S12- iga gif azg Q 4:34-al i. 1 ' f Z. ,. I 'Y -N if-.if i,.: 1 tif 'f 2 f - '7 ' -i-if ff 3- - E 1 l if l 1 it I Q l,f.iT-MT, Q. 5? - 5- i II i ' n f lf 1 : , i 'f 1 ' - ' V , 254530 I' ,, i fi M -lg , 1 . li 5 . H-: i ii . i ll f .hh 0 V if AL l .El cw. Ll. Once every Week the many electrical and mechani- cal engineering students gather in their Work shop under the supervision of The Supreme High Volt- age Carpenter, to discuss the engineering problems of the day. Many and varied are the discussions which arise in their meetings. Prof. McKee gases about the gas engine until 180 the proper compression is reached in the room, when the high E. M. F. of the members brakes down the insulation and an explosion occurs. D Mr. Martin then gets busy and calculates the B. Ti Us. of the gas. and the efhciency of the explosion which is so high that all of the members go away feeling well paid for their trouble. 1 f f Q S Q sf 7, ' -1 ' ff 1 4 ,4 x C x 7 4 9 x 0 . g , . - ' iq: HSN xx XXQX, xg N RL waxsr' x . r, M .. Viyiii N i .N 'xilf , . J if? , I X1-ix- 'X X: Z1 xo wx D x -3, X x X N XX x X X x X X T X - A . J: '-H. -. 1 .3 ,: ,, ' 'f' I ' fa ' A 5 1,2 Q, 3 17 I , f- :P AHA , W ,, vg. ,W N:-:T 7,i.,A, VW- Y. . , Y- .LvLtLL:n2. v:T..:--.:.-. YW Y Y A , ,..,.. , 4, WY ,-.. Y, YA,.....-3771.--,,., V ...WY V ,, .A-.,,i,,,, A '- ---v I -x'.,,, .,-,-..A.............,.?,-fu.,n......-............-.:-...,.A..-..Q.....- ,...,..,,.,,. - , . , ' A ,...m-........,....g:u l I 3:1 tl, I. usxlni.. Y.. Stknxl nu Bi- 14- The State College Pharmaceutical Association has been in successful operation for the past two years. The Society is composed of the members of the depart- ment of Pharmacy and at present has forty-tive members on its roll. The meetings are held each alternate Friday. The programs rendered are varied and interesting, covering the phases of the work not taken up in the classroom, such as Current Events in the Drug Tradej' The Relation of the Druggist to the Physician, The Relation of a Drug Clerk to His Employer, etc. Uccasionally an entire meeting is 182 V used for a lecture by a member of the faculty, a practical druggist, or a physician, on some special topic of interest. The meetings of the Society are the means of bringing to- gether the students in the different year's Work and arousing a general interest in pharmaceutical lines, and planning for those things which bind the students together for the general good, the advancement of their work and the work of the department. S The officers are elected semi-annually and at present are: J. B. Walden, President, M. L. Thomson, Vice Presidentg Miss Tentie Bean, Secretary, and Frank VVilson, Treasurer. X' ,A 'ln 7 VY Oflf 2' TT The Qratorical and Debating Association of the Vlfashington State College is a student organization for the purpose of promoting the best interests of the students in oratory and debate. All students of the College are eligible to enter its contests. I Officers Bl. R. Klepper ............. ....-., P resident N. I. Akin -.... .... V ice President O. W. Collins --- .....-. Treasurer L. L. Nolin --- - .......-..-.-, Secretary S. T. Shaw --- ---Corresponding Secretary ' Debating Teanls Moa faaa Team. A. J. Morgan. ' - Sophie Ormsbee. . F. 0. Kreager. O. A. C. Team. R. C. Chapman. F.. O. Kreager, Hf C. Todd. M7hitma1fL Team. Harold Davis. H. E. Goldsworthy. N. J. Akin. The record of these three teams has been one of unbroken success. Also to M. R. Klepper, our inter-collegiate orator, fell the laurel wreath of victory. iffy' , , 5 . if b ,., ,,,,.,,. . f, 4,6 W. ,M f, Q Xxx, f lf f ff! 35 M' '-'fm X il, ' ' 4 W , 3 Q ' ff V Ns i f A df f H f 'AW W fi x W 'I l - I F 1 l I l - 1 i . - Yq1s '!'iW t Q QU ED KES QW Q , QUGJSLQIES f E il 1' Q 'I Ill l I I I' hix 1 aftl 'r'0l': ' ' -ll Jufc'.ulW.Llgh 7.1.7 Sf 7'0 Tl 9 2 Q c-2 . E53 ccLuugfz uf your frz'euu's, und, your frieucls ure sore, So ruuob foe oefzer, you muy luugfz foe more. SCVCTHUCQ-NHOW 10118 will the W01'1d,S SUDDIY Of C031 i Hooker-6'What,s the matter, Cowgill, we have no 'waxe last Fl' from the U. of W. this week ? Zenitel- Five thousand yearsf, Brown- Probably they haven't had any wind over there Porter- Oh, welll all be warm enough by that time. SHORT CGURSE ASSAYERS Prof. Roberts- Importance is equivalent to effietivenessf' Student- You have i instead of e in that ward Prof. ' .-1-CK P77 - I . Flrst What have you got there' Prof.- Oh, that is Just my Ir1sh.', Second- Antomony. First- That is what We have in our bodies. -.i...-- Second- No. You mean anatomy. -...- Betaque- Mr, Small, tell us how it felt to play against our Freshmen in basketball. Sapp-'4When I go home now my old man gives me the Mr. Small of Idaho- I can tell you in a few words: I felt right of way. I-Ie used to think I didn't amount to much. pretty small. 186 I l vi i l J k. 1 i Dr. Stangeland, quoting' in Ec Sci. 3- Prof, Elyis class i, Cl was a meniberj contained many bright minds. N Prof. Johnston, to classf Study the 'gospel of St. Luke ii. for tomorrow. 3 Johnston, next day- Who was Mary P ,Q Crawford- I don't know, unless she was Martha's sister. Johnston- Why didn't you read the Bible last night PM pl Crawford-I was so busy lookingfor the Gospel of St. Luke in the library that I didnlt have time to read the Bible. i ' ' ---o--- '4 ' fC0m14mnicated.j 4 Pullman, Wash., Oct. 5, 1906. Editor '08 Chinook, Dear Sir: We are furnishing drawings and cartoons at the same rate as last year. We believe our work in the last year's Annual was entirely satisfactory and we solicit your patronage also. Respectively yours, Studio A. df-Fake. . .M-Q..-l I 5 Shorty Stewart to Jennie- Do you want to hear Madame Schuman-Heink ? Well, you get some girl there to-go with you. I don't care anything about singing. . I 4 . Laura- Zona, wouldn't it be nice to sit on one side of d of the fireplace with Ierryon the other of sit on one en the table with him on the other ? T Jerry- Wouldn't you like to have me closer? , s f ' use '-Nl' FT '.. -. , .Q i.. rf- X.-3 1 ' 4 ,.f-'v1f f '- gf-' if-' ?4F't.E - N1 '1t5':'-' 'ffl -----v-24- 4 5- . L 1 11 2.2. T -1 Eg, ,. -: ' T -' . .w ww Fifi . - 5: , ,- , Y .1 I. ,QA I gg. I Illlslgg ! -J I .9 .f...sf.f? -wa isa yi' Bw is A4 ' Wig' - 41-A , fri-: .'.' J 4- L+.. ' - it ii - - --Q1-1 A uf, , f r i: - - 1 - ,, . i --22' - N.: - , ..-Q-17: !-,,... .- Sea ff'-ie i The idea! ! Miss Dizny winked at Dr. Stangeland, what do you thing he did? He winked back. ill...-.MT THE COAL MAN. The coal man came down like a wolf on the fold. He jingled with silverg he tingled with gold, He sold us his specialty- walnut by name- And he slated our roof in the spring with the same. E111 vw-wks First Girl--- VVho is that new man on the Admission Com- mittee with light hair? Second Girl-'KVVhy, don't you know Professor VVatt ?,' L N g Y A - , V - ' -- 3 .1..a...,.w:nauA-...aa -.4...m .,f.-,...--5..: ..'. -.L,.... . my t H,-e--A - f-A I Young Arthur of Sprague is come out of the west In all the vet stables his steed was the bestg Save his good pistol, he weapons had none, He rode through the dusk and he rode all alone. So jealous in love and so blinded with rage Young Arthur of Sprague, the gallant of the age. He staid not for storm, and he stopped not for stone. He swam the Palouse where bridge there was noneg He rode as tho' mad, as tho' all were at stakeg A But the sleighriding party he ne'er could o'er take. For no laggard in love, not dastardly churl Had stolen the hand of the fair Pullman girl. So boldly he enter'd the Moscow Hotel. 'Mong drummers and loafers and ladies, so swell. He beckoned the night clerk and bade him to mind If he perchance the fair Edythe might ind. ,Then strode he straight way up the broad palace stair And, booted and spurred, greeted Edythe, the fair. The bride stepped up to the knight of her love. He pushed back his hat and threw down his glove. She looked down in wonder and she looked up in fear Her cheeks they were bloodless, in each eye was a tear As he took her soft hand his desire to beg. Now ride we forth homewardf' quoth Arthur of Spraffue So stately his form, and so lovely her face. That never a room such a couple did grace: 7 ,gg er-eds? 4.:v i D 'VVhile the maiden did fret and the night clerk did fume. And the rest of the party awaited their doom. The other maids whispered, It were better I wean, If Arthur of Sprague she never had seen. A fierce look of his eye, and a nod of his head. So quickly indeed, that no word could be saidg He reached to his side, and there did reveal The hilt of his weapon, a glitter of steel. All is lost! They are gone!', cried the rest in despair. Young Arthur of Sprague and Edythe, the fair. Y beth Flood, spinster. are hereby summoned to be and appear in this said court on Friday, the twenty-fifth day of January, A. D. 1907, at the hour of at once to show Just and sufficient cause why you should not be convicted of the crime of high- stacking, the crime having been committed in Stevens Hall on the said night of January 25, A. D. 1907. Q R. MARTIN, Clerk of Court. VVIUICSS my hand and seal this 25th day of January, A. D. 1907. M. E. RANDS. Sliemff. Excitement prevailed in the courtroom as the prisoner handcuffed and pale with emotion was escorted in by Sheriff Rands and G. Jacobs, deputy. Court was opened with Judge Noonon on the bench. The first witness called by Prescuting There was weeping and wailing and cries for releaseg ' And general commotion, and calls for police, Ny V' Vllvllxw 'l HY, illwkwmny l'1xV -,U nl. 1 And Arthur, the mighty, the noble, the brave, b gl ll ibm, lp l X, l lilil-lllf i 1 ylll pl l l l Was taken away and told to behave. lil J lv, l 1' llili 'lm M ,l ' l hi ' - ki 1. Q .451 , X , , - . lx ' 1, Next day as the sun sank deep in the west. il 'fl lj! .. . mb li if xx llykll X Young Arthur rode homeward all sad and depres'd. l I' ., lx f- dl, 1.-,, 'l'l .l ll! Q X, ',l1,L.il,. 'fly lf- lll A Tho' sunken in spirit, his faith did not slack. l tg 'I ,Q . li Ml. W W M qc: He swore by Doc Nelson held still win her back. , 3' lg' il nl, gl 'lt li ll1lu'l!,,1lUM So daring in love and so blinded with rage 1,6 pl, IM . P I , I ,f9TQ't ll:',..1il-Q vi.. Have ye eler heard of gallant like Arthur of Sprague? gm' n 1 ll IA' , ..-1-, ll?.'.,. ',Q t , fr . .QM-1, ll l ,I Ii' I ' Wg' 1 'lllIM' JTi'll1! 'f'f'i,'-t o i' 1 I DoRM1ToRY JUSTICE. l 'lil ' yi' l d , On the night of january 25, 1907, Beryl Elizabeth Flood Li 5 ' 1' , I ,Q l ., was rudely awakened from peaceful slumbers by an officer of 8 the law, whose presence was explained by the following: -2A Know All Jlifen by These Pivsmits-Tliat you, Beryl Eliza- I 89 . : 'S T M,..,...--...-:..- I Attorney, B. Vermilye, was Elizabeth Prior, who testified that on arriving home from Columbian Society she met Elizabeth Beryl Flood at the head of the stairs, which was an unusual place for her at that time of night, and that she wore an ex- pression of guilt, though it was apparent that she was trying to look innocent. Furthermore the witness testified that when she, Elizabeth Prior, entered her home, she found it completely devastated. Sophie Ormshee was then called by attorney for the defense, 0,Todd, but refusing to testify was put in charge of the sheriff for contempt of court. The testimony of both Alice Scully and Edna Carnine, who share the apartments of Elizabeth Prior, corroborated that of the -first witness. An incident of the trial was the appearance of Chief Jus- tice M. Andrews, who was invited to a seat of honor, but declined, saying that Court didn't usually hold after II oiclock. judge Noonan then allowed the prisoner a few words, but all she had to say' was that the expression of guilt was natural, that she was born with it, to which Judge Noonan replied, All the more reason why you should be punished. The jury filed out, and after a wait of only a few minutes returned a verdict of guilty, saying that the evidence pro- duced that the prisoner was standing at the head of the stairs at an unusual hour and wore an expression of guilt was enough to convict anyone. And amid intense silence in the courtroom, broken only by the heavy breathing of the prison- er and the sobs of the spectators, Judge Noonan pronounced the sentence. C Later-The complete innocence of the prisoner has been stiff'- 190 established andthe culprit found to be no other than Judge Noonan himself, who has been evicted of the high office for bad behavior and is now awaiting trial at the next session of the Supreme Court of Stevens Hall. ' ' .Q-....i- p oDE TO TEDDY. Teddy was a kitten, which a lady owned, you know, She fed it creamed potatoes, cooked just so. - Poor little, dear l1ttle cat. Once in a while she served it some fish -f Out of her best, her newest china dish. Poor little, dear little cat. Sometimes it cried and kept her awake,' Then she would give it a very gentle shake. Poor little, dear little cat. It must take a daily walk, not too long, nor too short. She read to it stories of just the right sort. - Poor little, dear little cat. Sometimes she played- to it on her own violin, It was musically inclined, if ever cat has been. Poor little, dear little cat. But one cold day when its nurse was rather slack. Teddy went away and has never come back. Poor little, dear little cat. ' Some say the evil spirits took him far away, Some say he's gone to glory, gone Poor little, dear little cat. there to stay. Gone to wait his mistress beyond the starry skies, While Miss Seabury wanders lonely with tears in her eyes. For the poor little, dear little cat. fQNfENX ' ,QW S O0 f xv qw 01 Dowrfg Q56 W4 0 Mfey, 0 if u 'QAURSS EQ qgvxowey . 469 'CHIP Y H o ,QW A V ff x' N2 URW 9? be we KH K H ND Y, . f ,f ,6..,aR M 0, 6 JSM We ffgvff . ffl! 6 'GX .6 an Cwggg . , IGHRS: Q 1,5 YK 95- 'u ,. X .iff 8 V KN ag, Joe-Brislawn, working on thesis- How do you spell thesis?l' . . ' - M.....g.-M... I I ,'l. I l ' ' Zell, to Anna Kimmel- I lost a book, have you seen it? Anna- What book was it ? Zell-'K 'What a Young Husband Gught to Knowf ...M...Q....l-.- Beryl Flood, in despair- Nobody loves me, I am Hunking in all my studies and I don't like my new hat, I'm just going home l .i....g.,.M Klepper at football rally- The Lord was with us in Mon- tana, the Lord was with us in Spokane and the Lord will be with us when we play Moscow. Small Boy in crowd-f'Praise'the Lord. He is a dead game sport! i....1.Q...M-.. Ray P. and Miss Edith Strain attended the Young Mar- ried People's dance at the I. O. O. F. Hall November 8, 1906. ..,...-...,....M, Irish Walsh at dinner table in Stevens Halle- Did yOu hear my jaw crack? ' 5 . Sophie Ormsbeef- I thought' another dog was shot. Irish- Thanks, awfully. ' L ' 1 S. O.- Excuse me, Byron, that was once I thought before I spoke. November IO at dance, Dink McC. to lady from Spokane tin Germaniaj- I am Mr. McCrookey. i ' Lady laughs. Dink had a very good time. ' .MQTMM Hammer- Y, SM. C. A. pennants caught fireifl' Lilligren- Weill have a fire sale nowff. CNorskyf and Ockerman put fire out November SJ m. I , - ,, V w Y ..-.l.g..M...-. , U . .-.pwglv ' First Sttident- What does Prof. B. know about diges- tion ? , A A ' Second Student- Can't say, but I'll bet he knows a lot about indigestionf' I ....?..g.M Ida- My goodness, I .must have Cheney. Grace- Uh, no, he is'taken.', ,MQMM Prof. VValler- There is error in everything in any 'lab on the campus, unless it is baking pies, and we eat-them and determine the error by the condition of our stomach. .1-?..g.T.M. Miss Seabury mistook a pair of rubbers she saw under- neath the curtain and she tried to take a pair from a man sit- ting there for her own. How surprised she was. I 4 A dQ: ' N 7+-i++-lC!1CJ'UdU -lv-lC!'OPTll11l7'l But we can hardly blame him if he wished the horses dead. ff m ,u ifhe last we saw of Enoch and his famous Cousin Bill is E Ililhey wlere gymgq tx vafalkpupright going down our College hill. in ' ' L' ow w .en noc r en ryan takes his friends out for a lark if . , They think it much the wiser to wait till after dark. ffffaaixi 4 X , 'ret-1. Q ' . 1- imi , 5' EQ- riff, 'l I lj ,s Bessie B.- Laura, those two kids must be twins. 3 T55 P . , , Laura- No, they are brothers. :,- 7-'rr-f-'e-IQLW. Mp.-q.1i2'4f.' T X ,J - I F ff' S a 6 E NT ' '43 4 7 :W wif K . , , -N ,,. X, '01 ff:-,NX 1 TN-- -v , ' 5- if gQJ ll1e. 5-- Ei XQ Hammer- Going to see Florence tonight, Ralph P TEX L5 ,sim ffgn - 5- fi Zig: ' .NX Cowgill- I can go when I want to, I have a standing in- -- ' Q? f xfiffi'-5: Ni X X vitationf' -K K ,xxx - g.1.l. ' N K ' ,LE---. 1 we -F x Q sf -,' .v. Tx if I' eww Joe Brislawn embraces Miss Putnam in Dramatic Class. , ' cc - , Q r - Enoch Arden Bryan and his famous Cousin Bill Essayed to take a ride about our College Hill. Little Enoch Arden felt as proud as proud could be Of his mighty Cousin Bill and his lecture, donit you see? So he got a dainty cutter and a dandy little team To show the lordly worthy that things are what they seem. They drove away' in glory from the armory door, they tell, And happy little Enoch thought it all extremely swell, But the dainty little team failed to see the dignity Attached to their positiong they wanted to be free, So they made it up between them as they sped across the snow To turn the old sleigh' over and then to cut and go. They worked their scheme so nicely that before the boys knew, They were tumbled in a snowbank and their glory with 'em, too. It hasn't been recorded what little Enoch said,' I Prof. Johnston- It looks to me, Miss Putnam, as though you didn't object strenuously enough. f Q NW Y I fl Qlnltgv X , X Q' if 7 'X .fel N 11, ' I if l lun-x.,. ' is .,,f - ' f -1' 4, 'Y at ff A 1-ia, f ' .li , 'f , Q-, . ' ' ea , ' ' I A if V. fl f , f. JX- M 7 , gl ,fp ' 1 I T it En' jvghln C, 'f' - -raii':4Qz.Q ,. I... .4 fl: if f ' 'N m ,, be M, A-.4- ' W MAE: Egfr-:TMbL,N 51ops .1 : f ,' -T PRO I '.3fff? Suuonr BASE gnu' gff' ' VVatkins, at dinner at Bean's- This is a great bunch of students in this institution. - I Shorty Thompson- Why P I -Watlcins- One of them Ferry Hall kids soaked me in the back of the neck with a snowball. .l-.g.. Glee Club on stage from Lewiston to Asotin. Goldy- Why is it Miss Seabury brings cats here from the east ? V Prof. Kimbrough- Because she didn't think there were the right kind of fiddle strings in the west. if . iz, L J 'Sk N X - as t fm z.- - we-.., ,... 5:6 5 ,p Q ,I ' 's' X if? , ,Ng ,. N ' -' huf afz. .:-f-e' .ya .4 ,M Z, 531 ILNE IQ- W -I-LZ, 11-vs' v S4 fam f iffy -1. -- f.. V l,f,Xg,,v iixw dp N.. U-QQ 1 1 . 5-7 221, I, l 1..l,Ii.lII N' nggive gs f , 1 . -f Qai- ,al Mf,!ff .l'Ill 4 ET, 5? X ---T 'ii 4a?Xxwit,lXm f :il61i?FIl.:l'llllffl if T S T Zz'R1',.rH LL., .' 'IW T, P ' f 'iL f'7 X . t, 1 3' CMJ :L ' - f '?J.'S-:Rf 2 '. ' er fu? ,-' , wi TW -if Ti f' 1 rf .J-Lgfx iii ? Qi? l,, .yall ,.-' I Q!'Ei !'i c.. L-.. , if X' - !7.:,gff f in ,hfhj 'X,. K V ,af Elle.: f 'b I V 'i . ff X --1 ' -' f' lv, K S - 'Fllu'2gxl-E x . f I 5 cow -' df L 9 M' A not ff' . - 5 ' V ' . J Pat and Pearl go sleigh riding. On their return home Pat freezes his ears while Pearl is warmly nestled in his big coat and muffler. I Zona Sapp, watching Retta and Eddie skating-:'Are they engaged P Sophie- It rather looks like it. .l.L.g.l,.. A' maiden fair with sunburnt hair, Came tripping down the hall, Her face serene, her age sixteen CU Gee whiz! but she was tall. From the library downstairs she did proceed, The bulletin board for to read, The stairway slick, she came down quick With a jolt that shook her curls. The words she used must be excused, For she is one of our best Senior girls. .l...g.i,i Thomle- Mr. President, in appreciation of the services loud talking, that Mr. Klepper has rendered this class for lots of bluff anda great deal of gaul and a bit of interest in athletics I move that he be voted the numerals of the class.' Jeff Fulton- I second the motionf' CShorty Stewart leaves the roonmj President Jack Hess-- You have heard the question. any remarks? Question. CThree vote for numerals, none againstj Jack Hess- Mr, Milton Klepper is awarded the numerals of the class. C3OQ Ferry Hall cheersj Severance- VVhitney has good chances forthe future. Prof. Strong says that his mother was always in the Whltliey'- Well, judging from Severance, he must have habit of taking her noble son to hear great singers his all settled. Pally Clarke was so busy looking after Clare Robinson this year that he had no time to do anything for the annual. John Brislawn-'KWhy is it that Vets are always acting the fool? Guston- VVhy, it's because they are breathing that ether all the time and it makes them Hightyf' .llg-1 Student to Librarian- Can you find me anything on humus?,' Librarian- W'hat's his first name ? I .l......... Johnny Bender, young and tender 'Spied a Cassell on the hill, And his eyes saw the size As they lingered-lingered still, Wliile his heart gave a start, Like the leaping of a rill. Ah, I see its up to me, Little Johnny murmured low, To capture in my rapture This Cassell ere I go. Cupids dear, all come here, Each one with a bended bow, Shoot them fast while they last Arrows from your quiver there. Be it known, I will own This Cassell, rich and rare, For you know it is so That the brave deserve the fairf Johnny Bender, heart so tender, Did besiege the Cassell well, And ere long all the strong, All the mighty guard work fell. Now the story of his glory Each of us delights to tell. Professor Strong to Ilis Nose Oh, blessed proboscis for ornament given, That is to my face like the stem' to the rose. In youth thou wert Hecked like the nocturnal heaven. Sometimes thou wert sunburned, a pondrous nose. I've toyed with the fancies that puzzled all ages, I've basked in the stream where divinity flows. I've 'climbed lofty mountains with the staffs of old sages, And learned from them all of my classical nose. When God made my face material was plenty. I-Ie left the grand bridge where my spectacles pose He took from my legs a percentage of twenty, And heaped it all onto my ominous nose. Ingcircles of folly ,tis guilty of theming. A juvenile target for belligerent blows. A tent on a desert, it seems, when I'm dreaming I wake with a Hy on my beautiful nose. I Therels pleasure and profit in all our possessionsg Our lands and our money our virtues expose. My gains are but small, but why make confessions. I've something ahead, 'tis a gigantic nose. I take from my pocket a silken bandana To cover my blushes-ah, do you suppose? Nay, to mop from my eyes tears falling like manna When I think of the wart that disfigures my A difficult task I've found in the twilight, In trying to kiss whomsoever I chose. To gain the consent or to argue it quite right, Not so difficult is, as to get past my nose. ' But of all of my charms, sure they are not many, From the crown of my head to the tip of my I have nothing to fill .my friends with such envy As the eminent sign of a prominent nose. HOSC toes 96, . 2 CAMPUSTIRY 6.51.5 aff afsyanfzddon , Caeafuc adfaf-7 Afpafa .'- 73 pa: aff 7x 443 az- Aff bane! 2f'pfpf-.r,-- C3-fflvv.sofv if idx.:-Ae.: .5144 ff- cafrJ!dfrf:7f yffaafe. - Z -.ff-2-fic' Iadaafenfsfd-sf ci-fc' idciebf- XX? 724' cagff-.se ff-1 cafgpasdy 4 qaaf-1 fa alfrreavdef-J 0 iff caffoye. hjxbfffgff fnadf-vcffafr fa' qfff-4.3f-fafsysyf-i.QffJ.fe ff-fefwgef-J aiff-1:7 Jafrrfvfdf' Jciaaf Qarzffvf' af- Cbwfsf fwffffa .f fa eye-mf frfyff .sf 5,40 ,verify aff 64649 cioyvgxa' if Afxcuf-,sf5fv.r do like 0291066 sf Z'-ki fd M5605 ffzzzf-rafikxr. fgxff C' uf-'Je Z-flvJ 610 .5-fvaffff xi?2df- ff:-vff C'-var-.sf frsfffcfde ,vaf-16 fi car-f-Aka' aff cf! lisoaw foabase X?-fr-ref-if ini pygyif? fvbfkdi ffl fvvo,-76159 fifty? fic' 0616 65516 ue fgf-ff-44144-'f ' 5f7f704f55.f076f755 'fi-'ff' 5' .f .1 ., ,,XQ.- ?3' Ji- ' '-'Fx 3 I ,412- Mr. Walden says that Miss Siemens is his Wild Irish Rose. I-Ie says that he is sure she is part Irish. ...--.-..-.g.,1 VVhat is the definition of strain? P. Brown- It is absentmindfulness on the part of Pick. Beattie-'iVVhat course P Student- Civil Engineering. Beattie- I started to take that course, but I decided if would keep me away from home too much and I changed to Botany. That is a fine course. To Next Student-'WVhat course? E Second Student- Electrical Engineering. Beattie- That is a good course, but Botany is better. I teach Botanyf, X To Next Student- VVhat course P Third Student- Domestic Science. Beattie- I started in to --- --- L but anyway Botany is a good course. AT WHITMAN BANQUET. Whitnian man to Pearl Boyles- Who is that solemn Senior over there P P. B:+ Where, I don't see any?,' Wliitman man-f'That girl with Jerry Nissen. P. B.- Oh, that is Laura Thompson. I Girls chewing gum in Physical Culture Class. Bender- I tell you what, young ladies, you can't take these exer- cises with gum in your mouths, roll it up in a little wad and throw it away or else stick it behind your ear, where you can find it. Q4 lk I X 4 I . ..- 1' z' ., . F fi Q wtf ,lvf a 4. Q f ' 'G?i5s . W fi -i' 3 ' t ,,.,. tl ui f . :assay rv, 335' drum, I T3 F! 1,735 f xm ' Milf' if - , - 99 Col.-'KI-Iammer, can,t you see the joke? Brown- I-Ie is going outside to tumblef 7 .Q.....T. Prof. Carpenter explaining fluids- If you place a cake of jelly here on the table it would remain until you got through --I' Cinterrupted by much laughterj Beg pardon. I didnt think of the audience I was talking to. Pick makes an early search for a rubber. 'Tis the morning after the Frat dance. - .L 1 ' i i - fniv 3201 , - .4 - , -, 'E 721 - 1.42 New --1 ::41?Jif-?a1S:21-t-was-,:f1..,r5i f QQ?-New i .Z - .am Yv Q, xv. '.-sg.-1:-:: fr:-..-5.-NNQ.: f,-fl. N.,X.m-:--'- aegis'-' ' 43 ' K 'J-x0 ,'1'-.'-.'- '5':- I',. i I' -f- -.- -' -' N- 'nt' ff Y, vk'..' -. '0'b 01 . aagagigagilst'-e ' ff: w ' 24 txaiifs- xy .Xe -+L-SNNYY , fir: .1-.aff--ze-Aff:f.:'.:-1ftq9flx A5-:eff-5'-.-QE-f?e'3 -' rw r-af X . 5.55-.-ax, S ' .1 Q X .55 .Nxt-.3-. ff , f..,.. wal .. .QXQR -db NS- .. . F-.c.+5:rf.9 Q. 1 i- - 1 -JL? 'W'A 'PKBQLAKQPQ so X 1- if ' 4 6 Jsslitrrsfasi-zf.Ti wr D , . . , . . A-5541:-.-11- 533,-5r5g:-3-G-,.,-H rmjvi ,Sh-jf. I I I: 'Q x :I !7,a,i..mf,Q spvffy ,tt J,,Z,,,l:apwfngyfvkf'Q,-.f'B:. -11. .yfgx i-sytffszfffz-5-I-2-:e5,l .'.:-ff1- y 'Q '-1' ' V. , . 'e2E1'f5t'1'l ti 'J f' HW '-' f 554331653 ' -' if up-Iguhu' lv' SQ ', l -. ,A P f' 'r ' .-,L f fazaljfg ffl... . f. yu' 1' '- ' ' ' -7 f , 412 :alll .J . . ,Z tha agligp .1 .J ,.'. ,I ,S-wir ,K V Nxlwib tl U, . lp I ,f ,F : Nuxl' Peril... ,IMI X I 47.41 f .--arg, 3 ij' Mgmt I thx Q9 -fy-. ,,,.4- f,-.'Vv wr' 1 .fl u W1-'W' ' L , I, .-133531 -.1 .. f mlm mlm, ..-l:f,'i wi-FU .9-alan- - ' r ...L fl-:gf Ugg- -- E? Ar' X, .-3:-. vg x YN Prof Strong reading to Music Class- This oratorio was played in a church. It was called 'The Representative of the Soul and Bodyf There was a chorus and orchestra, the whole was acted and the performance ended with a ballet dance, to music sung by the chorus. The state directions re- quire that it be danced sedately and reverentlyf' Prof to Class- This would be a good suggestion for the junior Prom. I Bob MCC. and Hammer talking about rings-Hammer: Now it might look as though I had bought Marguret's dia- mond ring, but I didn't for her mother gave it to her. But you know the ring you bought for Emma. Bob-Yes. No, you mean the one her mother bought P .li-...iii Prof Carpenter in Physics explaining sound- Place four women in the four corners of the room and start them all talking at once, and any one of them can tell you what the others were talking about ............g.?-.- Ralph and Florence had a scrap when they went to Mos- cow. Ralph says that she invited 'him to a meal at the dormi- tory and called it square CU ...... Prof. Timberlin teaching Iunors Prep. Algebra class. Scholar- You have made a mistake, it should be a 'y' instead of an 'a. ' Prof Timberlin- You had better get 'y's' or you won't get any 'a's. IH i.g.,..... Dr. Ralston- How large is the brain? Ickes- About 50 ounces. It is larger in some people than others and especially in orators and historians. Dr. Ralston- Couldn't some Vet have a big brain, too Iclces- Well, never saw one yet with a big brain. H PM ..4.... ...-.-Q.. 1 4 i 4 4 4 5 i l ANNA'S SOLILOQUY. 'Why should I regret That any Tabor Lafollette Has not the years of a sage, For firstrlove is true love, is s' s , , E Regardless of station or age.' 0067 ULU fLfVf!VS L f QE I f 1 H1 -rf efllf 1 THE THREE FOOLISH MEN. X V ? f '- 200 LET ME SLEEP. In room No. Twenty-one Doctor .Egge's work is done. There he leads the wandering students on and on Thro' a mystic maze of meter, That will make their lives seem sweeter Long after college days are dead and gone. Oh, that happy alliterationf' Like some furious flirtation. ' A Till your empty thoughts almost forget to creep. You forget that life's a bore While you murmur o'er and o'er In gentle tones and low, Let me sleep! Then you wander all alone With the mightiest ever known. VVith Tennyson and Milton and the rest, While the comma's tails are seen Switching proudly in between, Where are proclaims, may hap they look the best. Then you rouse and read your part, While within your sleepy heart You blindly pray that Providence will keep Ten thousand hours like this For you in heavenly bliss. When you murmur at the last: Let me sleep. - -...L.g..1-1 ' Irish Walsh- Where are you from, Lilly P Lilligren-'KFrom Stillwater, Minnesota. Irish- That must be a slow place. 201 First Triumverate-Stewart, Jennie Douglas, E. A. Mac- Kay. Second Triumverate-Walters Chidester, Nell Jones, M. R. Klepper. ' DESCRIPTION OF A HOOKER. I am wise, I know it. IfVhat there is to know, I know it. I know more than this whole college, W'hat I don't know is not knowledge. --ff-'-W--4 '----'--H 'i'- '- -Y A - - - - --Y .--- .-f- . - . - ie. ------H --- ---f-- -Y-.--..N W, Y E: 1 ... . V gf. , L L .. Js::mi..,:,. . y ,W -V Ax N il-pq .. .. .-.. .,..rs.... ..--...QT-'S' Chapman to M. K.- Which of these girls are you going to take? M. K -'4VVell, I don't know. Cf two evils always take Carrier pigeons have great endurance and are noted for their speed. E. R. P.-'fHow expensive are they P Mailcarrier-'gNot so expensive as stamps in your case. I ani sure. -4...-1. Frances Watt at College Widow -Does Olga fall in love with Jeff ? Beryl- Of course, she does, how could she help it? Col.- Rise and vote, Joe, as a matter of opinion. Joe- Thats rightg that is why Gay votes the Prohibition the worstf' ticket. 202 x 1 2 U. W V. Vflk?6,,g?-!- V,M,,-X 1 7 M , ,ww Q 5541? f , , X ',v'fyfzp4f'ff X 'z f.-ffl' A :W f. 4 .. M .aw ,, 1' KFQJZ f W. .9 44 ,a WX? gQzif if, ,S vxvmgy-fi X - W: - Q fs gx X1 x N .. -' 'X fm: .2 4. 1 X' + I H .W K A W.,.5 , XVS . sa Q Q f Q 15 xxf 2 X W YWN X K N ax 5 WX, 3' xxx- ff Xwwg g, QEQQ M XM X N xx 'X H1 T- Z--3iQf,:9 4 'X ' w X - ' Kd ': '+rf - Q f - l' 5 - x M2 X wg, !,zT W Q , f x, , im ' fu ffl 1111, f x 1' A--V X y X, +6 H pf' '- .4 xx: ' Q gifghiy if'-53 A A '15, 6,43 ,. ga Q2-Cy X f- X - X X x 1 xv, fy., ff'-11 f-wx 4 Q' 'il'-2.-,, XJ' .S Nfg.-x -x:.g , .xx-vw. N, w 4 zu X E Qiqf.-,,:.'-X.--rv'-A 1- ' a X Viifw. f,, ..Xa..Ms72 .5XX,sX,f X, gf K , S' X Q 0, 'U 5 .SQ X I A -1. , PW X2 ey .fn , f -'X':Z3-WLVX X News M LX X F X X X X X Aff, ., 4 f Nr ws -N NX.-Xxt. I 'ENN GRN KENNY Li Qxfkwfi XR ' NXS-NX mx f X NM EXT, N F92 X f XXX xg XXI GFS X Y X LX 'kX:- S x X X s ,. bLwim.I' f dz?-E: 'L kk , N..- gxw:w'.mw mmm, Bmw f , , S,,,x...,,..fG-... .N L if-Q Ma-H: Sw-.x.,.Nf:---x-X' A ' X Xx X Wsvsf-wwfiw X X' X' X- ' 1 vu Q -xr A is ,Var r. s 'fw m f' ' -f-In-ff , vyrfllil 2 ln- 1:'.f,s4u,3,,2 4' .ff- .'.4,.'i -11? S,f '7'.' 2 ' ,iff PY: v?:'1.'f': 1 T '5'Qi1?F4 1 ' . ff w w my , 1 Tf '.-. 'S ' f 5 ' . - ,Q , W LX I 'P Y ' M 1 , . ,, I 1 I ' 1 A 5 , A ' Y gk J' 4 V 4 , sflllf , , ,A . sazjfsffg ffg!4'7'- 55.23, .ffj I , 4651- xr' , ' , I fl we 9 3 4 MJ ,L fi' 'Y' f if Q' WT H ' , if ,A Q14 .f fm ' B 5 7f f 1,1-fl V, , QW L1 Q, 2 1 Capt. Kimmel- Baker, do you think that you will live to see war arbitrated out of existance ? Baker- That is according to how long I livef, ,t Q Marion R. to Hubbard, while out camping before she en- tered W. S. C. Hubbard- They have a training table at the girls' dorm. Marion- Uh, is that where they train them to eat F ..-.mi I President Bryan- The chapel is not to be used except at the chapel period. I was going to say as a study room, but that would not quite hit the point---Students can't study two by twof' Miss Anna Kimmel handed the following postal card to Mr. Arthur Lewis: Mr. Arthur Lewis, ,Esquire-I do herewith authorize you to sell tickets for Declamation contest to a certain Senior Prep, whom bearer is interested in. MABEL BAKER, Vice President Senioa' Class. l.L.g.l. Davenport of Whtman Debating Team- This joint I will leave for a moment and take it up again in a minute. ,..... March 15. Miss Mallotte's Second Year Latin class Cele- brated Caesar's death. .,............ I 1 x,-. , NN . --1: Am, 5-:Ig '-1-2 S fm 21:45 , ..., L 99, t S J f U ' Gini: , ,, , , -. -'-A'--if :f,::vQZ-55'2i4Z.5:f? 2.,'5iI..5 f- , . ' '-A 1 -'75 x 5 ' F-TTL - 7 1- 1 , T' I 4 -,,f,,,,,,,..,, .HV ax- -. 1 .-we-f:f1::-1:1-:zz-:':':-4 .- K -, ' - Y-Q A353315 e:::mwa'+X-zf: .-v'a,:gf.::.-,age - 2: :-- X f Zwhm, i,x..,,.v.. ., .. 'V' Q L 5 1 yi' ' ' yf' :Y Q 'K , 3: gf,.6,45.? 2fx,., -Q y X' , ul 'R' ' V 1 1, 35? 46..l.,,f' . .'-3'- ', -- 'fl 14 ,A fx 'N - fr 'L , vm . ' v 1- I s 0 x Q f 4 ,ff--.f 'Q - Q wh GX 1 X ,I fp, I Mb, 3 dl ,R 15 15425 s Q X56 . gym... ,fn ,AM f..vLN sr , , Q. X, , Y x wx 4 Q . ,mug N . , f Y' X 'Q W g i wig? x X , Q x X' 3 s' N ' i I ' 4 4 I5 X .,,,, .-r lv I I will lift up mine eyes unto the hillg from vvhence cometh my troubles. My Hunks cometh from the profs., which are subject to one5 PreXyf' He will not suffer the rooks to be rolleclg he that fenceth. the campus will not slumber. Behold, he that Reapeth the clemerits, shall neither slumber nor sleep. The Freshies shall not smite thee by day, nor the Sophies by night. PreXy shall preserve thee from all hazers, he shall help thee Pull for the Shoref, PreXy,' shall prevent thy going home, and thy coming in drunk, least thou receive clemerits enough and sufficient to cast thee into outer darkness. and there shall be Weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth. 206 J- W 1. BULLETIN BOARD. 1 f ' ' v 1 ' ff F ' - '55 ' .' n - w V-,fx ' , . 4- :wig jew f m. :+--as Wa I ,5 gig , ff' ja 'Ci . ..Pg-- iff ' Q- X Z .lc .., - X X 35556: -ff Q if'-x ' - 1- S.--.Aa 'i'-:.'--1. ' - Y- L.,- fs 1.1, ..hgR64l:',..,.1,'. qnjqfgf ki. fb., .0 , f, kj f ,. --W 'Q 5 4 hi iiwgiii' !5'3'75a. Wfikiih fe - e ' e at .L iff?-ff' ' ' M1 1 7' 3 :fi g Fzfifisisi l A -' Ii'5'2iF?'s if ,, u 'fy' - ,Of '21 J-5-:f':bf.QA U, H' xx C I e J 'L ,m.,.,. ' -swvv X O f X 'z ff-Y. -WX f.fq9'?'MQ, 145.,..: , ,L -f . , ' 2- wfdfjyg -. 1 4 : -' J 'uf-A -AMI X -0 - .',.. - W Hf.,f--. X --. , :s ,I -TW? -' if ,- 4 1 4- .I I , , : .lf 1 . ff 1 i 'S gf' -QU , - --' f- xT ,... VH O Y Q 1 'GAF .gftil C10 ni . gf ' 'Ai 'L' -'LZ--'f I N f 1- - , if , , . MW 1,1 41- xp. - N I T f - ltrflt P. ' i' II fx! I 1- ' Q Lrg gn- ,, 4f1Q,z'.,.4 - - , f fr' , ...L - V- fa- ---Q.. ini, ': Z -J,--. ' 'Z ,.s ' Q S U J if - 4... Q 2 5 l Qllnmng mnrh I rig Rr E WISH, in closing, to express a word of gratitude to all those who have helped make possible the publication of this ' book. We are indebted to many people for contributions of various kinds. We Wish to congratulate those who have been honored in this book, and to extend our sympathy to those who may have been hit. VVe wish to assure the latter that only from a sense of duty, acting as the mouthpiece of the student b-odyh, do We publish anything of such a nature. e ir If there be anything good in this volume of the Chinook enjoy it 5 it is yours g if anything otherwise remember that Charity suffereth long and is kindf, a - ' 208 ....- '7 ' I I ' -....., :4- : M .', fv---- I ff - 4- ,,..-- ,--., -.A ,.'N - .,.. 'ffxf -5 ' -H f , ,,,. ,..,,, ,Z ,,,,.l--,.. -----'...,...... .4 ,, -,... -7711 - ,-,.4 .:.- -A, ...-- gg, gg..-, --- . .-- - ,,,..-- . - -.,-, ,,,.,.- Y .. Qi 1 1 .X V. df VL E! K if I. I I :!.i. H1 - fu l v fff. Z ,.., 'f.1 ..,.....,. - l- ...-.,..-..- f .., f.f0E'l'. - 2 I I rf , J ffm 1.4 5' -dw ,,., -' og ' . -,..aL-- --,..,..,. N o .Q ,iQ .,.1T.,,.- :ACM 'I XX K , . ' U U, M I' A , 0 I , - .--ff W o Q If A Q -- a as L- 4 - . ' .0 ,,-- I 1 f, fx, Q ' . ,f- ' D .. - 'Q 'Tied - Q 'fi ' 0' ho -- -- o f , -Q-,4,. if:-r,j7Q,.... ' , 1-.- - , i?44,-- A - ' 7: 'r.f- -'Q' i Z Y':fl-'I.-f.:-.,..- -4 ' ' -.- 4433: -,.,.- 4- ' f 4' 7 Q ,...,,.... -. . --- f-gg..- ,,,'f ., ,.. ..- ,li ,.-.. i . . ..,L,t,,. - ---3.---,.-.- - , ,....4:-.,. f- ..,- Z- ,- ,.. I 1- ,L- --1-' VIENVS UF SIVVEET XNATER IRRIGATION CCYSIPROJECT 11sf1'11ffcd by IV. S. C. Gradz I lemtstnn Qhrrb awe 55355, adjoining the city limits of Lewiston, Idaho, lying 6oo feet above and over- looking the city, Within twenty minutes drive of schools, churches and theaters, jrtigateh YIELD annually from S300 to 51,000 per acre, and furnish ideal conditions for a Home. All Water furnished in Pipes, under Pressure. Tlllbrzz ullmam QIHUIIHTBEC in the Civil Engineering Courses have been actively employed in the construc- tion of the irrigation system which Waters these lands and have rendered splendid service. v a y I T it ..,,, A X: IIIIIMIWW llllhlhifllff i e 42 ef f . W I gi s k i s .. ip 1 ' 5 W .m l'il 4----0 -' L 756 FT. Loma---9 Wt ' H, Y ' ltr fl! A LONGER THAN QQ V- V The stupendous ' Encfiggfgcgf' Q Sweetwater Dam, lzs FREIGHT uns. R part of the in-iga. Crrzoss ff - SE CTION ,- X tion system sup- ! go 2 plying Lewiston 'f fear i Orchards, com- ,wm ff ! X Z pared with the QT-- ...... ' ,..---..-...,.9 Ai X soo FEET wlDE largest work of L'f' man's hand in the wqrld-the great Pyramid of Gizeh, X ' at sixtycenturieso1d - --f' f-f Q59 Write for PROP. GEORGE SEVERANCEFS report on the Soil of Lewiston Orchards illustrated With birds-eye View of the City of Lewiston etuistnn ants 8 Water LEWISTON, IDAHO o., ith 211 WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS and WILL SAVE YOU MONEY CLAY PRODUCTS AND LIIVIE I Pressed Brick Fire Brick Common Brick Architectural Terra Cotta We are the Iargest manufacturers in the Northwest and our goods are the Best. Our Bayview White Lime is not onIy the Best but the Cheapest, as we Guarantee the price. WASHINGTON BRICK, LIME 8 MFG. CO. We are manufacturers' agents for the Best Portland Cement. SPOKANE., WASHINGTON Gold Coin Stock Foods Commercial 3534 O Y Fertilizers I Cypher's Incubators and Chick Feed The Anderson Seed Co. 5 I3 Sprague Avenue Spokane, Washington 212 Uh P intent mag ru min 'Mrs Now, Hazel was a maiden fair, B' I And Bill her lover true, But Hazel didn't seem to care Whatever Bill might do. ' He gave her candy by the ton, He took her to the showg He wildly squandered all his .'mon,' But nothing seemed to go. B-ill wanted much to marry, but he couldn't For Hazel was his hope, and Hazel wouldn't. Poor Bill, he almost gave it up, Heart-broken by neglect 3 With sorrow Hazel filled his cup And all his wishes wrecked. At last one day Bill found a way To realize his dream 5 He set his girl with love awhirl By giving her ice cream. Bill wished to wed as early as he could And Hazel did, you see, for Ilazelwoodi' S end for tbe Portland Seed Company's Free Catalogue Which tells you all about THE BEST SEEDS for this localityg also about Spray Pumps, Poultry Supplies Bee Supplies, Eze. We are Agents for the Celebrated Mann's Green Bone Cutters and Cyclone Dust Sprays 906 First Avenue Portland Seed Co. Spgkane, wash, 2I ll fan N Y I . li. ,Q Q . E I lex ? sv' ii' S I uv Q il S I E x H Hx N , . 9 Y X. 1 X ff 1 V?'iTWhy We Like the ianola Ii First, because it is the only player worthy of artistic recognition, from the world's greatest ' artists. Second, it is in a class distinctly by itSelf. Having in all 326 basic patents, it cannot be imita.ted. Third, the Pianola is so simply constructed that it never gives trouble. Fourth, every , ,g h purchaser of a Pianola can play the piano correctly, not in six months or a : T year, but at once, thus rapidly becoming intelligent musical critics. Fifthl - W . 1. THE METROSTYLE, which makes this possible by following the Line ot , J I ' interpretation, which is marked by either the composer or some authority. . ' g We are proud to say that we are sole representatives for this wonderful educator and entertainer. Remember that all pianosplayers are NOT M ' Pianolas-there is but ONE3 PIANOLA. It is manufactured by the Aeolian Company, and is so-ld here only by us. Write Dvept. B for catalog and full information. Chickering Pianos celebrated their eighty-fourth birthday on the fourteenth of last April. Each year has seen more laurels added to the Chickering, which is so familiarly known as The Grand Old Piano. We are sole agents for the Chickering in this locality, and are proud of it. We carry at all times a full line of these noble instruments, both grands and uprights. The Chickering Quarter Grand takes up but very little more space than an upright piano and has a pure grand tone of wonderful sweetness and volume. We have a floor chart which will show you exactly how much space one of these will occupy in YGUR home. Shall we send it to you? Drop a card to Dept. B. Largest Western Dealers Kimball Pipe Organs QXANO Northwestern Distributors for Pianos and Reed Organs Victor Talking Machines 81 Records l SPOk9.I1C, VV3-Shi11g'EOI1 QQUSQ G. A. Heidinger, Manager Pianovalu 214 1 WHGLESALE CCDAL Spokane Stamp Works Carbonado Lump SPOKANE, WASHINGTON Kemmerer Lump or Nut Alberta Lump tam ps Checks A International Steam C315 t'11,N Dies SHOCIUGIITHC tencils Brands Foundry and Smelter Coke I BADGES, BUTTONS SGCIETY REGALIA WRITE FoR PRICES Metal Letters and Figures Enameled Signs Automatic Stamping ancl Cascade Coal 81 C0116 CO. I Perforating Machines 7l8 Sprague Avenue SPOKANE, WASH. in OI' ,. 1 Ho t Bros. 358' l ' ls G ' Q w yff. ' lu v' N5 vff 'tg ll X V , . . ui L, 81 7 Rlverslde Ave. Qi l le? . P. o. Box 649 I if f f' !fi N N j X lll SPOKANE - WASH SPOKANES LEADING Best place to buy Cut F lowers, Potted Plants, Ferns, Palms, Rubber Plants, Norfolk Pines, Funeral Designs, Wedding Boquets. We turn out the most Artislic Floral Work of any place in the Northwest. 216 BRGWNWS HGARMAQY Seattle Sporting Goods Co. . , Ph G , 02. n usmess or our Hea Besides everything to be found in an up-to- Largest Exclusive Wholesalers of - date Pharmacy, we also handle all kinds of Q, Spflrtillg Goods ' ' ' he Northwest SPoRT1NG Gooos SENDV Us YoUR MAIL oRDERs THIS TRADE MARK Guns, Rifles, 'QQ J Base Ball, , Cor. Monroe and Maxwell Phone 1460 RCVOIVQVSJ , .....f Foot Ball, Ammunitio n, TRAEZZDMARK Lawn Tennis, Hunting Golf and dl Clothing and S , Gymnasium , Fishing Tackle ,I Goods ' I G antees You Perfect Go d WR1TE FQR CATALQGUES LAUN D RY BETAQUE BRos., Agents Seattle Sporting Goods Co. At Pullman College J SEATTLE' U' S' A' 21 B1ilDES OF TIJE YEAR Tngrahvh vhhing Annnnnrvmrnta ami! Elnhitatinna CORRECT IN PHRASEOLOGY, FASHIONABLE IN FORM AND PERFECT IN SIZES APPROVED BY REEINED TASTE mhe Engraving We do contains all the qualities in keeping with Society's dictum and proclaims individual character of careful execution. NQ Other requisites are: Engraved At Home, Church and Visiting Cards and Acknowledgment Wedding Gift Stationery.Ng Style Sheets and Prices mailed on request. J H . GRAHAM 65 OOMPANY ENGRAVERS OF FINE SOCIAL AND BUSINESS STATIONERY '70'7-709-71 1 SPRAGUE AVENUE SPOKANE, WASHINGTON 708-710-'71 2 FIRST AVENUE 218 LIPBITT BROTHERS 01135 35 Dilllngham QQZSQQ Ghz iBiunet1: Siwertijants XXQF' ligne 561. Dry Goods, Ladiesf Wlaists, EQ Ladies' Skirts, Tailored Suits, My Cloaks, lVIen's and Youths, Clothing, Furnishings, Hats, Shoes, Gloves Y Trunks, Carpets, Matting, Linoleums, Crockery, Staple WX and Fancy Groceries ents for K' he Dclinea or d he X Ag Butilerick Patteriis t mf motto: The best quality of merchandise at the lowest possible price, in each and every department BQ? Kgs W Qtulfar z z masmngrnn t Makers of C0 jf SG? D Lme in 0 Pawn, Smzm X and Emzmelr l J Jobbers of Painters' Supplies Brushes Plate and Window Glass Argillite Roofing Alabastine Building Paper Sash and Doors Spokane Lefwzsfon 21 . - I I 'J:Ei fff :? i ' f. :Q Veterlnary Instruments and Wemafnufaftufe . - O , Anything from Q. '91 -. . Equlpments 3 -a.f:,1, p , , . 1, Canvas ' is Anatomical ' Surgical Mi: , '.6'f 5 l,p if Models Dental and lei? 5 if 71, 2' 1 .251 L Q2 I in Q ,Yo ,Q 7' Electrical CO. Hospital Send for aw,-X .1 l?,i.,' Z 3, 1 Apparatus S Supplies ,Caf210gl1C - 7 ii jr ---- .gi ' 'i-Wa p , I 3-02 Second Avenue SEATTLE, WASHINGTON Ware Bros. CO. 123-125-127 Howard St., Spokane BEST CUP OF COFFEE ON EARTH akes Cafe Spakanelr Popular Reftauram' OPEN ALL NIGHT 512 to 5IO Sprague Aw. E Spokane, Warh. Residence Phone Sl I 2 Established 1890 GEO. W. CLOUS Optician 'Mr. CLOUS makes periodical visits to Pullman with headquarters at WATT'S PHARMACY. 335 The Rookery SPOKANE, WASHINGTON 220 sqtfmge m H m m e D D seiesaeggDEDEDEDEDEDQQESQSESQESEDEESESTZDEDE D ' D Sew D... ,... DE SE i D ee DE S22 DDD DE QW aeei D VERAGE MEN We df ooLoRLEss as VERAGE CLOTHES College men are outside .the average-their togs have to be- College Brandt Clothes ezre. just a bit more dash to 'em, a great sight more style-and' the precisely right amount of fit. Though exclusive their price isn't enough to exclude you from Wearing 'em. For the young man and the like-to-be-young. Prices on Spring and Summer Suits range from 57.50 to S25 Your favorite College or Fraternity Pennant presented to you when you buy Col- ' lege Brand Clothes. SPOKANE'S GREATEST MEN'S AND BOYS' QUTFITTERS entmurtb Iutbiug Ziauwsf D? SistinemeunnyfsielsusiilQWQWQWQWDDYDLDDWDDWDEWDD 221 ..-Ww'5'-35 X NH ee W it -, 'f.,f i S A K., 1, .Ext N. 4 .y , -I. .' 1:.'.g' Q-1 - -- .' -- A ': ,- r : QF -' :', It , ' ' 1--'ik' - ' U f ti-'za E, ii i . - . 1' 'K I, .A'A : . - fx .-,., ,- '1 iff P - :E 11 . AVI? :-gl.: x' - , - ffif EQ' 1. ffi'1 '--,fi . ' - ,: , 1. -'ji 1' 31 -' ' I-'-' . '.- - vm fi 1 ' ' I .fig ' 3 ' ,gf -.j I .. .,. . ' l :If nr, V: 1. 55:2 .. X I , .. ,H il. 1v,?:H?I .3 ' . ' eff.: e ' 1. 5 H.:'i . .. ,r .- . 4 My 1' fn , . , . . , . it . 5,'54??gL, 5 x -1 '1 is tl' 'rl J' K x x x 'L vf ' I ' W-.lv K 'M-,bs xt Sv N X 1 X ' lf? 5.3 MMS. ii --l 2 in hx-KY, , wx I. x2 'W -'L X ' e , JK x 1 X XY: i L v ' ,Q x 1 u r lb Y nw f lg' , Q12-'gg.w ' 6 r J rw hx PW - X us x 'x Hx . 3 A ,- 'SQ ' 1 ui w AXA XI J Af- L X x if .ggi-, W ,LVN X5 X- ' I A tx' fu ' :sv if S fr. sv 1' H in N A me .CFM iii .' ' X ininx i f 'w N . X iw, , ' U x . 4-ri v ' -,f 4 1 NH! ' f 0 X 'n i . N 1-: A D my 4 X ' ' , M? 5 J.: Hu x 'L V ,, A Z I: ' i 5 'Ji f rm 'l ' .0 - w 'W 'H 1 JP' ' 5 pq: ' 2 Qxibg 'D 5 1 I 4 ' W A .x .',' , 1 iii ' ' J ' 'ff I 1 . - f . i JA , x , lb ,Hsu K Q ,,- er 1 ' Nh v ' 'fffg P rl-nu' 1 N ' ,SAW .su 2, H Pl ny ,s 1. 5,1 gi, ay? A ' ..9,:-inf.: , I 4' 1 5 'E fiixnaxl 'l1 V . f 1 f . .a V, r 1 - ,fx b 'Q' s , ,v ' f-in , 5.1 1 ag. '- , Q . my : 1 Q ,ig I 5 4 L I 'x W' ' M .Ch Ill, 1 li I , .9 . L 3 'S , r:5 .,:,rt, Q . N, .' . - 4 .lf-.N X v , 1 , .1 .. ' I 1 lib. v , . ' ll ff f -e as Qi V X Pfgcfwi. I TR A 7 '-3 Q - 'r V ye , ' M 1 K5 ' E lg in , A .. I I U i- , if2i':if'.--in-ali nl' I' N7 .S - . t I-X-1' 5 ' 1 ,7-2v3:2A,'3q-f + ' -' 15222 . tv 'Q ' 5 1, ., -4,4 Q 4. , ,L P v., ,. 5 .- . -11.1-.a--ve ' .5 - H - Z 1 ' . FM sr! A , ' L, -'V .. 5,2 L I - . it 'mb C C 'X 'i fs- , 'Y 3 1-' Gif GD -so Lc MADE IN Nsvv Yoxuc CITY -- Uyn Clothes thm KEEP MenYoung SES? SEP SE SE D SE 0 Db 0 S? Sh ge nib S592 D get Eb QPF E5 me Ss gig? Laboratory Supplies Chemical Glassware and Hardware Pure Reagents The C. M. Fassett Co., Inf. SPOKANE, WASH. Friends of Chinook : Please accept our thanks for past favors and remember that the HAT SHOP 'DQ at S. 8 Iloxvard St., Spokane bm ffj'UST PIATS-Tbaz'.v .ifflw fBL1XCK8fWHI'l'E51 222 . ..., ,,....-,,,.. , .,.-A............, ....,s-.--.- Y: W H V . . , ,,,.,, ,,,,,1, ,, ,,,, 'f A 1 -,- -- ,- - - - -Y . - .Afw BE H Y No use worrying how you are going to harvest my IIT '- -oi 45 - - 11, i:El-JIl1w.71l.I r e, 'M x X Q - -rl.. rgillgfgwllf xg , - -W ELE2- . .' ' - V3-1.i'4'-'ZQI41fIfWm: FF.y ' s 47' ' ff e ', az: HUWM- . 0 l'::::1 ll Lai 9.1..,j.,.5i Egy 1ua,4i...'.11,-vw if ,. s,m,,y not ,,.,... ...L1::.':::.:i1zxgrasgiyH I 1 'MFI-.,-gy .- -'?..-he ,f A '- ,.,- I -,7r-idzfav.-':f.iW -A-'fif' 'g 'if9ff?fm-1y5u .., ., , fin My New .. - -J. 'H - '-- . -. -' ...fl .P-.1 -', .wwf - A . , ,, , - , - . L ' I ,J 1x57 ,ufhlilfta uwpiil' lrffkl-?If,:jlg?,lv frm'-Jr., I H . y- J ' .. - -ln.. g-:U L -,- - ,. 4 -. , ,--1 is - . 'I' I All If I ' ll I m Ili I I I' 1 in 'vm iffwi1 'ra nfs -rru.f- r- i I . ,. My 19 g -.,,,..-. 4 ' I' .-'il' .lIw..'.frf...r.ie-:- .11 I Il'- -'f ' L- 'I + -fl.:- -li I , I I' I VL I 5' I Ali -'IME-'Wh XNJ ,I : 4, 1 -mu,.fg3.3gu'1 4-A',g,,,.:Q9,j- 3,3.'.-AJ Q1xLQ.'y,w,'QsQ-iq-la. k . , , ,, 1 ' J,-,H F .f, wmk..w1iG'ffe--firnwz 0.1 fm -M mf -'W fu P0-w1,u'Q'.1'-v-'ff'Iiefvcml'.ufTJlIk.!+m1i'.iiP'1Eua-I ,II B Y I-IOLT The owner of a . HOLT BROS. COMBINED HARVESTER puts the money in his pocket that he would by the old method have to pay out for hired help and threshing bill. Send us your address and we will mail you interesting Reading Matter and Photos. Write for Bulletin C. H. 23. The Holt Manufacturing Company Walla WalIa,Wash. Spokane,Wash. Stockton, Cal. Hallidie Machinery Company Engineers and Machinery Merchants SEATTLE SPOKANE Complete Plant Installations ...-.l -may ,Ml Steam -2 f re - H draulic sl is Alf 5,-e Y Electric 'I ?I ft I L I Mining ' Qiflas Producer Plants:-.ZD MACHINE TOOLS and WOOD WORKING MACHINERY The Largest Stock in the Northwest Carried in Seattle and Spokane Write for Catalogues 22 .-4 0 . l5E'5 '- We .'V. ' ' ' 1' .-..v.,.w ,. . 1 7 O t ' r We Lead the World nn VETERINARY lNSTRUlVlENTS dnkn V ,N A . , 'wfffif' ' , E , O W' O O I HAUSSMANN as DUNN co. Q b Q, N 2 r 2,3 -.2 'E 2 EEE 5 Q 2 6 , 3 X Manufacturers, Dealers and 'De-UE N D ij :gg E 'Y KJ 0 Exporters of 3 eifafazzo' r+ a 512 S Bias., 2 52 E 55 4 . vw. 552 U P' 522 82 3 E A 0 1 - n l ' Veterinary Surgical lnsl'rumenl's mp5'wai'T' --nga -.awww QU V2 ' H . l S Q Q Q5 33 E I -ll Texl' Books and , A--,, H: .r U Q - Q L 'ETB E3 5.2 RQ , 35 K? E , . r ,.,f Plwarmaceutical Preparations N 5, El, O , or R . d h 1 6 V , 1 .fag '.,1-, --'- . N ,A 1 3 - -4 - S - - 3' EE ing in EE 3 3 Z u - l fm Catalog Free, mailed on applrcalion. 4-Q: if lg, M ' N 5' ,T'1f5t,'ww3. 'l' L A Special Prices l'o Students , A-11ll59f,'a,fg-,,, K 3:-:g3,:g3fgfggf1+ggg1 fPf'ffGfff-mg.-EU, .,,:.., E ,,., . Q Our Celebrated Mouth , lx Qi rdf' e V Z Spgculum 392 So. Clark Street, Clncago, lll. by CHICAGO LEVELING Roo and W ,lV,l,.,t,,1,,., l Z CHICAGO LlNlNG POL a a FAIRBANKS-MORSE E .,,,,,., 'l ' Are well ,,Q'r -a' f -'1 Supplies Four Strings of Hose. Enough Y AVVA :.,f- Complete Outfit can be mounted bulftjlzg aali on wa 0 l lnlll -1 eitl The Engine can be used for many Send fffff 4,f1f-'a.'a1 '-1'1 'f-1 1' '.'-f.f f1..,,, X .N ,.,1, W., 1,l W ,,.,f,,.t,,,.,-f - f l lx . V' l l W lm' :: WWW or er Purposes 6233 Cottage Grove Ave. Catalogue FAIRBANKS MORSE 5 CO. NS Ni Spokane Washington Q I Send for Catalogue No. 943 , CO' ,. ,.:,...,-,,,v - ' -- - - A . . 22 55 JEL 'ig f-151 ' .4 N G if Q 'ig' r : i 1l's 25 93' S 2 fm- R it to A - ik,-5-XJ' -n. . L A 1 i 'iilikii . 'il' ' 'D will ci 5 LE 9 ew' ff . ' J - 'Q Q 4' .3 ,, 'nfl .. lm ---- :asc Y, for our INTERS ,gnc ATIONERS ENGRAVERS - ' SPEKNE I lco 'ay ti? 96 'if-ifaoavi Engraved Stationery We Engrave in plain script, French script, old English, Roman and shaded old English. VVe employ the .best workmen 'obtainable and furnish the best qualities of stock 6 Society Functions of All Kinds Wedding Invitations and Announcements 'Q ' Calling Cards Embossed Business and Society Stationery. we do our Embossing from steel dies, for business houses and society use. When Wishing Work in these lines see us, or write Shaw 6 6 orden Company 609 Riverside Avenue SPOKANE. WASHINGTON 610-612 Sprague Avenue ,l Q1 i f S 6 Es X 'kiirfq if 'N A nixf N Y J . I X., ,af- '5' 31 J X y .. .N . ' i. .X 5 '.g I 5 ll! x v v X U IX! x ' ' J. ' QTL, ' ' IL 9 V x 1 4 I5 I may . F2149 it 41. Lila 0 img My A 45 4 f . -. Z . iw? T 3 r - : A QI dkx Ui' 15 'Q INTCRS STATIONERS EN RA U5 xx 43080 Q 225 V. B. MCDOWEIJL COLFAX, WASH. INSURANCE: FARM LOANS : REAL ESTATE BONDS Ladies' Ready-to-Wear G a I. 6 H t S We Harry the ies! .teleci- Vvfv VV Vv! cftkfLLf Si't, I 22-ff fn igffffmfill I PVfzz'tmarz Cozmfy. Am! the but thing about it 2.5 The Place that Saves You Money . COLFAX, WASH' that we fzczfve your fzze. SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS You always appear better than most of the fellows by Wearing one of our Hart, Schaffner 553 Marx Suits white 32301158 flllutbing Qin. JOHNSON 85 LARSON, PROPRIETORS COLFAX SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS THE EDITOR OF The ullman Tribune Enjoys knowing the College boys. He also enjoys doing a neat job of printing for them XA I ,,.,.-N ., . .-Xftei' experimenting and test- ing the various machines for the past six months, Professor Tim- 'Jlin has placed his exclusive orclei' with us for a new equipment of fleiniiigtons. The ahove is a 'zliutog'i'apli of this orclei' which was taken in 'front of our o'H:1ce Jefore shipment. This large orclei' again clemonstrates the siipei'ioi'ity of the Remingtoii. The Spokane oflice placed 402 stenographers in the year 1906, and we will help any student of the State College Who- calls on us for assistance. REIVIINGTQ TYPEWRITER COMPA Y ll0 Washington Street, Spokane, Washington. 227 .J. II de ewe ry Co., Inc. Manufacturing jewelers, Watchmakers, Engravers, Etc. 45' fb St 6 . . . Birth Stull Diamonds, Emeralds, Rubies, Sapphires, .llnfifit Pearls, Turquois, Precious and Semi- ,Jfj,i, ,liillfiiiist Precious Stones in an endless Variety Saf.IiiilaX Bloqivlcilrgtone V Siieglnxsie Diafiffiind Le! as anew fwaaf ,year wants are. Wz'fa om' large Pfififi Emfjjald aaa' fvariea' :face fwe Mine we can please yea. June A ' December Agate Turquoise We make the Medals and Rings for the Washington State College. 60 9 Sprague Avenue, Spokane, Washington l 228 Students Defzgfvf in OZZYQ Home . If you are going to be in Colfax for a few days, to attend Court or other matters, call at the C HOTEL I0 S C and inspect our rooms. We are centrally located, being just half way between the Courthouse and Postoffice. BOARD and LODGING b ' the da or week Give 5 y - us a trialg we will clo our best to make you comfortable. be Krasselli bemiral u. Manufacturers of Strictly Chemically Pure Q I ACIDS and AQUA AMMONIA U Q N 6 ' Prices quoted on request. Special U Do not contract for your r quire prices on large quantities. ments until you obtain our p GENERAL OFFICES AND PRINCIPAL XVORKS R. K. Squibb, Prop? Cofvzx, Washinhgion CLEVELAND, QI-HQ, U, S, A, John P. Volmer, President Arthur E.. Clarke, Cashier The Larger! Hozzse in Eastern Washington Q:.:' e 5 'Q ' Q Earl AH itat attuned 18211113 LEWISTON, IDAHO ,ogr,lVlitchell 81 Co. Telephones, Chandeliers, Motors, f0B3L'A'S Batteries, Etc. Contractsffor alnya . th' l tr' l. E.st'mate urnis e oringhll eiiricl: of electrifzal work. Capital ...... 35 0,000.00 0 ' 9 l and Gas Surplus ..... 35241000.00 UNIEEZTES 7 Telephone Main 1088 .C S Deposits . . . 51,1 77,849.47 U DEPOSITARY 603 spfague Ave. SPOKANE, WASH. UPP 133 22 We are Striving for the Student Tfade While in CGI-rl-'ESE' TRADE WITH jUST TRY US AND SEE. The Star Livery Stable W. B. CROMWELL, Proprietor Pullman, Wash, Gentle Horses WATERS ' ' '5t5 inEf'lei,llllIflll?lffll ?'ffl4ll'jfEll ?if:ff' llltl ell? -all tiH!ftlQg 1 f lf,jJljlf?fftil i5sfi!' w 'Ml lflitfsfalllllllfrffrtlyfsifwl r 'i ti 'uf!?lrEl??ffl i f HC fl, a Ilsf55f,l!!!!!!II,.l:'t A L K Hows r o f ll f H I if 'wg ' I' ow T ' if l. Buy i O a t 12 ss, Q! iw g l :wr , wl !esXQfQ.:g'ff4l' I . ,' R' ii I And His Prices Are Right Stylish Rigs Waters' Furniture Store PRICES CGRRECT Botln Phones in the Barn Pullman, Washington 230 f-'r--vfA-,---vf--,-A-- -- 'f--,- A-if ----- - V .- I , H , V. , , g '. . . ,- . ,, ., .,,..1..+.4..k,,f-..-w-,fvs-.if 1--+-- ,.a,-4..- H -,W V ' - 1 Co to the PULLMAN STATE BANK for liberal and courteous treatment 'for anything A in the BANKING BUSINESS They will treat you right You Be The Doctor For just a little While and see if you cannot - conscientiously recommend the PULLMAN STEAM LAUNDRY I. N. SCOTT, Prop. T Pullman, VVash. A PYIODC Red 451 P 1 Yew ., wx ,LA . L W ,., ,,,.,.-,.,f.,. f,,..ug, xr A ,,, ,, The MURRAT IMPRINT Qzbkeiis cf Jon . b f l . t. OH 3 JO O PU? mg lllatchmakers and Jewelers has the same s1gn1ficance that iS'te1fl'ing has - on Class Rings, Pins and Medals IT'S THE BEST . , P llman, Wash. We do all I , I lzhe good work. V 1 1 SHE l5EdsT a an Qa J J Home Made Thejob Primer CANDIBS and ICE CREAMS F t National Bank Block, Upstairls. 1 k A PL1llma1j,AlWasl1.' A ManL1f3S:31ge2nof and FANCY LAP ROEES, COLLARS q ERIDLES, SADDLES and HARNESS Hardware REPAIR WORK A SPECIALTY A S PULLMAN, WASH. C IN CORPORATEDD J. P. Duthie A PRODUCE PULLMAN, L U M B E R 2 ' WASHINGTON COAL AND Hardware and Crockery WOGD WHOPE StoveS and Rarnges PIJLLMAN,WASH. 1-i-iflgaglf Plumblng and Tlnnmg 34 1 ,,,,,,, Springston Lumber Co. Dealers in Q Bullding Material, Coal and Wood P . EHX l Rock Sprlngs and Monarch Coal ' A Fir and Tamarack Wood Opposite Postofflce' d Pullman: Wash' Paul Kimball, Local Manager Phone Main 31 When Needing Headgear TRANSFER TIGEISHHAT Guaranteed for one ycar's everyday wear. W ood and Coal 53.00 W ' Anywhere in the United States. Q a Blackman Brothers 8: Co. Phone at Yard and Ofhce. , 171111111-2111, Wash. Agents for Pullman, A . 235 ECOLLEGE BUCK sToRE J P WL?-YQ?-XX P Heaclquarters for all Students' Wants in the Way of Pennants College Pins Picture Netting Drawing Supplies and Books Athletic Goods Fzhe Candies mm' he Cream Pufzmfm, zffdfmgfm 5 P C -ls-, 01' 19. mlmgpllf B' Evrman 15. illlarzhull, illll. Room I-Second Floor First National Bank Building Flatiffm Bldg- Pullman, Wash. Both Phones Office Phone: Black 371 .Residence Phone: B501 - - . , T il. illlngh Exit LII. Q!-1 Martin, fin. E. Doctoriof A P MEDICAL DENTISTRY Office in Flatiron Bldg. Pullman, ,Wash. Bilmard Block - Colfax Vvash. Hours 8 to I2 a. lm., I to 5 p. m. Other Hours by Appointment. Br. Sv. M. Minn 8: wifi? OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS I. O. O. F. Bldg. Pullman, Wash. Er. Eh. Qlllaguire PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in White's Drug Store Office Phone: 471 Residence Phone: 478 - Blessed is- the rook that walkelli not on the grass of the campus, nor idly standeth 'in the halls, nor sitteth in the seat of the loafers. But his delight is in the books of Prexyg and in his books doth he meditate day and night. And he shall be like the registrar planted by the registrars office, that runneth the institution at his will, and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper. But the sloughers are not so, but are like the feathers which the wind driveth away. Therefore, the lazy shall not stand at the head of his class, nor the knockers- in. the conigregation of the distinction list. For Prexy knoweth the way of the grafterg but the way of the smoker shall perish. 2 it l Y QW? neient as time itself is 1nankind's inherited love of Fine Clothes, Good Things to eat and the Best Quality of every- , thing around and about him. Q 3' Appreciating this fact, We have gathered together under one roof, Fine Clothes for all, Good Things to eat, 32-'53 and Elegant Furnishings for man and his home. We Want to impress this fact strongly upon your mind, and when you are in need of anything you will think of us' and purchase from Z4 The Burgan-Emerson Company l l 238 -,-------W --W 'f-- -' fi:?w-I 9 w Q 3 235 2, 5 QQ -Tl fl iq ' 'WN 33 XJ s Z :sa sb 1 DQ -4 ' x . P .jf - 1 ffn 's-A, 'i .JA lfl. -sf s., f 1 -,-X4 KZ? . 4, fx., 322 53? -95 C 1 31 1 425 37 3 I Neil Stewart, Sr., President Neil Stewart, Jr., Vice Pres, Stewart-Cture Hardware o. Stoves and Tinware Plumbing, Tinning and Steam Fitting ' Pullman, Wasli. 411 PALACE A MEAT MARKET 7, Watt,s Plwarmac Sh C f ' P I - Drugs Stationery OW C ' A Accuracy in Prescriptions ' Up to Date in Every. Particular A Ptnoto Goods, Toilet Articles, Student,s Supplies, s A Athletic Goods Game and Fish in Season P PULLMAN WASH E Both Phones Pullman' Wash' 239 , ,..4. I-W - XV. S. C. AMPHITHEATER-IDAHO GAME ONLY THE BEST CARRIED IN STOCK 6 df HITHAM sg WAGNERI Gents' Furnishings I nsss 'S if EsEE K I T Shoes and Oxfords Ready Made Clothes Tailor Made Suits ' S g The famous Keith Kangaroo for men Cluett and Ideal Shirts by Keith Kang,arool'Shoes, Ultz Dun for the ladies Longley Lowe Hats ' s . g A I. ,R , V I , A , fy I as S . , ,o., .. 4'-' ' ua NOV6ltiCSQi.if1ffT . - Dry Goods 1. A 'Nfl uhl' H M 1 ly ' K t' 1 A eornpleteifline alwgiysgon hand Everything necessary for a ctompletggyifardrobqf V Qi 1.4, 1 Sift l- Coats, ready made Skirts, Pglrticoats and Shirgtryaists bs, .4 Gr'0f3e1'1eS , K Full line of latest novelties in-Dressfgiootls for evening vyear g 'itr V V Both Fancy and Staple, at' Lowest Prices :Al g ,, I. h g U I A V We mfg ygpggfggj far 'tiger 5160-be Z7Z:'Sb07f'lL Nairce if' 1 . ., Q -.V f- - WHITH M Sc WAGNER ullmam, 11. . 241 G. W. EWING Express ancl Transfer Daily Trips tothe College QSTUDENT PATRONAGE SOLICITED Phone Black 311 Cr Leave Crders at Waters Furniture PULLMAN. WASH. - ITB r , ., f-, :J... Kemper MeAlister We Cater to the Wants of the Hungry THE BEST A1len's Printery---That's the Place Bread Rolls and Cali es ,, . 7 'XPS!c?1wo opfafsvagf ' Main a d G d Str z l53SEE's'gg'5L,'5'2Z,1F PULLSIAN wsxsl-1. Try it and you will want it daily. ' W 'QQQQQQEQ I vvlxv i 242 W ' . , s , ,... , . vgf:-::r.T.l'.4.--,.-'i-A - 1- ' H 2221'- lf1'f'fffff-'EW fi' Afrf 4- -'H ir -1 sg , gr 'ml ' y s t -'rf '--A+---- f ' ---ff 1 c ' 5 The Pioneer Firm of the Pacific Northwest Gray - Burgess Horse Importing Co. M, C. GRAY, Pullman, Washington ' THE COLFAX ATIVQ AL BA K NVe are the FIRST and ONLY institution of this character to Capital, surplus and DFOOYS--- ..... 5250000.00 locate permanently in the Pacific Northwest, where we seek always to Resources -------- ------------ ---, 1 '5QQ.0Q0.0Q carry a large portion of as good an aggregation of Stallions as there are in America. The records for the past thirty years show that no OHCCVS gggteglgiirgui oInLE?sTScontigent has surpassiedl ours in thie numbelr of Alfred COOlidge--- ----------- ------- P fggidenr TA B so , or so many iigi class Pro ucers. n a 1 - Y-C Prdgdz t third of a century OURS is but ONE of THREE firms that have A' Ff NRC ame'- -,vi 6 Cfctll stood the shock of time, and never closed its doors from business, Edwin T- COH1211 ---- --- we Prefldqlt Does not this tell the story to the thoughtful mind better than all Cl1aS. E. SCI'1lJCl --- ...-..-...-.- Ciflilllci' hot airu yarns and fake methods could do in a thousand years? D. C. Woodxvard ------ -------. ---- - n Jxssigtant Caghief Call on or address, M. C. GRAY, Pullman, Wash. THE OLDEST AND LARGEST BANK ix XYHITMAN COUNTY -- ,fe m, -- l Steam Heat, Electric Lights, ' Private Baths T -if .EJ ff i Hot 8 Cold Running Water in Rooms, Large Sample Rooms CQ 1X X f-X. . XX- N -4- s sag - iig- 0 e 0 ax gk .ge E Martin J. Maloxney r Tk, ' , l BACK To The A - X. K, , TALL GRASS V it I f nnamgxppcn - V+- 'i l Bus at all Trains American Plan W c ALQIFI' c 55511 Il: ll:-Z , -1':', -.- ' . f -.- -. .. COLFAX, WASHINGTON .1 lfefgx f -:lg aggif hiifiys ' 'I ff' -,-,, l i .AA 'ii MONEY SAVED MONEY EARNED YOU can earn money by buying your Clothes, Furnishings and Jewelry Bracllg' Engineering 8 Machinery Co. JMACHINERY mm' SUPPLIES Hoisting Engines, Saw Mills, FROM Gasoline Engines, Pumps L B and Irrigating Outfits PULLMAN ,..... WASH Sp k . . . Washingt of ,fa ywsgf W 1, J UI' T P 'BPH HI' Sviuh so aafvfmflvfviiisis X , X V :J wwf el Qs s t I Hoi-11 4 ?.,R?g?X ' F2735 J , F3 wr, 1 , - , - N-X ,aff . . .J , - , X om orta e, con en1a surroun 1n s are con- . cfm Q1 C1 3 3 AQM EY'?g,Qr!fi3i-- c1uc1ve to sat1sfactory study. ' Your Furnlture need not be elaborate, nor are o -X yi,...:,f.qg X sq g . . . , . . i n1ce furmslungs necessar11y 'eXpens1ve. 'WT , pggjfjgfgf f, Q' 5 . 4-3 5-Sf' . . - ' 1tI1s our lausmess to FL RNISH rooms and - 2' apartments so that they will be a source of con- ,Q ' ff' 'E stant pride to their owners. 4 f' V 4 ' . . . ' ' ph If you contemplate acldmg to or refurmslnng' I f your apartments Write, or when in Spokane call on us. ' e gladly assist in every Way possible. Send for our 'Catalogue A Card will bring our Catalogue ,, . ' Gnu. Ihr Hustniirr If fh hi CE hl 118411 hh ' S WOT W le H P9 'I H Spukanzxmaah 246 t N f V , , ' dum,-i ,,,,,, .,,..---..-....,.I, V. J-V. W. ,, . , . .., V. ' V V- .,,,,,., ...Q-Vw----'H s V - f - VV V ' --f-- -'-- -- - ' ,,g,,' ,-:Ttggl 1 f 4 AVN, ,, K, ,,.-..-,--- , . . my L1 --'- W'1'T1 'U 'K ' ' 'AA 'A ' ' ' ' f ' 1 f 6 1. ,. Q M: ?x.x A 5 ? i P ' -' .XXX 5 xx? ith I X: 5 3: . E V. . ' Q . f ' ' W A X ., 2 1 Ml K' .i,um , ,. M 1' cj It IS dead easy to go through' one s money if he carries lt 1n his pocket but the care- ful man who keeps h1S cash 1n a good bank and pays 111S b111s with checks, has a better chance to come out ahead. His checks, after they are paid, 'show him what has become of his money and remind him Where he can save useless expense. ' . Students should learn to manage their Iinances successfully and not confine them- uUDlkblK so 415 A DEAD EASY p viggtj sp ' 1 H selves to what is taught in books, A Well-kept bank book is always a recom- mendation, We extend a hearty Welcome to all stu- dents Who come to Pullman, Hlld offer them our services, which are the best that are to be had. FIRST NATIONAL BANK ' A 'PULLMANIWASHINGTON -!ll,,,ll,.l,,g- ,,-,,...............,.g...-.--.4, M. -.-lu...-.-.-...---:1:,,,:: ...,, ,,fff-:ee-,lla Y -Y , A V ' - f ARTISTS 5 .1 . DESIGNERS p I Ill' llllln-SW! I Y N F ' . ,Q F i X-v . A X 'E-THE DESIRES'TO EXTEND TO THE STUDENTS OF W. S. C. OUR MOST HEARTY APPRECIATION FOR THEIR LOYAL SUPPORT DURING THE PAST YEAR. WE HOPE OUR EFFORTS TO SERVE EACH AND EVERY ONE HAVE ' BEEN SUCH AS WILL INSURE I - YOUR VALUED PATRONAGE IN N THE FUTURE. WE STAND,FIRST, LAST AND ALWAYS Foa f P W S QE H A .. ,, J. R. STEPHENSON rmphu CxlrI 240 r I' e State College of Washington Full four-year courses, leading to the blachelor's i A THREE-YEARS' CGURSE in Veterinary degree, offered in Mathematics and Civil Engineer- I U . . Medicine and Surgery, leading to the degree of . . , . Imttnn ,. . ing, Chemistry, Botany, Loology, Agriculture, Hor- N Doctor of Veterinary Science. ticulture, .English Language and Literature, -Eco- ig Qllrpp A TWQ-YEARS' CQURSE in the SChQO1 Of llffmlc SC1G11CC and H1StQfY, MQCDQUICHI Ellglnffef' in au Forestry, fitting men for Work as practical foresters. 1pg,h.Electr1cal Enlgineegring, Min1ngGE1pg1neerEg, gg . A SHQRT COLTRSE in the School of Dairy- I YC dtecture' MOC em anguagei F GO Ogyf Oi Qhimhwig ing, offered each winter, ntting men- for practical Iiazefitlrc Economy, Pharmacy, Veterinary Science ant nf. dairy Work- , A v - W, I , . U ,. In addition, the following short courses and Th? 915119 OfferCdiFaXg1Ei,2i,EErm EFKS Course m Aqsaimg Schools Hfff mainfainefli l A THREE-YEARS' coLfRsE in the Depart- A TWU YEARS CGURSE in the School of J ment of Elementary Science, taking students at the Pharmacy: 16-ad1Hs t0 the-degree Gfaduate 111 F-haf' Q completion of the eighth grade, and fitting them for m3CY- Gfafmate? HTC EJIVCU Cef'f1f1C3f6S, Wlfhfllf entrance to college, or giving them practical second- further examination, by the State Board of Phar- my education. m3CY- , u 9 . A SIX-NNEEKS' CQURSE in the Summer A THREE-YEARS CQURSE 111 the Schqol gc Science School for Teachers, held each summer va- of Music, leading to the degree Bachelor of Music. , E 035011, Cost of Living Low. Moral and Scholarship Standards High. Healthful Surroundings. Fine Gymnasium and Athletic Grounds. For full information in regard to any department, o-r complete catalogue giving full information in regard to all departments, address, F. F. NALDER, Registrar, Pullman, W7 ash. l 250 ,W ,v f- f, fgff:f'1nL'K'L!-f:-....-'-'-...,.... -: ' W---F25 -f 'ff' 'TjjgTgi11:g'Q'i'LT.Ll111.144 AY--V --'-----H ' - ' ' W 'f'f',,, -r ' ' -- 't ' it ' i i 5 1 P V u 2 , 2 z I 2 r i 3 :A , '5':3:-'kLv+t---'-......m4.-1-:.?.-.-:::-:,:!,'zff-gfff F- ----J--A Y.. . if ,, , ,, ? 1M'W'A W-WW, ,W ,,,.,,,,, ,,,, ,,,, , H W ,,.,.., , , V, W I- n Z 1 Y 3 3 e f I , i 4 Pi fs 1 a' mfs:-an... 1 -- - I E 3 1 TJH .fig ,1 W ,-, , 3. I, as y - ,J-f ri? M - 5:53 ',--X, : ,Jul v A, 1 - Mz. , .s gg- fi -'sqgn 4 --A . f f . - x, X., '- ,' - I . l 1 -'QM b F Rx 'Q . LA ffsqd ' 'tm i 3 ., N -5 Qt x , 1. di? , ffl Q-. -Qwew 1 , -M Lf' ' K 'ff '4 H-..fef'z.i ,. .f ?x:V..Q-R 'uf-flf'i'j . 4,0 U X Y, lag.- 5. 4.5 -. ,M .,.. In ' AAF' J 4,1 . r , ,. M' 5 13' . -K'l,,,,-f... ,q , Nr.- , ,f A 'if'-2 ' iff ' , ,N 1 A ri, .111 uv. ...x ,. 2- ,, ...IKE 5 .Y nf, K ' 2'-I-F ' 5 V J' NE. ,y V . . V. v . 1 ig 5, 5. -3 . f 'Z' , Ein,-3. 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Suggestions in the Washington State University - Chinook Yearbook (Pullman, WA) collection:

Washington State University - Chinook Yearbook (Pullman, WA) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

1905

Washington State University - Chinook Yearbook (Pullman, WA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

Washington State University - Chinook Yearbook (Pullman, WA) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Washington State University - Chinook Yearbook (Pullman, WA) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

Washington State University - Chinook Yearbook (Pullman, WA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Washington State University - Chinook Yearbook (Pullman, WA) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911


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